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28-Year-Old CS Graduate Builds Trust-First Interior Design  Sourcing Platform in India 

28-Year-Old CS Graduate Builds Trust-First Interior Design  Sourcing Platform in India 
28-Year-Old CS Graduate Interior Design Startup

SUMMARY

Anyone who has undertaken a home renovation in India can relate to the challenges of  sourcing interior materials. The promises of “imported quality,” misleading samples,  counterfeit labels, and incorrect specifications are all too familiar. For many  homeowners, these purchases represent years of hard-earned savings, making each  decision both emotional and critical. 

Despite being a rapidly expanding, multi-billion-dollar sector, India’s interior design  sourcing market is still fragmented, unclear, and heavily reliant on trust. While there are  online marketplaces and listing platforms available, a crucial question lingers: Is the  product authentic and sourced from an authorised dealer? 

This is precisely the issue that ThinkHome, a Mumbai-based startup founded in 2025,  seeks to address. 

The Challenges of Interior Material Sourcing in India 

Sourcing interior materials in India involves navigating a complex web of brands,  distributors, dealers, contractors, and designers. Although global brands are  aggressively marketing their products, the experience for end customers remains largely  unregulated. 

Problems such as material substitution, inflated prices, counterfeit branding, and  unverified claims are prevalent, particularly in categories like plywood, lighting,  furniture, and sanitaryware. Platforms like Justdial and IndiaMart often prioritise paid  listings over authenticity, leading to unqualified and unreliable leads.

As founder Pratit Biscuitwala points out, sourcing materials across different cities  exacerbates the problem. A homeowner in Mumbai looking for materials for a project in  Delhi faces significant challenges in verifying whether a dealer is authorised or if the  product is genuine. 

Who Is Pratit Biscuitwala? 

Pratit Biscuitwala, a computer science graduate, hails from India. He completed his  Cambridge A-Levels at Podar International School before moving to the US to study  Computer Science at California State University, East Bay. 

After graduating during the COVID-19 pandemic, he returned to India and joined  Infibeam Avenues, the fintech company behind CC Avenue. Although this role provided  him with valuable experience in large-scale tech systems, Pratit felt a strong desire to  create something of his own. 

The concept for ThinkHome was born out of a real-world challenge. Pratit’s brother runs  an interior design firm, where sourcing materials proved to be time-consuming,  stressful, and fraught with uncertainty. Designers and clients spent an inordinate  amount of time verifying dealers and double-checking claims, often still facing doubt. 

How ThinkHome Came to Life 

ThinkHome was developed in-house over a span of eight months. Pratit created the web  platform along with iOS and Android apps, while his brother invested in the venture and  provided industry expertise. 

The platform functions like a Pinterest-style inspiration board, allowing users to browse  verified interior products—sofas, lights, fixtures, and furniture—complete with  specifications and approximate pricing. Users can submit an enquiry with minimal  information, after which only authorised dealers reach out to them. 

ThinkHome has redefined the traditional model by onboarding verified dealers first and  granting them category exclusivity. For instance, if a dealer is authorised to sell Kohler  products, all Kohler enquiries in that region are directed solely to them. 

Not an E-Commerce Platform—By Design 

ThinkHome is deliberately not an e-commerce marketplace. It operates on a pay-per lead model, where dealers pay ₹200 for each qualified lead, without any subscriptions  or sales commissions. 

Every dealer listed on the platform is brand-verified, significantly reducing the risks of  counterfeit products or misrepresentation. Since users can view complete product  details before making an enquiry, the leads generated are highly intent-driven.

Growth, Expansion, and Future Plans 

ThinkHome officially launched on October 3, 2025, and currently caters to over 1,100  daily users, with Mumbai being its strongest market. Plans for expansion to Delhi,  Bengaluru, and Chennai are already underway, along with the introduction of a pincode based sourcing model. 

A newly launched WhatsApp-assisted sourcing feature connects users with in-house  interior designers who assist in shortlisting products and raising enquiries—completely  free of charge. 

Bootstrapped and focused on long-term impact, Pratit’s vision is clear: to establish  India’s first tech-led, trust-first interior sourcing platform grounded in transparency and  authorised access.

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