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Complete Transcript of Network Capital's Podcast with Ashish Dhawan

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Complete Transcript of Network Capital's Podcast with Ashish Dhawan

Mental models, career principles and productivity techniques

Network Capital
Jun 13, 2020
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Complete Transcript of Network Capital's Podcast with Ashish Dhawan

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In this Network Capital podcast you will learn

1. Mental models for building a meaningful second career

2. Art of being a contrarian

3. How to combine distinct strands of thought and create something unique

4. Deep-dive into India's education challenge along with implementable ideas to bring about change

5. Critical importance of human capital development

6. Nuances of building a career in the development sector

7. The difference between important and urgent

Ashish Dhawan is the Founder and CEO of Central Square Foundation (CSF). He worked for twenty years in the investment management business and ran one of India's leading private equity funds, ChrysCapital. In June 2012, he left his full time role at ChrysCapital to start CSF. Ashish is an M.B.A. with distinction from Harvard University and a dual bachelor's (B.S./ B.A.) holder with Magna Cum Laude honours from Yale University. He is on the India Advisory Board of Harvard and a member of Yale's Development Council. Ashish serves on the board of several non-profits including Akanksha Foundation, 3.2.1 Education Foundation, Teach For India, Centre for Civil Society, Janaagraha and GiveLife. As Founder and CEO of CSF, Ashish hopes to bring a fresh impact-based approach to philanthropy in India. He was recently recognised as the NextGen Leader in Philanthropy by Forbes India.

