Kiran Jonnalagadda
cleared his PU course after five attempts. And by the time he did it,
his friends had completed their engineering course. But Kiran’s story
had just begun.
This Bangalorean’s name now features in the team that
developed the Human Protein Reference Database by John Hopkins
University. The database contains entries on the 3,000 most-studied
human proteins and their roles in diseases and is supposed to be the
standard of developing a database internationally. Kiran has come a long
way from an unsuccessful PU candidate to a successful entrepreneur.
Like
many who failed many times before tasting success, Kiran says it’s OK
to fail. Stories of suicides by anxious students shock them. Exams
are not the end of the world, they insist. “As Einstein said: ‘Just
because a fish cannot climb a tree doesn’t mean it’s not smart.’ I was
never good at Maths and Chemistry but I loved computers,” Kiran says.
What kept him going through the five years in PU:
“Fear. It was through an act of rebellion that I started working. I
gained confidence and I wanted to get into a college. But I felt
insulted when some people said I was too old for it. That was last
straw,” he said. Kiran has worked with Chip magazine, the e-governance
wing of the Karnataka government and then with the John Hopkins
University.
Another interesting example is renowned theatre artist Vivek Madan. He dropped out of college when he was doing his first year BSc in Environment Science at St Joseph’s College. >”Some
days, I’d revise a subject for days before the exam, but remember
nothing during the exam. I’d think ‘What’s the purpose of studying?’ I
realized I wasn’t stupid – it was either the subject or the way it was
dealt with,” said Vivek.
He added, “It wasn’t an easy decision to quit. My
family did well in academics. My two grandpas are PhDs. Scoring 52% in
PCMB was a horrifying experience,” he said.
Yet
that didn’t stop him from quitting college at 19 and plunging
whole-heartedly into theatre, despite of his parents’ disapproval — “I
had a big fight at home when I did that,” he says. “It was supposed to
have been a year-long sabbatical but I never went back to college.”
He began with a series of musicals adaptations. He
went on to direct his first play at the tender age of 20 and even won an
award for it. “You know, I got kicked out of the dramatics team at
school and college. I always wanted to go back and show the cultural
secretary that award,” he grins.
He then decided to tread a more conventional path and
took up a job at Trump It – an events and marketing company. It was a
short stint however that lasted all of ten months.So he went ahead and
started his own entertainment company, Harlequin entertainment along
with a partner.
Karthik Naralasetty, 25, with an established business in the US, feels success in studies does not guarantee success in life.
Karthik dropped out of Rutgers University, US, after a year. “I
realized I had to spend a lot of my father’s hard-earned money to get a
degree. I asked myself, ‘What do I want to do after getting a degree?’ I
knew the answer – start a large business and manage it,” said Karthik,
currently running a company called Socialblood Inc based in New York.
“Funnily, though I don’t have a degree, I’ve got investors who’ve been
to Harvard, Stanford, MIT and IIM,” says Karthik.
He was labelled a poor student in school. Karthik
said he couldn’t do much about his dislike for Mathematics. “Through
school, I was bullied by teachers because of this. In Class X, my school
officials openly declared that I and a few students would surely fail
the examinations and be a disgrace to the school,” recalled Karthik. He said the mantra to be successful in life doesn’t lie in Class X or Class XII grades.
Now much more successful than he may have ever been,
Naralasetty is an Internet entrepreneur and the founder of the first of
its kind site Socialblood.org. “In June 2011, I heard of a rare case in a
four year-old girl who had thalassemia. She needed 30 units of blood a
day every day. Not knowing anything about blood banks I realised how
hard it was to find blood. My obvious response in the age of Facebook,
was why can’t Facebook tell me when someone needs blood,” he says
animatedly over the phone.
Having started eight groups for different blood types
on Facebook, his idea led to people posting requests for blood on the
site. “Eventually, I formed the website that can connect you to people
in your locality or the city to donate and receive blood. Within six
months, 20 countries approached us to create a similar model for them,”
adds this winner of the Staples Youth Social Entrepreneur Award, 2011.
At least Akshar Peerbhoy, a successful businessman, followed that mantra since the day he was enrolled in the school. I’m probably one of the only few students to fail in Class 1. Even during exams, I’d prefer playing some games”
or later on, hanging out with my friends. Most teachers gave up on me.
My parents were incredibly worried, as both of them are leaders in their
field,” said Akshar, who had a brief stint at Deakin University,
Australia but dropped out in the second year and returned to India.
It’s
been a rollercoaster journey so far for Akshar, who says that focus and
power of mind are keys to real success. “Today, I’m respected among
colleagues and clients. Today, when I meet school friends, they’re
amazed at the change in me. At the beginning of my career, I started
every morning with only one goal — be better than I was the day before,”
said Akshar, a successful businessman.
Reid Hoffman started
his professional life with the intention of becoming an academic. But
then he realized: “in order to be a professional scholar, you have to
dedicate a vast majority of your career to writing esoteric books that
only 50 people will understand.”
So
instead, he got into the technology industry with a job at Apple, where
he helped build eWorld, Apple’s version of America Online. Next, he
started a company called SocialNet. It failed.
A friend of Hoffman’s, Peter Thiel, recruited him to
join a startup, PayPal. It sold to eBay in 2002. Then Hoffman went on a
long trip to Australia. There, he decided to create an Internet company.
It’s LinkedIn. Today, it’s worth $19 billion – and Hoffman is its
biggest shareholder.
Mantras for success
* I don’t believe the school system is the only route to success. It
gives you an automated path to a career. Otherwise, you can make your
own path.
– Kiran Jonnalagadda
* I was lucky it worked out for me. It could have gone awry. You have to play your cards right.
– Vivek Madan
* Life is what you make of it. If you fail, laugh at it and move on. Never lose hope.
– Karthik Naralasetty
* Studying is not the end of life. Today, I am who I wanted to be all along and it has nothing to do with a formal education.
– Akshar Peerbhoy
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