Urban governance runs on documents. Under AMRUT, every water-supply line, every sewerage upgrade, every green-space project begins as a tender, a detailed project report, or a policy note — drafted by officials who already carry a full workload. The writing is slow, the formats are exacting, and the institutional knowledge needed to get it right lives in filing cabinets and the memory of senior staff.
What we deployed
We piloted Vikasit Sarkar with departments working under the Government of Maharashtra's AMRUT programme. Unlike a generic chatbot, Vikasit Sarkar is grounded in each department's own rules, precedents, circulars, and document formats — it knows how that office actually writes. Officials draft tender documents, DPR sections, procurement notes, and official letters in Marathi and English, and the system produces output that follows the department's established structure and language.
What happened
Routine documents that used to take days of drafting and review came together in hours. Junior staff produced first drafts that read like the work of experienced hands, because the system carried the institutional memory with them. Senior officials spent their time reviewing and deciding — not formatting and re-typing. And because everything stays in the department's own language and templates, the output was usable, not just impressive in a demo.
"It writes the way our office writes. That is the difference."— Pilot feedback, AMRUT department, Government of Maharashtra
Why it matters
India's government is the country's largest writer. The AMRUT pilot is our proof that frontier AI, grounded in a department's own knowledge and fluent in Indian languages, can make public administration faster without sacrificing rigour or sovereignty. The data stays where it belongs; the knowledge compounds; the work gets done.
We're now expanding Vikasit Sarkar to more departments and missions. Talk to us about a pilot in your government.