AI-Powered Transcript with Time Stamp

00:13

hi Ashish

00:15

welcome to Network Capital y on skype

00:17

thanks for having me it's my pleasure

00:20

entirely Ashish I've known you now for

00:22

nine years and it's such a pleasure to

00:25

host you on this podcast today we're

00:27

gonna talk about your career principles

00:30

your mental models and the way you've

00:33

built a second career I still remember

00:36

the first time I met you and you'd come

00:39

to give us a guest lecture at yif and

00:42

you touched upon three things one was

00:45

the power of compounding second was how

00:48

you managed to get deep work done in an

00:51

era of distraction and third was how

00:54

education has been a constant in your

00:58

life from Saint James to today so you

01:02

know nine years out I'm gonna still

01:03

gonna focus on these three elements and

01:05

expand on that so let's get started are

01:08

sheesh tell us a bit about who you are

01:10

just a very short snippet because many

01:13

of our listeners are not from South Asia

01:15

they'd love to hear about what you do

01:18

yeah thanks of course yeah you clearly

01:21

have a great memory you know nine years

01:24

of recall that's phenomenal

01:26

you know by quick background as I grew

01:28

up in Calcutta I went to school there

01:32

and then I went to US for college and

01:34

worked very quickly in private equity

01:38

loved the investing business and then

01:41

eventually I moved back after business

01:42

school to India in 99 early nineteen I

01:47

set up a firm called Chris capital and I

01:51

was there for about 13 years

01:52

so all cold between the u.s. and India I

01:55

had about 20 years in finance and

01:57

investing and you know by as you said

02:02

education has been one of the constants

02:03

in my life and I always had this idea in

02:06

my head that when I was 30 I wanted to

02:09

be an entrepreneur which I accomplished

02:11

when I found it Chris capital and

02:13

that in my mid forties I wanted to have

02:15

a second career Benjamin Franklin had

02:18

always been a role model he had had like

02:20

seven or eight careers and had done so

02:23

much in one lifetime that you know I

02:26

finally made it happen

02:28

in my early 44 a little bit ahead of

02:30

schedule and so for the last eight years

02:33

education will what I've been primarily

02:36

been working on I'm a founder of Ashoka

02:39

as you know which is how we met and then

02:41

the founder of Central Square Foundation

02:44

which works on education reform and both

02:48

these projects started sort of eight ten

02:50

years ago so that's really what's

02:52

consumed my time and then I have a few

02:55

new initiatives that I started all

02:57

philanthropic in the last two to three

03:00

years so that's been my life in a

03:02

nutshell yeah no thank you or she's sure

03:05

so let's start from st. James you were

03:08

interested in education and wanted to

03:11

build a career in education since then

03:13

but I believe your mom or had a

03:17

different idea how do you remember that

03:19

conversation how did you take it yeah so

03:23

it's funny you know I first say I love

03:26

math so I I really loved my math teacher

03:31

and you know he was a user a nice man

03:33

who encouraged me a lot I also had a

03:36

wonderful principal who had me because I

03:40

was a reasonably good student I I we had

03:43

this one day when I went in taught

03:45

middle school it was a class called

03:48

Matt's is fun so outside the curriculum

03:50

does tricks and things like that you

03:52

know I had a blast doing it my

03:55

grandfather had been really good at math

03:57

they used to teach me math so there was

03:59

something about this you know when I

04:02

discovered that I was a reasonably good

04:04

akira which my grandfather was and

04:08

people i looked up to were you know I

04:10

went back to my mom at home and said you

04:13

know Mom I think I've discovered my

04:15

passion I want to be a teacher I love

04:18

math I think I could be a great match

04:20

wow these kids sure I can do it any

04:24

grade and she

04:27

ooh cold water on those green by saying

04:30

listen that's all fine but you know I

04:34

know that you also have other ambitions

04:36

and so why don't you know you just stay

04:39

focused on at that time I was studying

04:41

for the IIT for all getting into an Ivy

04:44

League college and and then we'll think

04:46

about this later and and you know focus

04:49

on first having a corporate career and

04:51

then worry about this later so I would

04:53

say it was temporarily suppress it

04:56

wasn't killed in that probably the right

04:59

thing for me because I was also equally

05:01

passionate about the world of business

05:03

and that's the part I went down for the

05:06

next few years right

05:09

um how was you what did you learn there

05:12

yeah so look Yale is a great liberal

05:15

arts college coming from a traditional

05:18

Union High School you know I had a very

05:21

narrow education Yale blew my mind cuz

05:24

they just opened up a window just so

05:28

many disciplines it made learning really

05:31

exciting and you know and also just I

05:35

became more of a global citizen and I

05:39

learned you know a number of skills but

05:43

above all I think there was something in

05:46

the air at Yale which was about spirit

05:49

of public service you know it was there

05:51

is something beyond just going to Wall

05:53

Street making money it's something

05:56

beyond just your personal goals which is

05:59

you know the objective to serve humanity

06:02

to serve your country and you know

06:04

there's so many smart kids I spoke with

06:07

who are my peers who were like you know

06:09

I want to go and intern with a a judge

06:12

or I want to go work for the senator on

06:14

Capitol Hill or I want to go work for

06:16

this think-tank or I wanted to work for

06:19

an NGO but everybody was just in that

06:22

rat race to go get the highest salary

06:24

and that just boggled my mind which

06:27

which felt like everybody should be

06:29

trying to go into the highest paying job

06:32

and in fact one summer or one internship

06:37

I did work at Brooklyn and what the

06:40

chance

06:41

verax

06:41

goes to Capitol Hill a bit and actually

06:44

like the quintic people they were quite

06:46

smart

06:46

but eventually I sort of really like

06:48

markets and Wall Street and I ended up

06:51

there in fact in one of the highest

06:53

paying jobs

06:54

partly because I had a loan and I was

06:56

break into a fight for my scholarship

06:58

pay off the loan but partly because I

07:00

did love the world of finance but I what

07:03

I took away from Yale was I think this

07:05

love for learning a belief that liberal

07:07

arts education is really important which

07:10

help you not just make a living but you

07:14

know live a life and importantly this

07:19

idea of public service I think those are

07:21

the takeaways for me yeah

07:24

so I'll sheesh a few weeks back we

07:26

hosted on our podcast a professor from

07:28

Yale

07:29

Helen loans room oh I don't know if she

07:30

was there when you were there or not but

07:33

she spoke about she talks were open

07:36

democracy a lot and she talked about

07:39

something very similar and something

07:41

that makes here and some of the other

07:44

universities there stand out is the

07:45

spirit of public service and I think you

07:49

have tried to build it in in many of the

07:52

institutions you found it since in India

07:55

I just want to just move forward and

07:58

talk about your wallstreet

08:00

days while you were there in the first

08:03

couple of years I remember once you were

08:05

telling about the rigor and discipline

08:06

teaches you amongst other things

08:08

but despite the busy hours you still

08:10

took time out to volunteer and Beach how

08:14

do you balance both and what were the

08:18

foundational investments these first

08:20

five six years away from India teach you

08:22

and set you up for success in future

08:24

yeah so I'm saying first and foremost

08:27

what Wall Street taught me was just

08:29

discipline a real work ethic and

08:34

perfection you know I worked you know

08:38

every day through one or two a.m. and I

08:40

was back in the office at 9:00 a.m. I

08:44

mean work consumed my life and every

08:47

Saturday was the same schedule maybe

08:49

left a little bit earlier so one could

08:51

go out a bit but Sunday's I was working

08:53

two not a full day but

08:55

so and I was single I I was willing to

09:00

sacrifice spending time with friends I

09:02

met a lot of friends at work as well but

09:05

really my goal was to Hoover up as much

09:07

as I could in terms of knowledge and and

09:10

understand the ropes and there was a lot

09:11

of work there's a demanding work place

09:13

so the hours were grueling but but I was

09:17

not complaining because I was enjoying

09:20

what I was doing and I was learning a

09:21

lot so I think that I would say I was

09:26

very lucky that my first job was one

09:29

that was really tough it really that

09:32

work ethic was instilled in me from that

09:35

point onwards a second is just very

09:38

demanding bosses I mean you know I know

09:41

a lot of people believe in oh we

09:43

shouldn't have as much hard

09:44

accountability you know we believe in

09:46

empowerment and I do too but I think the

09:48

accountability is really important we

09:50

need you know objectives and key results

09:52

we need to thrive we need to show

09:55

displeasure at someone's work that's the

09:58

only way the work improves and I

10:00

remember my first deal that I worked on

10:03

as an investment banker a young guy was

10:05

to modeling the breakup of dun &

10:08

bradstreet which is Ethernet and S&P 500

10:10

company brand I worked I pulled off two

10:13

all-nighters and I produced a pitch book

10:15

that was like a hundred first pages in

10:17

those days you had to stand by graphics

10:19

who did all the fancy chart for you got

10:22

it found took it my boss Lew Friedman

10:25

was a terror and you know he flipped

10:28

through it and I could see his face

10:29

turning red and then he ripped the book

10:32

in front of me and toasted it for me and

