A decade ago, as India’s fledgling startup economy rose with ambition and stumbled through market shocks, a singular phrase captured the collective imagination: Product–Market Fit. Building for real demand—not vanity—was the core doctrine. Founders were told to sync their capital burn with customer love, or risk oblivion.
Then came another reckoning: Product–Founder–Market Fit. As Digital India’s foundational stack matured and venture capital deepened, a new generation of founders emerged. Some soared. Others faltered as scaling pains collided with leadership gaps. A few reinvented themselves. Many others limped on—undead companies in a system that neither rewards closure nor acknowledges failure.
What we rarely examined seriously was Founder–Market Fit: the idea that a
founder’s lived experiences—personal, professional, even emotional—are uniquely
suited to solving a specific problem in a specific market.
Now, in a more public era for Indian startups, a new and urgent fit has entered the
fray: Founder–Public Market Fit.
In the past year, I’ve spoken with numerous founders, investors, bankers, and fund
managers. Their shared reality: India’s startup sector is graduating. IPOs are no
longer just liquidity events—they are litmus tests of a founder’s readiness to lead
under public scrutiny.
The public markets are offering validation but also demanding accountability.
India’s New Economy has delivered solid returns to global investors—returns that
were unthinkable a decade ago. But a new bar is being set.
The consensus?
Nearly one-third of the value of an IPO-bound startup resides in the founder’s quality. It’s no longer enough to be a great product visionary. The founder must now be a capital markets communicator, a governance evangelist, and a scale-stage operator.
This is where Founder–Public Market Fit becomes crucial.
Here are five key traits that determine whether a founder is fit for the public spotlight:
Credibility & Communication
Operational Maturity
Capital Markets Fluency
Talent Magnetism
Resilience Under Scrutiny
These are not optional. Public markets are unforgiving of inconsistency and opacity. They reward leadership clarity, depth, and discipline.
Jensen Huang of NVIDIA, Reed Hastings of Netflix, Jeff Bezos of Amazon, and Mark Zuckerberg of Meta all offer global case studies. They each scaled their companies in the public eye, transforming from visionaries into disciplined stewards of shareholder value. Not without missteps—but with evolution.
For Indian founders, the stakes are now similarly high. With projections of over $500 billion in market capitalisation from the New Economy alone, our GDP growth and job creation ambitions are intimately tied to the quality of leadership at the helm of these companies.
There’s a necessary humility in this conversation. Founder–Public Market Fit does not mean every founder must evolve into a public CEO. Nor does it mean every startup must chase an IPO. But those who choose this path must be ready.
That means stepping out of echo chambers, surrounding themselves with experienced voices, and committing to governance—not just growth.
India’s startup maturity is no longer about product sophistication or scale. It’s about leadership that endures. It’s time we mainstream the idea of Founder–Public Market Fit as part of our startup vocabulary. Because in the next phase of India’s startup journey, the story isn’t just who can build fast. It’s who can build for the long haul—in public.
Boby Kurian is the Co-founder and Managing Director of StratInk Consulting, a communications-driven corporate advisory firm. He partners with founders, investors, and policymakers to shape strategies at the intersection of capital, credibility, and growth. With nearly three decades of experience, Boby has chronicled and shaped some of the most defining moments in India Inc. A long-time observer and participant in India’s startup journey, he brings deep insight into the forces reshaping the New Economy.