. At the Indiaspora Global AI Summit on Wednesday, the nonprofit community of Global Indian leaders and management consulting firm Zinnov released two reports detailing AI’s impact on India’s startup and GCC ecosystems. These reports highlight India’s role as a premier global tech hub, exploring how AI is reshaping the world’s most influential companies at an unprecedented pace.The report Top 100 AI Startups in India examines where innovation is thriving, where opportunities remain untapped, and what it will take to build an ecosystem that empowers entrepreneurs to create products and services with lasting impact. The study of AI and Global Capability Centers confronts a parallel challenge: GCCs, a longtime strength of India’s technology sector, have evolved from cost centers into engines of innovation, yet much of their core work is now exposed to AI-driven displacement.Israel Iran WarUS-Israel-Iran War News Live Updates: Amazon Web Services ‘disrupted’ following drone attack in Bahrain; Saudi, UAE mull joining Iran war82nd Airborne Division to be deployed in Middle East: Inside America’s fastest strike force that once stormed Nazi-occupied France’Lack of permission’: Iran turns back Pakistan-bound ship trying to pass through Strait of Hormuz The central question is no longer whether GCCs will be affected, but whether they can move fast enough to transform vulnerability into advantage.AI has collapsed the traditional time horizon; transformations that once took a decade now unfold in months. With every new model, the boundaries of work are redrawn, compressing expertise into procedure and procedure into automation. The second report warns that over half of India’s current GCC portfolio remains anchored in commodity and procedural work—the layers most vulnerable to displacement. “The implication is clear: the window for adaptation has closed. The future belongs to GCCs that pivot from execution to co-creation, partnering with AI and startups to solve complex problems and redefine the very nature of a capability center.”“We are at an inflection point where artificial intelligence is no longer just a technology wave, it is a reordering of global capability. What is remarkable is not just the speed of change, but who is driving it. Across startups, enterprises, and research labs, Indians are helping define how AI is built, applied, and scaled worldwide,” M.R. Rangaswami, founder and chairman, Indiaspora, said.India’s top AI start-ups have collectively raised over $3.6 billion in funding, while generating $596 million in revenue, according to the first report. These enterprises are solving real-world problems across enterprise SaaS, healthcare, logistics, and more. Together, they employ nearly 20,000 people, demonstrating that India’s AI economy is creating tangible economic value at scale.The promise of India’s AI future cannot be realized in isolation. Sustained progress will require robust public infrastructure, strategic policy support, and savvy investment that backs founders solving real problems. The alignment of these forces is already underway, and this report documents the main drivers shaping India’s next generation of AI startups.And a large part of that future will be seen in the GCC’s throughout India. These institutions were built over decades, into sophisticated hubs that evolved far beyond their original cost-and-scale mandate, ultimately delivering deep expertise, strategic judgment, and frontier innovation that rivals headquarters worldwide. For most of that journey, 70–80% of GCC work was execution-focused, a model that rewarded process depth, portfolio breadth, and incremental improvement over long-time horizons.“AI is fundamentally reorganizing how and where innovation happens, compressing what once took decades into cycles of months. What sets India apart at this moment is not just scale, but the ability to build and deploy under real-world complexity—across languages, sectors, and constraints that increasingly mirror global markets. We’re seeing a clear shift—from execution to co-creation—across both startups and global capability centers, as value moves from building models to applying them in consequential ways. The ecosystems that lead from here will be those that can translate this complexity into scalable, applied intelligence, and India is emerging as one of the clearest proving grounds for how that future gets built,” said Pari Natarajan, CEO, Zinnov.The report on start-ups notes that India’s AI startup ecosystem, uniquely engineered by culture, infrastructure, and capital is fast becoming one of the most consequential forces in the global technology landscape. The transformative impact of AI is being felt at every level, from multinational corporations and GCCs to the country’s vibrant startup community. India’s startups are now uniquely positioned to drive innovation that reshapes not only emerging industries but also the established businesses and GCCs already operating on Indian soil. India entered the AI era with a structural advantage few nations can match. For startups, this means faster time-to-market and greater accessibility, making India one of the most favourable environments in the world for AI development.About the AuthorIshani DuttaguptaI’ve been a journalist with The Economic Times for 25+ years; first at the newsdesk of ET, Kolkata & then as a feature writer with the ET Magazine on Sunday in Delhi. I write largely on immigration policy issues and overseas Indians. I also write on entrepreneurs in food & beverages; crafts and education sectors. 