What
changed my fortune
When
all my friends who worked for various MNCs made good money every month and I made
losses with my venture. But I kept telling myself, I am moving in the right direction
to reach my ambition and vision. My dream was to provide employment and I was
doing just that. I continued to work till 3 a.m. but I never felt tired.
Through
BITS, Pilani, I got the BITS, Goa contract and that was the biggest break for
me. It was not a cafeteria like the earlier ones but the dining hall that we got.
We had to feed 1300 students. We started our operations in July 2007. At Rs 50,
for 1300 students, our sales was Rs 65,000 per day. We soon started making a profit
of Rs 10 to 15,000 a day. Around 60 to 70 people work there. I gave the charge
of the Ahmedabad operations to one of my managers and moved to Goa.
I
was still in debt by Rs 15-20 lakhs but I knew BITS, Goa would keep my dream alive.
Within six months of starting our operations in Goa, I repaid all my debt.
I
was called to give a speech at the SRM Deemed University. After the speech, I
asked the Chancellor, can you give me an opportunity to serve in your campus?
He said, "If not you, to whom will I give such an opportunity?" It's
a food court but a big one, similar to the one at BITS, Pilani. There are around
17,000 students there.
Now,
I have the BITS, Hyderabad contract, ready to start in July 2008. Other than the
six units, I have approached a few more universities and corporate houses too.
In the first year, I had made a loss of Rs 25 lakh. Right now, we have a turnover
of Rs 32 lakh every month, which works out to 3.5 crore (Rs 35 million) a year.
I have hired about
200 people. Indirectly, we touch the lives of around 1000 people. By this year
end, we will have 500 people working for us. Only 10% of my workers are educated,
the rest are uneducated. I want to make a change in their lives. If they have
any problem, I will take care of it. We support the marriages and education of
poor families. We are paying more to the employees as the company is doing well.
Now that the foundation is strong, I plan to have ten units and a turnover of
Rs 20 crore (Rs 200 million) turnover by next year
His
advice: Never give up!
In
the last two years, I have given more than 120 lectures in various institutions
in India. When I got the first opportunity to speak, I thought God had given me
an opportunity to encourage or inspire entrepreneurs. When youngsters tell me
they are inspired, I feel good.
When you just dish out the theory, nobody
believes you. But when you do it, they believe you. What I tell them is based
on my own experiences.
When I thought of starting a company, I felt India
needed 100 people like Narayana Murthy and Ambani. If 100 such people support
2 lakh people each, imagine how many Indians get supported.
Entrepreneurship is needed to uplift the poor. It is not easy to be an entrepreneur,
especially a first generation entrepreneur.
There will be lots of challenges
in the beginning but you should learn to look for the light at the end of the
tunnel.
Never give up even if there are hurdles. There are many who give up
within a week.
You need determination and a tough mind to cross the initial
hurdles.
If you are starting without much money, you should not have any overhead
expenses.
He still
lives in the same hut
As
I am in the food business, I know how much the price of every food item has gone
up. Many people will languish in poverty because of inflation. Had my mother been
working as an Anganvadi ayah today and earning Rs 1500, she would not have been
able to feed us and educate us.
On
the one side, we talk about India shining and India growing, but we should ensure
that people do not die of hunger. We can be a developed country but we should
not leave the poor people behind. I am worried for them because I know what hunger
is and I still remember the days I was hungry. That is why I feel it is our responsibility
to take care of them.
I wanted to buy a car and a house for my mother. I bought
a car first, not a house. I still live in the same house, the same hut. I can
build a house right now but I want my business to grow a little more. I feel good
in the hut; that's where I get my energy, that's where I lived 25 years of my
life. I want to remind myself that the money and fame should not take me away
from what I want to achieve.
But
within six months, I will build a good house for my mother. Her only advice to
me is, don't waste money.
Till
I was in the 10th, there was no electricity in my house. I had to sit near the
kerosene lamp and concentrate hard. That's how I learnt to concentrate.
The
two year journey has been very enriching. It seems like a 20-year journey for
me. I was living every moment of the two years, from sleeping on the Mumbai railway
station platform to this level.
Article
taken from one of the yahoo groups
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