The Startup That Wants to Fix Indian Academia
Most startups begin with a market opportunity. Cohypo began with a problem that its team had lived through personally – the specific, lonely frustration of sitting with a research idea that is ready to be built, and having absolutely no structured way to find the right person to build it with.
The team behind Cohypo are researchers, educators, and builders who spent years inside Indian academia – attending conferences, navigating institutional politics, watching brilliant ideas die quietly because the person who had the question did not know the person who had the tools. They did not set out to build a startup. They set out to solve a problem they could no longer ignore.
The Gap They Could Not Stop Thinking About
The problem, as the team saw it, was not a shortage of talent or ideas in Indian research. India produces hundreds of thousands of researchers every year. Its universities are full of people asking serious questions about health, society, technology, education, and the environment. What has always been missing is the infrastructure to connect them – a reliable, structured way for the researcher with the hypothesis to find the researcher with the complementary skill, and for both of them to turn that connection into a published, credible piece of work.
Platforms existed for sharing completed research. Platforms existed for professional networking. But nothing existed for the specific, critical moment when a researcher has an idea and needs a collaborator to bring it to life. That gap – obvious once you saw it, invisible until you did – became the founding insight behind Cohypo.
“We did not build Cohypo to compete with existing platforms. We built it because the platform we needed simply did not exist.”
– The Cohypo Team
Building What They Wished Had Existed
The team spent months talking to researchers across India – faculty at tier-2 and tier-3 universities, independent scholars, doctoral students, retired professors who had never stopped thinking. The stories were different in their details but identical in their shape. Everyone had felt the frustration of the cold email that never got a reply. Everyone had watched a promising research idea stall because the right collaborator was just out of reach. Everyone had experienced, at some point, the quiet indignity of a system that seemed designed for people who were already connected.
What emerged from those conversations was not just a feature list. It was a philosophy: that the idea should come first, that collaboration should be structured from the beginning, and that every researcher – regardless of institution, city, or affiliation – deserves a fair shot at publishing work that matters. Cohypo was built around those three beliefs, and every feature on the platform reflects them.
What They Built
Cohypo launched with six core tools: a hypothesis feed where researchers post ideas and invite collaborators; a smart matching system that surfaces verified researchers across 27 subject areas and 304 sub-fields; a dedicated collaboration workspace with authorship agreements and contribution tracking built in; WriteSpace, a real-time co-writing editor designed specifically for academic papers; a structured peer review pipeline staffed by more than 600 Scopus-indexed reviewers; and an authorship and contribution log that creates a transparent, tamper-proof record of every researcher’s work.
Together, these tools create something that has never existed in Indian academia before – a single platform that takes a researcher from raw hypothesis all the way to a journal-ready, peer-reviewed paper, with every step documented and every collaborator protected.
The Bigger Picture
The team at Cohypo are not naive about the scale of what they are attempting. Fixing Indian academia is not a product launch – it is a long, slow, institution-by-institution, researcher-by-researcher shift in how an entire country thinks about knowledge creation. But they believe, with some conviction, that the right infrastructure can accelerate that shift in ways that policy and funding alone cannot.
India has the ambition. It has the talent. It has the government mandates, the research funding, and the growing global recognition that its universities are rising. What it has lacked is the connective tissue – the platform that lets all of that potential actually find itself. Cohypo is building that tissue, one hypothesis at a time.
The team did not set out to build a company. They set out to solve a problem that had bothered them for years. The company, it turns out, was just what happened when the solution was too big to keep to themselves.
Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/cohypo/