10:34

the binding hit the corner of my head

10:36

him I mean I didn't damage anything but

10:40

he just shouted and screamed at me and

10:42

you know and in that moment I felt like

10:44

I was like oh my god I came out of

10:47

Yale I worked my ass off to do this and

10:50

you know this guy doesn't even

10:51

appreciate the work I've done but you

10:54

also then told me what he expected and

10:55

you know if I look back and I thanked

10:58

Lou because he just raised the bar or

11:01

for that matter I had a boss who any

11:04

memo I wrote he would just shred it the

11:06

bitch you know and

11:09

he taught me how to write a good memo so

11:12

I think having really high standards and

11:15

tough bosses is something I really

11:18

appreciate and then the thing about what

11:20

not to do is also what I learned right

11:23

which is it was a very selfish culture

11:27

very individualistic as a young person I

11:31

could see that I was not I mean yeah I

11:35

did take time out to go teach but

11:37

honestly it was a small bit of time it's

11:39

more just to keep my interest alive I

11:41

mean which is one day of the week I

11:43

carved out some time in the morning and

11:45

and a colleague of mine life would go

11:48

and do this at an underprivileged school

11:51

but really what I learned was more the

11:54

rest of my firm was really focused just

11:57

on making money on doing yields on and

12:00

they in the process became you know

12:04

people who were very arrogant who were

12:07

very money minded and didn't care about

12:09

the little people around it and really

12:11

treated them like little people and I

12:14

could see that I was becoming a person

12:16

who I didn't like I was becoming

12:18

arrogant bought them for this game for

12:21

and so I I I wanted to get out of Wall

12:25

Street so I I think what I also learned

12:28

was you can have high standards but you

12:30

can also have a good culture you can be

12:33

a nice person

12:34

and you should have a well-rounded life

12:36

and aspired I have a good family life as

12:40

opposed to one where it's all work and

12:44

everything else just falls apart that's

12:46

something I clearly did not write I

12:51

remember you also talked about the

12:53

importance of leaving at the right time

12:55

I came and saw you the day I was leaving

12:58

for business school and he talked about

13:00

some of your learnings there and some of

13:03

the mistakes to avoid

13:04

could you just reflect on what you

13:06

learnt at HBS and how did it shape your

13:10

thoughts about your career if at all yes

13:13

I firstly you know HBS happened after

13:17

I'd worked two jobs I've been out in the

13:20

workplace for three years

13:22

I think was a good time because I as I

13:25

told you I had worked you know grueling

13:27

hours I've been investment in private

13:29

equity it was a chance to meet lots of

13:35

people from around the world so I think

13:38

the network was phenomenal and you know

13:41

I'm a curious person like you interested

13:44

in not just doing business elsewhere but

13:46

in cultural language I'd learned some

13:49

Spanish when I was at Yale I I took the

13:51

chance to learn Portuguese when I was at

13:53

HBS on the side I had a Brazilian

13:56

girlfriend I went to Brazil five times

13:58

so I fell in love with Latin America and

14:02

a lot of European friends and started to

14:06

like some of those cultures so it made

14:08

me a real global citizen this one too is

14:12

I may be you know understood that HPS

14:17

was more about I mean the case studies

14:20

were good and maybe the chance to sort

14:24

of put you certain the shoes and many

14:26

other leaders but I think more than

14:28

anything else it gave me self-confidence

14:30

gave me the confidence that I could if I

14:32

had this degree I could take risk and I

14:35

had a family to back me up I should be

14:37

taking rest my dad was not an

14:39

entrepreneur but I felt that I could be

14:42

a normal and the third is it gave me a

14:45

lot of time to to reflect you know and

14:48

think about where I wanted to go you

14:51

know with my life and and so that's when

14:54

I decided that I wanted to be an

14:56

entrepreneur age 30 I what did i'm ii

14:59

Korea gave me the time to in a sense

15:01

chart my journey and and I know

15:03

something's happened serendipitously but

15:05

I would say as best as one can if you

15:09

can have some good person start working

15:12

towards them so more likely than not to

15:14

achieve good they may get delayed by a

15:17

year or two or may get advanced by a

15:19

year or two but at least you have a good

15:21

force and so through business school I

15:23

also had the chance to start working

15:25

towards my first goal post which was to

15:27

start a private equity business in India

15:30

I did three field studies connected with

15:33

India I've gotten all the faculty

15:35

who were doing work in India who were

15:37

then very supportive as advisors I in

15:40

the process discovered a mentor who was

15:44

willing to support me as I got my fund

15:46

up and running and my former boss I

15:48

really use it yes also it's a stepping

15:51

stone that time not only to figure out

15:55

what I wanted to do but really in a

15:56

sense get prepared for entrepreneurial

15:59

life and I leverage the network quite a

16:02

bit I mean I'll give you an example when

16:04

I did the field studies you know I would

16:06

stay up along with my partner Raj who

16:09

then started Chris capita with me we

16:11

would stay up to people in the morning

16:13

and you know we'd make these trips to

16:15

India and in the guys who were new study

16:17

I mean I was writing a case for instance

16:19

on India or doing another field study on

16:21

bankruptcies under the guise of these

16:24

field studies we wrote to mr. Tata

16:27

tadam Graham who is finance minister and

16:30

we were entrepreneurial enough to play

16:32

the 80s card actually meet all these

16:34

people and so really use it also as a

16:37

tool for networking in India because I

16:40

never worked to be other than a couple

16:41

of summer internships in India and yet I

16:44

wanted to start a private equity

16:45

business in India so I was smart also

16:48

about I would say how I leveraged HBS to

16:51

launch my business Connor when you

16:56

started your private equity it was the

16:59

first or among the first what was your

17:03

expectation that what was the potential

17:05

of the market and now with the benefit

17:08

of hindsight what are some

17:10

unconventional bets that you took at

17:12

that time that served you well and

17:14

others some mistakes if you want to

17:16

reflect on yeah so you know I mean look

17:20

I started in early 99 we've gone through

17:23

the Asian financial crisis which hit in

17:26

97 98 so people had written off Asia

17:30

right and I know it was more of an East

17:32

Asian Southeast Asian crisis but from an

17:35

investor standpoint I mean Asia was a

17:38

write-off at that point and then India

17:41

Pakistan did the nuclear test in 98 so

17:44

coming into late 98 early 99 the New

17:47

York Times was printing articles

17:49

this is the most dangerous place on

17:51

earth but an Indian popular South Asia

17:54

yes it's in that context that I was

17:56

trying to raise the fun it was really

18:00

hard it was really hard I mean I would

18:02

say for every 100 meeting you know we

18:05

had like a 98% rejection rate people are

18:08

like are you stupid to do this thing in

18:10

India you know Asia just blown up on us

18:13

and in India is a dangerous place it's

18:16

not appropriate place to put capital to

18:19

work subscribe it's untested having said

18:24

that I always believed that you know

18:26

India had gone through macro horn 291

18:28

often takes time for macro to trickle

18:30

down into micro like the period we're

18:33

going through now India was going

18:35

through a little bit of a crisis in the

18:37

late night we're going through a credit

18:39

cycle and I know we thought it was a

18:42

good time to start a business because

18:44

I've always been a contrarian and so

18:47

yeah I mean I think if we started then

18:50

made lots of mistakes and my idea from

18:52

the beginning was growth capital I said

18:54

India is going to grow faster than most

18:57

of the economy all entrepreneurs are not

18:59

going to sell you their business but

19:01

they'd be happy to dilute and give you a

19:03

stake or minorities thing and you became

19:06

a partner it will help them grow the

19:08

business that resonances I think where

19:10

we got diverted which is where you made

19:12

a lot of mistakes with dot-com 99 2000

19:15

and that oh yeah we'll do minority but

19:18

we'll apply here and that just blew up

19:20

cause calm never really materialized

19:22

there it was too early for the internet

19:24

at that point but what really worked

19:26

were the more of the real-world

19:27

businesses so I invest in business

19:30

called spectrum mine which we weren't

19:31

the first BPOs I invested in UTI Bank

19:35

which became access Bank very early on a

19:39

whole bunch of industries where we were

19:41

early to call them and then we also very

19:44

flexible investor I did a lot of pipes

19:46

which is private equity in public

19:49

companies and we wanted the first ones

19:51

to do it in convince investors that with

19:54

the right format for India so lots of

19:58

learning lots of mistakes but in that

20:00

process what I learned was that the

20:02

growth capital model

20:03

was the right one trivia and having

20:05

flexible long-term capital with a huge

20:09

sustainable advantage current you talked

20:13

about being a contrarian and it's

20:15

something that that is developed over a

20:18

period of time how did you hone your

20:22

skill of being a contrarian in in a

20:26

complex market like India and are there

20:30

some tips that you'd like to offer who'd

20:32

like to for others who might be

20:34

listening in yeah I think one is your

20:38

contrarian by nature you have to sort of

20:41

Zig when everybody else is lagging right

20:43

so it's almost like you revel in the

20:47

fact that you have a different opinion

