Truth Trumps Trends

Image Courtesy: Gemini

Earlier this morning, my colleague Samyuktha, Head of Digital Marketing, pinged me asking for link to video shot by Halli TV. Clip recorded my bytes highlighting NTTF way of skilling and benefits of NTTF training. To my utter surprise, footage recorded two years back had reached statistics shocking by my levels. Post, apart from other platforms where it was cross-shared, completely exploded on Facebook, crossing 9.9 million views, 118,000 reactions, and over 22,000 shares. In era dominated by calculated algorithms, this raw conversation struck massive chord. It proved that audiences are deeply starved for rare digital currency: absolute sincerity. Please note that there were no rehearsals, no retakes and no script. As I was headed out of the campus, my colleague Nagesh, Head of Administration stopped me to speak on what NTTF means and transformative benefits of the program.

People are tired of digital act

We live in world of filters, both digital and real. Social media is currently flooded with content designed just to grab quick views, and audiences have developed incredibly sharp radar for fake presentations. They can spot staged emotion or scripted speech from mile away. When talking about core impact of skill development and training, you cannot fake conviction. Speaking with absolute sincerity means you are not selling persona or putting on performance. You are simply sharing unfiltered truth, and that lack of pretense makes people stop scrolling.

Genuine intent creates instant connection

Thousands of comments and shares on Halli TV’s post tell fascinating story. Viewers did not just watch clip. They felt compelled to actively pass it on to family, friends, and WhatsApp groups. Message regarding power of vocational training cuts through digital noise because it speaks directly to real-world aspirations. When you truly believe in value of what you teach and build, that energy transfers effortlessly to listener. You do not need complex words or intellectual jargon because heartfelt thoughts carry their own weight.

Trust is built on truth, not algorithms

Algorithms can give platform temporary spikes in numbers, but they cannot build lasting trust. Trust is ultimate byproduct of sincerity. Massive wave of reactions on this two-year-old video was not just random clicks. It was collective nod of agreement from millions of everyday viewers who value genuine education and employment opportunities. It served as powerful reminder that even in fast-paced digital world, basic values like honesty and real impact still resonate deeply across generations.

Stop chasing trends and start chasing authenticity

For anyone trying to build platform, create content, or share message, success of this archival video offers clear lesson: stop stressing over what is currently trending or trying to hack system. Instead, focus entirely on substance of your message. When you speak from heart about things that matter, like skilling youth for better future, you do not just reach people’s screens. You reach their minds. Ten million views did not happen because of production trick. It happened because sincerity is, and always will be, irreplaceable.

Surprising what Sincerity can do!!!

Ultimate lesson for brand communication

This viral milestone offers profound blueprint for modern brand communication. True narrative power comes from deep, foundational knowledge of your brand and its institutional legacy. When corporate communication is rooted in years of real impact and proven heritage, it carries natural weight that trend-chasing marketing can never replicate.

Furthermore, true success lies in strategic alignment. True growth happens when future vision of your organization directly aligns with core values of its past. When tomorrow’s strategy honors yesterday’s legacy, marketing stops looking like manufactured promotion and starts looking like truth. Ten million views did not happen because of production trick. It happened because sincerity is, and always will be, irreplaceable.

Here is the Video (just in case the above link becomes inaccessible)

Skilling India: Human Dignity is Not a Commodity

Production Lines to Progress Lines: Soul of Social Engineering.

Over the last few years, I have had the privilege of working closely with a legacy organization that has seen the skilling landscape evolve over decades. At the same time, I have actively helped launch a few new skill development institutions and social enterprises in the recent past. This journey across both old and new organizations taught me a vital lesson. The institutions that survive and create genuine impact are not the ones with the largest marketing budgets or the sharpest profit motives. They are the ones that hold onto their core purpose. This first hand exposure showed me the thin line between scaling an impact and simply chasing a turnover, and it forms the basis of this piece.

Every year, millions of young people across India enter skill development centers with hope in their eyes. They come from small towns, villages, and urban slums, looking for a way to change their lives. But when organizations treat these centers as mere money-making factories, that hope breaks. For too long, the sector has chased numbers, batches, and enrollment targets. This excessive focus on profit is creating certificates without careers, and it is destroying trust. To fix this, leaders must change their mindset. Skill development is not a typical business venture. It is a deep form of social engineering, and greed will only kill the ecosystem.

