Thursday, 2 April 2026

Love my habits, not my face or my wallet.

If you're in love with how I show up every day — the discipline, the obsession, the relentless building — this thing will last.

If you're in love with how I look or what I earn, you're not in love with me. You're in love with a snapshot. And snapshots expire.

Looks fade. Money comes and goes. But habits? Habits are who I actually am. They're the one thing that keeps compounding.

Here's the test. Take away the money. Let the body age. Now ask yourself — do you still want to be in the room?

If yes, that's love.

If not, that was a transaction.

Most relationships fail because people fall in love with the output — the lifestyle, the appearance, the status. Not the process. Not the person grinding at 2am because they can't help it.

The ugly truth?

You didn't fall in love with a person. You fell in love with a phase. And phases end.

The person who loves your habits will stay through the worst chapter of your life. The person who loves your money will write the last chapter for you.

Choose carefully. Or life will choose for you.

The Certainty Premium

Every business that has ever made serious money did one thing: it removed doubt.

Not created utility. Removed doubt about utility.

McDonald's isn't the best burger in any city it operates in. But you know exactly what you're getting. In Tokyo. In São Paulo. At 2am. That predictability isn't a side effect of the business. It is the business.

People don't pay for value. They pay for guaranteed value. The gap between "this might work" and "this will work, every time" is where all the money lives.


Insurance: certainty that a disaster won't ruin you.

SaaS: certainty that a capability exists tomorrow without you thinking about it.

Consulting: certainty of decision quality. McKinsey's real product isn't insight. It's the ability to tell your board, "McKinsey said so."

Luxury: certainty of signal. A Rolex doesn't tell time better than a Casio. But it certainly communicates something.

The pattern is everywhere once you see it.


Most startups die not because they lack utility, but because they can't make it feel certain fast enough.

You built something good. It works. Sometimes. For some people. Under some conditions. That's a demo. Not a business.

A business exists the moment a stranger pays you and knows — not hopes, not believes, knows — they'll get what they expected. Repeatedly. Without babysitting.

The entire journey from founding to scale is manufacturing certainty. Branding is certainty. SOPs are certainty. Retention is proof of certainty. Unit economics only work when delivery is predictable.


This is why AI changes everything.

What is AI automation? Taking a human judgment that was intermittently available — dependent on one person's energy, mood, presence — and making it always available.

Your best employee's judgment at 3am on a Sunday. Without the employee.

That's not incremental. That's a category shift. You're converting uncertain, person-dependent utility into certain, system-delivered utility.

Every founder building with AI should ask one question: what judgment, currently trapped inside a person, can I make certain?

That's the entire game.


Amazon: certain delivery. Google: certain answers. Apple: certain experience.

They didn't win by being the best. They won by being the most predictable.

Stop optimizing for quality in isolation. Optimize for the certainty of quality.

The market doesn't reward brilliance. It rewards reliability. The gap between the two is where fortunes are made.

Monday, 30 March 2026

Maut hi change drive karti hai business world mein

 "In deal making, only the fear of death closes deals."


Sit with that.


No one moves until something is dying. A runway. A relationship. A window of opportunity. A reputation. When everything is fine, people negotiate forever. They stall. They "circle back." They wait for better terms.


But the moment something is about to die — urgency appears from nowhere.


The dying startup signs the term sheet. The desperate seller accepts the offer. The founder with 3 months of runway stops being precious about valuation.


This means something tactical for you as a deal maker.


**Your job isn't to make a great offer. Your job is to make the cost of inaction visible.**


What happens if they don't sign this week? What opportunity closes? What competitor moves in? What leverage disappears?


You're not creating fear. You're just making the existing death more visible.


The best deal makers I've seen don't push. They illuminate. They show the other side exactly what's dying — and let that do the work.

Sunday, 29 March 2026

Disha hi apki dasha tay karegi


For decades, creating software needed two things:

Direction × Hard Work.

Know what to build. Then grind to build it.

AI just killed one side of that equation.

The hard work? The coding, the debugging, the late nights staring at a screen? That cost is collapsing to near zero.

But here's what hasn't changed — and never will:

Knowing what to build is still rare.

Most people are chasing the "how." The real leverage is in the "what."

If you have taste, if you understand a market, if you can spot what's missing — you now have a superpower that didn't exist two years ago.

Because the gap between "I have an idea" and "I have a product" has never been smaller.

