Lakshmi Pratury

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Lakshmi Pratury
File:Lakshmi Pratury BW.jpg
Residence Bangalore, India and San Francisco Bay Area, California
Occupation Entrepreneur, Conference Host, Speaker
Known for INK Conference, INK Asia, SingularityU India Summit in association with INK

Lakshmi Pratury is an entrepreneur, curator, speaker, and self-described “people collector”. She is the founder and CEO of INK. She also is the host and curator of live events and inktalks.com.

Lakshmi also serves as director of the SingularityU India Summit in association with INK,[1] the first ever summit in Asia by Singularity University. She is the recipient of numerous awards and honors, including being named as “Inspirational Icon” at the Audi Ritz Awards in 2015[2] and being included in Forbes Magazine’s list of “Women to Watch in Asia”.[3] Lakshmi has also spoken at high-profile conferences such as TED Conference in the US, the DLD Conference in Germany, and WIRED conference in UK.

Prior to this, Lakshmi spent two decades in leading roles in the technology, venture capital, and non-profit industries in the USA. She has lived in Hyderabad, Mumbai, Portland and the San Francisco Bay Area. She currently splits her time between Bangalore and the Bay Area.

History

Life and career

Lakshmi was born in Visakhapatnam, India. She studied at the Nizam College of Osmania University in Hyderabad where she received a Bachelor's degree and was awarded a Gold Medal in Mathematics as well as graduating at the top of her class. She went on to attend IIT Mumbai. She completed an MBA from the Bajaj Institute, India. She later earned a second MBA from Portland State University in Oregon. During this course of study, she minored in Theatre Arts.

Lakshmi worked at Intel in USA for 12 years in the fields of finance, marketing, business development and strategy. She worked with software developers, media companies and content companies to develop strategic relationships with Intel. She was also part of the team that started Intel’s investments into a larger technology ecosystem; this later evolved into Intel Capital. In 1999, she went on to join Global Catalyst Partners, a VC firm in Palo Alto, California where she focused on connecting India's software-development community with the US tech community. Then, she moved to the America India Foundation (AIF) in 2000 and founded the AIF's Digital Equalizer program, offering technology education to approximately 80,000 children and 2,000 teachers across India. She also launched the AIF Summit to showcase social entrepreneurs and the annual AIF Gala Program to cultivate philanthropic giving by the Indian diaspora. Together with Anu Sethuram, Lakshmi set out to create a bridge of intellectual exchange between India and the US in 2005. The pair’s first project, Lakshmi’s Lounge, showcased the personal journeys of global doers through interviews, combined with equal parts audience engagement and personal insight. The firm’s next project was the first of many conferences emphasizing culture and personal experience. In 2007 (Napa Valley) and 2008 (Mohonk Mountain House, New York), the Aamra Grove Conference brought together 50 of the world’s most influential Indian leaders through conversation that explored the Indo-US corridor and re-imagined India’s international presence.

Association with TED

A TED attendee herself since 1993, Lakshmi co-hosted TEDIndia in Mysore in 2009 along with Chris Anderson, the curator of the TED conference. She has compared this feeling to one of bringing your best friend home. “The independence that Chris Anderson gave me to co-curate, identify the stories and interact with India opened my eyes to the stories that exist here and need to be told. It also showed the power of the stories — Pranav Mistry’s talk is still very popular. Talks by people like Devdutt Pattanaik and Sunitha Krishnan catapulted them from being local intellectuals to being global personalities,” she recollects.[4] Nearly 1,000 attendees from 46 nations traveled to Mysore, India, to hear from a diverse group of speakers. This conference brought together accomplished artists, architects, technologists, business people, musicians, dancers, scientists and social entrepreneurs as well as one hundred young TEDIndia Fellows. Riding the momentous energy and demand generated from TEDIndia and encouraged by the enthusiastic response, Lakshmi stayed in India and founded INK.[5] In December 2010, Lakshmi curated and hosted the first INK Conference in Lavasa, India around the theme of ‘Untold Stories’.

