Ashani Kumar Virdi runs a taxi service based around Bhogpur, the town on the Jalandhar to Hoshiarpur road in Punjab. The business carries the operator's own name, which tells you most of what you need to know about how it works today: this is a one-person, owner-driven operation where the person you book with is very likely the person who shows up at the wheel. There is no fleet brand, no call centre, no app sitting between the rider and the driver. You ring the operator, you agree a fare, and a car comes. The intake did not capture how many years the business has been running, the size of the car or fleet, or whether anyone else drives for the operation. What is clear from the way the service is described is the shape of the work: a steady run of point-to-point rides anchored to Bhogpur, with the busiest leg being Bhogpur to Jalandhar, and longer outstation trips out to Delhi and Amritsar when riders need them. That mix of a short, repeatable local route plus occasional long-haul work is the classic profile of a hyper-local Punjab taxi operator who has built a customer base by being reliable and reachable rather than by advertising. Online recon turned up nothing for this business. No Google Business Profile, no Instagram, Facebook, or other social account tied to the operator as a taxi service, and no JustDial, Sulekha, or IndiaMart listing matching the name. Six searches across Google, JustDial, Facebook, Instagram, Sulekha, IndiaMart, and general Punjab taxi directories came back empty for "Ashani Kumar Virdi" as a taxi operator. The only Virdi business found in Bhogpur was an unrelated agriculture company, and a similarly-named Facebook profile carried a different surname. So this is genuinely a business with no established online footprint, which is exactly why a website matters here. The reason the operator gave for wanting one is direct: they "need more rides." This brief, and the site that follows, are the business's first real presence on the internet.
Ashani Kumar Virdi runs a taxi service based around Bhogpur, the town on the Jalandhar to Hoshiarpur road in Punjab. The business carries the operator's own name, which tells you most of what you need to know about how it works today: this is a one-person, owner-driven operation where the person you book with is very likely the person who shows up at the wheel. There is no fleet brand, no call centre, no app sitting between the rider and the driver. You ring the operator, you agree a fare, and a car comes. The intake did not capture how many years the business has been running, the size of the car or fleet, or whether anyone else drives for the operation. What is clear from the way the service is described is the shape of the work: a steady run of point-to-point rides anchored to Bhogpur, with the busiest leg being Bhogpur to Jalandhar, and longer outstation trips out to Delhi and Amritsar when riders need them. That mix of a short, repeatable local route plus occasional long-haul work is the classic profile of a hyper-local Punjab taxi operator who has built a customer base by being reliable and reachable rather than by advertising. Online recon turned up nothing for this business. No Google Business Profile, no Instagram, Facebook, or other social account tied to the operator as a taxi service, and no JustDial, Sulekha, or IndiaMart listing matching the name. Six searches across Google, JustDial, Facebook, Instagram, Sulekha, IndiaMart, and general Punjab taxi directories came back empty for "Ashani Kumar Virdi" as a taxi operator. The only Virdi business found in Bhogpur was an unrelated agriculture company, and a similarly-named Facebook profile carried a different surname. So this is genuinely a business with no established online footprint, which is exactly why a website matters here. The reason the operator gave for wanting one is direct: they "need more rides." This brief, and the site that follows, are the business's first real presence on the internet.
Bhogpur to Jalandhar rides, Delhi taxi service, Amritsar taxi service