Prominent entrepreneur, best-selling author, and influential content creator Ankur Warikoo challenged the traditional Indian roadmap to adulthood, labelling the societal pressure to “settle down” as a calculated business model.
Speaking on the latest episode of the “Figuring Out” podcast hosted by creator Raj Shamani, Warikoo argued that milestones such as home ownership, luxury weddings, and high-end vehicle purchases are often “sold” to young professionals to keep them tethered to a cycle of forced labour.
Warikoo, the author of “Make Epic Money,” explained that these life stages are designed to trigger a sequence of financial burdens, starting with education loans and ending with long-term mortgages that stifle a creator’s ability to take professional risks.
The former Groupon India CEO told Shamani that the modern economy thrives on individuals who are eager to fit into the “not a failure” category.
This category is defined by visible markers of success, such as a credit card with a high limit or a financed car, which act as a “drug” for the middle class.
Warikoo noted that as soon as a young person achieves a stable salary, they are targeted with pre-approved loans for everything from international vacations to electronics.
This constant pull toward immediate gratification, he argued, creates a psychological barrier that prevents many talented Indians from entering the creator economy or starting their own ventures.
Warikoo specifically addressed the “on-demand” generation, noting that the ease of modern life has reduced the capacity for intellectual discomfort, the ability to sit with a problem or a failing project without quitting.
He observed that many creators today confuse the “spark” of a new idea with the discipline of building a brand, leading to a high “churn rate” (the frequency at which people quit a service or profession) in the influencer space.
To combat this, he urged his audience to view success as a game of internal discipline rather than a checklist of external acquisitions.
During the deep-dive session, Warikoo also highlighted how the information flow in India has become “water-tight,” with banks and coaching institutes accessing personal data as early as a child’s birth or a student’s high school registration.
This data-driven marketing ensures that at every stage of life, the individual is presented with a new reason to spend or borrow.
He suggested that true success is only possible when one breaks away from this “settling down” script and focuses on “self-worth”, which he defines as the act of keeping promises made to oneself, rather than “net worth.”
With over 3.3 million subscribers and a history of building multi-crore businesses, Warikoo remains a polarizing yet authoritative figure in the Indian startup ecosystem.
His insights into the “business of life” serve as a cautionary tale for the lakhs of aspiring creators currently navigating the intersection of personal ambition and societal expectation.
He concluded that while the system is built to make people consumers, the path to true wealth requires the resilience to remain “unsettled” and focused on long-term value creation.