@dhanhq Community, Branding, Socials & everything that needs to be done | @PranganF - Cofounder | DMs open. Views are personal, RTs are not endorsement.
the biggest sign IPO might be around the corner… when the CFO goes from spreadsheets to podcasts.
Anthropic: https://t.co/HVVYfYEPCt
OpenAI: https://t.co/wNigVMhHYr
Most of the comments here mention discovering him through their mom or dad. My experience is exactly the same. My mom introduced me to his YouTube videos, and their enrollment process is so seamless that my parents were able to sign up without any help from me.
The numbers he delivers are impressive, but what matters most is that my parents and their friends are genuinely happy with the training. And honestly, the quality of the training itself is very, very good.
Say hello to the GRAND DADDY of all consumer startups in India. Does 70% EBITDA, 60%+ PAT @ 300Cr+ run rate (approx). Habuild is probably the craziest thing I've seen come out of India
- Founder is an IIT BHU grad that just taught Yoga/mediation after unit
- Amassed a massive following - 3M+ on Youtube to be precise
- Bootstraps Habuild with his sister and uni friend in 2022
- Biz blitscales, growing 3x YoY. 6L+ reported users now, 240Cr+ run rate @ 3499 avg package
- Users seem to be mostly baby boomers and senior citizens, untapped market imo
- My estimate is that this is probably more now, given these guys have a GREAT engine for user acquisition
- So many fitness products (Sarva, Cult etc) have come out of India, but I've never seen something like this. Even Pankaj Chaddah (ex Zomato founder) is still building something similar in the Yoga/meditation space (Mindhouse/Shyft), but nowhere close
Fkn mental, only early Physicswallah probably comes close
Okay hear me out. Countries that take entrance exams seriously treat them almost like a national priority because they are deciding the future talent pool of the country.
Quick context:
China 🇨🇳
• Military doesn’t transport papers
• But exam security is calibrated at a national-security level: police escorts, surveillance, signal blockers, criminal penalties for leaks
South Korea 🇰🇷
• Army isn’t involved
• Yet the entire country aligns around exam day air traffic adjusted, police support, high coordination
India 🇮🇳
• After repeated leaks, if extraordinary logistics are temporarily used to restore trust, I don’t see it as problematic.
The real question is not “why Air Force?”
It’s: are we serious enough about protecting merit and fixing the system so this doesn’t happen again?
Have pulled comparison on chatgpt quickly for this.
Okay hear me out. Countries that take entrance exams seriously treat them almost like a national priority because they are deciding the future talent pool of the country.
Quick context:
China 🇨🇳
• Military doesn’t transport papers
• But exam security is calibrated at a national-security level: police escorts, surveillance, signal blockers, criminal penalties for leaks
South Korea 🇰🇷
• Army isn’t involved
• Yet the entire country aligns around exam day air traffic adjusted, police support, high coordination
India 🇮🇳
• After repeated leaks, if extraordinary logistics are temporarily used to restore trust, I don’t see it as problematic.
The real question is not “why Air Force?”
It’s: are we serious enough about protecting merit and fixing the system so this doesn’t happen again?
Have pulled comparison on chatgpt quickly for this.
To prevent another paper leak, the Centre is reportedly considering using Indian Air Force aircraft to transport question papers for the NEET retest on June 21, part of a sweeping “whole-of-government” security overhaul involving Home Ministry, central agencies & state police.
Meet Atiqa Mir, 11-year-old racing prodigy from India 🇮🇳
Atiqa has emerged as the highest-ranked female racer and seventh overall in the FIA International Karting Ranking (IKR). She is the first Indian chosen by the Formula 1 Academy and was fast-tracked into the Junior category at the start of 2026.
At @RaiseTheBarHQ, we proudly support Atiqa in her journey to become a professional F1 driver from India.
I really hope she makes it to the F1 car, sees the chequered flag at finish-line and makes it to the podium someday! For now, supporting and cheering for Atiqa from the sidelines 😇🚀
Pic credit: atiqa, economic times.
Craziest product I have seen in recent times. This is like drugs on steroids for people who love to monitor the situation. Insane news tracking, real-time events - faster than Twitter at times
I am pretty sure this website will be opened in the tabs of Pentagon employees right now.
Thanks to Galgotia, that other home grown, built from scratch in India, are going viral.
This one from Bengaluru's General Autonomy, the metal head robodog is named PARAM
For every ten Galgotias, there is one Sarvam in our country and it outshines everything else.
Sarvam has just put our country on the AI map again and is delivering across all fronts. In many ways, this could be our DeepSeek moment and our collective energy should be focused on building and contributing more value to it.
To everyone who makes you believe that we aren’t competing with the world don’t buy into it. Our real challenge isn’t outside the country. It’s the people within, where some are quicker to highlight failures than to celebrate progress. And love bringing shame to India.
What galgotias did was wrong, accountability should follow even to the extent of questioning their license if necessary. But calling the entire summit a failure would be unfair to the larger achievement and the people who made it possible.
Can someone who has attended both GFF and the AI Summit help clarify what exactly happened?
Usually, the third day of GFF is reserved for the PM’s address, where PMs speak and a select group of attendees — founders and invitees — are allowed inside the auditorium. There’s typically a long queue to attend the PM’s speech, and registration needs to be done well in advance. The selection criteria can vary each year.
Since this has generally been the norm, I’m curious to know whether attendees faced this issue for the first time this year and if that’s what led to the concern or if there were any other challenges involved.
If this is even remotely true, it would be a huge achievement for the government.
There has never been a better time to bring back the Indian Grand Prix.
With red tape steadily reducing and India pushing hard on ease of doing business, the ecosystem is finally mature enough to host an event of this global scale.
Indian brands need platforms like Formula 1 if they truly want to go global not just as manufacturers, but as brands.
With FTAs opening new doors for Indian companies across continents, this is a once-in-a-generation opportunity for Indian automakers to showcase their engineering, performance, and ambition on the world stage.
Force India proved it could be done. Mahindra and Tata have every reason to believe they can build on that legacy.
And maybe one day we’ll see Indian luxury names on the grid too :)
Just like Rolex, IWC, and TAG Heuer…
Jaipur Watch Company. Titan Nebula.
The time feels right.
The ambition is real.
Formula 1 belongs in India again. 🇮🇳🏁
The Indian govt is keen to bring the sport of Formula One back to the circuit in Greater Noida. The plan is to remove all the unnecessary tax and red tape that had burdened the sport and the organisers and eventually led to the suspension of the Indian Grand Prix in 2013.
The sanest thing you can do right now is to mute these words
These fucking monsters deserve nothing less than a hell we really are surrounded by devils and horrible horrible people