Alba's NoSmalltalk 6/25

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NoSmalltalk

June

Real People.

Real Conversations.

Alba’s

with

Albert Schiller

6/25

Alba’s NoSmalltalk

Real People. Real Conversations.

www.planetalba.biz/nos

JUNE ISSUE 2025

Editorial Note

ALBERT SCHILLER

In a world saturated with noise, genuine substance signals o�en get lost. ‘Albas

NoSmalltalk’ is our commitment to amplifying that signal. We lead conversa-

�ons that delve into what drives people, shapes their decisions, and leads to

true innova�on.

The individuals you’ll meet in this June issue embody this ethos. They are not

performers of a rehearsed script but authors of their unconven�onal narra�ves.

From Prateek Narang building a tech tribe rooted in the Indian hills, to Priyanka

Gupta execu�ng a life built on happiness and pragma�c discipline, each story is

a testament to orien�ng di�erently.

They are founders, innovators, and decision-makers who have chosen them-

selves rather than echoing prevailing norms. Dr. Sanjaya Pradhan rede�nes

ability by turning cultural heritage into market value, while Prasanna Akella engi-

neers well-being by fusing hard logic with essen�al empathy. Akshay Deshpande

moves beyond a label to tackle sustainability at its roots. Ratnesh Mathur recon-

structs educa�on based on radical trust in a child’s innate drive.

Every individual I listen to demonstrates meaning in their own right. They

remind us that the most resonant connec�ons and impac�ul endeavors arise

not from super�cial agreement but from the courage to explore complex truths

and challenge the status quo. If you are drawn to the substance beneath the

surface, lean into it. Priori�ze the ideas and the people that ignite your intellect

and spirit. That is where progress lies.

– Albert Schiller, CEO & Founder, Planet Alba BiZ

Table of Content

Building Your Tech Tribe

p.6

p.20

p.32

p.44

p.56

p.64

The Execution of Happiness

The Alchemist of Ability

To Belong

More than a Lake Cleanup Guy

How to get Work Certified

Prateek Narang

ColoredCow

Priyanka Gupta

VegFit

Dr. Sanjaya Pradhan

eKalakaar

Prasanna Akella

Belong

Akshay Deshpande

Switcheko

Ratnesh Mathur

Aarohi Life Education

Building

Your Tech Tribe

MY ENCOUNTER WITH PRATEEK NARANG

By Albert Schiller

ColoredCow and the Indian Hills

From Corporate Corridors to a Hilltop Philosophy

With s�nts at Tata and establishing NCR’s Gurgaon development center,

Prateek’s early career o�ered a deep immersion into corporate mechanics.

However, a growing sense of hi�ng a “treadmill,” a feeling that “this is not what

I want to do,” propelled him towards an unconven�onal path. A solo cycling

trip with Bertrand Russell’s “Conquest for Happiness” provided a cri�cal insight:

“forget about the big plans... You just do whatever you want to do in a simpler

and easier way.” This clarity, born from introspec�on, guided him towards lever-

aging his core coding skills to found ColoredCow.

Tales of urban innova�on hubs and billion-dollar valua�ons o�en dominate

the narra�ve of India’s tech ascendancy. Yet, nestled in the hills, Prateek Narang,

founder of ColoredCow, is authoring a di�erent, perhaps more resonant, story.

His company isn’t just another custom so�ware development �rm; it’s a delib-

erate experiment in social architecture, a “human resource company” disguised

in tech clothing. From a conven�onal engineering path to a self-described “ac-

cidental entrepreneur,” Prateek’s journey has led him to challenge fundamental

assump�ons about where talent resides, how it’s nurtured, and what cons�tutes

genuine business success. By consciously choosing to build his “tribe” away

from the allure of Silicon Valley, real or aspiring, and by priori�zing a�tude over

ap�tude in his hiring, Prateek is not just coding solu�ons but a new model for

sustainable, community-centric enterprise.

The ini�al foray into “Manage My NGO,” a so�ware product for the social

sector, was an “accident” that, despite its limited commercial success (“I don’t

know how to sell. I know how to create”), revealed a crucial market gap and

set the stage for ColoredCow’s referral-driven growth. This experience under-

scored a founda�onal belief: “Once you create a value, people pay back you

The An�-Resume: Hiring for A�tude, Training for Skill

A pivotal divergence from mainstream tech recruitment came from Prateek’s

evolving perspec�ve on talent. Having experienced the pressures of hiring the

“top 1%” in mul�na�onal corpora�ons and �nding the results o�en indis�n-

guishable from hiring less creden�aled individuals, he began to ques�on the

model. “Okay, 1% is �ne,” he thought, “What’s happening with the rest of the

99%?” This led to a radical decision for ColoredCow: instead of “stealing the

talent, we believe in crea�ng the talent.”

This philosophy found its most concrete expression when ColoredCow estab-

lished an incuba�on center in an engineering college in the hills of U�arakhand

in 2017. The ra�onale was clear: “Let’s go to �er N, not �er 2, not �er 3... tradi-

�onally, if there are hills that are normally neglected... it’s more touristry rather

than economy.” This move was not about �nding cheap labor but about unearth-

ing and nurturing poten�al where others weren’t looking. The “CodeTrack” pro-

gram emerged, a hands-on approach where students and fresh graduates work

on real, open-source projects, “pu�ng the code in Github, ge�ng it reviewed,

doing the Devops thing, launching the product.” It starkly contrasts tradi�onal

retraining programs, o�ering immediate, tangible experience. “The beauty was

that... it was the actual thing,” Prateek emphasizes.

The core hiring principle became “hire for a�tude and train for skill.” While ac-

knowledging this is “very tough when you are growing,” ColoredCow remains

commi�ed. They look for individuals who understand their current skill level,

believe in the company’s values, and are open to a learning curve. This approach,

Prateek believes, fosters natural loyalty and has resulted in an a�ri�on rate that

is “probably the lowest in the industry.” People who joined in 2014 are “s�ll

hanging around and they’re building the team further with the same tenacity.”

“Rather than stealing the talent, we believe in creating

the talent. It’s a very long-term approach, but it worked

well for ColoredCow.”

with value.” It also highlighted the unique challenges of the social sector, where

the value of technology o�en clashes with �ght budgets and a primary focus

on bene�ciaries. “For an NGO, the tech is s�ll not the core, right? So the money

should go to the bene�ciary, not to a tech company,” Prateek explains, ar�culat-

ing the �ghtrope he walks in pricing his services to be sustainable yet accessible.

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