
In a significant funding news in India’s OTT ecosystem, dialect-based video entertainment platform Stage has raised $12.5 million in its Series B round, with Olympic gold medallist Neeraj Chopra being a key investor.
The round was anchored by global consumer tech VC-focused Goodwater Capital and India’s Blume Ventures. Other notable investors were Physis Capital, Mumbai Angels, The Chennai Angels, Venture Catalysts, and Inflection Point Ventures (IPV). The round also involved $2.5 million worth of secondaries for early angel investors like Harsh Shah (co-founder, Fynd) and Aayush Phumbra (founder, Chegg), offering rich exits to early supporters.
Stage, also called the “Netflix of Bharat,” is doubling down on its objective of taking hyperlocal video content to India’s non-metro viewers. Established in 2019 by Parveen Singhal, Vinay Singhal, Harsh Mani Tripathi, and Shashank Vaishnav, Stage is an OTT platform with a distinct edge of creating content in indigenous Indian languages like Haryanvi and Rajasthani.
The vision of the founders was one of simplicity and strength—build a platform where viewers in small towns and rural belts could witness authentic, locally relevant content in their very own dialects. And it appears to be succeeding. Stage, the company says, now has more than 20 million users and 4.4 million paid subscribers, an impressive achievement in a field that has long been dominated by the likes of Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, and Disney+ Hotstar.
The new funding is likely to further support Stage’s expansion by increasing its content library, enhancing technology infrastructure, and opening operations in other regional languages and dialects. The company has mapped out plans to increase original programming and double down on Hindi heartland state user acquisition.
“We are on a quest to create a homegrown OTT platform for Bharat—one that speaks the people’s language, literally and culturally. This funding provides us with the gasoline to enrich our content offerings and move into other dialects of India,” said Vinay Singhal, CEO and co-founder of Stage.
The charm of the platform is its laser precision on dialect-first entertainment. Traditional regional content, which is typically based on mainstream Hindi or state-level languages, Stage makes unique web series, stand-up comedy, poetry, and cultural documentaries in hyperlocal dialects, providing an entirely differentiated user experience.
The ARR of the company is now ₹180 crore, indicating robust unit economics and monetization. Nevertheless, Stage had experienced a revenue decline in FY23 to ₹2.94 crore from ₹3.87 crore in FY22, based on Tracxn data. The Series B round is poised to fund operational scaling and revenue channel stabilization.
Strategic Backing from Neeraj Chopra
One of the platform’s high-profile supporters is Olympic gold medallist Neeraj Chopra, who has endorsed the brand’s cultural vision. His endorsement has also further enhanced Stage’s credibility and reach, particularly among viewers in northern and central India. Chopra’s association with Stage is perceived as symbolic of the platform’s rural outreach and grassroots orientation.
OTT with a Dialect-First Twist
What really sets Stage apart in the saturated OTT market is its dialect-first strategy. While giant platforms are fighting for urban, English-Hindi speaking audiences, Stage is targeting the under-penetrated tier-2 and tier-3 audience. Its Haryanvi-language shows and Rajasthani stand-up specials have become viral hits, propelled to a large extent by word-of-mouth and community-based promotion.
“Regional is the future of Indian content, and within regional, dialects have an even larger role to play. Our perception is that there’s a billion-dollar entertainment opportunity waiting to be unleashed in the Hindi belt alone,” co-founder Harsh Mani Tripathi said.
Investor Confidence Grows
The entry of Goodwater Capital and Blume Ventures indicates high investor faith in the hyperlocal OTT segment. With rising internet penetration and smartphone adoption in rural India, Stage’s business model is considered scalable and meaningful.
“Stage is redefining what it means to build for Bharat. Their bottom-up approach, unit economics, and founder conviction make them a star investment,” explained an investor with Blume Ventures.
Stage’s $12.5 million funding milestone is a notable point for India’s vernacular OTT space. With solid backers, an expanding subscriber base, and a definitive product-market fit, Stage is ready to spearhead the next generation of regional content innovation. As digital content consumption in India becomes deeper than metros, Stage’s dialect-first approach may serve as a model for the future of made-in-India streaming platforms.