Introducing Entlar: Building the Intelligent Ceiling Fan Platform
We are Entlar — a technology company building the next generation of BLDC ceiling fans. This is our story, our mission, and what we are building.
Divya Bansal is the Product & Strategy Lead at Entlar, responsible for product vision, go-to-market planning, and the company's broader technology strategy. She bridges the gap between engineering depth and market reality — ensuring that what Entlar builds is both technically excellent and commercially viable. Before joining Entlar, Divya worked in product management and strategy consulting for B2B hardware companies across India and Southeast Asia. She has a deep interest in industrial design, manufacturing supply chains, and the emerging landscape of hardware startups in India. On this blog, Divya writes about the business of building hardware — from prototype to product, navigating the Indian manufacturing ecosystem, and how Entlar thinks about the convergence of robotics, AI, and sustainable engineering.
6 articles
We are Entlar — a technology company building the next generation of BLDC ceiling fans. This is our story, our mission, and what we are building.
Industry 4.0 is not a single technology — it is the convergence of cyber-physical systems, IoT, cloud computing, and AI into a new paradigm for manufacturing. Here is what it actually means for engineers on the factory floor.
From humanoid robots entering industrial production to the software-defined robot revolution — we survey the most significant developments reshaping robotics engineering in 2026.
A digital twin is a continuously synchronized virtual model of a physical system. In industrial automation, digital twins are moving from research project to operational standard — changing how engineers design, commission, and maintain complex systems.
The world faces a structural labor shortage that is accelerating in manufacturing, logistics, and agriculture. Robotics and AI are not causing this problem — they are the most viable solution to it.
Building a hardware startup in India is harder than building a software startup — and more rewarding. Here is an honest account of the journey from first prototype to scalable product, based on Entlar's own experience.