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Yashi
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Yashi
@joinyashi
Documenting every wins and failures publicly | Techie turned Video Editor and Motion Designer.
Katılım Kasım 2024
336 Takip Edilen391 Takipçiler

@joinyashi Keep cooking my man
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I made this today using after effects!
Motion graphics product animation, leave me your suggestions or corrections on comment.
Yashi@joinyashi
Today I’m creating this! 🤯
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@vasantshetty81 @mundhebanni @DrBroKannada @ksutham Congratulations Vasant sir!
Actually @ksutham sir’s was crazy, I can say GOAT 🔥
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The @mundhebanni podcast has now unlocked a level of traction where YouTube is organically recommending our videos to a wider audience. 🙌
The episode with @DrBroKannada crossed a million views, making it our first episode to hit this milestone.
The episode with @ksutham, founder of Captain Fresh, crossed 250k views. The last 50k views came in two weeks without a single post.
The episode with @shreepoorna365, founder of Arctus Aerospace, is close to hitting 100k views within two weeks of release.
The episode with @geethamhp, founder of Niramai Health Analytix, is close to 25k views.
A big thank you to everyone who supported us in this journey 🙏🙏
@Shishir_S_U @akaranth @kodlady

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Mysuru, here we come..
Join us at the 6th @mundhebanni meetup at IRI auditorium, SJC STEP campus, Mysuru
Share with fellow founders, aspiring entrepreneurs from Mysuru region..
Registration link in the comment below



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@vasantshetty81 Mine also same starting point😃 (web dev), but not with that struggle!
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Can an average, middle class student with no background in business, no generation wealth become an entrepreneur, build successful businesses, create job and wealth?
Here is a great story from Bengaluru. Read on...👇
He was an average student from a tier 2 engineering college in South Bengaluru. The 2008 recession had hit, campus placements were weak, and he did not get placed. He did not even have a computer at home. But web development and building websites for businesses was becoming a trend then, and he thought, “Let me at least try my luck with the skills I can learn.”
So he started going to internet cafés to learn web development. That’s really where his low budget entrepreneurial journey began.
He and a couple of his friends would then go around Basavanagudi, Gandhi Bazaar in Bengaluru visiting small businesses and asking if they needed a website. Most people rejected him. But he kept showing up again and again. Finally, one shop owner told him, “I don’t even need a website, but I’ll still get one done because I like the perseverance you’ve shown.”
That one opportunity changed everything.
Over time, he ended up building more than 250 websites for businesses. In that process, he didn’t just learn web development. He learned sales, negotiation, communication, customer psychology, persistence, and execution.
Those experiences pushed him to start his own startup journey. But the first two startups failed.
And what I found authentic about him is that instead of hiding those failures, he openly talks about them on his LinkedIn profile. Most people market only success. He speaks honestly about failure and what it taught him.
After those setbacks, he moved into the corporate world, first at KPMG and later at Robert Bosch. Bosch eventually took him to Germany, where he worked on costing and investment structuring.
Then came a turning point.
While traveling in the US, he happened to meet someone at a café who introduced him to the world of crowdfunding. That conversation stayed with him. He realized that while crowdfunding was becoming popular in the US, Germany itself did not have a proper crowdfunding platform built locally.
So he decided to build one.
That startup went on to become one of Germany’s fastest growing startups for two consecutive years and was eventually acquired by a large German media house.
He later returned to India and continued building meaningful ventures. One of them was Kreate, inspired by seeing artisans in places like Karkala and Udupi selling handmade products for tiny amounts while the same products sold for much higher prices in cities. Kreate helped bring artisans online and enabled thousands of creators to sell products directly. He later also built Nucleo, a platform helping founders and investors streamline fundraising and due diligence.
From learning coding in internet cafés to building one of Germany’s fastest growing startups, Vittal’s story is really about curiosity, hustle, resilience, reinvention, and staying in the game long enough for things to finally work out.
One of the most fascinating founder conversations we’ve had on Mundhe Banni so far.
Episode 23 featuring @Vrallnanda is now streaming on @mundhebanni. It has grossed over 10,000 views within 2 days of release.
Catch it on YT with subtitles in English
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