

Tark Shank is a team-based mock startup competition that challenges participants to create and pitch hilariously impractical businesses. Blending entrepreneurship, improvisation, and storytelling, the event offers a playful take on startup culture while encouraging creativity, collaboration, and quick thinking.
What if you could experience the adrenaline rush of pitching a billion-dollar startup without having to actually build one? That's the premise behind Tark Shank, a fast-paced, team-based mock startup competition that swaps serious business plans for creativity, improvisation, and most importantly healthy dose of absurdity.
And obviously happening in the Silicon Valley of India, Bengaluru on the 18th of July, the event is designed for anyone who has ever watched an entrepreneur confidently present a wildly ambitious idea and thought, I could do that, Tark Shank invites participants to step into the role of startup founders for a day. Working in teams, attendees will be tasked with creating, branding, and pitching entirely fictional businesses, often ones that are intentionally ridiculous or completely unnecessary.
The event takes inspiration from the culture of startup pitches and entrepreneurial competitions while turning the concept on its head. Instead of focusing on market viability or scalability, participants are encouraged to lean into imagination and humour. The result is a competition where the most memorable are the ones that demonstrate the greatest storytelling and commitment to the bit.
Teams will have the opportunity to brainstorm a business concept, develop a brand identity, and craft a convincing pitch before presenting their venture to a panel. Whether it's a product nobody asked for, a service that solves a problem that doesn't exist, or a business model that sounds suspiciously impossible; success at Tark Shank depends on how convincingly participants can sell their idea.
We often associated start up culture with relentless ambition and serious innovation, Tark Shank becomes a reminder that creativity thrives when people are allowed to be playful. Whether you're an aspiring entrepreneur, a natural performer, or simply someone with a knack for coming up with terrible ideas and defending them passionately, this is your chance to build the next billion-dollar startup, or at least pretend you did.
Follow Kamal Makes Plans for more updates and register for the event here.
If you enjoyed reading this, here's more from Homegrown:
Could Pulp Society’s Summer Bazaar Be The Anti-Gallery Space Delhi Sorely Needs?
Bengaluru Poetry Festival: Attend A Celebration Of Language, Rhythm, & Storytelling
How A Sunday Morning Gig At Cubbon Park Became Derek & The Cats' First Live Album