From school dropout to Rs 5 crore a year: How one Bengaluru man built a massive floral empire

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 How one Bengaluru man built a massive floral empire

A former school dropout, Srikanth Bollapally, transformed his life from a Rs 1,000 monthly salary to a Rs 5 crore annual profit by building a massive floral empire in Bengaluru. Starting with a small flower shop, he transitioned to owning a 52-acre farm, cultivating premium blooms year-round and achieving a Rs 70 crore turnover.

Bengaluru is famous for its tech billionaires and startup unicorns. But if you look just outside the city limits, there's a completely different kind of wealth blooming right out of the dirt.Meet Srikanth Bollapally. He’s 40, a former school dropout, and he takes home a staggering Rs 5 crore in personal profit every single year. His goldmine? Flowers. Here is how a teenager who arrived in the city with empty pockets managed to build one of India's most lucrative agricultural empires.

The Rs 1,000 Salary Era

Let’s rewind a bit. Growing up in a traditional farming family in Telangana’s Nizamabad district, Srikanth’s childhood wasn't exactly easy.

His parents relied on the land, but the financial returns were incredibly dismal. Drowning in family debt, they had no choice but to pull him out of school during his 10th standard.

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At just 16 years old, he packed his bags and headed to Bengaluru to help support his family. A relative gave him a job in the local flower trade. The starting pay? A measly Rs 1,000 a month. Most people would have complained or quit. Srikanth, however, paid attention.

He spent his days quietly learning the ropes - figuring out how to cultivate, harvest, market, and even export the blooms.

From Trading to Planting

By 1997, he decided he was done working for someone else. Armed with a head full of industry secrets and whatever tiny savings he had scraped together, Srikanth set up a modest flower shop. For over ten years, he bought flowers from local farmers and sold them across the city.The trading business was good, sure. But it simply wasn't enough for him.

He wanted to actually get his hands dirty and grow his own crops.

Building a 52-Acre Floral Paradise

Transitioning from a shop owner to a commercial farm owner is no joke. The initial setup costs for floriculture are massive, and the climate risks are high. Refusing to back down, Srikanth put together a solid business plan and knocked on the doors of the National Horticulture Board.Backed by government subsidies, loans, and his own savings, he bought his first 10-acre plot.

Fast forward to today? That patch of land has exploded into a 52-acre paradise near Doddaballapura. Walk through his climate-controlled polyhouses and greenhouses, and you'll see a dozen premium varieties - including roses, carnations, gypsophila, and gerberas - blooming all year round.

Big Money, Green Mindset

What's truly impressive isn't just the sheer scale of the operation, but how he runs it. Srikanth’s farm is heavily focused on sustainability.

Every single dried leaf or discarded stem is recycled into organic vermicompost to feed the next harvest.The math speaks for itself. From nationwide wholesalers to busy wedding planners, his fresh blooms are shipped all over India- bringing in a staggering yearly turnover of Rs 70 crore. In the process, he’s created steady jobs for more than 200 people from rural Karnataka.So, what’s his ultimate takeaway for the younger generation? It's simple: don't write off agriculture. Yes, it tests your patience. Yes, unpredictable weather can ruin your day. But if you are willing to put in the actual work, the soil pays back—and sometimes, it pays back in crores.

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