

"From the toothbrush you use to the mattress you sleep on, business touches your life in some way or the other.

If something touches you, it pays to know about it!' By that, Subroto Bagchi meant that if a certain business touches your life every day, you must at least be aware of it.

Mark Tully hailed it as “a remarkable story of courage, integrity and enterprise”.Young Indians must preserve our intellectual legacy and strive towards creating an India where jobs will provide hope and security, feels b estselling author and founder of MindTree, Subroto Bagchi. His second book, Go Kiss the World was released in 2008 as a Penguin Portfolio. Many of these are archived at His first book, The High Performance Entrepreneur was released in 2006 as a Penguin Portfolio publication to great critical acclaim. His Businessworld column - Arbor Mentis - and Times of India column - Times of Mind - were widely read and discussed. In addition, Bagchi works at the grassroots by making himself available to its 45 Communities of Practice that foster organizational learning, innovation and volunteerism within the organization.īagchi has written extensively in leading newspapers and magazines, and spoken at industry platforms and educational institutions the world over. In this new role, Bagchi spends one-on-one time with the Top-100 leaders at MindTree on their ‘personal-professional’ issues to expand leadership capacity and build readiness for taking MindTree into the billion-dollar league. In 2008, Bagchi took on the role of Gardener at MindTree. MindTree is among India’s most admired companies across industries.

Subroto Bagchi is best known for co-founding MindTree in 1999 where he started as the Chief Operating Officer. This book is in the Hindi language and has been made available for the Kindle, Kindle Fire HD, Kindle Paperwhite, iPhone and iPad, and for iOS, Windows Phone and Android devices. If you are curious, come join Subroto Bagchi and a group of smart teenagers on their exciting voyage of discovery, and in the process, get yourself a teen MBA! But do you know what the corporate and business world is all about? How do businesses touch everyone’s lives? What really makes an entrepreneur tick? How does the engine of a company run? Who is a social entrepreneur?Īnd why do we need the world of business-is business good or bad for us? They are tomorrow’s entrepreneurs, investors, managers, policy makers, watchdogs and of course, consumers. Today’s teenagers are our smartest generation yet. When Sergey Brin and Larry Page met at Stanford, they were in their early twenties. Steve Jobs was all of sixteen when he met Stephen Wozniak.
