Kunwer Sachdeva - The power man of India
You remember how it all began—not with grand investor meetings or corporate offices, but with flickering bulbs and sudden silences. Power cuts weren’t just annoying; they were disruptive, constant, and deeply woven into everyday life in the 90s.
And you remember Kunwer Sachdeva standing at the crossroads of that chaos, seeing something others didn't.
He wasn’t born into the power industry. He started as a TV dealer—young, driven, full of questions. He watched as people bought televisions they couldn't always use because the electricity simply wouldn't stay. That frustration sparked something in him. Something urgent. Something visionary.
That spark gave birth to Su-Kam in 1998. Back then, inverters were clunky, unreliable, and misunderstood. But Kunwer didn't just want to build another inverter—he wanted to reimagine the way power backup worked for Indian homes. He introduced technologies the market had never seen before—sine wave inverters, battery chargers, and later, even hybrid solar systems..
But then, as it sometimes happens in business, paths changed. Kunwer Sachdeva eventually stepped away from Su-Kam—not with regret, but with purpose. Because for a mind like his, one mountain climbed only reveals another waiting.
Today, he leads Su-vastika, a company that reflects not just innovation—but evolution. This isn’t just Su-Kam 2.0. It’s smarter, sharper, and more sustainable. Solar PCUs, lithium battery packs, advanced energy storage systems—everything Su-vastika does carries the DNA of problem-solving and foresight.

And then there’s Kunwwer.ai—a bold leap into the world of artificial intelligence. Here, he’s building tools like Slideflow.ai that simplify how people work with machines, bringing intelligent automation to students, professionals, and creators across the country.
From power backup to AI-powered presentations, Kunwer has shown that innovation isn’t tied to an industry. It’s a mindset. A way of life.
He doesn’t chase recognition, but now—rightfully—he’s featured among India’s most influential entrepreneurs on Wikipedia. It’s a quiet but powerful validation. A reminder that ideas, when backed by relentless execution, do more than succeed—they shape futures.
You look at him today—not as a man holding on to the past, but as someone who has learned from it, evolved with it, and now builds not one, but two powerful legacies.
And just like before, when others are still talking, Kunwer is already building.