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AI Expert in India, Chetan Deshpande, Unveils "AI Advantage Program" to Boost Profits for All Businesses Across IndiaPUNE, MAHARASHTRA – June 30, 2025 – Big news for all kinds of businesses and industries in India! Chetan Deshpande, a leading expert in Artificial Intelligence (AI) in India, has officially launched his special **"AI Advantage Program."** This program is designed to make AI easy to understand and use, helping businesses of any size or type make more money and run their operations much better. For the past eight months, this program was quietly tested, and it showed amazing results for many different companies. Now, it's open to all businesses across India. It mixes smart AI tools with practical business advice to give real, measurable results and a quick return on your investment. "Many business owners think AI is just for very large companies with huge budgets," says Chetan Deshpande. "My AI Advantage Program is here to change that idea. We show that any business, big or small, can use the power of AI in a smart way. Often, the AI tools pay for themselves in just 3 to 6 months!" Here's how the AI Advantage Program helps businesses, step-by-step: 1. Understand Your Business: We start by taking a close look at how your business works now. This helps us find the best places where AI can make the biggest positive difference. 2. Get the Right AI Tools: Next, we choose and set up the perfect AI tools just for your business. These are practical, easy-to-use solutions that are built to deliver quick results. 3. Work Smarter and Serve Better: AI helps you improve many parts of your business, like managing your inventory or making your delivery routes faster. It can also handle common customer questions automatically. This means your team has more time to focus on important work, saving you money and making customers happier. 4. Make Smarter Decisions: The program helps you use your business data to make much better choices. AI looks at lots of information, giving you clear insights to help your business grow and earn more profits. 5. Ongoing Support and Improvement: You're not alone after the setup! You'll get continuous help, training for your staff, and we'll keep checking to make sure the AI tools are always working at their best for you. Businesses that participated in the test phase saw their profits go up by an average of 24% in just six months. Experts are praising Chetan's approach, saying he is "democratizing AI access for the businesses that need it most." With strong results already, Chetan Deshpande plans to expand the AI Advantage Program nationwide, aiming to help 500 businesses across India by the end of 2025. You can join the program now, and usually, the setup begins within two weeks of signing up. In today's fast-moving market, the AI Advantage Program offers Indian businesses a key competitive edge, helping them to innovate, improve, and succeed in the digital world. --- Ready to See How AI Can Benefit Your Business? Get your FREE Ebook: "AI Guide for Business"today! Message us on WhatsApp: +91 866 826 1447https://www.chetandeshpande.com Or visit our website: [www.chetandeshpande.com]

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What Investors and Policymakers Get Wrong About African Agribusiness



Africa is frequently described as the world’s next agribusiness frontier. Yet, despite abundant land, labour, and demand, investment flows remain inconsistent and cautious. According to Bharat Kulkarni, an independent consultant and author of
African Agribusiness, the problem is not Africa’s potential—but how that potential is misunderstood.

Too often, agribusiness strategies focus on increasing production while ignoring the systems that connect farmers to markets. This production-first mindset leads to oversupply, price crashes, and farmer distress. Kulkarni argues that without structured markets, productivity gains alone cannot deliver prosperity.

Having worked across multiple African countries, Kulkarni has seen firsthand how weak institutions distort incentives. Farmers lack access to transparent pricing. Buyers face quality uncertainty. Banks hesitate to lend due to poor collateral mechanisms. The result is a fragmented ecosystem where risk is amplified rather than managed.

Commodity exchanges and Warehouse Receipt Systems offer a practical solution. By enabling price discovery, quality certification, and trade financing, these institutions reduce uncertainty across the value chain. In Ghana and Kenya, Kulkarni has been involved in designing futures-ready market frameworks that demonstrate how African markets can evolve—if reforms are sequenced correctly and grounded in operational reality.

One of the most common policy mistakes is importing advanced market instruments before establishing basic systems. Futures markets, derivatives, and complex financing tools cannot function without reliable spot markets, warehousing, and contract enforcement. African Agribusiness highlights why institutional sequencing matters—and how skipping steps leads to costly failures.

Another misconception is that African farmers are too small or informal to participate in structured markets. Kulkarni’s work shows the opposite. When institutions are designed inclusively, smallholders benefit the most. In Ethiopia, standardised grading and guaranteed settlement empowered farmers by eliminating exploitative intermediaries and information asymmetry.

India’s agribusiness evolution provides a valuable reference point. While imperfect, India’s regulated markets, cooperative systems, and commodity exchanges illustrate how scale, inclusion, and efficiency can coexist. Kulkarni’s ability to bridge Indian experience with African realities makes his perspective particularly relevant for policymakers seeking adaptable solutions rather than imported blueprints.

For investors, the message is equally clear. African agribusiness risk is not fixed—it is structural. Strengthen institutions, and risk declines. Ignore them, and even the best projects struggle to scale. This insight is critical for impact funds, development finance institutions, and private capital looking for sustainable returns.

A African Agribusiness serves as both a warning and a roadmap. It cautions against simplistic narratives and offers a structured framework for understanding Africa’s agricultural markets as systems—where policy, finance, technology, and institutions must align.

As global food systems face unprecedented stress, Africa’s role will only grow. Those who understand the mechanics behind its markets will be best positioned to shape its future.

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