Gurugram,
June 2025.
As Samsung Solve for Tomorrow Season 4
sweeps across the nation, its message is clear - innovation is not confined to
metro cities; it belongs to every young dreamer with a problem to solve. After
energizing campuses in the North, South, and North-East, the programme has now
reached the states of Bihar and Jharkhand, drawing hundreds of students into
the fold of purposeful innovation.
At the heart of this new chapter were
three prestigious institutions in Ranchi Gossner College, St. Xavier’s College,
and Marwari College where design thinking open houses transformed classrooms
into idea labs. Meanwhile, students from IIT Patna joined virtually, proving
that geography is no barrier when it comes to shaping India’s future.
For Suraj, a student from Marwari
College, the workshop was an eye-opener. “It was the first time I saw how
structured thinking could turn the problems around me into actual projects.
I’ve always been aware of local issues — lack of sanitation, waste management —
but now I feel equipped to do something about them,” he said, his notebook
filled with early sketches of a waste-segregation solution designed for small
towns.
At Gossner College, the energy was
electric as students engaged in empathy mapping and rapid prototyping. Neha,
who is pursuing her graduation, couldn’t stop smiling as she shared her idea to
build a low-cost, solar-powered attendance system for rural schools. “This
workshop showed me how ideas can grow when you collaborate and think beyond the
obvious,” she said. “It gave me the courage to believe my solution can work —
not just in Ranchi but in every village with a chalkboard.”
Samsung Solve for Tomorrow is a
nationwide contest designed to inspire students to create innovative solutions
to address some of society’s most pressing challenges by leveraging technology.
Samsung ‘Solve for Tomorrow 2025’ will
provide INR 1 crore to the top four winning teams to support the incubation of
their projects, along with hands-on prototyping, investor connects, and expert
mentorship from Samsung leaders and IIT Delhi faculty.
Prashant, who joined the online session
from IIT Patna, was deeply moved by the larger purpose behind Solve for
Tomorrow. “It’s not just about tech or startups. It’s about building the India
we want to live in. I want to create a platform that helps farmers access
real-time data about soil health and crop cycles — something my own family has
struggled with,” he shared.
In every city Solve for Tomorrow has
touched, it has brought with it not just tools and techniques, but also belief.
In St. Xavier’s College, Adnan, a computer science undergraduate, found his
mission. “There’s so much talk about AI and automation — but very little about
using it for people at the margins. I’m working on a chatbot that can assist
elderly people in accessing government healthcare schemes. This programme made
me realise that innovation is not just a Silicon Valley word. It belongs to us
too.”
A Movement for Nation Building
Since its launch on April 29, Solve for
Tomorrow has rapidly grown from a competition to a nation-building movement.
With students from metros, towns, and heartland cities like Ranchi and Patna
now thinking critically, ideating boldly, and designing empathetically, the
next generation of changemakers is rising — from every corner of the country.
Samsung Solve for Tomorrow is not just nurturing ideas — it's nurturing a mindset. A belief that young Indians, no matter where they come from, have what it takes to solve for India and the world.