The Founder Behind TrackC

Hey, I'm the person building TrackC. No marketing team. No corporate backing. Just one founder who got tired of getting lost at concerts and decided to do something about it.

This page exists because if you're going to trust an app with your concert experience, you should know who's behind it.

How It Started

Travis Scott. Mumbai. A few years ago.

I'd been waiting months for that show. The night I'd been counting down to. I reached the venue, ticket in hand, ready to lose my mind to the music.

And then the chaos hit.

My phone signal completely died. There were no clear signs anywhere. Multiple gates, multiple zones, no idea which one was mine. I started walking — first toward what looked like the right direction, then realising it wasn't, then doubling back, then asking strangers who didn't know either.

I missed the entire opening set. By the time I finally made it inside, I was furious. Not at the artist. Not at the venue. At myself, for being lost. At the system, for letting this happen.

"We have GPS. We have smartphones. We can land a rocket on a platform in the middle of the ocean. Why is nobody solving THIS?"

That question wouldn't leave me alone. So I started looking for the answer.

What I Found

The more I researched, the more I realised — this wasn't just my problem. This was happening at every major concert in India. And globally.

Karan Aujla in Delhi. 75,000 people walking 1-2 km in the wrong direction. Coldplay in Mumbai. Crowds waiting hours at the wrong gates. Honey Singh, Calvin Harris, Keinemusik — every single major show, the same chaos repeated.

And here's the part that really got me: nobody was building the fix.

Not the venues. Not the ticketing platforms. Not Google Maps. Not Apple Maps. Not BookMyShow. Not Sunburn. Nobody.

The technology to solve this had existed for years. The demand was painfully obvious. The pain was real and recurring. But the solution simply didn't exist.

Why I Started Building

I'm not a serial entrepreneur. I don't have a long list of exits. I'm a builder who saw a problem nobody was solving and decided that someone had to.

I started TrackC alone, in my room, with no funding, no team, and no idea how complicated this would get.

Six weeks in, I had a working prototype.

Twelve weeks in, I tested the app at a real, sold-out concert. Karan Aujla Mumbai 2.0. 50,000 people. Mahalaxmi Racecourse.

It worked. Right gate. Right box office. Full offline map inside the venue. No signal needed.

The thing I'd imagined that night standing lost outside Travis Scott — actually existed. And it actually worked.

The Journey So Far

138K People Reached
7K+ Interactions
50K Tested Live
1 Solo Founder

Every number above happened organically. No paid ads. No PR agency. No marketing budget. Just one person on Instagram telling the story of why this app needs to exist, and a community of concert-goers showing up to say — yes, we need this.

What I Believe

The Problem Deserves a Real Solution

People paying ₹5,000–₹20,000 for a concert ticket deserve more than chaos at the gate. The fact that this has been the norm for so long doesn't make it okay.

Built in Public, Built with the Community

Every feature in TrackC was shaped by real concert-goers. The offline maps came from people venting about dead signal. The zone navigation came from someone tweeting about walking 2 km in the wrong direction. The female safety angle came from one comment that opened my eyes.

This app isn't built FOR a community. It's built BY one.

Privacy First, Always

I'm building TrackC to solve a navigation problem, not to harvest user data. Your phone number is for login. Your location is processed in real-time and never stored. Your maps live on your device, not our servers. That's not a marketing angle — it's a design principle.

Honest About What I Don't Have Yet

I don't have every venue mapped yet. I don't have every feature built. I don't have a big team. I'm still figuring this out, one concert at a time. But I'm honest about it, and I'm moving fast.

What's Next

The roadmap from here is simple:

None of this is going to be easy. Most of it isn't going to happen on the timeline I'd like. That's okay. The point is to keep building.

If You're Reading This

If you've ever been lost at a concert — this app is for you.

If you're someone who works at a venue, a festival, or a ticketing platform — I'd love to hear from you.

If you're an investor or operator who believes in fixing real, painful problems — let's talk.

And if you're just here to follow the journey — welcome. The next chapter is bigger than this one.

Want to Connect?

Email me directly. I read everything that comes in. No PR filters, no assistants. Just a founder and a real reply.

mike@trackc.in

The Bottom Line

I'm not building TrackC to flip a quick app. I'm building it because the next time someone lands at a concert and stands there panicking about which gate to enter — I want them to open this app and just walk right in.

That's the whole point.

Built in Mumbai. Built for every person who's ever been lost at a concert.