A soybean farmer from Madhya Pradesh, once relied on local traders to sell his produce, often at prices that barely covered his costs. Last season, he checked market rates across districts through an app linked to eNAM and sold his crop at an 18% higher price. In Karnataka, a woman farmer used Ninjacart to sell her tomatoes directly to restaurants in Bengaluru, avoiding spoilage and saving transport expenses. A millet-growing FPO from Maharashtra used a WhatsApp-based marketplace to secure bulk orders from a retail chain, turning group effort into digital empowerment. These stories represent more than just success; they symbolize renewed dignity and self-reliance. They are proof that when technology meets trust, change begins to sprout in the most unexpected corners of India. The story of agriculture has always been one of transformation. From the first Agricultural Revolution, when humanity shifted from foraging to farming, to today’s digital age, the way we grow, trade, a...