Ravish Naresh

995 posts

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Ravish Naresh

Ravish Naresh

@ravishnaresh

Founder/CEO @Khatabook Ex Founder @Housing

Katılım Ağustos 2011
125 Takip Edilen21.2K Takipçiler
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Ravish Naresh
Ravish Naresh@ravishnaresh·
Over 2020 @Khatabook activated merchants in >95% Indian districts, recording over $100Bn+ in transactions with over 150Mn+ customers. A good chunk of India's retail GDP is already being recorded on the platform and trade flows from across the country are getting digitized.
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Ravish Naresh
Ravish Naresh@ravishnaresh·
@mukundjha Mukund bro just ignore the noise. Your internals can clearly see your numbers/accounts, you're answerable to no one else. Have personally used the product, can vouch for the top tier, valley level execution. Godspeed 🖐️
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Prasanna S
Prasanna S@myprasanna·
Are you a funded startup under 30 employees? Do you have a backlog that you are not able to ship? Me and my team will work for you and try to ship your backlog for the next week using our latest sr software engg tool. It’s completely free for you — you just need to give us time, feedback and all the access you give to a new engg hire. Reply back to this thread and I’ll schedule a time with you, if it’s a good fit. I was ranked no 1 engg in india in programming contests and was cto of Rippling. But the models of course have become better than me these days.
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Aravind
Aravind@aravind·
So basically, the Iranian ship was safe as long as it was in Indian waters. India even offered it shelter. Which another Iranian ship took. But this one left port on call by Iranian navy for their war against the US. The US navy sunk this ship which was heading to war once it was outside Sri Lanka in international waters. This was twisted by Pakistani and Chinese run propaganda accounts to incite Indians and blame India. Many Indians fell for it and started blaming the Indian government as having "abandoned a guest" and "not helping Iran" etc. Nothing against Indians who got carried away by the psyops or politics. But it is concerning that foreign accounts are able to seed narratives and do such effective psyops inside India in a matter of hours. And India is unable to counter their propaganda within India itself. @MIB_India is failing to protect India's interests time and again around the world and inside India itself. There's no excuse for why India is not setting up a rapid response social media & media monitoring cell with all required tools and agency to react in real time to information domain threats. LONG OVERDUE. @PMOIndia @HMOIndia @narendramodi @AmitShah
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Ravish Naresh
Ravish Naresh@ravishnaresh·
It’s an open secret that r/Kashmiri is run by moderators in Pakistan. The subreddit pushes anti-India narratives, bans Indian redditors just for following Indian subreddits, and only amplifies separatist content. So the largest “Kashmiri” community on Reddit is effectively enemy-controlled, with Indian voices removed entirely. Meanwhile, Indian policymakers barely even register Reddit’s influence, allowing coordinated psyops to run unchecked. If we don’t build better oversight of foreign-run online communities, we’ll keep seeing online radicalisation translate into real-world consequences like what happened at the Red Fort.
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Ritesh Banglani
Ritesh Banglani@banglani·
This is not true, Nithin. Venture capital is not some underhand tax arbitrage scheme. In fact, we celebrate every time a portfolio company starts paying tax, because it means their profits have wiped out years of accumulated losses. There are three reasons VC funded companies are unprofitable, none of them have to do with tax. These are, in order: 1. Most startups are really hypotheses or experiments with no known business model. A vast majority of startups are loss-making till they die, because they never figure out how to make money. 2. Some startups are profitable only at a massive scale. Think network effect businesses like Facebook, Uber, Airbnb or even Swiggy and Zomato - they need millions of sticky customers and merchants to become profitable. Till they reach that scale, venture capital finances their losses. 3. Some companies can be profitable while being small, but don't create sufficient equity value at that scale to compensate for the losses in all the companies that fail (see reason #1 above). In such cases it makes sense to continue to invest aggressively in sales and marketing. Without this investment, not only will the company be too small to make a difference, the startup industry won't exist because the winners can't subsidize the experiments. If venture capital were such a clever tax-arbitrage scheme, we wouldn't lose money on 65% of our investments.
Nithin Kamath@Nithin0dha

