Brands
Lenexis Foodworks appoints Arvind R P as CEO to lead next growth phase
Former McDonald’s India leader to scale QSR brands and expand footprint
MUMBAI: Lenexis Foodworks has appointed Arvind R P as chief executive officer, bringing in a seasoned consumer business leader to steer its next phase of expansion.
Arvind joins the company with over 25 years of experience across quick service restaurants, FMCG, beauty, fashion and automotive sectors. Most recently, he served as chief business officer (south) at McDonald’s India, where he played a key role in driving growth and strengthening brand strategy.
At Lenexis Foodworks, Arvind will focus on scaling the company’s portfolio, which includes Chinese Wok, Big Bowl and The Momo Co.. The company currently operates over 260 outlets and is targeting an ambitious expansion to 500 stores by 2028.
The appointment comes at a time when Lenexis is doubling down on operational excellence and digital-led growth, while strengthening its position in key categories such as desi Chinese cuisine, bowl-format dining and the fast-growing momo segment.
Lenexis Foodworks founder and director Aayush Madhusudan Agrawal said, “We are delighted to welcome Arvind at a pivotal stage in our journey. His experience in building consumer businesses and driving P&L growth will be invaluable as we scale our brands and sharpen execution.”
Sharing his outlook, Arvind R P said, “Lenexis Foodworks has built a strong foundation with a portfolio of distinctive brands. I am excited to join at this stage and help accelerate growth while building a future-ready QSR platform.”
Known for leading large-scale transformations and building high-performance teams, Arvind is expected to play a central role in strengthening the company’s operating backbone and expanding its national footprint.
As competition intensifies in India’s fast-evolving QSR market, Lenexis Foodworks is betting on experienced leadership and sharper execution to turn its growth ambitions into scale.
Brands
Tessolve lands a semiconductor veteran to drive its next big push
Ravi Kumar Chirugudu, who started his career at ISRO and has spent 35 years building chips and companies, joins the Bengaluru-based firm as president and chief operating officer
BENGALURU: Tessolve has never been shy about its ambitions. The Bengaluru-based engineering services firm already counts 18 of the world’s top 20 semiconductor companies among its clients, employs more than 3,500 engineers across 12 countries, and last year pocketed a $150m investment from TPG. Now it has hired the executive it believes can turn those assets into something bigger. Ravi Kumar Chirugudu, a 35-year semiconductor veteran who once built satellite payloads for ISRO and has since scaled engineering organisations across three continents, joins as president and chief operating officer, effective immediately.
THE MAN AND THE MANDATE
The appointment is, by any measure, a serious hire. Ravi Kumar Chirugudu comes to Tessolve after senior leadership stints at HCL Technologies, Altran and Wipro, where he managed large profit-and-loss portfolios and oversaw cross-regional teams. Over the course of his career, he has been instrumental in bringing more than 1,000 new products to market across the high-tech, energy and manufacturing verticals. Before the private sector claimed him, he began his working life as a scientist at the Indian Space Research Organisation, contributing to research and development in charge-coupled device technology and satellite payloads, a foundation that shaped everything that followed.
In his new role, he will lead Tessolve’s global growth strategy: expanding its engineering capabilities, deepening customer relationships and accelerating innovation across semiconductor and high-performance computing domains. The brief is broad, but the context is specific. Tessolve operates in the $550 billion global semiconductor market, and its recent moves, the acquisition of Germany’s Dream Chip Technologies and the TPG funding round, have sharpened both its reach and its expectations.
Srini Chinamilli, co-founder and chief executive of Tessolve, is characteristically direct about why Ravi Kumar Chirugudu was the choice:
“As we scale our global semiconductor and system engineering capabilities, Ravi’s appointment marks an important step forward. As global semiconductor demand continues to accelerate across industries, it is creating significant opportunities across the semiconductor lifecycle, from design, packaging, validation and systems integration. Ravi’s deep knowledge and leadership in this ecosystem brings the right mix of industry expertise, customer connect and execution capability, which will play a key role in strengthening our position as a trusted global engineering partner and reinforcing our market leadership.”
THE NEW ARRIVAL SPEAKS
Ravi Kumar Chirugudu, for his part, frames the move in terms of timing and culture, two factors that veteran executives tend to weigh as heavily as title or compensation:
“I am happy to join Tessolve at a time when the industry is rapidly evolving towards more complex, AI-driven systems. What stands out to me is its strong people-first culture and its commitment to bringing value to its customers. The strength of its global team, combined with its deep expertise in semiconductor innovation and next-generation product engineering, creates a solid foundation to build differentiated, scalable solutions. I look forward to working closely with the team to drive strategic growth and strengthen its role in shaping the global semiconductor ecosystem.”
The reference to AI-driven systems is not incidental. The semiconductor industry is in the midst of a structural reshaping, driven by the insatiable compute demands of artificial intelligence. For engineering services firms like Tessolve, which offers end-to-end capabilities from silicon design to packaged parts and invests in high-performance computing, high-speed interfaces, photonics and 5G, the moment is both an opportunity and a test. The company says it is well positioned to capture the next wave of industry growth. Ravi Kumar Chirugudu is now the person who has to prove it.
He came in from outer space, literally, and spent three decades learning how the semiconductor industry works from the inside out. Now Tessolve is betting that accumulated knowledge can help it cross the next frontier. In the $550 billion global chip market, the gap between ambition and execution is measured in engineering hours and leadership quality. Tessolve has just gone shopping for both.






