Archive for July 14, 2009
July 14, 2009 at 12:00 pm
· City
TOI : PUNE: They are young. They have graduated recently. And, they have no jobs. The best part is, they are not looking for one either. Here are the young minds of the city who have chosen to give the regular nine-to-five jobs a miss to set up enterprises of their own and be their own bosses.
Sahil Khan is one such youngster. At 19, when he was in his final year of college, he started a lifestyle website called www.thetossedsalad.com. He does not find a regular jobs appealing. “I do not like the idea of working under someone and taking orders,” says Sahil, adding, “From a very young age I wanted to do something on my own and I am glad that I got the opportunity to start off so soon.”
Sahil is not the only one. Rohan Dhinge, an engineer from the Pimpri-Chinchwad Engineering College, who passed out in 2007, is another such entrepreneur. “After college I joined an agency in Mumbai. The job paid me well. But I began to lose interest. It became monotonous and finally, I left,” says the 24-year-old entrepreneur of a company which provides social web applications strategy for reaching out to more than 200 million users for business development.
The increase in the number of entrepreneurs below the age of 25 has been noticed not just in the information technology (IT) sector but also others fields like the service sector. Sahadev Yadav, 26, runs a service company which delivers packed fruits and vegetables at the doorsteps at no extra costs.
Swati Thorat, who worked as a sales manager in a prominent hotel in Mumbai started an outlet of cotton clothes in the city. The reason being the same: Something was missing in life, in spite of the big pay-package.
Starting early may sound exciting, but it was not all that easy as it sounds. “It was the red-tapeism…More
Permalink
July 14, 2009 at 12:00 pm
· City
TOI : PUNE: They are young. They have graduated recently. And, they have no jobs. The best part is, they are not looking for one either. Here are the young minds of the city who have chosen to give the regular nine-to-five jobs a miss to set up enterprises of their own and be their own bosses.
Sahil Khan is one such youngster. At 19, when he was in his final year of college, he started a lifestyle website called www.thetossedsalad.com. He does not find a regular jobs appealing. “I do not like the idea of working under someone and taking orders,” says Sahil, adding, “From a very young age I wanted to do something on my own and I am glad that I got the opportunity to start off so soon.”
Sahil is not the only one. Rohan Dhinge, an engineer from the Pimpri-Chinchwad Engineering College, who passed out in 2007, is another such entrepreneur. “After college I joined an agency in Mumbai. The job paid me well. But I began to lose interest. It became monotonous and finally, I left,” says the 24-year-old entrepreneur of a company which provides social web applications strategy for reaching out to more than 200 million users for business development.
The increase in the number of entrepreneurs below the age of 25 has been noticed not just in the information technology (IT) sector but also others fields like the service sector. Sahadev Yadav, 26, runs a service company which delivers packed fruits and vegetables at the doorsteps at no extra costs.
Swati Thorat, who worked as a sales manager in a prominent hotel in Mumbai started an outlet of cotton clothes in the city. The reason being the same: Something was missing in life, in spite of the big pay-package.
Starting early may sound exciting, but it was not all that easy as it sounds. “It was the red-tapeism…More
Permalink
July 14, 2009 at 10:00 am
· City
TOI : PUNE: They are young. They have graduated recently. And, they have no jobs. The best part is, they are not looking for one either. Here are the young minds of the city who have chosen to give the regular nine-to-five jobs a miss to set up enterprises of their own and be their own bosses.
Sahil Khan is one such youngster. At 19, when he was in his final year of college, he started a lifestyle website called www.thetossedsalad.com. He does not find a regular jobs appealing. “I do not like the idea of working under someone and taking orders,” says Sahil, adding, “From a very young age I wanted to do something on my own and I am glad that I got the opportunity to start off so soon.”
Sahil is not the only one. Rohan Dhinge, an engineer from the Pimpri-Chinchwad Engineering College, who passed out in 2007, is another such entrepreneur. “After college I joined an agency in Mumbai. The job paid me well. But I began to lose interest. It became monotonous and finally, I left,” says the 24-year-old entrepreneur of a company which provides social web applications strategy for reaching out to more than 200 million users for business development.
The increase in the number of entrepreneurs below the age of 25 has been noticed not just in the information technology (IT) sector but also others fields like the service sector. Sahadev Yadav, 26, runs a service company which delivers packed fruits and vegetables at the doorsteps at no extra costs.
Swati Thorat, who worked as a sales manager in a prominent hotel in Mumbai started an outlet of cotton clothes in the city. The reason being the same: Something was missing in life, in spite of the big pay-package.
Starting early may sound exciting, but it was not all that easy as it sounds. “It was the red-tapeism…More
Permalink
July 14, 2009 at 8:00 am
· City
TOI : PUNE: The crime branch, Pune, on Monday claimed to have cracked the murder case of electronics engineer Urvashi Laxman Dhavale, saying that her husband Arvind Waman Ghadole of Nagpur had given ‘supari’ (money for contract killing) for the job. Eight suspects, including Ghadole (43), have been arrested.
