Six products for the working day of India’s small businesses. One studio, in Bhandara, Maharashtra.

Biometric attendance and access for hostels, offices, factories, and colleges. ZKTeco K40 Pro at the door; parent, warden and manager PWAs in everyone's pocket.

Multi-tenant school and institution management. Admissions, fees, student records, staff — running today at a Bhandara ITI and rolling out to its peers.

Field sales CRM for consultants and distributors. WhatsApp follow-ups, voice notes, owner-to-team hand-offs — how Indian small businesses actually run sales.

Inventory and stock dashboard for manufacturing units. Raw material, work-in-progress, finished goods, cycle counts — all on one screen.
Every product ships in Marathi, Hindi and English from day one — and the voice-led ones speak eleven Indian languages. The local language isn’t buried five menus deep; it’s the default.
A solar dealership with five on the team, or five hundred. A hostel of fifteen students, or a college of a hundred. An office of fifty running daily attendance. A factory line with a hundred employees clocking in. A sales team of three, or three hundred. The catalogue serves all of them — and the pricing scales with the customer, not faster.

Built AI products at startups. A master’s in Artificial Intelligence from the University of Surrey. I came home to India with one conviction: the country that raised me needs software built for it — and I know how to build it.
The shopkeepers, dealers, college admins, factory owners and hostel wardens I grew up around keep meticulous books in three languages, on paper, and run their year-ends from memory. They don’t need a platform.
They need tools that respect how they already work. Saundarya Roof exists to build exactly those — solar vendor management, biometric attendance and access, school and college administration, field sales, inventory, voice-first ledgers in eleven Indian languages, and whatever the next small business asks for. We have never raised venture money. We’re open to it — if it helps us scale faster. Customers fund the studio today. Most of the catalogue earns money today; the rest will, soon enough.
— Vaibhav Talekar