Entrepreneur by the day, Content Creator by the night. On a mission to help young hustlers level up their skills, make more money and live their dream life.

I also run a 7 figure social media company called Growth Rocket where we help the top brands of India go viral.


Ayushman Pandita

Which AI Tool should I make the next masterclass video?

👇 Like my comments to vote for the AI Tools

2 weeks ago | [YT] | 1,047

Ayushman Pandita

What topic should I make my next video on?

3 weeks ago | [YT] | 580

Ayushman Pandita

Which AI Tool should I make my next Masterclass?

1 month ago | [YT] | 100

Ayushman Pandita

How did I make my first 1 crore by age 25?

In 2018, I made my first ₹10,000. Not from some crazy idea, but from an IIT-JEE mentorship startup I started in college.

Then came ₹1 lakh from my first salary as a software engineer at HSBC. Stable. Predictable. And honestly, not what I wanted long-term.

₹10 lakh happened in 2022 when I started YouTube + freelancing as a side hustle.

And then ₹1 crore in 2024. Not from one viral video. But from building a social media agency, Growth Rocket and working with brands like Lenskart and PokerBaazi.

Honestly, none of these milestones felt big when they happened.
They just felt like the next step.

That’s what people don’t talk about,
money compounds quietly while you’re still figuring things out.

₹10 crore by 2027 doesn’t feel ambitious anymore.
It just feels like a continuation.

PS: I think first ₹10K will teach you far more than your first ₹1 crore ever.

1 month ago | [YT] | 663

Ayushman Pandita

I walked away from a ₹40 LPA tech job to make videos on the internet.

No salary. No safety net. No one telling me it would work out.
And then came the phase where the numbers were dropping and my motivation was non-existent.

Was I tired? Hell yes, but I did it anyway.
Did I question the algorithm? Don't even get me started, but I did it anyway.
Did I feel like a failure watching my numbers dip? Every single day, but I did it anyway.

Anyone can show up when there's momentum.
Anyone can be disciplined when results are visible.
Anyone can be brave when the outcome feels certain.

But the people who actually build something don't wait for any of that.

They just have four words.

I DO IT ANYWAYS

That’s decision not talent, not timing , not discipline
This is what separates the ones who make it from the ones who almost did.

The days nobody saw are the reason anyone sees me now.

If you’re waiting for the fear to vanish, you’ll be waiting forever.
Next time your mind gives you a reason to stop, give it back those four words.

I DO IT ANYWAYS

1 month ago | [YT] | 530

Ayushman Pandita

Anyone can buy a ₹3 crore car.
Not everyone can sign 20 salary slips every month.

Because that ₹3 crore car? A loan can buy it.
A good salary can buy it.

But 20 people trusting you with their livelihood?
30 families planning vacations because your business is stable?
Careers growing because you chose to invest in people over things?

That takes something else entirely.

A ₹20,000/month fresher can own the same iPhone.
Can wear the same sneakers.
Can be part of same tribe on Instagram.

But they cannot carry the weight of other people's futures.
Cannot show up every month, no matter what
Cannot build something bigger than themselves.

And if that's your biggest flex, the scoreboard looks different from where real entrepreneurs are standing.

The real ones are too busy making payroll to post about it!

1 month ago | [YT] | 822

Ayushman Pandita

I never really talked about it. But this shook me.
For 2 years, my Instagram was stuck at 4L.

At one point it even dropped to 3.6L.

And when that happens, you start questioning everything.
Was it just luck?Am I losing relevance or am I even good at this?

But honestly deep down I knew, I wasn't giving my best.
I was showing up halfway and expecting full results.

So I stopped obsessing over trends, what's working for everyone else
And just made one decision to show up every single day, no matter what.

6 months later, 3.6L turned into 7L.

Doubled my audience with just 6 months of consistency.
and this is the real proof of what it can do.

In the creator economy, the only thing that compounds faster than the algorithm is discipline.

If you want the result, you already know what to do.

JUST DON’T STOP!

1 month ago | [YT] | 261

Ayushman Pandita

Some dreams don’t make financial sense. And that’s okay.

For me, it’s always been cars.

I remember sitting in the passenger seat as a kid,
watching my dad carefully calculate if we could even afford a Santro.

Cars in our house were never status symbols. They were just transport.

So when I bought mine worth 25L, I knew it wasn’t the smartest financial decision.
But I did it anyway. And I’d do it again in a heartbeat.

I’ve learned that guilty pleasures don’t drain your ambition. The right one fuels it.

I saw myself working harder because of that car. Not despite it.
In fact, I’d happily spend on more expensive cars in the future.

But the mistake people make is turning every desire into a guilty pleasure.
Expensive trips. Designer everything. Premium everything.

When everything becomes the goal, nothing becomes the drive.

Pick one thing that excites you unreasonably. Then go earn it.
That’s not bad financial planning. That’s a really underrated form of motivation.

What's your one guilty pleasure that keeps you pushing?

#Hustle #Entrepreneur #ContentCreator #CreatorEconomy #Motivation #BuildingWealth
#PersonalFinance.

1 month ago | [YT] | 555

Ayushman Pandita

People who’ve never built anything give the worst startup advice.

“Just build it for six months, hire a manager, and step back.”

I hear this all the time, and every time, I know the person saying it has never built anything from scratch.

They think delegation is the ultimate hack. It’s not. It’s a death sentence for a 0-to-1 venture.

The companies where a founder hands the keys to a CEO are 15-year-old companies.
They stopped being startups a long time ago.

In the first decade, you can’t replace the founder.

Not because founders are control freaks.
Because no one else will lose sleep over it the way you do.

No one else will feel the problem in their chest at 2am.
No one else will care enough to do the unglamorous, irrational, exhausting work of keeping something alive when it makes no logical sense to continue.

A manager excels at maintaining what already exists.
A founder fights for what doesn’t yet exist, and you cannot outsource that obsession.

I’m building my content and my AI marketing company.
I won’t start something new just to “automate” it, because I know that without a founder’s grit, a startup is just a slow-motion car crash.

Startups don’t die because founders won’t let go.

They die because founders let go too soon.

1 month ago | [YT] | 375

Ayushman Pandita

Happy New Year to all the entrepreneurs 🥂
Today marks the first day of business year

I’ve been reflecting a lot lately,

and if I’m being honest, the biggest mistake I’ve made as a founder is that
I’ve tried to do too many things at once

Content, agency, random ideas, new experiments 
I kept jumping from one thing to another

The problem was I was actually pretty good at most of them?

But my work became messy and scattered.
One hour I’m doing this, the next hour something completely different

And because of that, I never really became exceptional at anything

Deep down, I’ve always known this
Every successful person I’ve followed says the same thing
focus on one thing, cut the distractions

But it’s easier to agree with that than to actually live it

So, starting today, this is my biggest resolution

No more being the jack of all trades.
I’m picking one thing and going all in

You’ll probably start seeing that shift in my content too.

What’s your resolution for this year

1 month ago (edited) | [YT] | 666