Illusion of the Numbers Game


Walk into many skilling institutes today, and the conversation revolves around targets. How many students enrolled? How many completed forty five day programs? How many got placement letters? On paper, the data looks spectacular. In reality, the ground situation is very different.
When profit becomes the sole motive, quality is the first casualty. Classrooms get overcrowded. Trainers are underpaid, leading to poor teaching. Industry partnerships become transactional. Students get entry level jobs, but they drop out within months because they are completely unprepared for workplace realities. Chasing metrics might satisfy a spreadsheet, but it leaves young people underemployed and frustrated.

Skilling as Social Engineering


We must understand that skilling is not about manufacturing widgets on an assembly line. It is about human lives. When you train a youth from an underprivileged background, you are altering their entire socio-economic trajectory.
This work changes how a family eats, how siblings get educated, and how a community views progress. It gives a young person confidence and a sense of dignity. This is social engineering in its truest sense. It requires empathy, patience, and deep commitment. You cannot achieve this transformation if you look at a student merely as a source of revenue or a government subsidy head.

Sustainability Versus Greed


Of course, running an organization requires money. There are bills to pay, infrastructure to maintain, and staff salaries to disburse. No one can run a high quality training program on charity alone. Revenue is essential for survival and growth. However, there is a sharp line between sustainability and greed. Sustainability means making enough money to cover costs, pay fair wages, and reinvest in better technology or curriculum. Greed means cutting corners on training material to increase margins. It means treating students as numbers to maximize profit. A sustainable organization builds a foundation for the future, while a greedy one burns its own house for short term gain.

Loss of Trust Kills the Sector


When organizations prioritize quick profits over actual impact, a dangerous domino effect begins. First, the students lose trust. Word spreads fast in rural and semi urban communities. If a center delivers poor training and false placement promises, local youth stop coming. Mobilization becomes impossible.
Next, the industry loses trust. Corporate employers stop hiring from institutes that supply poorly trained candidates. When industry doors close, the certificates become worthless paper. Eventually, funding agencies and policymakers tighten rules, making it difficult even for good organizations to operate. Greed does not just destroy one company, it poisons the entire ecosystem.

Change the Thought Process


For any skilling organization to sustain and grow today, the mindset must shift from transactional to transformational. Leaders need to measure success by retention rates and long term career growth, not just by initial enrollment.
True growth in this sector does not come from inflating profit margins. It comes from building a legacy of impact. When you focus honestly on human dignity and service, sustainability follows naturally. It is time to bring passion and commitment back to the heart of skilling India.

Conclusion

To the founders starting new ventures and leaders managing legacy organizations, the pressure to scale up is real. Growth is important, but growing at the cost of your noble intent is a trap. If you sacrifice quality and empathy to chase rapid expansion, you are building on hollow ground.

Do not let the pressure of competition turn your institution into a cold numbers game. Legacy is not built on high profit margins. It is built on the lives you permanently transform. Choose sustainable growth over reckless expansion. Keep your original mission at the center of your strategy. When you protect your core purpose, you do not just survive, you become an institution that shapes the future of India.

In the business of skilling, raw material is human potential, and final product is human dignity. You cannot run a factory on greed when the output is supposed to be hope.

At the Lotus Feet: Family’s Loss and Ultimate Truth of Nature

On a drizzling Thursday evening of 11th June 2026, a call from Ravi just hurried us to visit home from work. For some reason, we decided to borrow a two-wheeler instead of driving down in our car from the office and rushed through the crawling traffic. While Shobha, who is an amazing lady and a selfless seva warrior who took care of Amma like no one else can even imagine, kept calling out to Amma to keep her eyes open, we thought she was just drifting into deep sleep due to a lack of proper rest over the last two days. It turned out to be a deep sleep alright, but one from which there was no waking up. When Aparna called out, Amma briefly opened her eyes, looked at us, tried to say something, and drifted back to a permanent sleep. Me and Aparna, who were wearing the Maala for our 67th Sabarimala pilgrimage, were anyway supposed to visit her that evening to offer traditional Dakshina and seek her blessings for our upcoming Saturday trip. Amma herself was a devout Ayyappa Bhakt who had completed 31 pilgrimages before age restrictions paused her streak. Perhaps this was Ayyappa’s way of saying He was satisfied with her Tapas. Befitting her lifelong devotion, she began sinking with two Swamis, Ravi, and Shobha around her. When the doctor arrived a few minutes later, he could only detect a faint pulse and told us the time had come. We broke our Deeksha, removed our Maalas in the Puja room, and rushed back to her side before she peacefully soared to the Lotus Feet of Bhagwan Krishna to join our Father and elder brother. She was the inspirational anchor of our family and a pillar of support for everyone in the local Ayyappa temple and AOL community. The challenges that she faced and conquered them successfully that too in early 1960s is unthinkable in a traditional society like ours. That makes her even more special and BRAVE!