INK

File:LakshmiPratury.jpg
Lakshmi Pratury, founder and CEO of INK, speaking at INK Asia 2015 in Singapore


INK describes itself as “India’s foremost platform for cutting-edge ideas and inspiring stories”. INK is known for its events such as the annual INK Conference, INK Asia, and INK Salons. The organization has grown significantly over the years. As of February 2016, INK had conducted seven conferences (across multiple cities in India and abroad); approximately 100 events; hosted 350 speakers and 70,000 attendees across these events; and received 20 million video views on inktalks.com and on various other social media platforms.


The 2015 INK Asia conference was a notable expansion for the organization because it was the first time a major INK event took place outside of India. This conference, held at the iconic Marina Bay Sands in Singapore with the theme of “Designing the Future”, was created as a forum for business leaders, entrepreneurs and technologists to connect and collaborate with their counterparts.



Eminent speakers at previous INK conferences include:

INK is a platform for innovation at the intersection of science, technology, community and culture. “We need to look at the new India with new eyes and focus on bringing digital access to everyone and cater to the needs of the youth in a whole new way. We need to give them a platform to shine and we need to listen to them more,” said Lakshmi in a 2015 interview.[5] Beyond live events, INK is a community that transforms imagination to impact. This is demonstrated by programs such as INK Fellows, an initiative started in 2010, which identifies young change-makers from different fields and provides them the support necessary to leverage their impact across the world. To date, 133 Fellows have been part of the program. INK is independent of TED, and values a continued warm relationship with the New York based TED organization.[6]

Conferences curated and hosted/co-hosted by Lakshmi Pratury

  • SingularityU India Summit in association with INK: Feb 26-27 2016, Mumbai, India
  • INK Conference 2015: “Disrupt”, Oct 16-18, Mumbai, India
  • INK Asia 2015: “Designing the Future”, August 21, Singapore
  • INK Conference 2014: “Beyond Boundaries”, Oct 31-Nov 2, Mumbai, India
  • INK Conference 2013: “All that Matters”, Oct 25-27, Kochi, India
  • INK Conference 2012: “Designing the Future - NOW”, Dec 11-14, Pune, India
  • INK Conference 2011: “Power of the Journey”, Dec 8-11, Jaipur, India
  • INK Conference 2010: “Untold Stories”, Dec 9-10, Lavasa, India
  • TED India 2009 (co-hosted): “The Future Beckons”, Nov 4-7, Mysore, India

Talks by Lakshmi Pratury

  • Talk at TEDxBayArea 2013, SF, USA.[7]
  • “Learn to Let go and Keep on” at TEDxTaipei 2013, Taiwan.[8]
  • “Remembering and Responding Online” at TED 2013, LA, USA.[9]
  • “Understanding India” at DLD Conference 2012, Munich, Germany.[10]
  • “Moving into the Future while Taking the Traditions Along” at TEDxASB 2012, Mumbai, India.[11]
  • Talk at WIRED 2012, London, UK.[12]
  • Talk at DLD Women 2011, Munich, Germany.[13]
  • Talk at DLD Conference 2011, Munich, Germany.[14]
  • “What the West Can Learn from the East” at TEDxDanubia 2011, Budapest, Hungary.[15]
  • Talk at WIRED 2011, London UK.[16]
  • Talk at AdAsia 2011, New Delhi, India.[17]
  • Talk at ideaCity 2012, Toronto, Canada.[18]
  • Talk at TEDxNUS 2010, Singapore.[19]
  • “The Lost Art of Letter Writing” at TED 2007, California, USA.[20]

Other Projects

Lakshmi is the host and interviewer of “Talk at 12 with Lakshmi Pratury”, a show on Radio One, 94.3 FM in Bangalore, India. She has also published articles in the San Francisco Chronicle, the San Jose Mercury News and Mint. Furthermore, she has contributed to radio programming on National Public Radio; has been featured in a podcast on “An Organic Conversation” show on the Organic Media Network; and has acted in theatrical productions. Lakshmi was featured in the seventh anniversary issue of Vogue India in 2014, which was themed on women empowerment.[21] She also appeared in the 2016 video “Hum Honge Kamyab”,[22] an initiative of Paper Boat which featured some of India’s celebrated entrepreneurs and for Ford India,[23] where she was featured along with Indian actor Farhan Akhtar.

References

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External links