Co-optex Has 65,000 Weavers and Zero Venture Capital — Tamil Nadu’s Cooperative That Silicon Valley Can’t Explain

Co-optex Has 65,000 Weavers and Zero Venture Capital — Tamil Nadu's Cooperative That Silicon Valley Can't Explain

In a small cement-floored shed in Kanchipuram district, a woman named Lakshmi operates a pit loom that is older than most startups’ founding documents. She earns approximately ₹9,000 a month weaving silk sarees — each one taking four to twelve days — and she has never heard the phrase “series A funding.” Yet the organisation that buys her fabric, markets it across India, and deposits money into her bank account operates at a scale that would make many venture-backed D2C brands envious. I find that irony impossible to ignore.

That organisation is Co-optex — formally known as the Tamil Nadu Handloom Weavers’ Co-operative Society — and it connects roughly 65,000 weavers across the state to consumers through a network of showrooms, exhibitions, and increasingly, digital channels. It has no equity investors, no cap table, and no Silicon Valley pitch deck. It runs on membership fees, government support, and the sheer stubbornness of a model that was born in 1935.

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What Silicon Valley Can Learn From a Cooperative Society in Tamil Nadu

What Silicon Valley Can Learn From a Cooperative Society in Tamil Nadu

When I first encountered Co-optex — the Tamil Nadu Handloom Weavers’ Cooperative Society, founded in 1935 — I expected a story of dignified decline. What I found instead was an organization that today connects more than 65,000 weavers across Tamil Nadu, operates its own national retail network, and has never filed a venture capital term … Read more

How Tamil Nadu’s Cooperative Spinning Mills Created an Entire Industrial Town in Coimbatore

How Tamil Nadu's Cooperative Spinning Mills Created an Entire Industrial Town in Coimbatore

On a damp morning in Singanallur, a suburb that bleeds into Coimbatore’s sprawling industrial belt, I watched Ramasamy Gounder, a 72-year-old retired mill worker, point at a row of concrete buildings stretching along the Noyyal River. “Every one of those structures,” he told a local reporter in 2023, “was built with money that belonged to … Read more