20:48

okay now it can't always be the case

20:52

because it works against you but I've

20:54

read a lot of buffeted and you know the

20:57

other iconic investors and so one is I

21:00

was always I mean I focused more on

21:03

value and less on price when price went

21:05

up you know I was clear to me that there

21:10

were few about this right when price

21:12

went down

21:12

most people psychologically like oh my

21:15

god I'm losing money I was always like

21:17

this is when price goes down bargains

21:20

are available so my mind actually was

21:22

the tool through this reading is seeing

21:25

to actually looking out for price

21:27

declines as opposed to you know becoming

21:31

afraid when price defined and having an

21:34

eye on value which was the most

21:35

important thing so understanding that

21:38

price value equation knowing that value

21:41

is permanent price is ephemeral the hard

21:44

being a contrary to is and you got to

21:47

separate yourself a bit from the news

21:48

cycle you know I think those who are I

21:51

was initially in Bombay and Bombay is a

21:53

little bit of a rumour mill but I hate

21:55

it to be part of that room on there or

21:57

even everyday you know I don't look at

22:00

my phone and track news and and I think

22:04

that just gets you caught in the new

22:06

cycle and in you wallow in other

22:08

people's thoughts versus just having the

22:11

time to think clearly for yourself I

22:13

think actually coming to moving to Delhi

22:15

was a big one

22:17

is away from bankers and research and

22:20

listen you know you have the time to

22:22

think you meet fewer people you go and

22:25

meet them on your terms in Bombay as

22:27

opposed to being part of that community

22:29

if it allows people to think

22:31

independently and not be part of the

22:33

news cycle a third is to have the

22:36

healthy skepticism of experts I mean I

22:39

I've never I mean I I value expert

22:42

opinion but I I don't I'm not gullible

22:45

let's put it this way and I mean what

22:47

I've learned is experts frankly often

22:50

have their own incentives I mean if you

22:52

are running a private equity fund or

22:55

mutual fund you always incented to say

22:59

that the markets going to do well

23:01

because you want to attract more

23:02

investors into your fund and so you're

23:06

never going to be intellectually honest

23:07

or same thing with a research analyst

23:09

you know it's so big I mean I would

23:12

always try to understand people's

23:13

incentives management you know the same

23:16

is true but there are some people who

23:18

are truth tellers popping there's no

23:21

reason to lie he cares more about what

23:24

people think of me intellectually then

23:26

trying to sell something to someone and

23:28

so are people like Howard Marks and pull

23:31

a bunch of other people in the other

23:32

people like I do so figuring out who are

23:34

the experts who are the truth tellers I

23:38

think was very important and then just

23:40

keeping a focus on reading like reading

23:43

about companies but sectors and just you

23:47

know making that the bulk of your day as

23:50

opposed to getting caught in the news

23:54

the way at least I train myself to be a

23:58

contrarian I think the most important

24:00

last point is just having control over

24:02

your own emotions I mean those who have

24:04

investors will realize that you know you

24:06

you I mean you do get invested or

24:11

emotional about companies or about your

24:14

idea and I think having that attached

24:17

detachment I think is very being able to

24:20

you know go down to 0-3 to understand

24:25

companies but also go down to 30,000

24:27

people look at them skeptically from

24:28

time to time

24:30

and I think building that skill is

24:32

important and it comes through a

24:34

combination of reading and thinking and

24:37

at the same time meeting management and

24:40

talking to people which is the zero feet

24:42

so so yeah it's it's training and it's

24:45

it's it's not just intellectual training

24:47

I think it's emotional trading one point

24:50

right I also remember you after your

24:54

first guest lecture you asked us to read

24:56

the letters that Buffett rights to his

24:58

their shareholders and all of us went

25:01

back and read them in one of the lines

25:02

that I remember is that a lot of a

25:05

success is being achieved because we are

25:06

I think intensely rational or something

25:09

that's what he said

25:11

thanks for laying out these principles

25:13

Ashish in this section I just work

25:17

conclude this section by asking when you

25:19

were stumbling upon success being a

25:22

contrarian as an investor did you have

25:25

you know the goalposts in mind the the

25:28

forty gold post that you set for

25:31

yourself

25:31

forty five and if yes did you have a

25:35

like you know like a year-by-year

25:37

assessment of what you wanted to

25:39

accomplish so that you could maybe get

25:41

on to your second career buy it by the

25:43

time you're 45 and something no I would

25:46

say no first five years was more about

25:51

survival you know I had started a fund

25:54

we went through a tough period when

25:57

the.com crash took place I was not sure

26:00

we would be able to be second point I

26:02

had to ensure that companies were doing

26:05

well like God exists

26:06

I was able to raise second fun I got

26:09

Harvard and Stanford his two key LPS and

26:11

that fund and so and then the third

26:13

point he sort of cemented ourselves a

26:15

little bit then it was about also

26:17

getting the right theme the right size

26:19

the team we got there the partnership

26:21

track so I would say the first few years

26:24

throws an intense focus on just building

26:28

business if I didn't have that I

26:30

wouldn't be able to liberate myself I

26:32

need it not only an actual freedom to go

26:36

on to my second career but I also wanted

26:39

to make sure I build something that

26:41

could outlive me

26:44

and for that you know I had to work

26:45

really hard on building the foundation

26:47

and ensuring survival so I would say the

26:50

first five to seven years were more

26:52

about that when we were in a more

26:54

comfortable spot I sorted the 2005 six

26:58

period is when I started talking at

27:01

least internally to my colleagues joking

27:03

they'd look someday I want to do

27:05

something different and the thought

27:07

re-entered my mind and you know I we

27:11

raised money quite a bit of money in

27:12

2007 we exited a large so we timed it

27:15

very right into cycle and then we had

27:17

the downfall we played that quite well

27:20

but I actually went and returned capital

27:23

to investors in late 2008 2009 just

27:27

saying look you guys going through a

27:28

hard time we waste a lot of money and

27:31

partly I was able to do it because I

27:33

knew that look I I wasn't focused on

27:36

just greed and making the most you know

27:39

for myself in that window but really

27:41

also you viewing it as a period where we

27:43

could get sort of this up partners to

27:49

understand that we were looking out for

27:51

their interests that we had a real deep

27:53

bench at push capital and that it was

27:56

not just reliant on me and so yeah I

27:59

would say that I ten years into starting

28:02

the firm is when I started acting upon

28:04

this idea that I could have a second

28:07

career and then by the time it was 2010

28:10

is when I announced him early and to my

28:13

investor that I was going to move on and

28:16

then actually had a year-and-a-half

28:18

transition period before I could move

28:21

into my new career she should one have

28:25

backup plans I think so I think look I

28:31

I'm not a big believer in a plan B in

28:35

that you first just go for planning a

28:38

sort of burn your bridges and go for it

28:41

right otherwise you can never be an

28:42

entrepreneur if you always have a back

28:45

plan for everything but you know there's

28:47

a worst-case plan which is even when I

28:49

started Chris Capital I always looked at

28:52

it and said what's the downside you know

28:54

I I'm lucky I have a degree from Yale

28:57

and

28:57

from Harvard Business School I doubt if

29:00

I'm permanently gonna be out of a job

29:02

I think I have some skills I have a

29:04

network so I've started with capital if

29:09

it feels I can always go work somewhere

29:11

now I don't have to plan that out to

29:13

figure out where I'll go working so I

29:16

mean I plan B which is simply I know I'm

29:19

not gonna be on the streets I know I've

29:21

got at least in my case I knew I could

29:24

live with my parents for free so I had

29:27

the ability to tide it out for a while

29:31

and go do something else so that just

29:35

you know in a sense it wasn't a detail

29:38

it was just like you know what's the

29:39

worst I mean and when your mind thinks

29:42

like that did look the downside isn't

29:44

that bad at the end of the day at least

29:46

you would have learned a lot you give it

29:48

a shot and then you'll sort of figure

29:50

things out so yeah I've always had that

29:52

mindset which is a fixed plan B yeah

29:56

this is such an important tool to keep

29:59

in mind and a very useful mental model I

30:01

must say Ashish a lot of people come to

30:03

us or network capital asking exactly

30:05

this question and now I'm gonna point it

30:07

point them to this podcast

30:10

Ashish I just want to move on now and

30:12

explore the education space because once

30:16

you began your second career in a

30:18

full-fledged fashion education has been

30:21

one of the order primary area of focus

30:26

what is your thesis about looking at the

30:31

education challenges in India I know

30:33

it's a very great question but I want to

30:36

start at that level and then dive deep

30:39

into specifics yeah so firstly I think

30:45

you know education is sort of at the

30:48

bedrock of social reform and an economic

30:51

transformation you know we know that if

30:54

you're better educated you will be more

30:57

productive citizen we know that if you

31:00

had educated you will evolve socially as

31:04

a society you'll at all and some of the

