
On a breezy evening in Delhi, while most parents worry about their children’s homework, Amiit Deep Kumarr was busy questioning the very foundation of how children learn. For him, watching his kids prepare for competitive exams wasn’t just a family experience—it was a moment of reckoning. “The system was broken,” he recalls. “Rote learning, endless stress, zero personalization. I thought—why can’t we fix this with AI?”
That single question sparked the birth of AssessCurve.ai, India’s first generative AI-powered platform for K-12 education and competitive exams. Today, just a year after its launch in 2024, it’s already reshaping classrooms, empowering teachers, and giving thousands of students a fair shot at success.
The Leap from Corporate to Entrepreneurial
Amiit is no stranger to change. Before turning to entrepreneurship a decade ago, he spent years as a corporate professional, working with multinational companies across the globe. That experience, he says, gave him systems thinking, exposure to diverse cultures, and the ability to adapt quickly. But it also left him hungry.
“I knew corporate life would never give me the freedom to solve problems that truly mattered to me,” he says. “Entrepreneurship is risky, but it lets you design impact on your own terms.”
At 48, Amiit blends that global corporate discipline with a restless entrepreneur’s curiosity. His mission: to make education more efficient, inclusive, and deeply human—ironically, through AI.
Beyond Buzzwords: Real AI for Real Needs
What sets AssessCurve.ai apart is its integration, not disruption. Instead of sidelining teachers or replacing schools, it automates their administrative burdens and enhances their ability to mentor. For students, it creates adaptive learning paths and predictive analytics that adjust to individual strengths and weaknesses. Parents, meanwhile, get transparency they’ve long craved.
The platform has already reached 10,000+ students and partnered with schools in Delhi NCR and Rajasthan, with international expansion to UK and Dubai by 2025. Aligning closely with the National Education Policy 2024, it promises both scalability and sustainability.
“Education is not a business alone—it’s a responsibility,” Amiit emphasizes. “We’re not here to create another shiny app. We’re here to build a movement.”
Philosophy of a Relentless Doer
Those who know Amiit describe him as a blend of calm and fire. Spiritually grounded, he sees change as inevitable and doesn’t get bogged down by challenges. Yet, he is also relentless: “I don’t know how to quit,” he laughs. “If one door shuts, I’ll break open another. That stubbornness has carried me through the hardest days.”
His inspirations mirror this mix. He admires Elon Musk for his audacity to build massive ventures step by step, and treasures Nobel laureate Daniel Kahneman’s Thinking, Fast and Slow as a guiding light for decision-making.
Recognition on the Global Stage
It’s no surprise then that Amiit’s work is already gaining international acclaim. In 2025, he was awarded Most Inspirational Leader for AssessCurve.ai at the House of Commons, British Parliament, London. For him, however, the true recognition comes when a student in a small town, with limited resources, uses AssessCurve.ai to crack a competitive exam.
“That’s when I know we’re on the right track,” he says.
Advice for the Next Generation of Entrepreneurs
When asked what advice he’d give to budding entrepreneurs, Amiit is quick to respond: “Validate your ideas. Don’t just fall in love with them. Talk to users, research the market, map the lifecycle. A well-validated idea will always attract capital. But a half-baked one will drain you.”
For him, speed and adaptability are equally crucial. “Move fast. Fail fast. Learn fast. Entrepreneurship isn’t about avoiding mistakes—it’s about making them quickly and turning them into stepping stones.”
Looking Ahead
The road for AssessCurve.ai is ambitious: deeper penetration into Indian schools, rapid adoption in international markets, and eventually, becoming the global benchmark for AI in education. But for Amiit, the goal is larger than revenue or valuation.
He wants to nurture first-principle thinkers who can challenge norms, build solutions, and contribute to making India a $10 trillion economy.
“Great companies don’t just sell products,” he says thoughtfully. “They shape societies. And if we can reshape education, we can reshape the future.”
In a world where startups often chase quick exits, Amiit Deep Kumarr is building something far more enduring—a legacy of learning, powered by technology, guided by conviction, and fueled by curiosity.