How Honeywell Is Quietly Changing the Way India Breathes Indoors

Updated on 29-Jun-2025

Mohit Anand isn’t selling air purifiers. He’s selling a shift in mindset. That’s the first thing that strikes you when speaking to the Co-Founder & CEO of Secure Connection Ltd., the force behind Honeywell’s consumer tech presence in India. Sure, the conversation meanders through AQI levels and the architecture of IoT ecosystems in India, but at its core, it’s a talk about human behaviour. About how we live, breathe, clean, and even ignore the air around us. 

What drives Mohit is a question most of us never ask: how do we start treating air quality the same way we treat drinking water?

“We drink maybe four litres of water a day,” Mohit says, “but we breathe in eleven thousand litres of air. Every. Single. Day.” 

For him, that statistic isn’t a pitch. It’s a wake-up call. He recalls watching his asthmatic father find real relief thanks to air purifiers. He describes the dusty chaos of Indian infrastructure, the aromatic chaos of our cooking, and the toxic swirl of cleaning chemicals and incense that make up a ‘normal’ Indian home. When you’ve lived through the haze of Delhi winters, where AQI levels cross 2,000, numbers too high to even be captured by most air quality devices. When you see people panic-buy purifiers only after pollution spikes or news headlines make it impossible to ignore. The point isn’t that we need purifiers because of spikes in pollution. It’s that we need them because we live.

Air, AI, and the Invisible Interface

At first glance, it might be easy to box Honeywell into the ‘air purifier’ category and move on. But what Secure Connection has been quietly building under Mohit’s leadership is far more layered—a part ecosystem, a part habit-formation tool, a part bet on the future of intelligent living. The way he sees it, most “smart appliances” today aren’t actually smart, they’re obedient. They wait for your tap, your toggle, your prompt.

“IoT has been around for a while. You could control your purifier from an app for years now. But AI? AI flips the script. Imagine a world where the app controls the appliance without you needing to do anything,” he explains. “Where your air purifier pulls weather forecasts, tracks local AQI trends, even reads your smartwatch health data and adjusts itself.” 

Mohit isn’t talking about flashy features. He’s talking about anticipation. A world where your air purifier doesn’t just wait for you to tell it something’s wrong—it already knows how your lungs respond to pollen. A firmware update that boosts performance because it knows the pollution’s going to spike tomorrow. A product that moves from passive to predictive. 

This vision of truly intelligent home wellness systems naturally leads to the real hurdle: walled gardens. 

“Walled gardens are killing interoperability,” Mohit says bluntly. “Apple, Google, everyone wants you locked into their system. You enter my iOS world, and everything plays by my rules. Same with Android. It’s silly, we just started using a common charging port recently. If we want AI-driven wellness, this has to change. AI needs open collaboration. If we want true intelligence in our homes, global tech leaders need to build bridges, not moats.” 

It’s a rare critique in an industry that too often speaks in press releases and partnerships. And it shows a refreshing honesty: that the magic of AI in consumer wellness won’t come from a single brand or platform, it’ll come from the collective willingness to dismantle silos.

Designing for India, Not Just Shipping to It

While global brands often treat India as a price-sensitive market to test stripped-down SKUs, Honeywell under Secure Connection is going the other way: designing with India in mind. “Take the AirTouch V1 and V5,” Mohit says, “two models built specifically for the Indian bedroom and the multi-room family home.” 

“Indian bedrooms are often 12×12, people won’t spend ₹20,000 for that space. So V1 is compact and value-focused. For larger homes with open doors and multiple people, V5 made more sense.” 

But it didn’t stop at hardware. When pollution levels peaked unexpectedly last year, Honeywell pushed a firmware update remotely to every cloud-connected V5 device, activating a new Turbo Mode to deal with the crisis. It wasn’t about gimmicks. It was about urgency. About showing up when it mattered.

Even the public messaging went beyond brand: Honeywell published air purifier usage tips and Do’s & Don’ts that could apply to any model, regardless of manufacturer. It wasn’t about owning the conversation—it was about elevating it.

India’s push toward local manufacturing often reads like a campaign slogan, but Mohit is aware of the challenges. 

“Precision tooling, trained manpower, and molding expertise, we’re not there yet,” he admits. “But we’re getting there. And we’re committed.” 

Honeywell is already shipping multiple SKUs from India, driven partly by regulation, partly by rising economies of scale, moving closer to domestic self-reliance.

The Bigger Ask: Change How We Think

But this story isn’t about products. It’s about perspective. About shedding the reactionary mindset that sees air purifiers as panic buys. 

“Cooking, incense, perfume, cleaning chemicals, these all release pollutants indoors. And they’re not going away. It’s our way of life. That’s why an air purifier isn’t optional anymore. It’s hygiene.” 

Mohit wants them to become wellness essentials, like water purifiers. Not luxury. Not seasonal. Just part of a healthy life. 

“Air purifiers in India are where water purifiers were 25 years ago,” Mohit says. “We’re in the awareness-building phase. And that’s the real work.” 

And it’s not just purifiers. Honeywell’s consumer tech portfolio is quietly weaving itself into the “four-screen life” most urban Indians live today: smartphones, laptops, tablets, TVs. Whether it’s an 8K HDMI cable that doesn’t bottleneck your gaming setup or a TWS that makes work-from-anywhere smoother, it’s all stitched around an experience that already exists. These aren’t grand innovations. They’re reminders. Human habits, not hardware specs.

Siddharth Chauhan

Siddharth reports on gadgets, technology and you will occasionally find him testing the latest smartphones at Digit. However, his love affair with tech and futurism extends way beyond, at the intersection of technology and culture.

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