A one-on-one programme for Class 11 & 12 students — not career guidance, not stream selection, not tutoring. Something more fundamental: helping a young person discover that they are capable of far more than they currently believe.
Start the conversation For students and parents in Kolkata & MumbaiAt 16 or 17, a student is expected to have life figured out. Which stream to pick. Which college to target. What career to build. What their "passion" is. All while managing boards, parents' expectations, and the constant noise of comparison.
Most students in this stage aren't confused about what to do. They're afraid they're not good enough to do it. That fear — not lack of direction — is what holds them back.
No amount of career counselling fixes that. What fixes it is someone sitting with them, listening without judgement, and helping them see themselves clearly — maybe for the first time.
A fixed programme — 3 or 5 sessions depending on where the student is. Every session builds on the last.
No agenda, no forms. Just an honest conversation to understand where the student actually is — what they think, what they fear, what they want but haven't said out loud.
Working through the noise — separating what the student actually believes from what they've been told to believe. Identifying real strengths, not just academic scores.
The final sessions focus on confidence — making decisions, owning them, and leaving with a mindset that doesn't collapse under pressure or comparison.
I spent 8 years building a business from ₹25 Crore to ₹150 Crore. In that journey, the one thing that separated the people who grew from the people who stayed stuck wasn't skill or intelligence. It was belief in themselves.
I've seen grown adults — smart, experienced people — held back by the same self-doubt that most students feel at 16. The earlier you address it, the more of your life you get to live without that weight.
I'm not a therapist and this isn't therapy. But I've sat with enough people — in boardrooms and in my own head — to know what it looks like when someone doesn't believe they're enough. And I know what changes when they finally do.
If you know a student who needs this — send them my way. No sales pitch, no pressure. We'll just talk first.
Reach out however feels easiest. If you're a parent — tell me a little about your child. If you're a student — just say hello. We'll take it from there.