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From Patna to Profit: Rohit Kashyap’s Food-Tech Startup at 14.

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At just 14 years old, Rohit Kashyap from Patna was not thinking about video games or exams. He was thinking about hunger. Watching children in his neighborhood go without proper meals made him wonder if there was a way to make nutritious food accessible and affordable. That question became the spark for his food-tech startup, Food4All, an idea that has now turned into a growing venture with partnerships in schools, NGOs, and local kitchens.

Rohit started small, cooking simple meals with his mother and delivering them to nearby slum areas. He realized early that charity could not solve the problem forever. So he began looking for a way to combine social purpose with business. By using digital tools, he created a model where leftover food from restaurants and events could be collected, checked for quality, and redistributed safely through a network of volunteers. Every delivery was tracked using a basic online platform he built with the help of a friend who knew coding.

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Within a year, Food4All had become more organized, operating through small kitchens that prepared affordable thalis for school children and daily wage workers. Local eateries started collaborating with him, impressed by his dedication and the transparency of his system. The venture grew through word of mouth, and Rohit began earning a small income that he reinvested to expand his outreach. His goal was not just to feed people but to make the idea sustainable, so he created a hybrid model combining paid meal services with donation-based food drives.

What sets Rohit apart is his ability to think like a social entrepreneur at such a young age. He once said that food is not just a business, it’s a right that can create dignity and hope. His simple yet structured approach caught attention from mentors in the startup ecosystem of Bihar, who helped him polish his model and connect with small investors. Today, Food4All operates in multiple areas of Patna and is slowly expanding to other towns through school-based community programs.

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The startup’s tech side continues to evolve as Rohit learns coding and data tracking. He dreams of building an app that can match surplus food suppliers with hungry communities in real time. His team of volunteers includes college students, homemakers, and even local rickshaw drivers who deliver meals daily.

Rohit Kashyap’s journey from Patna to profit is more than a story of a young founder; it is about compassion meeting entrepreneurship. At 14, he proved that leadership has no age limit and that even small actions, when powered by purpose, can build something truly big for India’s future.

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