Deepinder Goyal and Navil Noronha: a study in contrasting exits
And what that says about how far Eternal can push its norm-defying acts
The Ken Podcast
Why so many 1:1 meetings are dreadful and (often) futile. And how to fix it.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang wants to completely do away with 1:1 meetings. “They (1:1s) are really not necessary. If there is a strategic direction, why do you tell one person? You tell everybody,” he said.
Most 1:1s meetings are ineffective, inconsistent, and often futile. In companies that mandate it, it is simply a check in the box. Employees use it to lobby for promotion, crib about annoying co-workers, or overshare personal details. So, managers hijack these meetings and turn them into monologues.
But 1:1 can be a gamechanger, if used well. It makes the workplace more democratic, especially if the organization is hierarchical, and gives employees a dedicated space to express themselves fully and make themselves heard. Research suggests that employees who do 1:1s well, and regularly, are more engaged at work and productive.
Host Akshaya Chandrasekaran talks to the world’s leading expert on meetings, Steven Rogelberg, and Kamal Karanth, the founder of specialist staffing firm Xpheno to find out ways to make it work and get what you want in these 1:1 meetings.
Introducing surveys. Want to do more than listen to the podcast? You can suggest new topics, contribute to the narrative, and even be on it by taking our weekly surveys.
Have you ever felt like an imposter at work? Undeserving of the opportunities you get? And overall feeling not good enough? Then, you can take the survey and let us know: Are you good enough at your job?
FREE READ: TCS offers quirky titles and little else in recruiting revamp to attract 40K hires
If you have a career question you want us to cover? Tell us.
This episode was written and hosted by Akshaya Chandrasekaran, and produced by Anushka Mukherjee, with audio engineering by Rajiv CN.
The First Two Years is produced from the newsroom of The Ken, India’s first subscriber-only business news platform.
Subscribe for more exclusive business stories, deeply-reported newsletters, and a whole lot of stuff.
And what that says about how far Eternal can push its norm-defying acts
The Walmart-backed company commands nearly half of India’s digital-payments landscape. But its financials trail its smaller, listed rival
As the logistics firm plans to pour IPO money into new warehouses and long leases, incumbents are squeezing returns from assets they locked in when land was cheaper, and rents were lower
The Ken has learnt that the Centre is holding deeper discussions on allowing private schools to run as for-profit entities to encourage transparency and long-term steady growth
A complex system with feedback loops that pulls us towards a future we imagine possible
Private labels meet brand ambition
So far, only Wechat seems to have cracked the code to creating an apps-within-an-app ecosystem. Can AI take it to the rest of the world?
The IT services firm is seeking a secondary listing to match the valuation of its Indian rivals. But logistical and regulatory challenges lie in the way
The co-founder on how Darwinbox grew quietly before it grew big
In this episode, we unpack the rise of what we are calling the “fitness warrior”. This is a new professional archetype where work follows the same logic as sport: optimise, train, perform.
As India’s data law kicks in, WhatsApp outreach is getting regulated, and a new compliance market is emerging fast
The IT services firm is seeking a secondary listing to match the valuation of its Indian rivals. But logistical and regulatory challenges lie in the way
The Sequoia-backed cross-border remittance startup Aspora wants to win over 15 million NRIs at all costs, and it has to decide which cost it wants to bear—regulatory or cross-border realities
The Supreme Court’s recent guidelines and a state’s AI mandate hint at a fragmented overhaul—one testing whether tech can cut through decades of procedural drag
Here are the ones—whether it’s The Nutgraf, Long and Short, or Trade Tricks—that you didn’t expect
Here are the stories that our subscribers read and shared the most in 2025
Here are some of the episodes—across our six different podcasts—that listeners loved
Do you know anyone else who would like to listen this podcast?
Share this episode with them.