If you take money out of a business as dividends, the effective tax rate is 52% (25% corporate tax + 35.5% on personal income). Through capital gains, it's just 14.95% (with cess). Why does this matter? Here’s what you should know if you invest in IPOs. If you're an investor (especially a VC), the math is simple: reduce corporate tax by showing minimal profits or losses. Spend (Burn) on acquiring users, build a growth narrative, and then sell shares at a higher valuation while paying much lower tax. This spending also makes it harder for competitors to survive. To be clear, we're not discussing R&D spending here, which, incidentally, is very low in India (0.7% of GDP). What's often overlooked is that VCs are essentially playing a tax arbitrage game. Look at most VC-backed businesses listed in the last few years, the reason they show little or no profit is partly due to this. Once you run a business this way, it's extremely difficult to switch. Every startup that's 7-8 years old from the time of raising the first round faces constant pressure from VCs for an exit. With almost no M&A opportunities in India, IPO is often the only way out. The government probably designed this tax arbitrage to incentivize companies to spend money and not just accumulate and distribute. But I'm unsure if the balance is correct. I think it's also creating businesses that aren't very resilient. One prolonged market downturn, and many of these unprofitable companies would struggle to survive. Two things that make this more interesting: Unprofitable growth gets valued at much higher multiples than steady profits. A company doing ₹100 cr revenue with 100% growth might get 10-15x, while a profitable one with 20% growth gets 3-5x. So VCs aren't just saving on tax; they're in essence creating a 3x higher exit valuation. If you're competing against someone burning cash, you almost have to match it to defend market share, even if you don't want to, because of the quirks I mentioned above.

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Taranjeet
Taranjeet@taranjeetio·
Memory is what makes us human. It's also what makes AI truly intelligent. @mem0ai has raised $24M to build the universal memory layer for AI. Thousands of teams in production. 14M downloads. 41K GitHub stars. Intelligence needs memory & we're building it for everyone. More👇
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Ritesh Banglani
Ritesh Banglani@banglani·
I don't know if you've noticed, but when Bengaluru citizens talk about "infrastructure", the administration responds with "potholes". This not only hijacks the narrative to focus on short-term fixes, it trivializes the entire issue ("just a matter of potholes, don't get too worked up"). The narrative must include fixing drainage, increase in bus density and quality, bus routes that reflect tech industry demand, allowing private shared transportation, halt in new construction permits in choked areas, road widening, flyover end underpass construction and faster metro buildout. Not only potholes.
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Lal Chand Bisu
Lal Chand Bisu@lcbisu·
@deepakabbot haha.. let's make it compulsory, first you will talk about Bangalore infra then only you can talk about UPI
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Nisha Poddar
Nisha Poddar@PoddarNisha·
Announcement Delighted to join back NDTV where i first got my break as a biz reporter 2 decades ago. Grateful to the leadership to entrust me with the role of - Executive Editor- Corporates, NDTV Profit Look forward to your continued support in my new journey. 🙏
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Ravish Naresh
Ravish Naresh@ravishnaresh·
WhatsApp retention and network effects are too strong to displace. Nothing short of a ban will work.
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Ravish Naresh
Ravish Naresh@ravishnaresh·
We could pivot from the H1B ban by banning US big tech like China did. Build our own local ecosystem for Social, Search, OS, Cloud etc. Then maybe we have a chance of catching up in the AI race too.
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Ravish Naresh
Ravish Naresh@ravishnaresh·
@1kunalbahl The lack of quality of life in metro cities is a big drawback to retain talent.
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Kunal Bahl
Kunal Bahl@1kunalbahl·
Because of the new H1B rules, a tremendous number of talented individuals are going to be headed back to 🇮🇳. It will no doubt be tough in the beginning to move base, but will work out for them given the tremendous opportunities in India. The talent density in 🇮🇳 is going 🚀
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AV
AV@onceuponabhi·
@ravishnaresh Tag those 5 BJP MP too who are getting elected. Ever asked such accountability question from them?
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Ravish Naresh
Ravish Naresh@ravishnaresh·
Sir what happened, conditions have only worsened.
DK Shivakumar@DKShivakumar

.@ktrtrs, my friend, I accept your challenge. By the end of 2023, with Congress back in power in Karnataka, we will restore the glory of Bengaluru as India’s best city.

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Ravish Naresh
Ravish Naresh@ravishnaresh·
Startups in HSR/Koramangala (India's Sillicon Valley) are already generating billions of $ of taxes. Yet we have v bad roads, almost daily power cuts, poor quality water supply, unusable foot paths. Many rural areas now have better basic infra than India's Sillicon Valley
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