Direction is the new moat.

Wednesday, 18 March 2026

The Category 2 Thesis: Why Known Problems with Unknown Solutions Are the Biggest Opportunity of the AI Era

The Three Categories of Problems

Every problem can be placed on a simple grid based on two questions: do we know the problem exists, and do we know how to solve it?

Category 1: Unknown Problem, Unknown Solution. These are the true blind spots. We don't know the problem exists, so we certainly don't have a solution. Black swan events, undiscovered market needs, and latent systemic risks live here. AI can help with pattern detection, but you fundamentally cannot solve what you haven't conceived of. This category remains largely intractable.

Category 2: Known Problem, Unknown Solution. We see the problem clearly. We feel it. Entire industries complain about it. But nobody has cracked a workable, scalable solution — because the expertise was too scarce, the data too fragmented, or the coordination too expensive. This is the category that AI is blowing wide open.

Category 3: Known Problem, Known Solution. Both the problem and its fix are well understood. Accounting, payroll, standard logistics. These are execution games. AI makes them faster and cheaper, but the opportunity here is incremental, not transformational.


Ten Reasons Category 2 Problems Are About to Become Easy

1. Expertise is no longer a bottleneck.

The defining feature of Category 2 was that you knew what was broken but couldn't find or afford someone who knew how to fix it. LLMs have absorbed vast amounts of specialist knowledge across law, medicine, engineering, finance, and dozens of other fields. The knowledge that used to be locked inside a senior consultant's head is now accessible through a prompt. You still need human judgment for the final mile, but the first 80% of expertise is suddenly free.

2. AI agents can synthesise across domains, which humans couldn't do at scale.

Many Category 2 problems persisted because they sat at the intersection of multiple fields. A rare disease diagnosis requires synthesising genetics, pharmacology, and clinical presentation simultaneously. A complex regulatory question might span tax law, environmental policy, and trade compliance. No single human expert spans all of that. An AI agent can reason across all of it in a single pass. Cross-domain synthesis was the hard part, and it just got easy.

3. The cost of experimentation has collapsed.

When solutions are unknown, you have to experiment — try approaches, test hypotheses, iterate. That used to cost real money: hiring researchers, running pilots, building prototypes. With LLMs and code-generating agents, the cost of generating and testing a candidate solution has dropped from months and lakhs to hours and nearly nothing. You can now explore the solution space a hundred times faster than before.

4. Data exists — we just couldn't process it.

For many Category 2 problems, the raw material for a solution was already out there: buried in research papers, government databases, customer feedback, sensor logs, and industry reports. The bottleneck was never data collection but data comprehension. AI agents can ingest, structure, and extract insight from volumes of information that no human team could get through. The solution was always hiding in the data — we just needed a reader fast enough to find it.

5. LLMs turn tacit knowledge into explicit knowledge.

A huge amount of problem-solving expertise lives as tacit knowledge — the kind that experienced professionals carry in their heads but struggle to articulate or document. LLMs, trained on the written output of millions of such professionals, have effectively distilled a significant portion of this tacit knowledge into a queryable form. Problems that required "finding the right person who just knows" can now be approached by anyone with access to the model.

6. AI agents handle the coordination that made solutions impractical.

Some Category 2 problems weren't unsolved because of a single missing insight but because the solution required orchestrating many moving parts — multiple data sources, multiple stakeholders, multiple sequential decisions. The coordination cost alone made it impractical. AI agents can serve as the orchestration layer: pulling data from different systems, routing decisions to the right people, and managing workflows that would have required an entire project management team.

7. Personalisation at scale is now possible.

Many Category 2 problems were really personalisation problems in disguise. We knew that every student learns differently, every patient has a unique health profile, and every small business has distinct compliance needs. The solution — truly personalised service — was known in concept but impossible to deliver at scale because it required one expert per person. LLMs make one-to-one personalisation economically viable for the first time.

8. The feedback loop between problem and solution has tightened dramatically.

In the old world, you'd identify a Category 2 problem, spend months researching, build a prototype, test it, learn it didn't work, and start over. With AI agents, this loop compresses to days or even hours. You can describe a problem, have an agent generate candidate solutions, evaluate them against real data, refine, and iterate — all within a single working session. The speed of iteration itself changes what's solvable.

