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Vishal

Vishal Bisht  | Answer  |Ask -

Start-up Mentor; E-commerce, EdTech Expert - Answered on Mar 10, 2024

Vishal Bisht is the founder and CEO of IT services provider Marksman Technologies.
An aeronautical engineer -- he is a member of the Aeronautical Society of India -- Vishal is a versatile technologist and entrepreneur with a passion for artificial intelligence, blockchain and e-learning solutions.
His company has been providing software development and customised solutions to several e-commerce businesses and EdTech platforms across India.
Vishal is interested in India's start-up innovation and has mentored aspiring entrepreneurs and start-ups for over 20 years.... more
ashish Question by ashish on Sep 15, 2023Hindi
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Career

I am an intern in a company. I want to be a millionaire and wish to leave my job and start a YouTube channel and side business. I don't know should i leave my job as i dont enjoy it.

Ans: No Ashsih you didn't required to leave job , I can understand you are not enjoy your work but at the same time you are earning from this job only. Now to become a millionaire its not a overnight job , if you want to start your Youtube channel here the few steps-
First you have to identify your market segment , and user base .
then you start your channel only those segment and then start it but at this time you have work it with your job once your channel get traffic and more audience and you are earning from your channel then only the right time to quit the job.
Career

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Naveenn

Naveenn Kummar  |265 Answers  |Ask -

Financial Planner, MF, Insurance Expert - Answered on Nov 10, 2025

Money
Hi, I'm 49 married with 2 kids aged 16 and 11. I work in mid mgmt in a Finance co. Wife is 45 works at a Bank. Combined annual salary is 80 lakhs. Live in a home which just got loan free. Have a rental income of 40k monthly that my wife gets. Mom also lives with us and she gets a rental income of 45k per month. I have invested in a small office space which will be ready by mid 2027 and has a construction linked plan, have to pay 40L more. I Have stocks of 45L and EPF of 60L PPF of 12 L. Have ancestral property in land at native place not much but say 25L. Mom has pledged 50% of her assets to my sister. Liability of office and company car is 6L. School fees and tution fees are paid from rental income and wife chips in. There's maintenance, club membership fees, insurance, repairs and maintenance, kids pocket money, groceries, internet, mobile, maids etc. which I pay. I'm thinking of quitting my job and starting something on my own. I am a guest lecturer at a college which is pro bono and also helping 2 Startups of friends over weekend with a tiny equity stake in one. Is it a right decision? Pressure at work is high, growth chances are minimum. Many colleagues asked to go. The environment isn't very encouraging. Pls advise if I'm ok financially with about 45 lakhs liability. Never got a chance to save as EMIs were 75% of income. I'm unable to get a direction.
Ans: You are 49, with a stable dual-income family, home loan cleared, and some investments in place. You feel stagnated in your job and want to start something of your own. It’s a natural and valid thought at this life stage — but the decision needs to be planned, not impulsive.

At present, your financial base is decent but not fully liquid. You still have about ?45 lakh in liabilities, upcoming education costs for your children, and limited cash reserves. Your wife’s job and rental income can sustain household expenses, but not much beyond that.

The wise move is to continue your job while you explore your business or investment idea part-time. Use the next 18–24 months to:

Clear pending loans, especially the office property.

Build a minimum ?20–25 lakh emergency corpus.

Fund your children’s education separately.

Test and refine your business idea alongside your job.

Before quitting, also discuss openly with your spouse whether she is comfortable with you stepping away from a steady income. Her emotional and financial comfort will determine how smooth your transition is.

In short:
Keep your job, continue your startup or investing interest part-time, strengthen your finances, and plan a structured exit once liabilities are cleared. Freedom feels best when it’s backed by security, not uncertainty.

Contingency buffer and health insurance details:
For detailed financial planning and portfolio reconstruction, please connect with a Qualified Personal Finance Professional (QPFP).

Disclaimer / Guidance:
The above analysis is generic in nature and based on limited data shared. For accurate projections — including inflation, tax implications, pension structure, and education cost escalation — it is strongly advised to consult a qualified QPFP/CFP or Mutual Fund Distributor (MFD). They can help prepare a comprehensive retirement and goal-based cash flow plan tailored to your unique situation.
Financial planning is not only about returns; it’s about ensuring peace of mind and aligning your money with life goals. A professional planner can help you design a safe, efficient, and realistic roadmap toward your ideal retirement.

