Versuchen GOLD - Frei

HOW SMALL FACTORIES ARE POWERING ZETWERK

Mint Mumbai

|

September 04, 2023

Despite the funding winter, the unicorn has been able to maintain its valuation

HOW SMALL FACTORIES ARE POWERING ZETWERK

Bengaluru: Spacenex Aero Pvt. Ltd’s name was inspired by SpaceX—the Elon Musk-founded company that designs, manufactures and launches advanced rockets and spacecraft. But unlike SpaceX, Spacenex isn’t widely known. It is a mid-sized contract manufacturing company in Bengaluru, which till two years back, could mostly make and test aerospace and defence components. Parts of cockpits; thermal equipment; rocket launchers; night vision lenses; heat sinks, and night vision cameras, among others.

The manufacturer found it challenging to expand beyond aerospace and defence. So, in 2021, it decided to become part of Zetwerk Manufacturing Businesses Pvt. Ltd’s growing network of contract manufacturers.

Zetwerk, which started in 2018, is now a unicorn, or a company with a valuation of over a billion dollars. It is not the usual tech or consumer startup you would come across—the firm aggregates and standardizes factories, particularly small factories spread across the length and breadth of India. Think of it as the Oyo of the industrial world. Zetwerk generates demand from large companies, like Larsen & Toubro (L&T), Tata Steel, and Bharat Heavy Electricals. These orders—let’s say to make 1,000 precision parts that will go into an aircraft—are next routed to the right manufacturers in its network. Manufacturers quote their prices and the work is finally sub-contracted. Such a process helps Zetwerk offer competitive costs to customers and ample capacity. Well, Zetwerk also runs its own factories in emerging sectors such as consumer electronics—while it aggregates factories, the company is also a contract manufacturer itself.

WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Mint Mumbai

Mint Mumbai

Mint Mumbai

Tax residency depends on your travel pattern and primary base

I am a salaried individual employed by an Indian company that allows me to work remotely.

time to read

2 mins

October 10, 2025

Mint Mumbai

Mint Mumbai

IN INDIA'S KNITWEAR CAPITAL, A SURVIVAL ACT

Hit by Trump's tariffs, textile manufacturers in Tiruppur are renegotiating deals while scouting for newer markets

time to read

7 mins

October 10, 2025

Mint Mumbai

Mint Mumbai

Nestlé looks beyond Maggi, bets on India petcare boom

Nestlé SA sees India as a potential top-three global petcare market after the US and China

time to read

2 mins

October 10, 2025

Mint Mumbai

Mint Mumbai

Tata Trusts strife bares a void

Today's meeting may set the tone for the philanthropic entities' future, a year after the death of Ratan Tata

time to read

4 mins

October 10, 2025

Mint Mumbai

The dollar is far from dead and the yuan is not staging a coup

Greenback doomsayers got it wrong. The dollar's reign is not over

time to read

3 mins

October 10, 2025

Mint Mumbai

Mint Mumbai

Celebrating the snake in jewellery and art

An exhibition in Mumbai reiterates the power of the serpent motif in ornamentation and shines a light on Jaipur's wealth of gemstones

time to read

2 mins

October 10, 2025

Mint Mumbai

Silver ETFs fired up by scarcity, festivals

Silver exchange traded funds or ETFs opened Thursday with a record 10-12% premium to spot prices, underscoring a scramble for the metal as festive buying, industrial use, and investor FOMO (fear of missing out) drove up demand against tight supplies.

time to read

2 mins

October 10, 2025

Mint Mumbai

Without wills, death sparks a costly legal ordeal for NRIs

Wills help legal heirs bypass months of bureaucratic and logistical hurdles to claim family assets

time to read

4 mins

October 10, 2025

Mint Mumbai

AI BROKE THE INFO BOTTLENECK, BUT VALUE INVESTING STILL DEPENDS ON INSIGHT

In a Bloomberg column, Guy Spier argues that AI has ended the golden age of value investing by removing the old information edge.

time to read

2 mins

October 10, 2025

Mint Mumbai

Mint Mumbai

TCS preps big pivot to AI, data centres

At least $6 bn investment in 6 yrs; Q2 revenue beats expectations

time to read

3 mins

October 10, 2025

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size