https://thejournalshouse.com/index.php/JoARTESIE/issue/feedJournal of Advanced Research in Technological Entrepreneurship and Start-Up Incubation Ecosystems2025-12-20T09:36:47+00:00Advanced Research Publicationsinfo@adrpublications.inOpen Journal Systemshttps://thejournalshouse.com/index.php/JoARTESIE/article/view/1827Managing Innovation in Indian Startups2025-12-20T09:28:02+00:00V Basil Hansvhans2011@gmail.com<p>India's start-up ecosystem has become one of the fastest-growing in the world because of the rapid growth of digital technology, government policies that help businesses, and more people wanting to invest. In our fast-paced world, good innovation management is now one of the most important factors in the success and growth of a business. This article looks at how Indian start-ups think about, carry out, and keep up with innovation in product development, business models, and organisational processes. Utilising modern case studies and secondary research, the study emphasises essential facilitators, including entrepreneurial leadership, agile methodologies, open innovation practices, and the strategic application of emerging technology. It also points out problems that keep coming up, such as not having enough resources, not having enough skilled workers, complicated rules, and market uncertainty. The results show that start-ups that make innovation a part of their business through defined processes, a culture of experimentation, and relationships with other businesses are more likely to get ahead of the competition and develop over time. The essay ends with suggestions for entrepreneurs, policymakers, and investors on how to make India's start-up scene more innovative.</p>2025-12-20T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 2025 Journal of Advanced Research in Technological Entrepreneurship and Start-Up Incubation Ecosystemshttps://thejournalshouse.com/index.php/JoARTESIE/article/view/1828Indian Business in the Digital Age2025-12-20T09:30:45+00:00V Basil Hansvhans2011@gmail.comManjula Mallyavhans2011@gmail.com<p>The digital revolution has changed the way people do business in India, opening up new possibilities for innovation, growth, and reaching people all over the world. This article looks at how Indian entrepreneurship has changed in the digital age. It focuses on how the rise of tech-driven businesses has sped up because of the widespread use of the internet, cheap mobile technology, and government programmes that help businesses. It looks at how digital platforms, finance breakthroughs, e-commerce ecosystems, and startup incubators may help both city and country entrepreneurs get to markets and resources more easily. The article also talks about some of the main problems that still affect entrepreneurs, such as gaps in digital literacy, complicated rules, and a lack of capital. The report shows how Indian startups are using data, automation, and digital ecosystems to build long-lasting business models and compete on a global scale. It does this through case studies and insights from different sectors. The article ends by thinking about where India's digital entrepreneurship is headed and how it could help the economy grow in a way that includes everyone.</p>2025-12-20T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 2025 Journal of Advanced Research in Technological Entrepreneurship and Start-Up Incubation Ecosystemshttps://thejournalshouse.com/index.php/JoARTESIE/article/view/1829Technology Mission: Changes, Important Events, and Chances2025-12-20T09:33:04+00:00Sajimon P.P.saji@staloysius.edu.inV Basil Hanssaji@staloysius.edu.in<p>The rapid expansion of technology has changed the way national and global development missions work. It has opened up new opportunities for innovation and changed the way things used to be done. This article looks at how technological missions have changed over time by looking at three related areas: transitions, milestones, and new possibilities. First, it looks at important changes that are happening because of digitalisation, automation, and technologies that are coming together. These changes are changing social and economic institutions and policy frameworks. Second, it points out important milestones that define the present innovation environment, such as basic infrastructure projects and recent advances in artificial intelligence, clean energy, biotechnology, and linked platforms. Lastly, the essay talks about the strategic chances that these changes give to governments, businesses, and research ecosystems. It stresses the need for collaborative governance, flexible investment models, and creating capacity. By putting these parts together, the paper gives a forward-looking view of how technology missions might be set up to speed up inclusive growth, make society more resilient, and provide long-term benefit for society.</p>2025-12-20T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 2025 Journal of Advanced Research in Technological Entrepreneurship and Start-Up Incubation Ecosystemshttps://thejournalshouse.com/index.php/JoARTESIE/article/view/1830AI Boom: Analysing the Austrian School's Economic Ideas2025-12-20T09:34:57+00:00Ashok Mashok.21aug@gmail.comV Basil Hansashok.21aug@gmail.com<p><em>The swift growth of artificial intelligence technologies has instigated significant structural transformations in global markets, leading to a resurgence of interest in theoretical frameworks that elucidate entrepreneurial discovery, capital reallocation, and innovation cycles. This article examines the current AI boom using the economic theories of the Austrian School, referencing the contributions of Mises, Hayek, Kirzner, and Schumpeter. It contends that the AI surge exhibits decentralised knowledge processes, wherein entrepreneurial entities assess fragmented information and vie to predict unpredictable future wants. The research examines the emergence of malinvestment hazards due to misleading pricing signals in exuberant investment environments, alongside the capacity of spontaneous market adjustments to reallocate resources towards sustainable applications. By using Austrian ideas like subjective value, capital heterogeneity, and entrepreneurial awareness, the research gives us a way to think about both the creative energy and possible weaknesses of the AI revolution that is happening right now. The research finds that an Austrian viewpoint provides significant understanding of the catalysts, trends, and enduring consequences of AI-fuelled economic change.</em></p>2025-12-20T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 2025 Journal of Advanced Research in Technological Entrepreneurship and Start-Up Incubation Ecosystemshttps://thejournalshouse.com/index.php/JoARTESIE/article/view/1831Mapping the Evolution of Technological Entrepreneurship: Insights into Ecosystems, Behaviors, and Disruptive Technologies2025-12-20T09:36:47+00:00Amitabh Upadhayayamitabh14@gmail.comRameshwar Sharmaamitabh14@gmail.com<p>Technological entrepreneurship has emerged as a critical driver of economic development, innovation, and global competitiveness, serving as a catalyst for industrial transformation and new venture creation in both developed and emerging economies. Over the last decade, rapid advances in digital technologies—such as artificial intelligence, blockchain, and the Internet of Things—have fundamentally reshaped the landscape in which entrepreneurs operate. At the same time, the proliferation of incubation mechanisms, including university-based incubators, accelerators, innovation labs, and co-working spaces, has expanded the support infrastructure available to early-stage ventures. These developments have transformed how entrepreneurial opportunities are identified, evaluated, developed, and scaled, enabling start-ups to experiment, pivot, and commercialise innovations at an unprecedented pace.</p> <p>This review synthesises the evolution of research and practice across four central thematic areas: (1) the structure and functioning of technological entrepreneurship ecosystems, (2) entrepreneurial behaviour and decision-making processes within technology-driven contexts, (3) the transformative role of disruptive technologies and innovation dynamics in shaping competitive environments, and (4) international and sustainability-related dimensions that influence the global diffusion and responsible development of technological ventures. By integrating findings from interdisciplinary scholarship—including management, economics, engineering, psychology, and policy studies—this article provides a holistic view of the multifaceted elements that shape entrepreneurial success in technology-intensive environments.</p>2025-12-20T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 2025 Journal of Advanced Research in Technological Entrepreneurship and Start-Up Incubation Ecosystems