Quick Take
- Indian-origin CEOs now lead 15 major global firms, from Microsoft and Alphabet to WhatsApp and Chanel.
- Meta named CRED founder Kunal Shah as WhatsApp’s first Indian head on June 22, 2026, with a $900 Mn (Rs 8,460 Cr) deal.
- The trend shows India’s deepening talent pipeline into top jobs at the world’s biggest companies.
In This Article
Indian-origin CEOs now run at least 15 of the world’s largest companies, a roster that grew bolder on June 22, 2026, when Meta named CRED founder Kunal Shah as the new head of WhatsApp.
The appointment came with a $900 Mn (Rs 8,460 Cr) Meta investment in CRED, confirmed by Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg and reported by Bloomberg and CNBC. Shah succeeds Will Cathcart, who led WhatsApp for nearly seven years. The list spans technology, retail, and global finance, and it keeps getting longer.
StartupFeed Insight
The Kunal Shah hire marks a quiet shift. Earlier Indian-origin CEOs rose through corporate ladders over decades, like Satya Nadella’s 22 years inside Microsoft. Shah, by contrast, is a startup founder handed a 3 billion-user platform almost directly. StartupFeed sees this as proof that India’s founder talent, not just its managerial talent, now reads as global. Watch for more product founders, not career executives, getting tapped for Big Tech’s top seats. Our prediction: by end-2027, at least two more Indian startup founders will join boards or C-suites at trillion-dollar firms, driven by India’s payments and AI depth. By StartupFeed Desk.
Who are the Indian-origin CEOs running global firms?
Indian-origin CEOs lead companies across technology, retail, and finance, with combined market value running into trillions of dollars. The table below lists 15 prominent leaders and the firms they head, as confirmed by company leadership pages. The list is not exhaustive.
| Leader | Company | Sector |
|---|---|---|
| Kunal Shah | WhatsApp (Meta) | Messaging |
| Satya Nadella | Microsoft | Software |
| Sundar Pichai | Alphabet (Google) | Technology |
| Arvind Krishna | IBM | Technology |
| Shantanu Narayen | Adobe | Software |
| Sanjay Mehrotra | Micron | Semiconductors |
| Thomas Kurian | Google Cloud | Cloud |
| George Kurian | NetApp | Data Storage |
| Leena Nair | Chanel | Luxury Retail |
| Ajay Banga | World Bank Group | Global Finance |
| Nikesh Arora | Palo Alto Networks | Cybersecurity |
| Revathi Advaithi | Flex | Manufacturing |
| Raj Subramaniam | FedEx | Logistics |
| Shailesh Jejurikar | P&G | Consumer Goods |
| Ravi Kumar S | Cognizant | IT Services |
The most striking entry is the newest. Kunal Shah’s jump from a homegrown fintech to a 3 billion-user app is unmatched on this list for speed.
About CRED
CRED is an Indian fintech platform founded in 2018 by Kunal Shah, headquartered in Bengaluru. It rewards users for paying credit card bills on time and has grown to 17 million monthly active users, per the company. CRED recently secured a payments aggregator license from the Reserve Bank of India. Meta now holds a minority stake at a $4.5 Bn (Rs 42,300 Cr) post-money valuation.
Why did Meta pick Kunal Shah for WhatsApp?
Meta picked Kunal Shah to push WhatsApp beyond messaging into payments and commerce, with India as the testing ground. India is WhatsApp’s largest market, with over 500 million users. The hire began with a cold outreach from Meta product chief Chris Cox, who was seeking advice on WhatsApp’s next leader.
While it’s come very far, the delta between WhatsApp today and its full potential is massive, Shah wrote on X, adding that he looked forward to working with Mark, Chris, and the leadership across Meta.
The thesis is clear. WhatsApp Pay gained ground in India but trailed rivals PhonePe and Google Pay. Meta is betting a founder who scaled payments at home can finally crack commerce at global scale. Shah will step away from CRED’s CEO role, with strategy head Miten Sampat serving as interim chief. You can read Shah’s full statement on his official X account.
What does this mean for Indian founders?
For Indian founders, the Kunal Shah appointment signals that building a startup at home can now lead to a global top job. Earlier role models like Nadella and Pichai climbed inside one firm for decades. Shah’s path is different and shorter.
| Path to the Top | Example | Route |
|---|---|---|
| Corporate climber | Satya Nadella | 22 years inside Microsoft |
| Corporate climber | Sundar Pichai | Joined Google in 2004, CEO in 2015 |
| Founder-to-Big-Tech | Kunal Shah | Founded CRED in 2018, WhatsApp head 2026 |
What sets Shah apart is that he was hired as a founder, not promoted as a manager. That route is new for the Indian diaspora at this scale.
What is driving this trend?
The rise of Indian-origin CEOs is driven by a deep talent pipeline built on strong engineering schools, English fluency, and global mobility. Many leaders on this list trained at the IITs or top Indian colleges before moving abroad. The newest factor is India’s startup boom, which now produces founders with proven product and payments skills. Meta’s own history shows the pull: it has spent years and billions trying to crack India’s payments market, per Bloomberg’s reporting on the WhatsApp deal. Hiring an Indian founder is the latest bet on that opportunity.
What’s Next
Watch for WhatsApp’s payments and commerce roadmap under Shah, likely to show new features within the next 12 to 18 months. India will be the first proving ground. CRED, meanwhile, will test whether a founder-led startup can run smoothly with an interim chief. Could more Indian startup founders be next in line for Big Tech’s top jobs?
Frequently Asked Questions
Last updated: June 25, 2026 at 23:50 IST
Written by Avinash. Published: June 25, 2026. Updated: June 25, 2026. Have a tip? Write to us at editorial@startupfeed.in.