31:06

ills tradition and and else will call

31:10

aside

31:11

you're more likely to educate your

31:13

daughter the view educated you know

31:15

things like that so we know it's at the

31:18

bedrock and investing in human capital

31:21

is so critical we also know that you

31:25

know for countries that enter look sort

31:28

of middle income status it's even more

31:31

important I mean when you're dirt-poor

31:32

you're just focused on doing the very

31:35

very simple things like like India in

31:38

terms of opening up its economy trading

31:41

you know taking it's already skilled

31:43

people in making them more productive in

31:47

that stage it is building very simple

31:49

infrastructure getting the incentives

31:51

right etc now I think we're at the stage

31:55

where we ate 2,500 our per capita income

32:00

you know the factors of production have

32:04

cut in the line but as we start to get

32:08

up to five ten thousand dollars per

32:10

capita income what you realize is that

32:12

if you don't invest in your people you

32:16

get stuck in middle income trap and

32:19

that's what happened with a lot of

32:20

countries if you look at Latin America

32:22

Latin America you know did very well and

32:25

was the Promised Land in the 16th and

32:28

17th then things went sideways largely

32:31

because you know they didn't invest in

32:34

education and then of course the

32:35

politics didn't work out very well and I

32:37

think the same is true in Asia where

32:39

look at countries that really invested

32:42

in education like Japan and Korea

32:45

they're our first Asian countries that

32:47

really took off and became developed

32:49

countries other than Hong Kong Singapore

32:50

which is small city-state so I think

32:53

it's evident that education has high

32:56

payoff particularly at a certain stage

33:00

of development India had entered that

33:02

stage of development and so now over the

33:05

next 15 years it's absolutely critical

33:08

that we solve for this human capital

33:11

deficiency because if we don't we will

33:14

be another Mexico or Latin American

33:18

country that'll go sideways as opposed

33:21

to breaking out and becoming a developed

33:24

country someday

33:25

so for me you know it's partly fashion

33:29

the fact that I always wanted to be an

33:31

education it partly what's right for the

33:33

country given at this stage of

33:35

development it's so critical and it's

33:38

partly the fact that we know that it's

33:40

the bedrock societal and economic a fish

33:46

in the chapter that you've written in

33:48

mr. Khan's book you talk about lifting

33:51

up the tale and investing in

33:53

foundational learning are these the

33:56

bedrocks of investments and decisions

34:00

that you've made in Central Square

34:01

foundation and some of the other

34:03

initiatives that you helped set up yeah

34:08

everything else it often you learn by

34:12

doing we did a number of things in our

34:14

first five years at CSF and I mean if I

34:18

was smarter maybe you could have dawned

34:20

on me earlier and I would have focused

34:21

on just this is the core from the outset

34:25

but yeah I mean I think we instinctively

34:27

knew this was most important but I think

34:30

when we started to narrow the focus is

34:32

when we made it our number-one priority

34:34

in a sense so yes foundation learning is

34:39

critical I think we just look at the

34:40

data it's obvious that by third grade

34:43

somewhere between 50 to 75 percent of

34:46

the children are falling behind whether

34:49

it's on the metric or reading writing

34:51

basic arithmetic you know about

34:55

two-thirds of the children are falling

34:57

behind and once they fall behind they

35:01

fall behind permanently because if you

35:03

can't if you don't love learn to read

35:06

you can't read to learn you know there's

35:08

that important transition in third grade

35:10

I'm learning to read to reading to learn

35:13

- you're the door shut with you you

35:17

can't transact the fifth grade textbook

35:19

if you can't read you can't do fractions

35:23

and algebra if you don't understand

35:26

addition and subtraction multiplication

35:28

division these are building blocks so we

35:32

think it's absolutely ensure for the

35:34

country to focus on this the data so and

35:37

then if you look at

35:39

other countries that have succeeded you

35:41

know why was Korea so successful we're

35:44

invested in a big way in foundation

35:47

irresolute you see in the sixties and

35:49

early seventies korean india corner the

35:52

same per capita income at that time

35:54

Korea made this investment and then

35:57

Korea to cause Viet Nam has been doing

36:00

this of late no Vietnam has prioritized

36:03

rotation let me see let me see

36:05

and it's no surprise you can see it in

36:07

the data export many facts it's not

36:20

coming dream I think one is recognizing

36:23

within it if you want children to

36:25

continue and want them to be able to you

36:31

know silver in terms of very very clear

36:35

if you can invest because most jobs in

36:38

India don't require a higher ed degree

36:41

most jobs don't require high school

36:43

degree I mean when was the last time you

36:46

use trigonometry or calculus or log

36:50

agents oh yeah or logs or coordinate

36:53

John I mean you don't frankly the

36:55

moisture if you can just read write

36:58

speak confidently if you can do basic

37:02

math and be logical in your thinking and

37:05

not get fooled in terms of you know

37:08

basic financial stuff you're more likely

37:12

to succeed in life so I think that's why

37:14

the foundational is so critical current

37:19

has India managed to lift up the tail

37:21

and in your work what have been some of

37:25

the major challenges in lifting up the

37:28

tail and improving learning outcomes so

37:30

I think look firstly it's a question of

37:34

prioritization I think India has not

37:37

come out till very recently till the new

37:39

education policy came out in draft form

37:43

last year and finally got finalized eel

37:47

is that you know we've now called out

37:50

never

37:51

I believe in the past to say

37:53

foundational learning is the number one

37:54

that's very clear and even we put it

37:56

that we've even put a timeline to it

37:58

saying by 2025 we want to achieve

38:02

success which is the majority of I have

38:05

achieved this I think this is meant that

38:07

firstly it's a question of prioritizing

38:10

it recognising its most important clue

38:12

is we need measures we need independent

38:15

data we need to know what that goal is

38:17

and you don't know we know with literacy

38:20

there is a ladder and so you can measure

38:22

it at every stage our children

38:24

recognizing letter our children are able

38:27

to decode words are they do they have a

38:31

minimum vocabulary can they read the

38:32

sentence and they read at a certain

38:35

speed all reading fluency can they read

38:38

with comprehension and they write so

38:41

there's a ladder at every stage same

38:44

thing with mathematic and having a goal

38:46

overarching goal for every graded train

38:49

you know Peru is the most improved

38:51

country and Pisa the president got up

38:54

and said in second grade children should

38:56

be reading 40 words per minute in third

38:59

grade 60 words per minute every teacher

39:01

every parent in the country knew that

39:03

goal and then it went about then

39:05

measuring every month every teacher

39:07

would measure formative assessment and

39:09

they had strategies for children reading

39:12

10 words per minute 20 words per minute

39:14

and they've eventually achieved huge

39:16

success so I think you need to have the

39:19

goals you need to measure and then move

39:22

accordingly third is we need the tools

39:25

you know we need simple tools like

39:27

lesson plans for teachers the training

39:31

for the teachers the the sort of

39:34

scaffolding around formative assessment

39:36

for them to know what to do any stage a

39:40

children are falling behind so

39:42

strategies around lifting the tail so I

39:46

think with with teachers who are most

39:48

important we need to provide them these

39:51

tools so that we can bring about a

39:52

change and training so that we can

39:54

change the classroom transaction because

39:56

if that doesn't change nothing will

39:58

change I think that's a third very very

40:01

important piece and then fourthly

40:04

you know in terms of the curriculum and

40:07

adding in though already has a

40:08

reasonably good grade let me just need

40:10

to you know make sure it's

40:11

age-appropriate simplified put into

40:16

chunks so that it's easy for the teacher

40:20

to understand what you're going to

40:21

measure at each stage and it's and it's

40:24

achievable you can actually transact

40:25

that curriculum and it starts at the

40:27

right point I think I curriculum often

40:30

is over ambitious I think we can do a

40:33

few of these things and get the system

40:34

aligned around this but it's the number

40:36

one priority that will make basic

40:39

resources the teacher is already there

40:41

it's a question of saying I'll make sure

40:44

that the teachers have a teacher guide

40:45

with the lesson plans

40:46

I'll make sure children have workbooks

40:48

and make sure the the classrooms have a

40:51

basic library so if I want children to

40:53

read those things cost like three four

40:57

hundred rupees per child on top of what

40:59

they're already finished so it's not a

41:01

huge expenditure and and I think it's

41:03

very achievable in the next five videos

41:06

right and so this I mean they're two

41:09

points I want to explore more one is the

41:11

importance of heading having a goal

41:14

which is very clearly understandable so

41:16

us you've written about the fact that

41:19

they've had say state to state

41:21

comparative federalism to augment goals

41:25

are there some things that India can

41:28

learn in terms of scaling it's you know

41:32

quest of enhancing learning outcomes I'd

41:35

love to get your thoughts in that you

41:38

know I would say for a moment let's no

41:39

even look outside just look within I

41:41

