From Side Hustles At 14 To Building Sustainable Packaging: How 25-Year-Old Azhar Mohiuddin Is Driving BioReform’s Mission
At just 25, Hyderabad-based entrepreneur Azhar Mohiuddin represents a new generation of founders who are building businesses not just for profit, but for purpose. As the founder of BioReform, a sustainable packaging startup focused on biodegradable and compostable materials, Mohiuddin is tackling one of the most urgent global problems: plastic pollution.
His journey began early—long before BioReform existed.
From Teenage Hustles To Purpose-Driven Entrepreneurship
Mohiuddin’s interest in business started at 14, when he began experimenting with small side hustles and problem-solving ventures to earn quick money. But over time, his motivations evolved.
“I was always interested in solving problems,” he says. “But during COVID, while I was in my second year of engineering and classes had paused, I finally had the time to build something meaningful instead of chasing quick wins.”
That period marked a shift—from transactional hustling to long-term impact.
Building The “Third Alternative” To Plastic
The idea behind BioReform came from a simple observation: while awareness campaigns and regulations against plastic were growing globally, businesses lacked practical alternatives.
“Paper isn’t durable enough. Cloth is expensive,” Mohiuddin explains. “The world needed a third alternative.”
BioReform focuses on developing biodegradable and compostable packaging that businesses can adopt without operational disruption or major cost increases. The company’s mission is not just to replace plastic, but to rethink how materials are designed, produced, and disposed of.
“Hence the name BioReform,” he says.
Execution Over Hype
For Mohiuddin, the most motivating part of building BioReform is its tangible, measurable impact.
“One BioReform bag replaces one plastic bag. No fluff, no drama—just execution,” he says.
Tracking the number of plastic bags replaced each day keeps the team grounded and energized.
“We’re building something future-relevant,” he adds. “Sustainability, regulation, and consumer awareness are all moving in the same direction. We’re not chasing trends—we’re preparing for the future.”
Engineering Practical Sustainability
One of the biggest challenges BioReform faced early on was bridging the gap between sustainability and practicality.
“Many sustainable products fail because they’re either too expensive or operationally impractical,” Mohiuddin notes.
To overcome this, the company invested heavily in engineering products that work within existing manufacturing systems and meet real business needs.
Instead of idealistic solutions, BioReform prioritized realistic ones.
As the company grows, so do the challenges—from finding early customers and vendors to managing supply chains, aligning teams, raising capital, and scaling impact.
“That’s entrepreneurship,” he says. “Problems evolve as you grow.”
A Vision Beyond Products
BioReform’s long-term ambition extends far beyond packaging.
The company aims to evolve into a global sustainable materials company, expanding exports across the Middle East, Europe, and North America while eventually building localized manufacturing hubs closer to key markets.
This would reduce logistics emissions and improve scalability.
Mohiuddin also envisions BioReform expanding into innovation-led sustainability solutions, positioning the company at the forefront of next-generation materials.
Values At The Core
BioReform’s culture is guided by three principles: responsibility, integrity, and long-term thinking.
That includes making difficult ethical choices.
“No interest-bearing loans. No lying to acquire customers. No bribes for approvals,” Mohiuddin says.
As a leader, he focuses on building systems rather than dependency on individuals—emphasizing empowerment, accountability, and continuous learning.
Advice To Young Muslim Entrepreneurs
Mohiuddin believes entrepreneurship is one of the most powerful ways to serve society—if rooted in intention and discipline.
“Build with purpose, not just profit,” he says. “Islam encourages excellence, honesty, and responsibility.”
His advice: start small, stay consistent, and focus on solving real problems.
“Barakah often comes from sincerity and persistence more than perfect timing or resources,” he adds. “Be a seeker of barakah, not just a hustler.”
A Legacy Of Ethical, Impact-Driven Business
Looking ahead, Mohiuddin hopes BioReform contributes to making sustainable materials the default choice for businesses worldwide.
“If companies adopt environmentally responsible packaging without even questioning it—and BioReform played a role—that would be meaningful.”
But his personal ambition goes deeper.
He wants to prove that it’s possible to build a company on uncompromising ethical principles while still achieving scale and profitability.
“My true north star,” he says, “is to build a business with 100% ethical principles and zero compromise—and show my generation that it’s possible even today.”