Ghadole, who has confessed to his involvement in the murder, wanted to get rid of his wife as he was fed up fighting five court cases filed by her for seeking divorce, the police said. Dhavale also wanted a share in the flat on Sus road in Pune, which was jointly owned by her and Ghadole, the police said.
The other suspects have been identified as Uday Pralhad Deshpande (28) and Raju Bhagvati Chaudhari (52) of Badalapur in Thane district and Wilson Moses Murty (20), Sharad Trambak Sose (27), Shirshak alias Golu Ramesh Narnavare (20), Ganesh Devidas Gaikwad (25) and Sachin Sharad Meshram (26), all from Nagpur. Acting on a tip-off, a police team led by assistant commissioner of police (crime) Sangramsingh Nishandar nabbed Deshpande and Chaudhari at Badalapur and…More
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July 14, 2009 at 6:00 am
· City
TOI : PUNE: They are young. They have graduated recently. And, they have no jobs. The best part is, they are not looking for one either. Here are the young minds of the city who have chosen to give the regular nine-to-five jobs a miss to set up enterprises of their own and be their own bosses.
Sahil Khan is one such youngster. At 19, when he was in his final year of college, he started a lifestyle website called www.thetossedsalad.com. He does not find a regular jobs appealing. “I do not like the idea of working under someone and taking orders,” says Sahil, adding, “From a very young age I wanted to do something on my own and I am glad that I got the opportunity to start off so soon.”
Sahil is not the only one. Rohan Dhinge, an engineer from the Pimpri-Chinchwad Engineering College, who passed out in 2007, is another such entrepreneur. “After college I joined an agency in Mumbai. The job paid me well. But I began to lose interest. It became monotonous and finally, I left,” says the 24-year-old entrepreneur of a company which provides social web applications strategy for reaching out to more than 200 million users for business development.
The increase in the number of entrepreneurs below the age of 25 has been noticed not just in the information technology (IT) sector but also others fields like the service sector. Sahadev Yadav, 26, runs a service company which delivers packed fruits and vegetables at the doorsteps at no extra costs.
Swati Thorat, who worked as a sales manager in a prominent hotel in Mumbai started an outlet of cotton clothes in the city. The reason being the same: Something was missing in life, in spite of the big pay-package.
Starting early may sound exciting, but it was not all that easy as it sounds. “It was the red-tapeism…More
Permalink
July 14, 2009 at 6:00 am
· City
TOI : PUNE: They are young. They have graduated recently. And, they have no jobs. The best part is, they are not looking for one either. Here are the young minds of the city who have chosen to give the regular nine-to-five jobs a miss to set up enterprises of their own and be their own bosses.
Sahil Khan is one such youngster. At 19, when he was in his final year of college, he started a lifestyle website called www.thetossedsalad.com. He does not find a regular jobs appealing. “I do not like the idea of working under someone and taking orders,” says Sahil, adding, “From a very young age I wanted to do something on my own and I am glad that I got the opportunity to start off so soon.”
Sahil is not the only one. Rohan Dhinge, an engineer from the Pimpri-Chinchwad Engineering College, who passed out in 2007, is another such entrepreneur. “After college I joined an agency in Mumbai. The job paid me well. But I began to lose interest. It became monotonous and finally, I left,” says the 24-year-old entrepreneur of a company which provides social web applications strategy for reaching out to more than 200 million users for business development.
The increase in the number of entrepreneurs below the age of 25 has been noticed not just in the information technology (IT) sector but also others fields like the service sector. Sahadev Yadav, 26, runs a service company which delivers packed fruits and vegetables at the doorsteps at no extra costs.
Swati Thorat, who worked as a sales manager in a prominent hotel in Mumbai started an outlet of cotton clothes in the city. The reason being the same: Something was missing in life, in spite of the big pay-package.
Starting early may sound exciting, but it was not all that easy as it sounds. “It was the red-tapeism…More
Permalink
July 14, 2009 at 4:00 am
· City
TOI : PUNE: They are young. They have graduated recently. And, they have no jobs. The best part is, they are not looking for one either. Here are the young minds of the city who have chosen to give the regular nine-to-five jobs a miss to set up enterprises of their own and be their own bosses.
Sahil Khan is one such youngster. At 19, when he was in his final year of college, he started a lifestyle website called www.thetossedsalad.com. He does not find a regular jobs appealing. “I do not like the idea of working under someone and taking orders,” says Sahil, adding, “From a very young age I wanted to do something on my own and I am glad that I got the opportunity to start off so soon.”
Sahil is not the only one. Rohan Dhinge, an engineer from the Pimpri-Chinchwad Engineering College, who passed out in 2007, is another such entrepreneur. “After college I joined an agency in Mumbai. The job paid me well. But I began to lose interest. It became monotonous and finally, I left,” says the 24-year-old entrepreneur of a company which provides social web applications strategy for reaching out to more than 200 million users for business development.
The increase in the number of entrepreneurs below the age of 25 has been noticed not just in the information technology (IT) sector but also others fields like the service sector. Sahadev Yadav, 26, runs a service company which delivers packed fruits and vegetables at the doorsteps at no extra costs.
