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About

Some things about me:

Personal:

1. I studied Economics at Delhi University, transitioned into writing, and now co-founded an education company.

2. My first passion is writing and exploring the creator economy, followed closely by teaching and mentoring.

3. I’ve never set foot in a traditional office as an employee. Since 2019, when I earned my first paycheck, I’ve been 100% remote.

4. When I’m not working, you’ll likely find me exploring new cafes or binge-reading about astrology.

5. Mantra to live by: Work insanely hard for a phase in life, then pivot to balance. Startups are the cheat code to do exactly that.

Work:

1. GrowedIn Academy:

This is my first venture—a labour of passion and our way of contributing to the skill-based economy. We aim to build a platform that brings quality education to learners and empowers experts to become exceptional teachers.

2. GrowedIn:

This is where my professional journey really took off. At GrowedIn, we help people become brands. I lead strategy and communications here, driving growth and marketing initiatives.

Some things I believe in:

1. Culture comes first: A strong culture is the backbone of any business serious about driving change. Without it, you might make money, but you won’t create impact.

2. Small teams win big: Big teams often end up bloated, slow, and weighed down by bureaucracy. Lean teams are fast and relentless. They fail quickly, learn faster, and get back up even faster.

3. Integrity is a line you don’t cross: Technical mistakes or even ignorance? We’re human—they happen and are forgivable. But dishonesty, manipulation, or a lack of integrity? That’s a hard stop. You can’t build trust, or anything meaningful, with people who cross that line.

4. Great thinking needs downtime: Working nonstop isn’t impressive because, more often than not, it leads to mediocre ideas and execution. Thought-intensive work requires rest and space to breathe. If you’re not unplugging, you’re not performing at your best.

5. Write it before you say it: If your thoughts aren’t clear in writing, they won’t be clear when you speak. Writing forces you to think, challenge, and refine your ideas so you don’t end up sounding like an idiot.