think the Prime Minister is initiative

41:44

on swatch Park is a great example of

41:47

getting the mission mode having a clear

41:52

objective around open defecation or

41:57

defecation freely districts and blocks

42:01

and then providing some support as well

42:04

at the district level to help the system

42:09

but having a clear

42:11

you know goal its measured now you can

42:15

argue that maybe we're measuring the

42:18

I recall alerts were built and maybe the

42:20

behavior change didn't happen but at

42:23

least and even open the behavior change

42:25

I know there was a campaign and work was

42:27

done but I mean it's a classic example

42:31

of how we put into mission mode that was

42:34

someone who is clearly accountable

42:37

highest officer who is driving it states

42:40

and districts were energized once they

42:44

reached a certain milestone they were

42:46

assessed and hikmah was put in front of

42:49

them they were celebrated so you had

42:51

both the demand side incentives where

42:54

people wanted to achieve this goal and

42:57

they understood the goal and then on the

42:59

supply side you had budgets and you had

43:02

some resources and the growl training

43:04

protocols the corporate sector was

43:07

brought in to provide CSR and to the

43:12

extent that that could complement what

43:14

government is doing so I think we need a

43:17

similar we played before in other area

43:20

like sweat spiral and so why can't we do

43:22

it with foundation learning if we put it

43:25

into a similar mission mode Donna um

43:28

Ashish in one of your interviews with

43:31

ton of Qatari you talked about the

43:34

complexity of India say you you spoke

43:37

about the example in Maharashtra for

43:38

example about the challenges of scaling

43:42

quality education there do you think

43:44

central squares aim of ensuring quality

43:48

education can be scaled and if yes how

43:52

can we contextualize it with respect to

43:55

different regions and languages in

43:57

context what I really trying to

43:59

understand is what is the kind of

44:02

building block that will be giving we

44:05

need and what are the kind of

44:06

customizations that we need to do to

44:08

scale quality education yeah so firstly

44:12

we are one of many participants in

44:15

education and I always say we stand on

44:17

the shoulders of others with an

44:18

phenomenal to work in India so I think

44:21

the good news is in India what we may

44:23

not have had system reform you see it

44:26

from the yessir data that learning

44:28

levels really haven't improved much in

44:30

the last fourteen fifteen years what we

44:32

have

44:32

Dinah's is focus of excellent so there

44:35

are several nonprofits that in terms of

44:37

foundational learning you know whether

44:39

it's yon sha-la-la-la or room to be

44:43

returned who have shown that you can

44:49

really improve learning outcomes and

44:51

that reasonable scale and they worked

44:53

with state governments to do it often at

44:57

a district level or a block level so I

44:59

we don't have to even look to Kenya or

45:01

Peru we can say look we have the tools

45:04

we have the methods people have done it

45:06

here now it's a question of how do we

45:08

get the system to invite this as opposed

45:11

to an NGO running its own program how

45:13

can we build the capacity of the system

45:15

how can we white label all the tools how

45:18

come you get the system aligned around

45:20

this so that and make the NGOs the

45:23

technical partner

45:25

as opposed to be implementing body to

45:27

work with state governments to make it

45:29

happen so I think firstly there is an

45:32

overarching playbook right which the

45:35

center can roll out to States and I

45:37

think the good news with the new

45:39

education policy is it not only talks at

45:42

a high level but it has some concrete

45:44

ideas about what could be done in

45:46

foundational and now the government will

45:48

have an implementation plan which the

45:51

center will have in a playbook would

45:53

state I think as you rightly said we are

45:56

very diverse country and states will

45:58

have to contextualize it so you know all

46:01

reading fluency a target may be one in

46:04

one state like behind and in go it may

46:07

be different because the starting points

46:09

are different the language complexity is

46:11

very different to each language etcetera

46:14

the tools will have to differ but I

46:16

think the playbook could be similar and

46:18

then you know the nice thing with India

46:21

is we have NGO partners in different

46:23

scale so every state will obviously have

46:26

their own programs you know derived our

46:30

national mission but the goals you know

46:34

we have a common set of gold we can

46:36

calibrate depending on the state for

46:38

what who cook they need to jump and then

46:41

also a bunch of technical partners in

46:43

each state who can help contextualize

46:45

develop

46:46

materials you know etc so I'm not

46:48

suggesting by any means something

46:50

uniform already each state develops its

46:53

own curriculum etc but you know we can

46:56

ensure that every classroom at least

46:58

gets a teacher guide the appropriate

47:01

workbooks their proper reading material

47:03

for children big books posters you know

47:06

that could be a standard kick but the

47:09

module being local language and could

47:12

naturalize for their context obviously

47:16

what about a deck - sheesh has it

47:20

fulfilled its promise in India someone

47:22

once said that in India you don't have a

47:24

deck you have education solutions and

47:26

tech solutions which people call EdTech

47:28

is that a fair assessment what do you

47:31

think this person is being harsh no I

47:34

think look last firstly initially was

47:38

used more as an enabler you know I think

47:42

mostly texts been used historically

47:45

either it meant computer literacy

47:48

program oh it meant this is your tech

47:52

enabling something right

47:54

even smart class by eight pumpers

47:57

deliver that yeah we'll bring you a

47:59

videos into the classroom kind of thing

48:01

I think what Tech is evolved to now is

48:05

personalized adaptive learning and I

48:08

think that can be quite powerful so is

48:11

it today ready to scale I'm not sure I

48:15

think we need more supply in the

48:19

vernacular which is aimed at India - in

48:21

India tree most of Baidu's and tougher

48:25

and all the for-profit companies still

48:26

cater to the top segment of India do we

48:30

need products we India - India foods

48:32

will next applies with in the vernacular

48:35

need to be either very very cheap or

48:38

free we parents to understand that the

48:44

divide face which needs to be shared I

48:47

mean by juice you can bundle with the

48:49

tab and in an upper income household and

48:51

give it to the child in a low-income

48:53

household they'll be using the fares for

48:55

the involving the parents or teachers

48:58

would be very very different

49:00

next is different so I think we're early

49:03

in the journey of personalized adaptive

49:06

learning for children but I think using

49:08

text tool we can we're ready so I when I

49:13

make some foundation learning could we

49:15

give the teacher an app with her lesson

49:17

plan and some resources yes we can do it

49:21

right now and teachers already up

49:22

smartphone deeksha which is the national

49:25

platform where we have energized

49:27

textbooks with QR codes in each chapter

49:29

could the teacher scan it and get a

49:30

lesson plan and video so to the class

49:33

yes could we get the middle management

49:35

who comes to visit schools you know have

49:38

an app we've developed such apps the

49:42

checklist to observe the classroom and

49:44

get feedback to teachers in a structured

49:45

form or to take videos with the teachers

49:48

they can show it to the Future yes III

49:51

think we can start using technology even

49:54

in the offline program

49:55

and then additionally we can experiment

50:00

with personalized adaptive learning

50:02

build the supply-side build the evidence

50:06

and get ready to scale you know in the

50:09

coming year

50:10

understood let's explore human capital

50:14

development a little bit many states if

50:18

not all states don't really have an HR

50:20

policy or an organizational development

50:22

policy I remember one of your quotes

50:24

once was that I wish sometimes the

50:27

education space ran with the rigor at

50:30

which financial services work

50:32

are we taking steps in this direction of

50:35

ensuring the best teachers have the best

50:37

tools to get there if yes how and if not

50:43

what should we do yeah so I look firstly

50:49

I think on the HR side you've always

50:52

talked about education and you know

50:56

pre-service which is before they become

50:57

teachers performing that is essential

51:00

but it's a you know it will have an

51:02

impact over the next 20 years because

51:04

the attrition is is small so our first

51:07

order of business is how do we improve

51:09

what we already have and I think for

51:12

that we have

51:13

start with some structural changes which

51:16

is right now if you look at the

51:17

Education Department in any state the

51:19

department does everything everything

51:21

from policies to running the school

51:24

system to even figuring out you know

51:26

what the private schools are doing I

51:29

think we need to like any separate you

51:31

look at the reforms in the airline

51:34

sector the utility sector any sector

51:37

telecom sector what we did many years

51:40

ago is we took these departments and we

51:43

carved them out of the three entities

51:44

the department which is responsible for

51:48

policy setting and administration there

51:50

is a body that's responsible for

51:53

execution like BSNL was transferred out

51:56

your companies similarly Maharashtra

51:59

could have a body that runs its school

52:01

system and the one of the reason for

52:04

KB's and and the Nevada with well has

52:06

run well is they have a separate body

52:09

you know that runs it so as opposed to

52:12

an IAS officer who's coming every 1/2

52:15

years and trying to run the school

