Anika Parashar, Founder and CEO, The Woman’s Company, Founder Director, Organ India
Graceful yet fiercely resilient, Anika Parashar is a woman who has spent her life building spaces where women feel seen, heard, and cared for — not just medically, but emotionally and holistically. As the Founder and CEO of The Woman’s Company and Founder Director at Organ India, Anika stands at the intersection of compassion, leadership, and meaningful impact, championing conversations around women’s health, wellness, and dignity with rare authenticity.
For over two decades, she has dedicated herself to redefining how women experience healthcare — advocating for care that is continuous, respectful, specialised, and deeply human. Her work stems not from corporate ambition alone, but from a personal understanding of the invisible emotional load women carry every single day. Through her ventures, Anika has consistently challenged the idea that women’s wellbeing should ever be treated as secondary.
Yet beyond the entrepreneur, changemaker, and leader lies the role that transformed her most profoundly — motherhood. A single mother balancing family, ambition, and emotional responsibility, Anika speaks about motherhood not as perfection, but as presence. Her children, she says, became her greatest teachers — showing her that true strength is often quiet, patient, and deeply empathetic. They taught her that not everything in life needs fixing; some things simply need to be heard, held, and understood.
What makes Anika deeply inspiring is her emotional honesty. She does not romanticise the journey of modern motherhood. Instead, she embraces its layered reality — the balancing act of ambition and affection, leadership and vulnerability, success and emotional availability. For her, motherhood is not about always getting it right; it is about becoming a safe space your children can always return to without fear.
As a celebrated face of TheGlitzMegaSuperMom 2026, Anika Parashar represents a powerful new generation of women who are rewriting the narrative around motherhood and success. She is proof that resilience can coexist with softness, ambition with empathy, and strength with vulnerability.
…Because at the end of the day, Anika believes the most powerful mothers are not the perfect ones — they are the ones who continue to show up with honesty, love, and courage, every single day.
Over To Anika Parashar, Founder and CEO, The Woman’s Company, Founder Director at Organ India

You wear many hats, mother, leader, achiever. Which role has surprised you the most, and why?
The role that has surprised me the most is motherhood, because it is the only role where you are learning even while you are leading. In most parts of life, especially at work, we are expected to know, decide, act and move forward. But as a mother, I have learnt that not everything can be solved. Some things have to be held, heard and felt.
My children have taught me patience in a way no professional journey could. They have made me softer, but also far stronger. They have reminded me that being successful means very little if you are not emotionally present for the people who matter most. Motherhood has been my most honest mirror.
In a world that celebrates hustle, how do you create meaningful moments of pause and connection with your children?
I don’t think pause always has to look like a holiday or a perfectly planned family moment. Sometimes it is just sitting together after a long day, listening to what they are saying, and sometimes listening to what they are not saying. It is in small rituals, food, conversations in the car, late-night chats, laughter over something silly, or simply being available.
My children have taught me that I do not always have to get everything right. As a single mother, I have had to balance work, family, and parental responsibilities all at once. They have always been my biggest source of support and understanding and reminded me that motherhood is not about being perfect all the time, but about being honest, present, and human.
What is one life lesson motherhood has taught you that no business school or boardroom ever could?
Motherhood has taught me that strength is not always loud. Sometimes strength is in staying calm when your child is struggling, in saying sorry when you get something wrong, in accepting that you cannot control every outcome, and in loving without trying to shape everything.
A boardroom teaches you strategy, performance and decision-making. Motherhood teaches you emotional intelligence in its purest form. It teaches you to read silence, to understand fear, to make space for vulnerability and to keep showing up even when you are tired yourself. I think it has made me a better leader too. Once you learn to lead with empathy at home, you cannot go back to leading only with authority outside.


If your children had to describe you in three words, what do you think they would say, and what would you hope they say?
I think my children would say that I am strong, loving, and that I always have their back. And honestly, that means everything to me. They have seen me work hard, build institutions, go through difficult days, and still try to come back home as their mother.
But what I would hope they say is slightly different. I would hope they say I am safe, honest and there. I want them to know that they can come to me not just with their achievements, but also with their confusion, their mistakes, their heartbreaks and their fears.
For me, motherhood is not about being seen as perfect by your children. It is about becoming the place they can return to, without fear.
Could you tell us a bit about your work and the philosophy behind it?
My work has always come from a very personal place. For over two decades, I have worked in and around women’s health, wellness and entrepreneurship, and one thing has stayed with me: women are expected to carry everything, but their own health is often treated as an afterthought.
The idea has always been to change that experience to build spaces where women are heard, not hurried. Spaces that understand that women’s health does not begin only at pregnancy or end at motherhood. It begins from adolescence and continues through fertility, pregnancy, menopause, ageing, emotional health, preventive care and everyday wellness.
The philosophy is simple: women’s care cannot be episodic. It has to be continuous, specialised and deeply respectful of the lives women actually live.
What does being a “TheGlitzMegaSuperMom 2026” mean to you in today’s world: perfection, resilience, reinvention, or something else entirely?
For me, it is definitely not perfect. I think the idea of the perfect mother has put too much pressure on women for too long. Mothers are expected to be calm, giving, successful, available, beautiful, patient, and endlessly strong, often without being asked how they feel. So to me, being a mother today is about honesty. It is about resilience, yes, but also about allowing yourself to be human.
It is about raising children while continuing to grow yourself. It is about ambition without guilt, love without losing yourself, and strength without pretending that nothing is difficult. If this recognition means anything to me, it is this: mothers do not need to be perfect to be powerful.
Rapid Fire With Anika

Coffee or Calm Morning Tea?
I prefer Coffee in the morning because herbal tea in a slow quiet morning is an indulgence which rarely happens.
Heels or Sneakers?
Sneakers for most days, heels when the occasion calls for it.
Boardroom Mode or Bedtime-Story Mode?
A healthy balance of both.
Planner or Spontaneous?
Mostly a planner, but open to surprises.
One Word Your Daughter Uses for You Most?
My daughter often tells me “love you,” and that’s something she truly says the most to me.
Mom Guilt or Mom Power?
Mostly Mom Power, though I do give in to Mom Guilt sometimes too.
Your Secret Superpower in one word?
Resilience




