Our Story
We believe great design can happen only when we feel the passion for your business as much as you do. We design to grow your business keeping the fine balance between meeting the business goals on one end and creating the delightful experience on the other hand.
We believe that the more you invest in the initial 3 stages, higher are the chances of getting it right in the later stages and even higher chances of delivering a successful solution, solution that works in real world for both, the business and the user!
Meet Our Team
Since the day we have started, hiring has been an ongoing process and welcoming new,
passionate team members a most look forwarded event!
It feels great to see we are a strong team of 6, in less than a month, all from various backgrounds, with expert skills, years of experience, and not to miss, filled with passion. We are ready to rock!
To give a glimpse of incredible 6, let us introduce them in the order they joined
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Bansi Mehta
The Inventor
Bansi our fearless leader is one of a kind.
I think they broke the mould once God created her. She's the Inventor of Koru Tech and is destined to go far. At such a young age she has achieved a lot.
One thing is clear, she sure knows her business. Her employees adore her. We can say more about her but suffice to say that working for Bansi we get to exploit our creative talent as she brings out the best in us. -
Nitin Sawale
Creative Head
Nitin is the first person to come on board. He will truly remain special in that terms!
Nitin is a passinate designer who invests his intelligence and emotions into design.
He is open to learn new things, and always has an eye on how can we do better. Nitin loves Adobe Illustrator and speaks through the language of design – a language so creative and beautiful! -
Monodeep Samanta
Web Designer
This babu moshai comes to meet Koru all the way from Kolkata. He is the youngest in the team and with his charming personality, he wins everybody’s heart the moment they meet him.
Monodeep loves designing beautiful websites. You can always count on him for his honest opinion. -

Dhaval Shah
UI Designer
HTML5 and CSS3 is Dhaval’s second love, first being his wife!
His passion for the great design, HTML5/CSS3, Jquery and Twitter is so visible that it inspires others.
What stuns everybody is the way his fingers move on the keyboard when he is using Photoshop! It is like thunder lightening where you see the light first and the sound comes later! -

Prakash Giri
Web Designer
Prakash belongs to a small town of West Bengal and comes all the way from east to meet Koru at west! And when he comes to Koru, he brings the famous Rasogolla of K. C. Das from Kolkata! If you haven't tasted them, you are missing something in life. With this, Praksh also brings a lifetime contract of bringing us this delicious desert each time he visits his native place…
HTML5 and CSS3 are his tools at work and he is on his way to master them. His love for CSS is visible in his work! Prakash is the most quite guy in the office, however, his work
speaks loud enough for him. -

Palak Soni
Web Designer
Palak is one of those rare and blessed people who can be in the present. When he is working, he is 100% involved and dedicated to work. After giving 100% to his work, when he goes back home, he is absolutely there! You can give Palak work and be absolutely worry-free. He will not rest till it's done, a dream quality to have for any organization in their people.
The latest change Palak is feeling right now in his life is fatherhood. Koru and his daughter Gracy both entered into his life at the same time!
Meaning of KORU
The koru, which is ofen used in Maori art – tattoo, print and etching – as a symbol of creation, is based on the shape of an unfurling sliver fern frond. Its circular shape conveys the idea of perpetual movement, and its inward coil suggests a return to the point of origin. The koru, therefore, symbolizes the way in which life changes as well as stays the same. It also represents peace, tranquility and spirituality doing with a strong sense of re-growth or new beginnings – bringing to mind the lush growth of New Zealand’s famous wet forests.
The koru is also often associated with nurturing so when two or more interlink with others it is frequently used to represent the strength and purity of a loving relationship within a family.
To the Maori of New Zealand, the koru is also a symbol of interconnectedness from one life to another, linking one generation to the next. It is believed that a carving, which is worn with respect or given and received with love, takes of part of the sprint of those who wear or handle it. In this way, it becomes a spiritual link between people spanning time and distance.
There is a Maori proverb that says: “Ka hinga atu he tete-kuraka hara mai he tete-kura”
It means: “As one fern frond dies, another born to take its place”.