Best regards,
Naveenn Kummar, BE, MBA, QPFP
Chief Financial Planner | AMFI Registered MFD
https://members.networkfp.com/member/naveenkumarreddy-vadula-chennai

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Nayagam P

Nayagam P P  |12065 Answers  |Ask -

Career Counsellor - Answered on Jan 22, 2026

Asked by Anonymous - Jan 21, 2026Hindi
Career
I'm 23 years old guy entered into software industry. I'm earning a salary of 50k .But I'm not interested in job. I have around 10 crores property which includes farm land and plots . I'm getting rent around 50k from plots(This may increase to above 1 lakh if I build a commercial space).From farm land I'm getting around 1.5-2 lakhs yearly.In agriculture we are getting not any profits we may get in next two or three years but not sure. Should I continue with my job? Can I quit my job and plan a business or focus on rental properties? Suggest me a financial advice
Ans: You possess a rare financial advantage at 23: substantial property assets generating Rs.7.5–8 lakhs annual passive income while earning Rs.6 lakhs employment salary. Rather than an impulsive employment exit, you need a structured pathway that converts employment dissatisfaction into wealth creation while protecting family economic security. 3 evidence-based options exist, each addressing your constraints differently while ensuring zero financial loss risk. OPTION 1: Strategic Passive Asset Development (Continue Employment + Active Property Management Optimization). Maintain your Rs.50,000 monthly software employment as an income stability foundation while systematically upgrading property and agricultural assets through professional management. Hire a property manager for Rs.5,000–10,000 monthly to handle day-to-day residential rental operations, freeing your time for strategic commercial conversion planning. Simultaneously, engage an agricultural consultant for Rs.10,000–15,000 annually to validate the "2–3 year profitability" timeline with concrete data; if valid, you've confirmed future income; if invalid, you've avoided business failure before committing capital. Over five years, residential plots generate capital appreciation of 8–10% annually on your Rs.10 crore base (approximately Rs.80 lakh appreciation); plot rental increases from Rs.50,000 to Rs.75,000–100,000 through market escalation; and commercial development conceptual planning establishes a timeline and return on investment (ROI). By year five, passive income growth combined with employment stability creates Rs.20–25 lakhs annual income without employment dissatisfaction escalating into financial crisis. You maintain psychological freedom (planning your exit) while managing transition risks mathematically. This option eliminates the employment-exit financial cliff, allows five-year passive appreciation exceeding Rs.80 lakhs, validates agricultural assumptions risk-free, and enables calculated commercial development decisions post-validation without desperation or hasty judgment. OPTION 2: Hybrid Transitional Model (Employment Continuation → Validation → Strategic Exit) - Execute controlled exit within 24 months through three sequential phases: first, the validation phase (six months) where you hire professionals to verify agricultural profitability timeline, quantify commercial development return-on-investment, and stress-test passive income assumptions against worst-case scenarios; second, the preparation phase (12 months) where you build Rs.25–30 lakhs emergency reserves through employment savings, hire professional property and agricultural managers, establish digital accounting systems, and document all income sources for future bank loan qualification; third, the exit decision phase (months 18–24) where you evaluate whether validation confirms Rs.12–15 lakhs annual sustainable passive income, and only then transition to full-time asset management with employment departure. This approach de-risks employment exit through professional validation, financial buffer accumulation, and systematic management infrastructure establishment. You address employment dissatisfaction within a defined 24-month timeline while maintaining family economic security; neither impulsive exit nor indefinite employment suffering occurs. This option validates passive income assumptions before exit, builds a Rs.25–30 lakh safety buffer, establishes professional management systems, enables data-driven departure decisions, and manages the employment dissatisfaction timeline while securing family stability through structured planning. OPTION 3: Commercial Real Estate Entrepreneurship (Full-Time Asset Development & Scaling) - Exit employment within 12–18 months to pursue aggressive commercial real estate strategy: convert your current Rs.50,000 residential plot rental into Rs.1–2 lakh commercial space through phased development over 18–36 months, while simultaneously identifying undervalued properties within your existing Rs.10 crore portfolio for commercial conversion or redevelopment, unlocking 15–20% annual returns versus current 8–10% residential yields. Maintain agricultural land as cash-generation baseline contributing Rs.1.5–2 lakhs annually post-profitability confirmation. This pathway transforms you from passive landlord into active real estate entrepreneur, leveraging your Rs.10 crore asset base as development capital, building a professional developer network, and scaling wealth through value-creation rather than passive appreciation. During year one post-exit, you'll generate Rs.11–15 lakhs (temporary dip due to development costs and timeline); by year two, Rs.20–27 lakhs; by year three, Rs.32–45 lakhs from multiple commercial developments; by years four through five, potentially Rs.40–60 lakhs annually if three to four commercial projects operate simultaneously. Risk is substantially higher than other options; upside potential reaches Rs.40–60 lakhs annual income within five years if the commercial strategy succeeds, but it requires active management, market knowledge, execution discipline, entrepreneurial competence, and strong risk tolerance. This option converts your Rs.10 crore asset base into a value-creation engine generating 15–20% returns versus 8–10% passive yields, builds entrepreneurial skills and market reputation, enables Rs.40–60 lakhs annual income scaling potential, and transforms employment dissatisfaction into meaningful entrepreneurial work—though it replaces employment stability with business execution risk and requires you possess or rapidly develop construction management, tenant acquisition, and market-timing competencies. Your CHOICE depends on personality and risk tolerance: Option 1 suits stability-seekers willing to wait five years; Option 2 accommodates controlled exit within two years through a validation-first approach; and Option 3 suits entrepreneurial individuals comfortable with managed chaos and willing to actively build a commercial real estate portfolio. Begin immediately with agricultural consultant validation (Rs.15,000–25,000), expense calculation, and emergency reserve accumulation—these cost-effective actions provide decision-making clarity regardless of the pathway chosen. (IMPLEMENTATION PRIORITY: Immediate Actions—Next 30 Days: Regardless of which option you choose, start these immediately: First, clarify ownership by verifying whether your Rs.10 crore assets are individually owned or joint family property, as this directly affects your decision autonomy and financial control. Second, calculate your monthly personal expenses by detailing housing, food, utilities, healthcare, insurance, and leisure costs—this determines your financial sustainability threshold and reveals whether passive income alone can support your lifestyle. Third, hire an agricultural consultant to get professional validation of the "2–3 year profitability" claim within 30 days through a Rs.15,000–25,000 investment; this establishes whether agricultural income projections are realistic or optimistic assumptions. Fourth, build emergency reserves by starting to save Rs.10,000 monthly from your current salary toward a Rs.25–30 lakh emergency fund, as this financial buffer is critical for all three options and provides security during employment transitions or unexpected property income disruptions. Fifth, meet with a banker to discuss property-backed loan options, which gives you financial flexibility and demonstrates that understanding your borrowing capacity is power—you may need this safety net if employment exit occurs and initial passive income doesn't materialize as projected. These five actions cost minimal money but provide the clarity and foundation you need to choose your pathway confidently and execute it successfully. Do not exit employment without establishing this foundation, as doing so without proper validation, expense clarity, professional guidance, emergency reserves, and banking relationships would expose your family to unnecessary financial risk and jeopardize the substantial ?10 crore asset base you've inherited or accumulated.) All the BEST for Your Prosperous Future!

