Not every entrepreneur wants to be in the spotlight. Some just want to build something useful — and then keep building it, quietly, until the work speaks for itself.
Shivendu Madhava is that kind of person.
He founded All India Technical Consultancy Corporation Limited, better known as AITCCL, with a straightforward conviction: that the real bottleneck for most businesses and institutions in India isn’t effort or intent it’s the lack of honest, technically sound guidance at the right moment. A promising project can fall apart not because the idea was bad, but because nobody with the right knowledge was in the room when it mattered.
AITCCL was built to be that presence in the room.
From One City to Many
The early years were about proving the model worked. The firm started offering project evaluation and consultancy services, helping clients think through feasibility, resource planning, and execution the unglamorous but essential groundwork that separates businesses that survive from those that don’t.
What grew from that foundation is a consultancy that now covers an unusually wide range: management audits, smart city planning, agriculture and environment advisory, skill development, livelihood promotion, and human resource consulting. That breadth isn’t accidental. It reflects years of responding to what clients actually needed, rather than staying comfortable within a narrow niche.
The firm now operates across Dehradun, Patna, Jaipur, Bhopal, Lucknow, Varanasi, Kolkata, Kochi, and Bangalore. For an organisation that could have stayed comfortably Delhi-centric, that footprint says something real about where Madhava wanted the work to go. The company has expanded its offices in Dubai, Malaysia, Singapore, and the United States.
The Entrepreneurship Piece
One thread that runs consistently through AITCCL’s work is its focus on entrepreneurs and first-generation builders people with ideas but without the network or knowledge to navigate the early maze of starting something. The organisation has worked with educational institutions on training programs, and has helped new ventures get off the ground through need-based consulting and project report preparation.
Madhava himself has spoken about believing in the power of execution over ideas alone. It’s a mindset that shows up in how the firm operates less interested in theoretical frameworks, more focused on what can actually be done with what a client has in front of them.
Now, the Gulf
After years of consolidating its position across India, AITCCL is now looking outward. Madhava has been vocal about the firm’s plans to enter the Gulf consultancy market a region going through significant transformation, with major investments flowing into smart infrastructure, sustainability, and economic diversification.
It’s a competitive space, and Madhava knows it. But AITCCL’s decade of experience working on exactly these kinds of projects inside India gives it something that newer entrants to the international market often lack: a track record that’s been tested in messy, complex, real-world conditions.
What Stays the Same
Through all of this, there’s something about AITCCL that hasn’t changed a sense that the work is supposed to mean something beyond the invoice. The organisation has been involved in CSR initiatives including healthcare outreach and student support, reflecting a view that a consultancy’s obligations don’t end at the client’s door.
Shivendu Madhava hasn’t built the loudest firm in the industry. But he’s built one that keeps showing up, in more cities, in more sectors, and soon, in more countries. Sometimes that’s the more interesting story.
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