9. AI reduces the minimum viable team to near-zero.

Category 2 problems used to require well-funded teams: researchers, domain experts, engineers, coordinators. The minimum viable team to even attempt a solution was expensive, which meant only large companies or well-funded startups could try. Today, a single founder with an AI agent stack can perform work that previously required a team of ten or twenty. This means thousands more people can now attempt to solve Category 2 problems, and the probability that someone cracks each one goes up enormously.

10. The economic incentive is perfectly aligned.

Here's what makes this moment special: Category 2 problems are, by definition, problems that people already know they have and already want solved. There is existing demand with no existing supply. That is the purest form of entrepreneurial opportunity. You don't need to educate the market or create demand — you just need to show up with a solution that works. And because the old cost of solving these problems was enormous (or infinite), even an imperfect AI-powered solution at a fraction of the price represents massive value to the buyer. The margins are extraordinary, the willingness to pay is already there, and the competitive field is still thin.


The Bottom Line

Category 1 problems (unknown problem, unknown solution) remain genuinely hard — you can't solve what you can't see. Category 3 problems (known problem, known solution) are already crowded and commoditised. But Category 2 — where the problem is staring us in the face and the solution was just out of reach — is where the entire game has changed. LLMs and AI agents haven't just made these problems slightly easier. They've made many of them trivially solvable compared to what they were even two years ago. The people who recognise this and act on it are going to build the most valuable companies of the next decade.

Tuesday, 17 March 2026

**Your role is not "Amazon seller who makes videos." Your role is "YouTuber who happens to recommend products."**

Great question, Kumar. Here's what I'd consider the core insight:


**Your role is not "Amazon seller who makes videos." Your role is "YouTuber who happens to recommend products."**


That mental shift changes everything. Here's why it matters:


YouTube's algorithm rewards content that keeps people watching. It doesn't care about your product listings. So if you approach it as "how do I promote my Amazon products," you'll make ads that nobody watches. But if you approach it as "how do I make content people genuinely want to see," you'll build an audience that naturally buys what you recommend.


**The core understanding boils down to this:** People come to YouTube to solve problems or be entertained — not to be sold to. Your job is to be the most helpful or most engaging person in your niche, and the sales follow from that trust.


Practically, this means a few things:


First, build content around search intent. Think about what someone types into YouTube before they buy a product in your category. "Best budget headphones 2026," "how to set up a home gym," "is X worth it?" — these are the videos that attract buyers who are already in a purchasing mindset. This is where YouTube and Amazon overlap naturally.


Second, focus on watch time and click-through rate above all else. These are the two metrics YouTube cares about most. A compelling thumbnail and title get the click, and genuinely useful or entertaining content keeps them watching. If your first 30 seconds don't hook someone, the rest doesn't matter.


Third, trust is your real product. Viewers can smell a pure sales pitch immediately. The creators who win long-term are the ones who give honest reviews, point out flaws, and sometimes even recommend competitors. Paradoxically, this honesty drives more sales because people trust the recommendations.


Fourth, consistency beats virality. One video won't change anything. Posting regularly in a focused niche — say two to three times a week — trains the algorithm to understand who your audience is and recommend your content to them.


If I had to distill it to one sentence: **Make the video you'd actually want to watch yourself if you were shopping for that product, and make it so good that someone would watch it even if they weren't shopping.** That's the bar. Everything else — SEO, thumbnails, descriptions, affiliate links — is optimization on top of that foundation.

Sunday, 15 March 2026

Direction Over Destination - Condition Is Temporary, Habits Aren't

A person might be in a great position today — successful, healthy, wealthy — but if their daily habits are slowly degrading (negative acceleration), that advantage erodes over time. Conversely, someone might be in a tough spot right now, but if they're building strong habits — reading, exercising, showing up, being disciplined — that consistent positive acceleration will compound and eventually overtake the person who started ahead but coasted.

The key insight is that habits are the acceleration, not the outcome. You can't always control the hand you were dealt (initial velocity), and your current situation could be the result of luck, circumstance, or a thousand things outside your control. But what you choose to do repeatedly — that's the force you're applying to your own trajectory.

And just like in physics, acceleration wins over the long run. A small but sustained force in a consistent direction will eventually dominate any initial advantage in velocity.

It's a useful mental model because it shifts attention away from judging people (or yourself) by their current state, and toward asking the more important question: what are they doing every day, and in which direction is that pushing them?