Utho Cloud Team
Manoj Dhanda - Founder and CTO - Utho
Manoj Dhanda – Founder and CTO – Utho

When Manoj Dhanda started Microhost in the early 2010s, the cloud as most Indian businesses know it today barely existed. He was in the business of website hosting,  practical, unglamorous, essential. But as the decade progressed and India’s digital economy began its steep upward climb, Manoj watched something troubling unfold. Startups and enterprises were migrating to the cloud in droves, only to find themselves trapped, paying unpredictable bills to distant global providers, struggling to get a human on the phone, and handing their data over to foreign servers with little say in the matter.

He decided not to become a reseller of someone else’s cloud. He decided to build his own.

In February 2018, what had begun as Microhost formally evolved into an indigenous cloud platform. By 2023, it had a name that captured its mission perfectly: Utho –  meaning “to rise.”

The Problem With the Global Default
For most Indian businesses, the path to cloud infrastructure ran through AWS, Microsoft Azure, or Google Cloud. These are world-class platforms, and Manoj will be the first to acknowledge it. But world-class doesn’t always mean right-fit, especially for the Indian market.

The complaints were remarkably consistent across company sizes and industries. Bills that were impossible to predict. Pricing structures so complex that even experienced engineers struggled to decode them. Support systems that felt designed to keep customers away from actual engineers. And underlying all of it, a growing unease about data sovereignty, the question of where exactly Indian businesses’ sensitive information was sitting, and under whose jurisdiction.

“What confirmed this as a significant problem was how consistently these concerns surfaced across different stages of growth,” Manoj reflects. Startups burning through runway on cloud bills. Enterprises navigating regulatory pressure. MSPs trying to build businesses on top of infrastructure they couldn’t fully control or afford.

Global hyperscalers were built for global scale. Utho was built for India.

Starting Where the Pain Was Sharpest
Rather than entering the market broadly, the Utho team made a deliberate choice: go deep into one industry first. They identified cloud telephony as a sector where the pain of high cloud costs was most acute. These platforms required always-on infrastructure, low latency, and high availability, and they were getting squeezed by the unpredictable pricing models of global providers.

Utho came in with significantly lower costs, predictable billing, and local engineering support. It worked. Those first customers didn’t just try the platform; they stayed and scaled on it. And they talked.

Without a marketing budget to match the giants, early growth came the way durable growth usually does, through results. Consistent performance, transparent billing, and engineers who could actually be reached on WhatsApp or Slack turned early adopters into advocates. Word spread through the networks of India’s startup and SME ecosystem, the same communities that had been most frustrated with the hyperscaler experience.

What Utho Actually Built
Utho is a full-stack cloud platform, compute, storage, Kubernetes, networking, security, GPU infrastructure, private and dedicated environments, and migration services. But the product story isn’t really about feature breadth. It’s about how those features are delivered.

The platform promises up to 60% lower cloud costs compared to hyperscalers, with transparent, usage-based pricing that bills hourly and caps predictably monthly. No hidden egress fees. No support charges buried in fine print. No long-term reservations forcing customers to pay for capacity they don’t need.

Data stays in India. That’s not a marketing line, it’s an architecture decision. Utho’s infrastructure is hosted in Indian data centers, designed to meet local regulatory requirements for sectors like finance, healthcare, telecom, and government, where data sovereignty isn’t a preference but a compliance necessity.

And then there’s the support model, which Utho’s customers consistently cite as a differentiator. Direct access to engineering teams. Real responses. The kind of support that makes a meaningful difference when something goes wrong at 2 a.m. during a production incident.

Co-founder and COO Kusum Dhanda, who joined as the platform began to scale, has been instrumental in building the internal processes that make this level of service possible consistently, transforming what began as a technology-led initiative into a structured, operational organization capable of serving thousands of businesses reliably.

Bootstrapped and Deliberate
Here’s something that sets Utho apart from much of India’s startup landscape: it has never raised external venture funding. The company has been built entirely on internal accruals and customer-driven revenue.

Manoj is direct about why this matters. “Many startups make early decisions based on free credits, brand perception, or aggressive scaling promises without fully understanding long-term cost implications.” Operating without investor pressure has meant Utho could build for sustainability rather than growth metrics, prioritizing customers who stay and scale rather than those who churn after a promotional period ends.

It’s a philosophy that shows in the numbers. The platform currently powers 22,000+ users and over 3,500 B2B businesses, spanning startups, SMEs, and enterprises. Among them is Photon Insights, an AI company building and training large language models, which migrated to Utho to escape the high and unpredictable costs of GPU infrastructure on global platforms. The move gave them cost-effective, predictable compute resources and direct engineering access, enabling experimentation that simply wasn’t financially viable before.

The Bigger Picture
Utho’s long-term ambition tracks closely with the broader arc of India’s digital ambitions. The platform is explicitly aligned with Digital Bharat and Atmanirbhar India,  the national vision of reducing dependence on foreign technology infrastructure.

The next phase of the platform’s evolution includes enterprise-grade networking and security capabilities, hybrid cloud solutions, seamless migration tooling, and a deepening MSP ecosystem that enables technology partners to grow alongside the platform. New data centers are in the pipeline to reduce latency and expand AI-ready infrastructure capacity across Indian regions.

Utho Cloud Is Challenging the Hyperscaler-Dominated Market

But the mission, at its core, remains the one Manoj articulated when he decided not to become a reseller more than a decade ago: build an infrastructure platform that Indian businesses can actually trust, one that performs, bills honestly, keeps data where it belongs, and picks up the phone when you call.

“Follow logic, solve real problems, manage costs wisely, and build with clarity of purpose rather than chasing trends,” he advises fellow entrepreneurs.

For Utho, that clarity has been there from the beginning. And it’s what continues to power the rise.