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Latest Questions
Nayagam P

Nayagam P P  |12065 Answers  |Ask -

Career Counsellor - Answered on Jun 14, 2026

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Nayagam P P  |12065 Answers  |Ask -

Career Counsellor - Answered on Jun 14, 2026

Asked by Anonymous - Jun 14, 2026
Career
Got admission for pg mtec at vit vellore in embedded system. Preferring vlsi but no chance and hence decided to study embedded. Is it good for placement?
Ans: Vellore Institute of Technology’s M.Tech in Embedded Systems is a solid choice, especially if VLSI didn’t work out. VIT Vellore has strong industry connections, and recent placements show opportunities in embedded software, firmware, automotive electronics, IoT, verification, and semiconductor-related roles. However, success in embedded placements depends more on skills than just the branch. Recruiters typically look for strong C/C++ programming; knowledge of microcontrollers, RTOS, embedded Linux, ARM architecture, and digital electronics; communication protocols like CAN, SPI, and I2C; and basic VLSI and Verilog knowledge, along with relevant projects and internships. Placement trends for VIT’s M.Tech Embedded in the last few years has been decent but generally below top VLSI roles, with many students also moving into software or IT roles. Core embedded and VLSI companies recruit selectively, so it’s important to build a semiconductor-focused profile. Accepting VIT Vellore for Embedded Systems is a good step, and during the M.Tech, focusing on VLSI verification, SystemVerilog, FPGA, and Linux driver development will improve chances with semiconductor firms. This can lead to strong placements, but it’s essential to back the degree with practical skills and experience. All the Best for Your Prosperous Future!

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DISCLAIMER: The content of this post by the expert is the personal view of the rediffGURU. Investment in securities market are subject to market risks. Read all the related document carefully before investing. The securities quoted are for illustration only and are not recommendatory. Users are advised to pursue the information provided by the rediffGURU only as a source of information and as a point of reference and to rely on their own judgement when making a decision. RediffGURUS is an intermediary as per India's Information Technology Act.

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