The pathology department was drowning in paperwork. They built the answer in months.
Every hospital has a bottleneck that nobody talks about at board level. It is not in the ICU or the emergency room. It sits quietly in the pathology department — in the gap between what a doctor says and what eventually makes it onto a page.
For decades, that gap has been filled the same way: a note-taker standing beside the pathologist, writing furiously by hand. Then a typist converting those notes into a digital document. Then a review cycle. Then corrections. Then filing. A chain of human handoffs, each one a delay, each one a point where something can go wrong.
A team of 22-year-olds from Bangalore decided the chain had gone on long enough.
A WISH THAT BECAME A PRODUCT
In 2025, the founders of what would become Penguin Scribe were working closely with Phoenix Oncopathology, a clinical pathology practice in India. One of the pathologists, Dr. Aparna Gangoli, put into words something her entire team had been quietly feeling for years.
“I wish there was some magic that would just get the report ready from dictation — no manual writing, no waiting on typing.”
It was not a formal product brief. It was not a commissioned research report. It was one sentence, spoken honestly in a room full of people who knew exactly what it cost them every single day. That sentence became the specification for Penguin Scribe.
Anish Singh Rajpurohit, Prince Singh Rajpurohit, and Vijay — all 22 years old — built the answer.
THE PROBLEM NOBODY HAD PROPERLY FIXED
To appreciate what they built, you need to understand the full shape of the problem.
A pathology report does not begin at a keyboard. It begins at the grossing table, where a pathologist examines a specimen and speaks their observations aloud. Those observations have to be captured. But a pathologist in the middle of a gross examination has gloved hands. They cannot tap a screen. They cannot press a button. They cannot interact with any conventional device that requires physical contact.
This single practical constraint — gloves — had quietly made every existing voice recording and transcription tool completely unsuitable for the environments where they were needed most.
The result was a six-step manual process that had not meaningfully changed in a generation:
- The pathologist dictates; a second person writes it down by hand.
- Notes are reviewed and corrected.
- The notes are handed to a typist.
- The typist produces a digital document — under time pressure, interpreting someone else’s handwriting.
- The document goes back for review.
- The final version is filed.
Three people. Six steps. Every handoff a delay, every stage a source of potential error. And throughout all of it, the most expensive and irreplaceable person in the room — the pathologist — is waiting.
WHAT PENGUIN SCRIBE DOES
Penguin Scribe replaces the entire chain with a single session. The pathologist speaks. The platform handles everything else.
The most critical innovation is hands-free voice control. A pathologist mid-gross can start, pause, and finish a recording using only their voice — “Start,” “Stop,” “Finish” — without touching anything. The constraint that had made every previous tool impractical was the first problem the team solved.
From there, the audio moves through an AI-powered transcription pipeline that delivers clean, readable text automatically. No typist. No waiting. The output then passes through a formatting workflow that structures the transcription into a document-ready report — shaped, reviewed, and ready, without the pathologist ever picking up a pen.
But Penguin Scribe is not a dictation app. It is a full enterprise platform.
Every recording is stored within a governed, multi-tenant workspace — meaning each hospital or department operates in its own isolated environment, with its own access controls, its own team library, and its own audit trail. A three-tier role architecture governs who can record, who can transcribe, who can edit, and who administers the entire system. Every login, every edit, every administrative action is logged and immutable.
For clinical environments where documentation integrity is a legal and operational requirement, this is not optional. The founders treated it as foundational from day one.
THE NUMBER THAT MATTERS
The impact on pathology departments using Penguin Scribe has been direct and measurable:
MORE THAN 50% REDUCTION IN REPORT TURNAROUND TIME.
That figure is not a projection or a benchmark estimate. It is the result observed in practice at teams using the platform.
What it means on the ground: grossing documentation captured in real time, no note-taker required. Reports drafted from dictation, no manual writing by the pathologist. Final documents formatted and ready for review, no typist involved. Every step logged, auditable, and accessible to authorized team members.
The operational efficiency is significant. But the deeper implication is more important: hours that used to disappear into documentation loops are returned to clinical judgment. Time that a pathologist spent waiting on handoffs, correcting transcription errors, or reviewing poorly converted notes is now time spent on the actual work — the diagnosis, the patient, the decision.
BUILT ENTERPRISE-READY FROM THE START
What separates Penguin Scribe from the dozens of transcription SaaS products already in the market is a question of intent. Most tools in this space are consumer or prosumer products with enterprise features layered on afterward. Penguin Scribe was designed for institutional deployment from the first line of code.
Session security, CSRF protection, Content Security Policy enforcement, API rate limiting, single-device session enforcement — the platform carries the security posture of a mature enterprise product. Not because it was required by a compliance checklist, but because the founders understood from the beginning that clinical organizations handle sensitive documentation and cannot afford the alternative.
The company, Penguin Biotechnologies PVT LTD, was founded in September 2025. The product launched in January 2026. From observed clinical problem to production-grade, enterprise-deployed platform in months — built by a team of three, median age 22.
BEYOND PATHOLOGY
Pathology was the origin. It will not be the limit.
The underlying workflow problem that Penguin Scribe solves — the gap between what an expert says and what needs to become a structured document — exists across medicine, law, research, and operations. The legal deposition where hours of spoken testimony need to become searchable text. The clinical consultation where a physician’s verbal summary needs to become a formal note. The research interview that should have been a transcript but became a set of incomplete handwritten bullets.
Every one of those workflows has the same broken chain. Penguin Scribe was built to replace it.
The platform is already architected for multi-site, multi-department, multi-tenant deployment. The founders are not retrofitting a single-use tool into an institutional product. They are taking something that was built enterprise-ready on day one, and expanding the list of organizations it can serve.
That list, it turns out, is very long.
“Penguin Scribe was born in a pathology lab — where every minute saved in documentation is a minute returned to patient care.”
Company: Penguin Biotechnologies PVT LTD
Product: Penguin Scribe
Founded: September 2025
Launched: January 2026
Headquarters: Bangalore, India
Website: www.penguinscribe.com
Contact: hello@penguinscribe.com
