Most startup advice comes from Silicon Valley. But if you're building in DeepTech, you need a different playbook. Here are two books that will completely change the way you think about science, innovation, and business.
📖 Book 1: Atomic State – Big Science in Twentieth-Century India
Ever wondered how India built its nuclear and space programs from scratch? This book dives deep into the early days—how Homi Bhabha, Vikram Sarabhai, and even Nehru shaped India’s scientific future.
The biggest lesson? DeepTech is never just about technology. It’s about building institutions, working with governments, and creating an entire ecosystem around your ideas.
Bhabha once said, “No power is as expensive as no power.” That’s exactly how you should think about your startup—if you don’t push forward, someone else will.
📖 Book 2: The Pasteurization of France
Now, let’s go back in time. Louis Pasteur didn’t just discover germs—he changed how an entire country thought about medicine. But here’s the crazy part: his ideas only took off because he built relationships with hospitals, politicians, and even farmers.
Bruno Latour, the author, makes a bold statement: “Truth is not discovered, it is constructed.” Meaning? It’s not enough to build something revolutionary—you have to get people to believe in it.
🚀 Final Thought
DeepTech startups don’t win just because of great tech. They win when they create the right ecosystem, partnerships, and influence.
So, what books have changed your thinking? Drop them in the comments! ⬇️
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