Before scaling SMB growth engines like BidAssist and Nexizo, I learnt the ropes of incubation inside two of the world’s largest companies: Deutsche Telekom in Europe and Airtel in India. The challenge was simple to state but hard to solve: how do you build future growth teams inside massive organisations designed for innovation, and speed but on top of the legacy stack.
What worked was combining my McKinsey problem-solving training with a startup style of execution. Big visions only moved forward when broken into milestones, phases, and finally sprints that leaders and teams could align on.
At Deutsche Telekom, I worked on a pan-European OTT platform designed to compete with global streaming players. The hard part was alignment across nine countries, content partners, and vendors, all pulling in different directions.
At Airtel, I led the build of Wynk Music as an in-house platform. The goal was clear: build capabilities internally instead of outsourcing so Airtel could scale faster and own the customer experience directly.
In both settings, I learnt that building the product was only half the battle. The other half was alignment.
Three big takeaways stand out:
These journeys taught me that large enterprises can drive innovation like startups if they commit to alignment, structure, and building lasting capabilities.