52:16

system the state could we actually have

52:18

a separate body that runs the school

52:20

system a department that supervises it

52:23

and focuses more on policy and

52:26

separately we need a sort of quality

52:29

assurance body of regulator which

52:31

provides the basic like that regulation

52:35

and quality assurance of both the

52:37

private and public school system in

52:39

India so I think if we looked at it like

52:42

that if you look at telecom you have a

52:44

department you then have you know

52:47

independent providers both private patio

52:50

Airtel Vodafone but also public DSL MTNL

52:54

to similarly private and public

52:55

providers so that efficient and then a

52:58

third is the regulator like prei time

53:00

equivalent back but also ensuring

53:02

quality issuance so I think that says

53:05

systemically a model we need to move to

53:07

the new education policy does allude to

53:09

some of this and then of course once we

53:12

do that look at building capacity at

53:15

different levels and I think we look at

53:17

the kV system or the nd system they do a

53:20

much better job of that because they

53:22

have people at all levels you know

53:25

running the system and they all

53:27

generally homegrown from within the

53:29

system understood in terms of the uptake

53:36

of EdTech in the Cobra doctor math do

53:39

you expect some changes to become

53:42

permanent do you think that the ed tech

53:44

solutions the overall human capacity

53:48

development indicators obviously

53:50

basically getting top talent to teach do

53:53

you think that we'll see some

53:54

fundamental changes if yes what look I

53:58

think that change is already coming I

54:00

think what Cove is doing is its

54:02

accelerating a trend but so yeah if we

54:06

look at say EdTech adoption by parents

54:10

even for in school it is increasing I

54:14

mean I think you're seeing the

54:15

for-profit companies also making their

54:17

products available for 3d making them

54:19

more accessible we've developed at CSF

54:22

some products picked at learn top

54:24

parents which a bunch of state

54:26

governments and telcos and others are

54:28

rolling out because there are free

54:31

resources for children both in the early

54:33

years but also in school but can be used

54:37

at home on the parents smartphone and

54:39

we've seen definitely a lot of increased

54:43

uptake in the recent past but also Chief

54:46

Minister's who've been willing to

54:48

endorse the products that we have

54:49

launched and partly because they want to

54:52

show their work they're doing something

54:54

whilst the children are out of school so

54:56

it's it's clearly provided inroads and

54:58

accelerated what would have been a trend

55:01

otherwise but I do want to lend some

55:04

caution I mean like say if you take

55:07

higher education we're like at a so

55:10

Covey's transition to online teaching

55:13

and and and had to do it quickly now is

55:16

online teaching or substitute for the

55:19

physical I I'm not quite sure I think

55:22

I'd ahsoka you've been in the young

55:24

India fellowship right you know I I

55:27

don't think it's a substitute of having

55:29

a professor who you can engage with who

55:32

is in the classroom or even a peer group

55:35

and the fun of going to college I mean

55:37

if I gone to Yale sitting in my bedroom

55:40

there'll be no

55:41

horrible experience I wouldn't be Who I

55:43

am so let's not get all too far ahead of

55:47

ourselves and also suggest that

55:49

everything's gonna be disruptive I mean

55:51

I think children need to go to school

55:53

they won't be social animals and we you

55:57

know there's so much to learn from your

55:59

peers from your teachers from just the

56:02

discipline of waking up in the morning

56:03

and getting out going to scoop your

56:05

mental health for your parents also who

56:07

need you a way for them to have

56:09

productive lives without you for that so

56:11

I am NOT a big believer that I'm gonna

56:14

Buster Yuki is technology will help it

56:18

will hopefully help right now it's only

56:20

accelerated the learning of the rich or

56:22

the motivated learner and what we need

56:25

instead is to view education technology

56:29

as a tool to bridge the education divide

56:32

as a tool to reduce inequity and that'll

56:37

only happen if we say that look this

56:39

teacher currently cannot lift the tier

56:42

and so half the kids are still not

56:44

succeeding and can I provide some

56:46

remedial tools that will help assist the

56:48

teacher in making that happen

56:51

if we can achieve that and I believe we

56:53

will in the next five to ten years that

56:55

will be the real success better success

56:57

of EdTech is not to take the student

57:00

who's already a motivated learner who's

57:02

going to see BSU ICC's food and helping

57:06

them you know crack some influence exam

57:08

I mean yeah it is for the for-profit

57:11

companies but I think the real success

57:13

would be for those children I told you

57:16

in the SA report who are falling behind

57:17

and we help bridge the gap can we ensure

57:21

that they can learn to read write to

57:23

basic math and we won't be doing it

57:26

alone we'll be doing alongside the

57:28

teacher

57:28

we'll be doing it alongside the parent

57:30

that to me would be the real success

57:33

right thanks Ashish of does it worry you

57:38

that our budgets are on the lower side

57:41

no I don't think so you know a lot of

57:43

people saying I need to spend 6% of GDP

57:46

the government on education let I'm a

57:48

realist

57:49

I mean firstly are attached to GDP is at

57:52

half the level where developed

57:55

steam countries are so so firstly that

57:57

too is our private sector is much larger

57:59

in those countries all public quarters

58:02

so when you add a private and government

58:03

it's well over five percent almost five

58:05

and a half being spent on education and

58:08

so I'm a realist it's not going to

58:10

happen it's not like we're government

58:12

can afford to spend six percent you know

58:15

of GDP the public system card if you

58:18

continue to spend just above three

58:20

percent and that's appropriate we just

58:22

need to make it more efficient

58:24

we need our goals to be clear we need to

58:27

energize the system and I think with the

58:29

same spend as a percent of GDP we can

58:33

achieve amazing results so I'm not one

58:36

to suggest that we ought to increase the

58:38

fiscal envelope with the kind of realist

58:39

everybody else would be doing that in

58:42

fact I think India needs to be using its

58:44

additional fiscal space to build

58:46

infrastructure and to create jobs as

58:50

opposed to putting more money into

58:51

education I think with the same money in

58:54

education we can still achieve the goals

58:57

that we want and by the way other

58:59

countries have done Goddard Ashish every

59:05

time there is a job opening or in

59:07

Central Square Foundation hundreds of

59:11

people from Network capital become super

59:13

curious they schedule time with us to

59:15

prepare so let's hear straight from you

59:18

who makes a solid professional at CSF

59:22

and how can you chart out a career a

59:25

meaningful one and satisfying a

59:28

successful one in the development space

59:30

do you have any thoughts on that yeah so

59:33

look I think CSF is a certain type of

59:35

organization so I can tell you about us

59:37

and I can generalize also I think see I

59:39

said look we are small we are right now

59:42

seventy plus people so obviously we

59:45

don't recruit too many people every year

59:46

I think foundations pay better than NGOs

59:49

so that's attractive foundations often

59:52

you know give you a wider exposure so

59:55

that's often attractive for younger

59:56

people who after copiers want to go to

59:59

grad school so for that profile yeah I

60:03

mean we are sometimes a stepping stone

60:05

sometimes we're about you know I have

60:07

the passion for

60:08

this my parent will let me experiment

60:11

for a couple years before I go to grad

60:12

school and that's fine I understand that

60:15

I didn't later learns what we're looking

60:17

for someone who's completely mission

60:19

line someone who wants to do this for

60:20

the rest of their lives and somebody who

60:22

apparently could have gotten a job

60:24

anywhere but really it's the best talent

60:28

who we want working on these because

60:31

these are hard complex problems

60:33

apparently harder than the problems we

60:35

face in the corporate sector there's no

60:38

way we can solve them with talent that

60:42

is subpar or be degree I'm very focused

60:45

on the quality of talent we have I think

60:48

the sectors of all has seen an

60:49

improvement in the talent coming in as

60:52

more young people have the social

60:54

conscience and want to contribute

60:56

towards improving the country and

61:00

building a new India I think having said

61:04

that they do need to be skilled and

61:07

trained and you know is DM which is

61:09

another institution that I'm involved

61:11

with I'm a founder of in school

61:13

management plays an important role as do

61:17

other programs like many of the

61:18

fellowships I mean that I am you go for

61:20

one year it's like an I am for the

61:22

social sector and now they're coming up

61:24

the new is DM 2.0 which is much more

61:27

focused on management and so we I

61:29

thought there is you know if you really

61:31

want to be a leader in the social sector

61:33

you should be going to an iamb type of

61:35

institution that's customized for the

61:38

sector so programs like that so I am

61:41

quite hopeful that if we can build these

61:43

kinds of initiatives and I'll assess any

61:45

leaders the social sector is another

61:48

program I have start which is more

61:50

focused at corporate crossovers so I

61:53

think we'll see more talent coming in we

61:56

just need to you know get them to

61:59

unlearn a bit and also get them reorient

62:02

it for the sector and give them the

62:04

toolkit to succeed in the sector

62:06

I have been is DM and network Apple

62:10

recently joined hands for for the

62:13