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At the Indiaspora Global AI Summit on Wednesday, the nonprofit community of Global Indian leaders and management consulting firm Zinnov released two reports detailing AI’s impact on India’s startup and GCC ecosystems. These reports highlight India’s role as a premier global tech hub, exploring how AI is reshaping the world’s most influential companies at an unprecedented pace.The report Top 100 AI Startups in India examines where innovation is thriving, where opportunities remain untapped, and what it will take to build an ecosystem that empowers entrepreneurs to create products and services with lasting impact. The study of AI and Global Capability Centers confronts a parallel challenge: GCCs, a longtime strength of India’s technology sector, have evolved from cost centers into engines of innovation, yet much of their core work is now exposed to AI-driven displacement. The central question is no longer whether GCCs will be affected, but whether they can move fast enough to transform vulnerability into advantage.AI has collapsed the traditional time horizon; transformations that once took a decade now unfold in months. With every new model, the boundaries of work are redrawn, compressing expertise into procedure and procedure into automation. The second report warns that over half of India’s current GCC portfolio remains anchored in commodity and procedural work—the layers most vulnerable to displacement. “The implication is clear: the window for adaptation has closed. The future belongs to GCCs that pivot from execution to co-creation, partnering with AI and startups to solve complex problems and redefine the very nature of a capability center.”“We are at an inflection point where artificial intelligence is no longer just a technology wave, it is a reordering of global capability. What is remarkable is not just the speed of change, but who is driving it. Across startups, enterprises, and research labs, Indians are helping define how AI is built, applied, and scaled worldwide,” M.R. Rangaswami, founder and chairman, Indiaspora, said.India’s top AI start-ups have collectively raised over $3.6 billion in funding, while generating $596 million in revenue, according to the first report. These enterprises are solving real-world problems across enterprise SaaS, healthcare, logistics, and more. Together, they employ nearly 20,000 people, demonstrating that India’s AI economy is creating tangible economic value at scale.The promise of India’s AI future cannot be realized in isolation. Sustained progress will require robust public infrastructure, strategic policy support, and savvy investment that backs founders solving real problems. The alignment of these forces is already underway, and this report documents the main drivers shaping India’s next generation of AI startups.And a large part of that future will be seen in the GCC’s throughout India. These institutions were built over decades, into sophisticated hubs that evolved far beyond their original cost-and-scale mandate, ultimately delivering deep expertise, strategic judgment, and frontier innovation that rivals headquarters worldwide. For most of that journey, 70–80% of GCC work was execution-focused, a model that rewarded process depth, portfolio breadth, and incremental improvement over long-time horizons.“AI is fundamentally reorganizing how and where innovation happens, compressing what once took decades into cycles of months. What sets India apart at this moment is not just scale, but the ability to build and deploy under real-world complexity—across languages, sectors, and constraints that increasingly mirror global markets. We’re seeing a clear shift—from execution to co-creation—across both startups and global capability centers, as value moves from building models to applying them in consequential ways. The ecosystems that lead from here will be those that can translate this complexity into scalable, applied intelligence, and India is emerging as one of the clearest proving grounds for how that future gets built,” said Pari Natarajan, CEO, Zinnov.The report on start-ups notes that India’s AI startup ecosystem, uniquely engineered by culture, infrastructure, and capital is fast becoming one of the most consequential forces in the global technology landscape. The transformative impact of AI is being felt at every level, from multinational corporations and GCCs to the country’s vibrant startup community. India’s startups are now uniquely positioned to drive innovation that reshapes not only emerging industries but also the established businesses and GCCs already operating on Indian soil. India entered the AI era with a structural advantage few nations can match. For startups, this means faster time-to-market and greater accessibility, making India one of the most favourable environments in the world for AI development.