Women’s Day
EXCLUSIVE
Kavita Sugandh
PUNE: We read
many interesting stories about young male entrepreneurs who are thriving in the
burgeoning Indian start-up culture. Unfortunately, not enough is being written
about the women who are changing the entrepreneurship game in the country.
Gender based inequality has deep roots in India, but the struggles women
entrepreneurs go through are pretty much the same across the world.
Despite the
challenges, some have managed to break through the proverbial glass ceiling and
are
giving the men a run for their money.
This International Women’s Day, meet Kavita Sugandh who carved
out a niche for herself as successful entrepreneur and business leader in the
thriving Indian direct selling industry. From making Rs.35,000 in her first job
to today making a 7-figure income in US dollars, she has come a long way!
Elaborate
about your background and how it influenced your decision to become an entrepreneur?
I come from Nagpur from a traditional business family. My
father encouraged me to start earning my own money from an early age. I always
knew I wanted to do something on my own. However, lack of enough capital to get
started was holding me back. After 8 years of working for leading MNCs, I quit
my job and started an HR consultancy business. That was my first venture into
entrepreneurship.
So how
did you go from there to direct selling? What attracted you to it?
At the consultancy business, I was the CEO, administrator, and
the clerk all rolled into one since I couldn’t afford to hire anyone. Through
hard work I was able to grow the business but my company was centred around me.
I could not afford to fall sick or go on vacation since a lot of money was at
stake. Also, all the profits seemed to only appear on paper and never in the
bank! Two years after I started the business, a family friend told my husband
and I about direct selling. The opportunity was through QNet, a prominent Asian
direct selling company from Hong Kong. He and I went for one of QNet’s
international conventions where I had the opportunity to attend training
programs and interact with other distributors from around the world to learn
more about this business. I was so inspired by its potential that I came back
home from the convention and closed down my HR business to focus on direct
selling instead.
How long
did it take you before you achieved some level of success with QNet?
For the first 18 months, I didn’t make any money. I faced
severe setbacks and rejections. That made me angry but it also fuelled my
hunger to do better. When I earned my first major commission cheque after 18
months of hard work, the wait was totally worth it! I have never shied away
from hard work, but as an entrepreneur with QNet I have experienced hard work
at a whole new level. This is not a get-rich- quick scheme, but a get-rich-sure
business, provided you put your heart and soul into it.
Has it
been difficult being a woman in this business?
I think men find it far more difficult. Women usually have all
the traits needed to succeed in direct selling. We don’t need a special Women’s
Day to talk about everything that’s good about being a woman. Success doesn’t
see gender. It comes to those who put their blood and sweat into and are
deserving of it.
Your
advice to the young generation of women:
In India, even today in many places young women or girl
children are dissuaded from taking up a career or being ambitious. In my
opinion we celebrate Women’s Day because we don’t consider women as equal to
men. I tell the women in my organisation that their success is entirely up to
them. They need to believe they can be successful and be willing to put in the work
needed for it.
such a scam !
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