Alba's NoSmalltalk 5/25

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NoSmalltalk

Real People.

Real Conversations.

May

Alba’s

with

Albert Schiller

5/25

Alba’s NoSmalltalk

Real People. Real Conversations.

www.planetalba.biz

Editorial Note

ALBERT SCHILLER

In an age when social skills are mone�zed, and the inability to exchange

polite nothings seems pathological, I want to o�er a counterpoint: not being

good at small talk is not a �aw, nor is it something that needs �xing. I read the

books, took the classes, and watched the videos. The outcome was predictable.

More conversa�ons I wasn’t interested in. For some of us, mastering the weath-

er report or following sports and entertainment programs that other people �nd

intriguing, isn’t the point. If you aren’t interested in the answer, don’t ask.

Meaningful connec�ons are rare. They occur through curiosity, shared ideas,

and fric�on. They are built when we stop performing social �uency and start

listening.

If you’re drawn to people and uninterested in prac�cing small talk, don’t waste

�me forcing it. You are not defec�ve. You are oriented di�erently. That’s ok.

Lean into that orienta�on. Priori�ze you —and the people—that make you forget

to check the �me. Focus on what brings you alive intellectually, emo�onally, and

crea�vely. That’s where your energy will �ow, and where it should.

– Albert Schiller, CEO & Founder, Planet Alba BiZ

A Time for

New Beginnings

FROM THE TEAM AT PLANET ALBA BIZ

Welcome to the inaugural issue of Alba’s NoSmalltalk (NoS)

We operate in an era saturated with content, increasingly generated by

sophis�cated tools, o�en rendering informa�on replaceable, transient. Genuine

human connec�on feels scarcer, yet the resonance we experience when we

truly connect remains potent, undiluted. Atv Planet Alba BIZ, we believe the

quality of these connec�ons fundamentally determines the quality of our lives

and work. This belief anchors NoS.

This magazine is one part of a deliberate ecosystem. You will also �nd

focused blog posts online, exploring speci�c angles from our conversa�ons.

Why both?

Because people are complex. They are the sum of their thoughts and ac�ons,

naviga�ng challenges with logic, yet inevitably possessing blind spots that are

striking when viewed from another perspec�ve. No single ar�cle can capture

every facet; a single interview o�en contains mul�ple dis�nct lines of inquiry

worth pursuing. The magazine o�ers the integrated narra�ve; the blogs pro-

vide the deep dives into speci�c analy�cal threads.

What you read here are things people said, thoughts they ar�culated. Our

aim is the un�ltered substance that emerges when individuals are given the

space to think aloud, grapple with contradic�ons, and share their opera�onal

reali�es.

Our proposi�on to you, the reader, the curious mind, is access to this unvar-

nished substance. We invite you to engage with these complex individuals, to

�nd resonance in their logic, perhaps recognize your own blind spots re�ected

in theirs, and ul�mately, to value the increasingly rare act of genuine human

connec�on and intellectual e�ort.

Welcome to NoSmalltalk.

– The Team at Planet Alba BiZ

Table of Content

Authenticity as a Business Model

p.6

p.20

p.28

p.38

p.42

p.50

The Founder Who Runs

on Self-Awareness

Designing with Purpose

The Case for Value-Driven

AI Leadership

The Portfolio Future

Why Rural Markets Need

Structured Disruption

Gauri Malik

Sirohi

Midhun Noble

Insighte Childcare

Dhisti Desai

Pineapple

Mahendra Singh

Benovymed

Shreyas Katta

Stealth

Sachin Jagtap

Geo Roots Agritech

Authenticity

as a Business Model

MY ENCOUNTER WITH GAURI MALIK

By Albert Schiller

The trajectory from interna�onal �nance to grassroots social entrepreneurship

focused on rural Indian ar�sans is not a conven�onal one. It suggests a profound

internal shi�, a rejec�on of established paths. Yet, in conversa�on with Gauri

Malik, founder of Sirohi, the journey appears less a single Damascene conver-

sion and more a complex convergence – a synthesis of seemingly disparate,

even contradictory, life experiences. Her background in economics and invest-

ment banking, the stark contrasts observed between her privileged boarding

school educa�on and the constrained lives of women in her hometown, a deep-

ly personal aversion to social conformity iden�fying herself as a “mis�t”, and a

single, harrowing incident witnessed in a village coalesced into a unique form

of pragma�c ac�vism. Sirohi, the brand empowering women ar�sans, emerged

not just from idealism but from experienced frustra�on, analy�cal thinking, and

a lived understanding of both independence and limita�on, ul�mately driven by

an “accidental ac�vist” naviga�ng her path.

Forma�ve Dichotomies: Independence and Constraint

Understanding Gauri’s drive requires acknowledging the powerful, o�en con-

�ic�ng, forces of her upbringing. Hailing from Muzafarnagar, U�ar Pradesh – a

town marked by both wealth and signi�cant poverty – she was sent to boarding

school at the unusually young age of six. This environment fostered intense

independence. “You have to make decisions for yourself,” she recalled, “You

don’t have your parents suppor�ng you... you take li�le decisions, and they start

becoming bigger decisions”. This enforced self-reliance, further honed through

athle�cs (sprin�ng and state-level basketball), stands in sharp contrast to her

observa�ons back home. She witnessed her own highly educated mother, pos-

sessing a Master’s degree, unable to pursue a career within the prevailing social

norms.

Financial Independence needs no Excuses

This “dichotomy... existed from a very young age”, seeding a persistent

ques�oning of societal constraints placed upon women, even within a�uent

se�ngs. This wasn’t theore�cal feminism; it was a lived observa�on of wasted

poten�al and dependence that le� an indelible mark, likely fueling her later in-

sistence on �nancial independence as a core tenet of empowerment. The feel-

ing of being a “mis�t” perhaps stemmed partly from inhabi�ng these contras�ng

worlds – the independence she experienced versus the restric�ve norms she

observed.

10

Following the expected path of academic achievement led Gauri through

pres�gious schools, economics degrees, and ul�mately, into the world of

investment banking. Yet, this conven�onal success felt hollow. “I was numb

by my job,” she admi�ed, hin�ng at a profound disconnect between her

external achievements and internal ful�llment. The desire for impact work

persisted. A pivotal transi�on occurred when she began working in the develop-

ment sector in the village of Sirohi. Here, the abstract dichotomy she observed

growing up became brutally concrete. She encountered a community mirroring

her hometown’s constraints – girls uneducated, con�ned to their homes, denied

economic par�cipa�on.

The Catalyst. From Financial Numbness to Focused Ac�on

"That's the time, I decided. I will do it."

This incident wasn’t just mo�va�on; it was the speci�c, intolerable problem

demanding a solu�on, moving her from a general desire for impact to focused,

necessary ac�on driven by a frustra�on she could no longer ignore.

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