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Success StoriesWomen

How Aditi Gupta Turned a Silent Taboo Into One of India’s Most Influential Social Startups

Last updated: May 23, 2026 5:29 pm
The Editorial Desk
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Before Menstrupedia became one of India’s most recognized menstrual education platforms, Aditi Gupta was a young girl growing up in a conservative town in Jharkhand, trying to understand something nobody around her wanted to explain properly.

When she got her first period at the age of 12, the experience came wrapped in confusion, shame, silence, and restrictions. She was told not to touch certain objects, not to enter places of worship, and to hide the reality of menstruation as if it were something impure.

Years later, instead of forgetting those experiences, Gupta decided to confront them directly.

That decision eventually led to the creation of Menstrupedia, a platform that transformed menstrual education in India through storytelling, comics, workshops, and culturally sensitive learning tools.

Solving a Problem Most Businesses Ignored

When Aditi Gupta began working on menstrual education, the challenge was not simply a lack of information.

The deeper problem was social discomfort.

Menstruation remained heavily stigmatized across large parts of India, including educated households. Many schools avoided proper discussions around periods, while girls often entered puberty without understanding what was happening to their own bodies.

Gupta realized that traditional educational methods were failing because they approached the topic either too clinically or too awkwardly.

So she approached the problem differently.

Instead of medical pamphlets or formal lectures, she used storytelling and comics.

That creative decision changed everything.

Building Menstrupedia Through Storytelling

While studying at the National Institute of Design in Ahmedabad, Gupta researched menstrual awareness deeply and discovered how widespread the knowledge gap truly was.

Together with her husband and co-founder, Tuhin Paul, she launched Menstrupedia in 2012 as an educational comic platform designed to explain menstruation in a simple, friendly, and culturally relatable way.

The comic used illustrated characters, conversations, and visual storytelling to explain puberty, hygiene, emotional changes, and menstrual health without fear-based language or embarrassment.

This mattered enormously.

For many girls, it became the first time someone explained periods without shame.

Turning Education Into Scalable Impact

What made Menstrupedia powerful was not only its mission but its scalability.

Gupta understood that social impact becomes meaningful only when it reaches people consistently and accessibly.

The company expanded beyond books into workshops, school programs, digital content, teacher training, and multilingual educational material.

Today, Menstrupedia content is available in multiple languages and has reached schools across India and internationally. The platform has reportedly impacted millions of girls and is used in thousands of schools.

Instead of building a charity-dependent awareness campaign, Gupta built a sustainable educational brand.

That distinction is important.

She transformed a taboo subject into a scalable social enterprise without losing the integrity of the mission.

Creating Trust in Conservative Spaces

One of Aditi Gupta’s greatest strengths as a founder was understanding cultural sensitivity.

Many awareness campaigns fail because they attack communities rather than communicate with them.

Menstrupedia avoided that mistake.

Its content remained educational without sounding confrontational.

Parents, teachers, and schools felt comfortable introducing the material because it balanced scientific accuracy with emotional understanding.

That balance helped the company gain acceptance in places where conversations around menstruation were traditionally avoided.

The platform later collaborated with educators, NGOs, schools, and healthcare professionals to expand menstrual literacy further.

Recognition Followed the Impact

As Menstrupedia expanded, Gupta’s work gained national and international recognition.

She was featured in Forbes India’s 30 Under 30 list and later appeared in the BBC’s 100 Women list for her contribution toward breaking menstrual taboos.

She also became known globally as one of the leading voices in menstrual education and adolescent health.

Yet what makes her journey remarkable is not awards or media attention.

It is the fact that she built influence around a topic most entrepreneurs avoided entirely.

Building a Different Kind of Startup

Most startup success stories revolve around speed, valuation, funding rounds, or market capture. Aditi Gupta’s journey followed a very different logic.

She built trust before scale, impact before visibility, and education before monetization. Menstrupedia succeeded because it solved a deeply human problem with empathy rather than corporate distance, proving that meaningful businesses do not always emerge from technological disruption alone.

Sometimes, they emerge from giving language to silence.

Why Her Story Matters

Aditi Gupta represents a new generation of Indian entrepreneurs, founders who understand that social stigma itself can reveal a massive unmet need.

She recognized that millions of girls needed more than products; they needed dignity, clarity, and education. In doing so, she proved that entrepreneurship does not always begin with the pursuit of wealth.

Sometimes, it begins with remembering what it feels like to suffer quietly and deciding that the next generation should not have to.

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Photo: Sugarmint

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