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Left Home At 16, Billionaire Gautam Adani Shares 'Golden Lessons' From His Mumbai Days - Watch Video

Gautam Adani he shared his journey from a diamond sorter in Mumbai to a successful entrepreneur, stressing the importance of dreaming big and pushing past limits.
11:14 AM Sep 07, 2024 IST | simran rajpal
left home at 16  billionaire gautam adani shares  golden lessons  from his mumbai days   watch video

Gautam Adani Success Story: Gautam Adani, one of India's wealthiest people, recently spoke at Jai Hind College in Mumbai, the same college that turned down his application in the late 1970s. At 16, he was rejected for admission but later built a $220 billion business empire. In his talk, "Breaking Boundaries: The Power of Passion and Unconventional Paths to Success," he shared his journey from a diamond sorter in Mumbai to a successful entrepreneur, stressing the importance of dreaming big and pushing past limits.

Gautam Adani’s journey started when he moved to Mumbai at 16 to work as a diamond sorter. He applied to Jai Hind College in 1977 or 1978, where his older brother Vinod had studied, but was rejected. Vikram Nankani, President of the Jai Hind College Alumni Association, introduced Adani and mentioned this story, calling him a "deemed alumni" because he had applied to the college.

Nankani said, “Fortunately or unfortunately, the college didn’t accept him, so he worked full-time and followed a different career path.” After spending two years in Mumbai, Adani returned to Gujarat to work in a packaging factory run by his brother. In 1998, he started his own company, entering the commodity trading business, which was the start of his rise in the business world.

The Rise of Adani’s Business Empire

Over the past 25 years, Adani's businesses have expanded into many areas, such as ports, mining, infrastructure, power, city gas, renewable energy, cement, real estate, data centers, and media. Today, he manages 13 seaports and seven airports in India, is the largest private power provider, and leads in renewable energy production. He also runs the second-largest cement company in India and is involved in building expressways and redeveloping major slum areas in Asia.

Adani explained, "Giving up my education and moving to Mumbai was about taking a chance on an uncertain future. People often ask why I moved to Mumbai instead of finishing my education. The answer is that I saw boundaries as challenges that tested my courage. I wanted to see if I had the bravery to build a life in the most vibrant city in our country."

Lessons From Mumbai

In his early days in Mumbai, Adani learned a lot about trading, which he found to be a valuable teacher. He said, "Trading taught me that an entrepreneur shouldn’t get stuck by overthinking their options. Mumbai showed me that to achieve big things, you first have to dream beyond your limits."

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