The Leaders Shaping India’s AI Future
The usual way to rank a country in artificial intelligence is to count its chips, its capital, and its frontier labs. By that measure, India trails the leaders.
But India’s AI story is not primarily about scale at the frontier. It is about making the technology usable across a population of more than a billion people, hundreds of languages, and a mobile-first internet.
They make an odd group, the fifty here. One is a union minister. Another helped build Aadhaar—the identity layer a billion people now carry in their pockets. A few are teaching machines to read medical scans in places that have never had a radiologist. And one spends her days asking, in rooms where the question isn’t always welcome, who all this data is really for.
What links them is not the titles but a set of choices, about language and compute, governance and trust, being made quietly right now in ways that will be hard to undo.
Those choices are what this list is really about.
Our AI20 list mapped the organizations. AI50 turns to the people. MIT Sloan Management Review India recognizes 50 individuals for their influence, technical depth, and role in deciding how AI gets built, deployed, and governed across the country.
Editor’s Note: MIT Sloan Management Review’s AI Research Forum will make its India debut in Bengaluru on 23 July 2026, bringing together enterprise leaders, researchers, and practitioners to examine how autonomous AI is moving from experimentation to governed deployment at scale. To speak, partner, or attend, register here.