Nishith Chinnala is a LinkedIn creator based in Bengaluru, Karnataka, India with 9,444 followers, focused on Personal Development, Career Development, and Workplace Culture content. Posts average 22 likes and 0.3% engagement.
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Profile Highlights
A quick glance at some key stats
9,444Total Followers
22Avg Likes
3Avg Comments
0.3%Avg Eng.
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Engagement Over Time
Visualization of how my engagement on posts has evolved
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My Activity & Engagement Calendar
Visualizing posting frequency and audience engagement over the last 6 months
Influencer Activity & Engagement Calendar
Visualizing posting frequency and audience engagement over the last 6 months
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The room was quiet......He had handed in his badge......Laptop shut....Boxes packed.
HR looked up, pen poised, waiting for the usual exit interview lines salary, perks, brand stories.Then she asked the one question that mattered most:
“What made you stay here for so long?”
He smiled for a moment....Didn’t mention salary....Didn’t mention perks....Didn’t mention brand value.
He said one thing:“My manager trusted me on my bad days.”
That was it....No fanfare....No long explanation.
Just the weight of one simple truth.And suddenly, it made sense.
Careers don’t break because of pressure.They break because of how pressure is handled.
People don’t leave jobs.They leave environments.They leave places where mistakes are punished, where fear replaces trust, where bad days make you feel unsafe.
But they stay where someone has their back especially on the days they’re not at their best.
So here’s a question worth pausing on:
When people talk about working with you…do they remember the stress you created, or the support you offered?
4:37 PM. Her phone buzzed in silent mode: Dad calling.
She glanced at the time 3 slides left to present and thought:
“I’ll call back in 20 minutes.”
5:01 PM, meeting ended.
She texted:“Hey Dad, sorry! Call you now?”
No reply.
That evening, the call came but from her mother’s phone.
And it wasn’t about dinner plans.
Months later, she still kept his last missed call in her notifications.
Just to see his name appear,like he was still trying.
Work messages get “ASAP.”
Family calls get “later.”
Sometimes, “later” never comes back.
Maybe today, pick up that call.
Even if it’s just to say:“I’ll tell you everything once I’m home.”
Who’s that one person you shouldn’t keep waiting today?