After the Antyesthi and post-rituals, following the departure of all relatives and friends, it was time for us as a family to sit together when we truly missed the towering presence of this bundle of infinite energy. A few days thereafter it was some me-time for me to reflect on her lasting influence on my life. Replaying all small incidents and anecdotes, not only with her but also with Dad and Brother, brought a smile albeit with a tinge of pain. It was during these moments that I got pondering on the essence of death. It is something that is such a certain phenomenon, yet it remains so unacceptable for the near and dear ones of the departed. Thought of capturing those thoughts here specifically about what is it that affects us when we lose our Amma.

Losing our mother is the kind of pain that completely breaks something inside us. She is the person who brings us into this world, and when she is suddenly gone, our whole life feels empty and confusing. It is natural to feel shattered because the bond we share with a mother is the deepest one we ever have. But if we look at it deeply, death is not an enemy that comes to ruin life. It is actually the boundary that gives life its real value. Think of life like a canvas. A painting only exists because it has edges. Without that frame, the colors would just bleed out infinitely into nothingness, losing all their shape and meaning. In the same way, our time with our mothers is precious simply because it does not last forever. If we all lived forever, we would take every single moment for granted.

The heavy grief we carry after her loss is actually just love that has nowhere to go. It is the price we pay for being blessed with someone so special. In this universe, we do not truly own anyone; we only get to borrow them for a little while. For several decades, the universe brought a beautiful, devout soul into our lives in the form of our mother. When she leaves, she just returns to the source. Even though her physical body is not here anymore, her love, her words, and her values are completely mixed into our own character. We are carrying her forward in the way we live, the way we speak, and the way we care for others.

Trying to fight the reality of death only increases our suffering. Accepting it does not mean we stop missing her or that we pretend everything is fine. It just means understanding that death is the oldest and most honest rule of nature. Everyone who comes here has to leave one day. Instead of focusing only on the painful end, philosophy teaches us to look at the beautiful journey. The fact that she was here, that she loved us so deeply, and that we got to be her children is a permanent truth. Death can take away her presence, but it can never erase the love we shared.

To dearest Amma, the brave trailblazer, our inspirational anchor, and our constant guide, We wish you a beautiful, blissful journey into the heavens. As you find your eternal rest at the Lotus Feet of Bhagwan Krishna and Swami Ayyappa, we know you are finally reunited with Dad and Brother. As rituals draw to a close and an uncomfortable quiet settles in, home feels different without your towering presence and infinite energy. Yet, there is a profound peace in knowing that you completed your earthly Tapas so beautifully, surrounded by love and devotion until your very last breath.

You may have stepped out of your physical form, but your journey with us isn’t over. Keep shining your light upon us, dear Amma. Look down on your children and grandchildren, and continue to guide and bless us from up above, just as you always did. You will live forever in every prayer we whisper, every value we uphold, and every step we take. Which brings me to the profound Truth that Bhagwan Krishna explains to Arjuna about the immortality and indestructible nature of the soul (Atman).

नैनं छिन्दन्ति शस्त्राणि नैनं दहति पावकः।
न चैनं क्लेदयन्त्यापो न शोषयति मारुतः॥
nainaṃ chindanti śastrāṇi nainaṃ dahati pāvakaḥ
na cainaṃ kledayantyāpo na śoṣayati mārutaḥ

– Bhagavad Gita 2:23

“Weapons cannot cleave the soul, fire cannot burn it, water cannot wet it, and wind cannot dry it.”

Bhagwan Krishna helps Arjuna overcome the fear of death and grief by explaining that no physical world can harm true self. The soul is completely beyond the reach of the four physical elements: Weapons, Fire, Water and Air. Death is only of the body. Soul is eternal, unchangeable, and immortal.