GenAI 2.0: Why Indian Startups Are Pivoting from “Chatbots” to “B2B Agents”
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- nationtheneo@gmail.com
- November 28, 2025
- Startups Tech
By Santosh Sinha | Tech & SaaS Desk | Date: November 28, 2025
Bengaluru: If 2024 was the year of the “wrapper” (startups wrapping GPT-4 for consumer chats), late 2025 is the year of the “Vertical Agent.” A quiet but massive consolidation is underway in India’s GenAI landscape, with founders abandoning low-moat consumer tools to build high-value, specific B2B agents for sectors like Healthcare and Legal Automation.
This shift isn’t just a trend; it’s a survival strategy. With general-purpose LLMs (Large Language Models) like GPT-5 and Gemini becoming commoditized, Indian startups are realizing that the real money isn’t in talking to users—it’s in doing work for enterprises.
The Rise of “Agentic AI”
The defining technology of late 2025 is Agentic AI. Unlike passive chatbots that wait for a prompt, “Agents” are autonomous systems that can plan, execute, and complete complex workflows without human intervention.1
A recent EY India Report (Nov 2025) confirms this explosion: 58% of Global Capability Centers (GCCs) in India are now actively investing in Agentic AI to automate core business functions.2
“The prompt box is dead. Enterprises don’t want a bot that writes a poem about a contract. They want an Agent that reads the contract, highlights the risks, and emails the revised draft to the legal team.3 That is where Indian SaaS is winning,” says a partner at a leading Bengaluru-based VC fund.
Sector 1: Legal Tech (The New Goldmine)
The most aggressive adoption is happening in India’s legal corridors. The sheer volume of paperwork in Indian courts and corporate compliance has made this the perfect playground for B2B agents.
- SpotDraft & Jhana.ai: These aren’t just repository tools anymore. In 2025, platforms like SpotDraft have evolved into “Contract Intelligence” engines that use agents to redline agreements automatically. Meanwhile, Jhana.ai has gained traction with its “AI Paralegal,” which doesn’t just search case law but drafts research memos citing specific Indian penal codes.
- CaseMine’s AMICUS: Moving beyond search, CaseMine’s AMICUS system now offers “Visual Precedent Mapping,” helping litigators visualize how a specific judgment has been cited over time—a task that previously took junior lawyers days.4
The Shift: From “Legal Search” (Consumer) $\rightarrow$ “Contract Automation” (Enterprise).
Sector 2: Healthcare (Beyond the Chatbot)
In healthcare, the pivot is even more critical. The initial wave of “AI Symptom Checkers” faced trust issues. The new wave is purely B2B—focused on helping doctors, not replacing them.
- Eka Care’s “DocAssist”: This year, Eka Care released specialized evaluation datasets for Indian healthcare AI.5 Their DocAssist tool is a prime example of a B2B agent: it listens to the patient-doctor conversation and auto-generates a structured clinical note (EMR) in real-time.6 This saves doctors hours of typing, directly solving a “burnout” problem.7
- Qure.ai & Niramai: These players have doubled down on B2B integrations. Niramai’s recent Harvard Business School case study highlights its shift to integrating deep-tech thermal screening directly into hospital workflows, rather than just selling devices.8
The “Zoho” Wake-Up Call
The power (and risk) of Agentic AI was highlighted this week in a viral incident involving Zoho. CEO Sridhar Vembu shared a “sorry note” from an internal AI agent that accidentally revealed sensitive trade secrets during a negotiation.
While amusing, it proved a point: Agents are powerful enough to be dangerous. This has created a new sub-sector for Indian startups: “AI Governance & Guardrails”—building the safety nets that keep these autonomous agents in check.
Why Investors Are Loving This
For VCs, the B2B pivot solves the “Unit Economics” problem.
- High Retention: Once a hospital integrates an Agent like Eka Care’s, they rarely switch.
- Higher ARPU: An enterprise contract for legal automation pays significantly more than a $20/month consumer subscription.
- Data Moats: B2B startups are building proprietary datasets (e.g., Indian contract law, Indian medical accents) that OpenAI cannot easily replicate.
The Outlook for 2026
As we head into the new year, expect the “Agent Wars” to heat up. The startups that will survive won’t be the ones with the best “chat” interface, but the ones whose agents can do the most “boring” work—filing taxes, auditing logs, and reading X-rays-without getting tired.
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