"Traditional businessmen understand business in their own way. That person will discount you in the first place. For a tech guy, that is past. This is the future," Ashneer Grover, the head of finance of online grocery market place Grofers, said.
This in a way would continue to disrupt traditional business model, he said.
The same view was echoed by TCM Sundaram, MD of IDG Ventures, who said that start-ups would disrupt traditional business models in the days to come which has become evident with the likes of cab aggregators and e-commerce firms.
"Ninety-nine per cent of the start-ups will not generate jobs. One or two will succeed. But these successful ones will be disruptive in nature," he said at a panel discussion organised by Calcutta Angel Network (CAN), a city-based body of investors which has funded almost eight to ten start-ups.
Lack of talent and eco-system in the eastern part of the country were also a cause why the city was way behind places like Bangalore, NCR, Pune, Hyderabad and Chennai.
"I hope the situation is improving now. To add to that, getting the right talent here is also very difficult. The rightly qualified people does not want to stay here or come back", he said.
The same was the opinion of Kaushal Dugar, founder of tea portal TeaBox.
"We started operations from Siliguri. But now shifted to Bangalore due to lack of talent available here", he said.
Although the registered office is still in Siliguri, the research and development centre is in Bangalore, he said.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
