Take Me Home

by Rashmi Bansal


4.00 out of 5 based on 1 customer rating
(1 customer review)

4.00 out of 5 based on 1 customer rating
(1 customer review)

Description:

Parakram Singh Jadeja did it in Rajkot Deepak. Dadhoti did it in Belgaum. Vibhor Agrawal did it in Meerut. Take Me Home is the story of 20 entrepreneurs who have built remarkable enterprises, while remaining true to their roots. From small towns across India, they run giant global companies with locally trained talent. The ability to run a professional business is no longer limited by location. What you need is a vision and a mission and a burning desire. To ‘make it happen’, wherever you are.

355
English
Genre, Non Fiction, Business & Management, Self Help & Reference

About The Author

Rashmi Bansal (born 1985) is an Indian non-fiction writer and public speaker. As of 2016, she has published six best-sellers, all addressing entrepreneurship in an attempt to provide encouragement to young men and especially young women. Her first book, Stay Hungry Stay Foolish, which traces the progress of 25 MBAs, has reached sales of over 300,000, breaking the Indian record for non-fiction works. Bansal was born on 8 March 1985. She grew up at the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research in South Mumbai where her father was an astrophysicist. After attending St Joseph’s High School in Colaba, she studied at Sophia College for Women before earning an MBA from the Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad.
On graduating from IIM, she first worked as a brand manager for the Times of India. After developing a youth page for The Independent, she went on to found JAM (Just Another Magazine), a youth magazine in collaboration with her husband Yatin Bansal.
She was inspired to write Stay Hungry Stay Foolish (2008) by Rakesh Basant, a professor at IIM Ahmedabad who suggested she should cover the experiences of 25 entrepreneurs from the school. It turned out to be so successful that 100,000 copies were sold in the first 10 months, eventually recording sales of over 350,000. Her next book, Connect the Dots (2010), traced the progress of entrepreneurs without the MBA qualification. It also proved to be a best seller. Her I Have a Dream (2011) focused on social entrepreneurs, introducing an interesting mix of English and Hindi, popularly known as Hinglish, in an attempt to add a more realistic account of her personalities.
In a interview with Heather Timmons of the New York Times, Bansal explained she decided to use Hinglish as it provides a more direct representation of people’s voices and makes them more real. More recently, Bansal has written another four best-sellers on entrepreneurs: Poor Little Rich Slum, Follow Every Rainnbow, Take Me Home and Arise Awake. All are concerned with entrepreneurship with advice on how to succeed. She frequently illustrates her ideas with accounts of those who have risen to unexpected heights.


1 review for Take Me Home

  1. 4 out of 5

    Good book
    I have read other books by rashmi bansal too. And, this one is again very encouraging. It gives you a look into the struggles behind Big Names, their Journey and how did it all start.

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