lecture series that you're running and

62:15

the response from the community has been

62:17

phenomenal so I'm really excited by how

62:19

much

62:20

sector appeals to the Millennials and I

62:22

think the two points that you laid out

62:24

in the answer will really help them

62:26

think through which stage they want to

62:27

intervene and what problem they want to

62:29

solve actually is just a final few set

62:32

of questions if you have a few more

62:34

minutes Gordon yeah Ashish is there

62:38

something that you've changed your mind

62:40

about in the education space in India

62:43

you've been doing this now for from for

62:47

a very long time full time would love to

62:51

hear some talks on it yeah I think

62:54

couple of things one is I've become more

62:57

and more convinced that system reform is

63:00

the key I don't think there's a silver

63:02

bullet like you asking human capital is

63:05

just training our future is going to be

63:07

officious sufficient no there is no

63:10

silver bullet I think you need a

63:11

combination of a variety of different

63:13

things and it has to be system led

63:16

otherwise it'll fizzle out so I think

63:18

one thing I have learned is that system

63:22

reform I think is the key and we all

63:25

need to work on of course

63:27

NGOs need to work on developing new

63:29

solutions and showing how can be done

63:31

but I think they need to bring a little

63:33

bit of this system lens to it thinking

63:35

about not just implementing but how do

63:38

they get the system to ship at me is

63:40

very important and therefore the NGO

63:42

played more of a technical partner so

63:44

that's a shift in my thinking that NGOs

63:47

have a very important role to play in

63:48

terms of doing the R&D showing how

63:50

things work developing new tools but

63:53

also can be this transformation to

63:59

system reforming they just have to let

64:02

go of some of their propriety material

64:04

be willing to Whitely we willing to

64:05

co-create with the government and being

64:08

open to partnering and I think they can

64:10

develop that skill set they can get much

64:13

better ROI on their initial investment

64:15

so that's one shift in my thinking a

64:18

second one in education is I think we

64:21

all know this or everybody's very

64:22

focused on school and improving

64:24

schooling children learn so much outside

64:27

of school and so I think focusing on the

64:31

parents early on because parents play an

64:33

important role

64:34

I think and very few people to figure

64:36

out interventions who get the parents

64:40

into the home environment and so if we

64:43

can make some ship there I think that

64:45

would be a game changer I think also

64:48

just making learning more exciting for

64:50

the child and and I think EdTech could

64:53

do some elements of that gamification

64:54

making it fun so that they're being

64:58

exposed to the wider world and learning

65:00

so I think bringing out the best in the

65:02

child and because they are active

65:04

learners they're curious schools

65:06

sometimes kill creativity and can you

65:09

keep that alive through other means

65:11

through exploration

65:12

and then the parents you know can we get

65:14

the parent to play a little bit more

65:16

active role and give them the tools I

65:17

think those are things that maybe

65:19

started to pay more attention to I think

65:22

this idea mission mode and goal setting

65:25

is something that I'm I'm completely

65:28

sold on I think you know I've seen the

65:29

power of it in the last few years as our

65:32

government has driven many different

65:34

missions so if we can if our country

65:37

just says you want to get into mission

65:38

mode if we can define the goals you can

65:40

get people energized I know this will

65:43

happen and so I I hope we do the same

65:45

for foundational learning as well yeah

65:48

there's a final short questions on your

65:50

personal habits I know you don't check

65:54

your phone often that was the first

65:55

thing you told us when you came for your

65:57

lecture tell us some things about your

65:59

habits that have helped that still help

66:01

you learn new things quickly and talk to

66:04

me good about what you do beyond work

66:06

clearly works keeping you very busy but

66:09

give us a flavor of your personality to

66:13

those who don't know you

66:14

yeah so I would say one is I'm still a

66:18

bit of a Luddite person and you know

66:24

almost as a matter of habit I I'm not on

66:27

social I am I have some stupid picture

66:29

of me in a suit on Facebook personal

66:31

secretary uploaded it many years ago and

66:34

I've never even changed I never go to

66:36

Facebook I've never gone to LinkedIn II

66:38

and although I have a profile there I

66:40

signed up for Twitter and got off it

66:43

very quickly because it just was taking

66:45

up too much time

66:46

so I know young people all use social

66:49

media and they should and I'm not I just

66:51

I found it I already had a busy day and

66:55

this is taking up too much time I just

66:57

also felt with social media you know

67:00

when I even Twitter which you know I

67:02

could make the people I wanted to follow

67:05

I was wallowing in other people sports

67:07

and and I don't want to do that you know

67:08

I don't want to just be in the stream of

67:10

new cycle and flow of information it's

67:13

too much already and so I want to

67:15

disconnect a little bit from that so I

67:17

think one is this that's my habit I mean

67:20

I can stay if my phone weren't working

67:23

for like three days that wouldn't be the

67:25

end of the world if I go on vacation I'm

67:27

okay checking things in the morning

67:29

locking my phone is a safe for the whole

67:31

day swimming in the pool hanging out by

67:35

the beach and checking it at night and

67:37

frankly I wouldn't miss anything you

67:39

know somebody I can who ever really

67:42

needs to know has my wife's phone and

67:43

they can find a way to reach me or some

67:45

other phone

67:46

so I've always learned in life that you

67:49

know if you can separate the urgent from

67:51

the important and you can pick so that

67:54

reduce the noise level in your life stay

67:58

away from you have to do it and you have

68:01

to some point respond to email and pick

68:03

up the phone and respond but you're not

68:05

to respond to every phone call you know

68:07

as it comes you just say listen when I'm

68:09

going to work in the morning or coming

68:11

back in the evening I'll respond and

68:13

maybe something's really important I'll

68:14

take you doing the day so I always like

68:17

the fact that you know puppets sits in

68:18

his office all day long you reach 500

68:20

pages

68:21

barely answers the phone I mean that to

68:25

me is like an ideal way to get work done

68:27

you know just to be in the zone to be

68:30

focused to not be distracted so that's

68:32

one habit too is I like sort of working

68:36

in bursts so like right now the global

68:40

economy is in tatters and I have not

68:41

focused on investing for many years my

68:44

brother runs we have a family investment

68:46

office and I feel it's important right

68:48

now for me to stay on top of investments

68:50

in addition to doing my normal work so I

68:52

wake up at 4:30 every day and from 4:30

68:54

to body 30 I stay on top of investments

68:58

you know I what's on going on globally

69:00

I read up on companies that track

69:03

sectors and that's for our sort of

69:05

nonstop endeavor so just like working

69:09

these chunks keep the noise away just

69:13

chunks of work nothing distracted that's

69:16

worked well for me and you know I I like

69:22

having fun at work so I'm I like joking

69:24

around I can be very serious and and

69:27

drive accountability and express a lot

69:29

of displeasure but I'm also quite

69:31

non-hierarchical and an easygoing right

69:34

I think that has worked with my

69:36

personality but I also I feel made me

69:39

effective in in my style as far as fun

69:42

is his son you know I I like going to

69:46

the gym quite regularly helps me clear

69:49

my head and be more much more effective

69:52

I mean right now at home my I still

69:54

exercise every day I play badminton I

69:57

play some cricket with my son so I think

69:59

sport and spin is important to me I love

70:04

beer and so I have a beer every day and

70:07

I'm an expert on beer and I like I can't

70:11

socialize now but I'll still enjoy my

70:14

drink and you know catch up with friends

70:17

over zoom but I prefer to do it in the

70:19

real world and then you know in terms of

70:23

interests I mean I I like sort of music

70:26

from the 80s when I grew up and I you

70:30

know I like I have some reading

70:31

interests which I sort of keep up but

70:33

yeah I mean I I do work pretty hard but

70:38

you know I I believe that you gotta have

70:41

you live one life so you have to have a

70:43

lot of fun I mean I want to be able to

70:45

go out and and see friends and and dance

70:48

and enjoy music and you know do all they

70:52

have lots of fun vacations so a life

70:55

would be to sorta film to miss out on

70:57

all that Ashley this was so much fun

71:00

thank you so much for your time and

71:02

favour inside this goes out to almost a

71:06

million people now

71:07

and I'm sure whether they're Indian

71:09

South Asians or people in the West

71:12

they'll have a ton to reflect and learn

71:14

really appreciate your time and I hope

71:17

you don't panic work during the covert

71:19

crisis and I hope we get to meet in

71:21

fashion but blood soon absolutely you

71:24

know thank you so much and it's so much

71:27

fun to do this with you and you know so

71:30

proud that as an Ashoka grad and a why

71:33

I've grabbed you you've done amazing

71:35

things in your life but most importantly

71:38

you're doing this

71:41

thank you I should I keep learning from

71:42

the best like you it's it's really fun

71:45

see you see you very soon

Your Network Capital Team

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Complete Transcript of Network Capital's Podcast with Ashish Dhawan

networkcapital.substack.com
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