The Week that Was: Indian Startup News Overview (21st September- 27th September)
- Indian startups secure significant funding across HR-Tech, Clean Tech, AI, SaaS, and EV sectors.
- All Things People, Chakr Innovation, Emergent, Good Capital, and Simple Energy lead the funding wave with Pre-Series A to Series C rounds.
- Investments aimed at scaling technology, expanding operations, and driving innovation in India and global markets.
The Indian startup ecosystem has set a new record by bagging another round of funding in a few sectors like Climate tech, Travel, Aviation Tech, Retail Apparel and Fashion, and Chemical Manufacturing & Digital Entertainment. It marks another win for the startupreneurs by raising funds and updating the growth probability and standardizing the products and services. The week went by successfully witnessing funds in every stage of funding from Pre-Seed, Pre-series, Seed, Series C, and others.
Funding News: All Things People Raises Rs 7 Crore to Scale HR-Tech Startup
Startup: All Things People
Founders: Anish Singh, Kshitij Jain, and Shashank Shekhar
About us: All Things People is an HR-tech startup focused on transforming human resource operations for companies through technology-driven solutions. The platform offers seamless employee management, recruitment automation, and performance analytics to help organizations optimize their workforce efficiently.
Founded Year: 2024
Office: Headquartered in India
Sector: HR-Tech / Human Resource Solutions
Funding Round: Pre-Series A
Investors: Undisclosed angel investors and early-stage funds
All Things People has raised Rs 7 crore in a funding round aimed at scaling its platform and accelerating growth across India. The capital will be deployed to enhance its technology offerings, expand the product suite, and strengthen its presence among SMEs and mid-sized enterprises. The startup leverages automation, analytics, and AI-driven tools to simplify HR workflows and improve employee experience.
Website: https://www.allthingspeople.com
Also Read: How Retail Giants Are Becoming Silent Co-Founders of E-Commerce Startups

