Professor Turns $60 Into $120K Mushroom Empire in India
A college professor in Rajasthan started a mushroom business with just 5,000 rupees ($60) and grew it into a 1 crore ($120,000) enterprise. Now she's teaching rural women to build their own farming businesses.
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Annu Kanawat walked away from her stable teaching job to grow mushrooms in a single small room, armed with nothing but $60 and a bold idea.
The Rajasthan professor faced doubt from everyone around her. Society expected her to stay put in academia, but she saw an opportunity to create something bigger than a paycheck.
Starting with basic equipment and minimal space, Kanawat learned mushroom cultivation from scratch. She experimented with different growing techniques until she found methods that worked in her local climate.
Her tiny operation grew steadily as word spread about her quality organic mushrooms. Within a few years, that humble room became the foundation of Aamlda Organic Foods, now valued at over $120,000.
But Kanawat didn't stop at building her own success. She started training rural women in mushroom farming, sharing every technique she'd mastered through trial and error.

The Ripple Effect
These women now run their own small mushroom farms, earning independent incomes without leaving their villages. Many had never imagined running a business before meeting Kanawat.
The training program covers everything from spawn preparation to marketing finished products. Women learn to grow both fresh mushrooms and create value-added products like mushroom powders and supplements.
Kanawat's brand now produces ayurvedic mushroom products alongside fresh varieties. Each sale funds more training programs and helps another woman start her farming journey.
Her success proves that sustainable agriculture can thrive on small investments when combined with determination and knowledge sharing. Rural entrepreneurship doesn't require massive capital, just the right skills and support system.
One woman's courage to leave comfort behind is now lifting entire communities, one mushroom batch at a time.
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Based on reporting by The Better India
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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