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Supervity bets on Mumbai to drive AI first enterprise operations globally

Supervity is positioning itself to address this gap by redesigning enterprise operations around AI led execution, with India playing a central role in that strategy.

Founded in 2017 by Siva Moduga and Vijay Navaluri, the Boston headquartered firm builds what it calls AI employees, which are multi-agent systems designed to run workflows across finance, HR, procurement, compliance and operations. While enterprises continue to buy AI tools, Supervity believes the real challenge lies in not restructuring operations around AI execution. “We started Supervity with the idea that there is software, there is services, but there has always been a disconnect between both of them. Enterprises buy software and then employ people to operate that software,” Navaluri told a publication. “AI can be the bridge where it becomes both the car and the driver together… That is what we mean by an AI workforce,” he added.

India forms the backbone of Supervity’s execution model. The company runs large engineering and deployment teams from the country, with Mumbai emerging as a key enterprise gateway. “Our India teams are not just delivery teams… Mumbai is becoming our enterprise gateway for global customers,” Navaluri said. The firm operates across manufacturing, financial services, healthcare and government sectors in over 20 countries, with Indian teams deeply involved in building and scaling AI led systems.

At the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting 2026 in Davos, Supervity signed an MoU with the Government of Maharashtra to set up an AI GCC hub in Mumbai’s Bandra Kurla Complex. The hub is already operational and designed as an applied agentic AI research and innovation centre. “The BKC hub is live and designed as an open innovation environment,” Navaluri explained. Alongside plans for a product engineering hub in Andhra Pradesh, the company will also work with the state on AI first operating frameworks and talent development, including training up to 25000 forward deployed engineers. The move aligns with Maharashtra’s GCC Policy 2025, which targets investments of ₹50600 crore and the creation of 400000 high skilled jobs, positioning the state as a global hub for AI driven operations.

Also read: Viksit Workforce for a Viksit Bharat

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