Difference between revisions of "Bhavin Turakhia"

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|website    = [http://bhavin.directi.com Bhavin's Blog]
 
|website    = [http://bhavin.directi.com Bhavin's Blog]

Revision as of 15:52, 27 September 2016

Bhavin Turakhia Directi CEO.jpg
BhavinTurakhiaCaricature.jpg
Affiliation: Radix
Country: India
Website:

LinkIcon.png   [Bhavin's Blog Bhavin's Blog]

LinkedIn: LinkedInIcon.png   [Bhavin Turakhia Bhavin Turakhia]

Bhavin Turakhia is Founder, CEO and Chairman of The Directi Group.[1] He is also CEO of ResellerClub, .pw, LogicBoxes, and BigRock, which are all a part of The Directi Group.[2][3]

In 1998, at the age of 19, he founded The Directi Group with his brother Divyank with a $600 loan from their parents. Directi is now an industry-leading Web Services Provider serving a growing customer base in 230+ countries; it is currently valued at $300+ million.[4][5]

Mr. Turakhia has been instrumental in defining Directi's corporate structure and business process automation, which enables Directi to continue growing at triple digit rates year after year.

He is a frequent speaker at various seminars. He also serves as a technical advisor to the local CyberCrime Investigation Cell, and designed and launched CodeChef, a plaftorm for coding competitions.[6]

ICANN Involvement

Bhavin formerly served as chairman for the ICANN Registrar Constituency for two consecutive terms. He was the youngest elected chair for this post in the history of ICANN.[7]

In a letter dated December 8th, 2011, Bhavin Tuakhia, along with twenty-seven other domain name industry representatives, wrote to Sen. Jay Rockefeller and Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison to support ICANN's new gTLD program, in response to the Senate Hearings taking place on the same day. They supported ICANN's argument that the program would be innovative and economically beneficial, and noted that the program took a diverse group of international stakeholders years to develop.[8] The letter can be found here.

Awards

He has won several awards, including the Entrepreneur of the year award in 2005.[9]

Education

Turakhia was first exposed to computers at a young age, and dove quickly into learning basic programming, devoting much of his free time to the hobby. He began teaching teachers and other students, and by early high school had already programmed several games in Basic.

After high school, Turakhia studied science at DG Ruparel College in Mumbai, later transferring to Sydenham College, where he studied Commerce.[10]

References