Not long ago, the idea of a college student walking into Microsoft's office to pitch a business would have seemed unlikely. Today it is not just possible, it is happening. Twenty-four student entrepreneurs from Chitkara University recently did exactly that, and they did not stop at Microsoft. They went on to present their startups at IIM Lucknow, one of India's institutions for management education. For students who are still figuring out what they want to do after graduation, this kind of story is worth paying attention to.
 

Chitkara University Student Startups Pitch at Microsoft India and IIM Lucknow

The opportunity came through the Global Entrepreneurship and Innovation Program, organised by the Centre for Entrepreneurship Education and Development at Chitkara University. The programme took these student founders to Microsoft India's office in Gurugram and then to IIM Lucknow, where they stood in front of industry professionals, investors, faculty members, and startup mentors and presented their businesses. Not their assignments. Their businesses, with products, business models, and plans for growth.

The startups these students had built were working across sectors that are changing the world right now. Artificial intelligence, healthcare technology, farming technology, sustainability, enterprise tools, and fashion. Each of these sectors is changing fast, and these students had identified problems within them and built something to address those problems. That alone says something about the kind of thinking that goes on at Chitkara University.

At Microsoft India's office in Gurugram, the students came face to face with the company's Startup and Investment Team. These are not people who offer polite feedback. They work with startups every day and know the difference between an idea that sounds good in a room and a business that can survive in the market. The students were asked if people were buying their product, if the business could grow in the future, if the technology worked properly, and if the founders knew how to get money from investors. For many of them, it was the first time they had been in that kind of conversation. Not a classroom discussion, not a college competition, but an evaluation by people who do this for a living.

The second leg of the journey was IIM Lucknow. Students were invited to present there, and the reception was encouraging. Faculty members and mentors appreciated the thinking behind several of the ideas, the vision that the founders showed, and the way they handled themselves in the room. For students who had spent months or years building something they believed in, being recognised at a place like IIM Lucknow meant a great deal. It told them that their work had merit outside the university, and that gave them something no lecture can easily provide. Confidence.

When the students returned, they were felicitated by Dr. Madhu Chitkara, President and Co-Founder of Chitkara University. She congratulated them for representing the university at platforms like Microsoft India and IIM Lucknow, and she spoke about what entrepreneurship means. She said that it is about turning ideas into something that creates impact, and that watching students present their innovations in front of industry leaders and experts was inspiring. She also said that these experiences go beyond validating an idea. They shape the kind of person a founder becomes, and the kind of solutions they are capable of building for the world.

Chitkara University has been building its entrepreneurship ecosystem over the years. There are programs for mentoring, incubation support, investor interactions, innovation challenges, and collaborations with organisations in India and abroad. The idea is straightforward. A student with an entrepreneurial mindset needs more than a course on how to write a business plan. They need access to mentors, feedback, and platforms. The Global Entrepreneurship and Innovation Program is one way the university tries to make that happen.

For students and parents looking at universities for engineering or technology programmes, experiences like this are worth thinking about. It is one thing for a university to say it supports entrepreneurship. It is another for its students to be standing in Microsoft India's office in Gurugram and presenting at IIM Lucknow. What happened on those days gives a picture of the kind of environment Chitkara University offers, and for a student who has an idea they want to build, that environment can make all the difference.

ABOUT CHITKARA UNIVERSITY

Chitkara University is a UGC-recognised and NAAC A+ accredited private university with campuses in Punjab and Himachal Pradesh, recognised among India's leading institutions by NIRF, QS World University Rankings, and Times Higher Education. It offers undergraduate and postgraduate programs across Engineering, Business, Healthcare, Pharmacy, Design, Architecture, Hospitality, and emerging technologies including Artificial Intelligence, Data Science, and Machine Learning.

The University's academic model integrates internships, live industry projects, and research into core curricula, supported by 2,000+ campus recruiters and 300+ international academic and industry partners. Global Pathway programs, developed in partnership with leading universities in the United States, Australia and Canada, allow students to complete part of their degree abroad. With a focus on innovation, entrepreneurship, and applied learning, Chitkara University, prepares graduates for careers in India and internationally.