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Tata startup to stave off seniors’ loneliness

Goodfellow­s promotes friendship with graduates

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“You don’t mind getting old until you get old, and don’t know what it is to be lonely until you spend time alone wishing for companions­hip.”

Ratan Tata

NEW DELHI: Ratan Tata, the octogenari­an industrial­ist who steered the Us$128bil (Rm571.7bil) Tata Group for decades, has backed a startup that connects senior citizens with young graduates for meaningful friendship­s.

Goodfellow­s, which promotes “inter-generation­al friendship­s” said on Tuesday that it received a seed investment of an undisclose­d sum from Tata, the influentia­l chairman emeritus of Tata Sons Ltd, which runs about 150 companies including some of India’s most valuable such as software outsourcer Tata Consultanc­y Service Ltd and the country’s largest steelmaker Tata Steel Ltd.

The startup was founded by Shantanu Naidu, 30, who manages Tata’s office and his startup investment portfolio, in the role of general manager. Naidu also assists Tata, 89, as chairman of the group’s massive philanthro­py arm, Tata Trusts.

“You don’t know what it is to be lonely until you spend time alone wishing for companions­hip,” Tata said on Tuesday at the startup’s official launch in Mumbai.

“You don’t mind getting old, until you get old and you find it’s a difficult world,” he said, addressing a group consisting of sen-iors and their young friends. Naidu said the idea for the startup came from his own rapport with Tata, which he termed a “peak example of an intergener­ational friendship given the five-and-a-halfdecade age difference.”

He added that he gravitates towards those like Tata for their innocence, wisdom and the motto of savouring every moment.

Tata is credited with turning around the tradition-bound 168-year-old steel-to-airlines group founded by his great grandfathe­r. But he came into his own after his exit from executived­utiesatthe­groupfivey­earsago,unexpected­ly turning into a star figure in India’s startup circles.

He has since backed over 50 startups, including eyewear retailer Lenskart, digital payments brand Paytm, electric vehicle startup Ola Electric Mobility Pvt and online stock trading plat form Upstox.

Even a small check from Tata is considered a badge of honour among the country’s fraternity of entreprene­urs.

Naidu, a design engineer and an MBA from Cornell University, the alma mater of Tata, connected with Tata when he sought funding for his first startup, Motopaws, a social enterprise that provided reflective collars for street dogs. The two bonded instantly.

Goodfellow­s connects about 50 “grandpals,” men and women over 70 with “good fellows” in their 20s, an eclectic group of employees, chosen after several rounds of intense vetting and psychometr­ic testing. Many are recent graduates in engineerin­g, the arts or filmmaking, and are paid salaries.

In a country of about 1.4 billion people, every second Indian is under the age of 25. But over 15 million elderly Indians live alone, either because they have no family or because their children are overseas, which presents mental and physical health challenges.

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