Shivam Chand Srivastava is a LinkedIn creator based in Gurugram, Haryana, India with 22,576 followers, focused on Business Strategy, Startup Insights, and Personal Development content. Posts average 59 likes and 0.4% engagement.
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My Topmate isn’t a side hustle. It’s an R&D lab for the 1% of operators.
In 90 days, it turned into a high-growth engine:
Top 1% of Topmate
64+ Sessions (4.4 Star Rated)
500+ Queries resolved.
100+ Operators in a closed-loop community.
The irony of the "Ceo's Office," "Founder's Office" or "Chief of Staff" world is that there is no manual. When I was navigating high-stakes roles at Paytm, Blinkit, and Park+, I had to build my own compass.
I started mentoring because I wanted to be the person I didn't have when I started. Here are the 3 "un-business" secrets that actually drove the growth:
1. The "Listen-to-Solve" Ratio
Active listening is the most underrated skill in operations. Most mentors talk; I chose to hear. By actually listening to the chaos of a mentee's day-to-day, I could build customised development plans instead of giving "copy-paste" advice. The more you listen, the more perspectives you gain to solve complex problems effectively.
2. Radical Belonging (Culture > Transactions)
I didn’t want a "customer base"; I wanted a community. We created an open forum where mentees can ask anything without fear of judgment. When you drive a culture of mutual growth and "belongingness," word-of-mouth becomes your strongest marketing tool. My mentees aren't just students; they are my counterparts.
3. The "Give-Back" Paradox
When your primary goal isn't the paycheque, the paycheque usually follows. I entered these high-stakes roles as a "Shadow CEO" operator, realising how lonely these roles can be. My Topmate was built to be a safe space for people to navigate those difficulties.
The Ending :
The real ROI? It’s not the fees.
It’s sitting in the trenches with the top 1% of operators.
It’s the "hidden" job market - helping folks land the 10% of roles that never hit a job board.
It’s the speed - realising your "unique" problem was solved by someone else in the community 10 minutes ago.
Huge thanks to topmate.io Ankit from Topmate Dinesh Singh for giving a home to the ‘over-achievers.’ It’s been incredible watching this platform turn 'wanting to do more' into 'actually doing more' through real, 1:1 connections.
#Topmate3Things
You might be "rich" in Delhi, but you’re "wealthy" in Ladakh.
Most people think India’s Top 1% is a single, unreachable number. It’s not. It’s a geography game.
According to the latest data from the Ministry of Statistics, the entry barrier for the Top 1% varies by over 5x depending on where you stand:
> The High Ceiling: In Goa (45L) and Delhi (42L), you need a corporate empire just to get a seat at the table.
> The Middle Ground: Maharashtra (35L) and Karnataka (32L) reflect the tech and finance hub realities.
> The Surprising Entry: In Ladakh (8L) or Andaman (9L), the "Top 1%" looks very different.
The Realization: Your lifestyle isn't just determined by your salary - it's determined by your Local Purchasing Power.
In 2026, the real "career hack" isn't just chasing the highest CTC in a Tier-1 city. It’s about Geo-Arbitrage: Earning a "Delhi Salary" while living in a "Himachal Cost of Living."
The Top 1% isn't a destination; it’s a strategy.
Are you chasing the highest number, or the highest quality of life?
P.S. Look at your state on the map. Does that number feel accurate for your city? Let’s discuss in the comments.
#IndiaWealth #Economy2026 #CareerStrategy #PersonalFinance
"I won’t give you a single Phooti Kaudi."
We’ve all used the phrase. We say it when we’re being stubborn about a bill or a negotiation. But did you know a Phooti Kaudi was a literal, physical unit of currency in India?
It wasn't just a shell; it was the foundation of the world's most complex monetary math.
The "Idiom to Cash" Decoder:
If you’ve ever wondered where our daily financial slang comes from, here is the historical conversion rate:
> "Phooti Kaudi" (Broken Cowrie): The lowest unit. 3 Phooti Kaudis = 1 Sabit Kaudi.
> "Pie Pie ka Hisaab" (The Pie): 3 Pies = 1 Paisa. When someone asks for a "Pie Pie" account, they are asking for a level of detail that literally doesn't exist in our currency today.
> "Damdi jaye par Chamdi na jaye": 10 Kaudis = 1 Damri. It was so small that being stingy about a Damri was seen as the ultimate sign of greed.
> "Ek Dhele ka kaam nahi karta": 2 Damris = 1 Dhela. If someone calls you "Ek Dhele ka," they are valuing you at roughly 1/128th of a Rupee.
> "Solah Aane Sach" (16 Annas Truth): 16 Annas = 1 Rupee. When we say something is "16 Annas true," we are saying it is 100% - a whole Rupee - accurate.
The Evolution Timeline:
3 Phooti Kaudi ➔ 1 Kaudi
10 Kaudi ➔ 1 Damri
2 Damri ➔ 1 Dhela
1 Dhela ➔ 1.5 Pie
3 Pie ➔ 1 Paisa (Old)
4 Paisa ➔ 1 Anna
16 Anna ➔ 1 Rupee
The "Redpill" for Modern FinTech -
We think UPI and Digital Rupee are revolutionary. But our ancestors were managing a system with 7+ layers of fractional units without a single calculator or Excel sheet.
Our language has outlived our currency. We stopped using "Pies" in 1947 and "Annas" in 1957, yet we still use them to define our integrity, our work ethic, and our truths in 2026.