You are — and a liar too, every time you say “I just don’t have the time.”.
You have a full 24 hours. That’s 1,440 minutes. Every single day — the same 1,440 handed to every CEO, every monk, every living being on this Planet.
You’re not short of time. You’re just not managing it the way you could and SHOULD.
Want to solve the riddle of where your hours actually disappear?
The answers are in my new book, “Time Isn’t the Thief”, available now on Amazon — and FREE to read on Kindle Unlimited.
⏰ Want the one-page Compass to keep beside your desk? — pop your details into this quick form and it’ll land in your inbox within seconds: https://forms.gle/iFitSARbCVs84dEU9
Not sure about tapping links? No need — just open Amazon and search “Time Isn’t the Thief.” It’s free to read on Kindle Unlimited.
And if you only want the one-page Compass from the post above, — pop your details into this quick form and it’ll land in your inbox within seconds: https://forms.gle/iFitSARbCVs84dEU9
I spent five years as an officer in the Indian Army. Then I took off the uniform and started again — from nothing.
With ₹1.5 lakh and no business background, I built what became the Chaque Jour Group: a bootstrapped, pan-India company in staffing and facility management that today turns over more than ₹150 crore and serves clients who have stayed with us for 10, 15, even 20 years.
I wasn't given any of it. I built it.
That phrase — built, not given — runs through everything I do now. After three decades of leading teams, closing deals, surviving downturns, and learning the hard way what separates the founders who last from the ones who fold, I've turned to what matters most to me at this stage of life: passing it on.
Today I mentor first-generation entrepreneurs and emerging leaders — not with theory from a textbook, but with what the Army and the market actually taught me: discipline, execution, resilience, and the composure to think clearly when everything is on fire. I also help professionals master something most leaders neglect — staying calm under pressure, through simple practices of breath and stillness.
I write for the same reason I mentor: knowledge shared is knowledge multiplied.
If you're building something — a business, a team, or a stronger version of yourself — you're in the right place. Let's build it. Not wait to be given it.