Swati Thorat, who worked as a sales manager in a prominent hotel in Mumbai started an outlet of cotton clothes in the city. The reason being the same: Something was missing in life, in spite of the big pay-package.
Starting early may sound exciting, but it was not all that easy as it sounds. “It was the red-tapeism…More
Permalink
July 14, 2009 at 2:00 am
· City
TOI : PUNE: They are young. They have graduated recently. And, they have no jobs. The best part is, they are not looking for one either. Here are the young minds of the city who have chosen to give the regular nine-to-five jobs a miss to set up enterprises of their own and be their own bosses.
Sahil Khan is one such youngster. At 19, when he was in his final year of college, he started a lifestyle website called www.thetossedsalad.com. He does not find a regular jobs appealing. “I do not like the idea of working under someone and taking orders,” says Sahil, adding, “From a very young age I wanted to do something on my own and I am glad that I got the opportunity to start off so soon.”
Sahil is not the only one. Rohan Dhinge, an engineer from the Pimpri-Chinchwad Engineering College, who passed out in 2007, is another such entrepreneur. “After college I joined an agency in Mumbai. The job paid me well. But I began to lose interest. It became monotonous and finally, I left,” says the 24-year-old entrepreneur of a company which provides social web applications strategy for reaching out to more than 200 million users for business development.
The increase in the number of entrepreneurs below the age of 25 has been noticed not just in the information technology (IT) sector but also others fields like the service sector. Sahadev Yadav, 26, runs a service company which delivers packed fruits and vegetables at the doorsteps at no extra costs.
Swati Thorat, who worked as a sales manager in a prominent hotel in Mumbai started an outlet of cotton clothes in the city. The reason being the same: Something was missing in life, in spite of the big pay-package.
Starting early may sound exciting, but it was not all that easy as it sounds. “It was the red-tapeism…More
Permalink
July 14, 2009 at 12:00 am
· City
TOI : PUNE: They are young. They have graduated recently. And, they have no jobs. The best part is, they are not looking for one either. Here are the young minds of the city who have chosen to give the regular nine-to-five jobs a miss to set up enterprises of their own and be their own bosses.
Sahil Khan is one such youngster. At 19, when he was in his final year of college, he started a lifestyle website called www.thetossedsalad.com. He does not find a regular jobs appealing. “I do not like the idea of working under someone and taking orders,” says Sahil, adding, “From a very young age I wanted to do something on my own and I am glad that I got the opportunity to start off so soon.”
Sahil is not the only one. Rohan Dhinge, an engineer from the Pimpri-Chinchwad Engineering College, who passed out in 2007, is another such entrepreneur. “After college I joined an agency in Mumbai. The job paid me well. But I began to lose interest. It became monotonous and finally, I left,” says the 24-year-old entrepreneur of a company which provides social web applications strategy for reaching out to more than 200 million users for business development.
The increase in the number of entrepreneurs below the age of 25 has been noticed not just in the information technology (IT) sector but also others fields like the service sector. Sahadev Yadav, 26, runs a service company which delivers packed fruits and vegetables at the doorsteps at no extra costs.
Swati Thorat, who worked as a sales manager in a prominent hotel in Mumbai started an outlet of cotton clothes in the city. The reason being the same: Something was missing in life, in spite of the big pay-package.
Starting early may sound exciting, but it was not all that easy as it sounds. “It was the red-tapeism…More
Permalink
July 14, 2009 at 12:00 am
· City
TOI : PUNE: They are young. They have graduated recently. And, they have no jobs. The best part is, they are not looking for one either. Here are the young minds of the city who have chosen to give the regular nine-to-five jobs a miss to set up enterprises of their own and be their own bosses.
Sahil Khan is one such youngster. At 19, when he was in his final year of college, he started a lifestyle website called www.thetossedsalad.com. He does not find a regular jobs appealing. “I do not like the idea of working under someone and taking orders,” says Sahil, adding, “From a very young age I wanted to do something on my own and I am glad that I got the opportunity to start off so soon.”
Sahil is not the only one. Rohan Dhinge, an engineer from the Pimpri-Chinchwad Engineering College, who passed out in 2007, is another such entrepreneur. “After college I joined an agency in Mumbai. The job paid me well. But I began to lose interest. It became monotonous and finally, I left,” says the 24-year-old entrepreneur of a company which provides social web applications strategy for reaching out to more than 200 million users for business development.
The increase in the number of entrepreneurs below the age of 25 has been noticed not just in the information technology (IT) sector but also others fields like the service sector. Sahadev Yadav, 26, runs a service company which delivers packed fruits and vegetables at the doorsteps at no extra costs.
Swati Thorat, who worked as a sales manager in a prominent hotel in Mumbai started an outlet of cotton clothes in the city. The reason being the same: Something was missing in life, in spite of the big pay-package.
Starting early may sound exciting, but it was not all that easy as it sounds. “It was the red-tapeism…More
Permalink
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