What Real Startup Journeys Teach That Placements Can’t: Lessons from VSF 6.0

Placements teach you how to execute within systems. Startups teach you how to build them. Insights from Vadodara Startup Festival 6.0 reveal the real lessons founders learn through experimentation, failure,…

What Real Startup Journeys Teach That Placements Can't: VSF - Vadodara Start-up Festival 6.0 Insights

March 12, 2026 | Anjali Shah |

Here’s what your placement cell won’t tell you: a ₹12 LPA offer teaches you how to execute someone else’s vision. A failed startup teaches you how to create your own.

At Vadodara Startup Festival 6.0, the disconnect between corporate preparation and entrepreneurial reality became brutally clear. While most campuses celebrate placement percentages, Parul University’s PIERC showcased a different metric: 250+ startups incubated, ₹100+ crores in investments raised, 1400+ jobs created instead of filled.

The speakers who took the stage at VSF – Vadodara Start-up Festival 6.0 weren’t talking about salary negotiations or appraisal cycles. They were sharing lessons that don’t fit on a PowerPoint slide—lessons learned from building, failing, and rebuilding.

Let’s break down what those journeys revealed that no placement preparation can teach.

Lesson 1: Shameless Selling Beats Perfect Products

The Placement Narrative: “Build technical skills. Polish your resume. Interview well.”

The Startup Reality: “If you cannot sell, you cannot be an entrepreneur.” — Rajat Singhania

During his signature talk at Central Auditorium, Singhania made a statement that would make most computer science students uncomfortable: “Entrepreneurs should be shameless when it comes to selling. Things must get done one way or another.”

Notice what’s missing from that skill set? Technical perfection. Code quality. System design.

Why? Because in a startup, the best product doesn’t win—the best-communicated product wins.

Real Example: EasyRugs' Meta Ad Strategy

Samrath Singh Nagpal and Harnaam Kaur (EasyRugs) got real about their marketing learning curve. Their advice to students at VSF – Vadodara Start-up Festival 6.0?

“Don’t overspend on Meta ads. For Meta to perform well, at least 50 ads should be live and running.”

That’s not something you learn in digital marketing textbooks. That’s learned by burning money on underfunded ads and discovering what actually works.

They also shared: “The language used for a brand is very important. Our first order came through Instagram when our website was still under development.”

Translation: Your Instagram copy mattered more than your fully-functional e-commerce backend.

Placement world: Focus on backend optimization

Startup world: Focus on why anyone should care

The skills don’t transfer.

Lesson 2: The First 100 Orders Teach More Than Any Course

The Placement Track: Join established company → Follow existing processes → Optimize margins

The Startup Track: Have zero credibility → Convince people to pay you → Create processes from nothing

Manan Vasavada (Owner & CEO, AV DEVS Solutions) shared during his VSF – Vadodara Start-up Festival 6.0 talk that being the first entrepreneur in his family meant navigating without a playbook. No founder parent to ask. No family business to learn from.

The EasyRugs team emphasized: “The first 100 orders are always difficult, and reviews should be taken very seriously.”

Why?

  • No brand recognition means every sale is a trust leap
  • Each early customer is a referendum on your entire premise
  • Bad reviews when you have 10 ratings kill you (vs. 10,000 ratings)
  • You learn unit economics the hard way by doing them

This isn’t an internship experience. Internships give you defined problems with known solutions. Early startup life gives you unknown problems with solutions you have to invent.

The Instagram vs. Institutional Learning Divide

EasyRugs made their first sale on Instagram before their website was built.

Think about what that teaches:

  • ✓ Validation can come from anywhere
  • ✓ Professional infrastructure (website) isn’t always prerequisite
  • ✓ Direct customer conversations matter more than marketing theory
  • ✓ Speed to market beats perfection

Now think about a typical placement:

  • ❌ Join with perfect résumé and portfolio
  • ❌ Work within established systems
  • ❌ Follow brand guidelines created by others
  • ❌ Execute strategies from leadership

Opposite skill sets. Opposite mindsets.

Lesson 3: Breaking Boundaries Requires Seeing Them First

Rajat Singhania’s session on “Breaking Boundaries” revealed something profound: you can’t disrupt what you don’t understand intimately.

His cement business example:

  • Industry standard: 90-day payment cycle
  • His innovation: 9-day payment cycle
  • Result: Company reached #3 position in 9 months (the “999 Incident”)
  • Broader impact: Industry average now 7-10 days

But here’s the key: he only saw that boundary because he was in the cement business. Not consulting for it. Not studying it in a case study. Operating it.

Similarly, his IT services venture reduced quality checks from three to two—challenging norms because he understood them from the inside.

Placement learning: How to work within existing systems

Startup learning: Why those systems exist and how to rebuild them

The Scholify Case Study

Mayank Pareek built Scholify from personal pain: struggling to find scholarships and financial support as a student.

He didn’t:

  • ❌ Join an EdTech company to “learn the industry”
  • ❌ Get an MBA to understand education business models
  • ❌ Work in admissions to see the scholarship landscape

He:

  • ✓ Lived the problem
  • ✓ Built a solution from authentic insight
  • ✓ Iterated based on real student needs

Result: ₹7-8 crores in scholarships disbursed, platform ranking above Byju’s and Unacademy in specific metrics.

The depth of understanding came from being the customer, not studying the customer.

Lesson 4: Failure Literacy Matters More Than Success Formulas

The Placement Preparation: “Tell us about a time you overcame a challenge” (sanitized story with happy ending)

The Startup Reality: Multiple ventures fail completely. You learn to read failure signals.

Look at the VSF – Vadodara Start-up Festival 6.0 lineup’s actual track records:

Rajat Singhania: 6 businesses, multiple exits

  • Transport business: Exited due to lack of satisfaction
  • Synthetic yarn: Exited due to co-founder conflicts
  • Typewriter ribbons: Total failure, financial loss
  • Cement: 29-year success

Anurag Sundarka (ZebraLearn):

  • Saralife.com (vegetables): ₹20,000 revenue, failed
  • Aatisbazi.in (crackers): Failed
  • ZebraLearn: Shark Tank deal, ₹10.7 crore revenue (2024)

Yash Tarwadi (Solnce Energy):

  • Desalination project: Technical failure
  • Solar energy: Growing renewable energy business

Notice the pattern? Success came after learning to identify what wouldn’t work.

The Failure Taxonomy They Don't Teach

From VSF – Vadodara Start-up Festival 6.0 insights, here are the failure types you learn to distinguish:

Type 1: Satisfaction mismatch (Rajat’s transport exit)

  • The business works, but you don’t want to work on it
  • Learned skill: Internal alignment assessment

Type 2: Partnership failure (Rajat’s yarn exit)

  • Revenue is fine, relationship isn’t
  • Learned skill: Co-founder compatibility evaluation

Type 3: Fundamental premise failure (Rajat’s typewriter ribbons)

  • Technology/market timing is wrong
  • Learned skill: Distinguishing fixable from fatal

Type 4: Execution failure (Anurag’s early ventures)

  • Good idea, bad execution
  • Learned skill: Iterating on delivery, not premise

Placement track teaches: How to avoid all failure

Startup track teaches: How to read and respond to specific failures

These are not the same skill.

Lesson 5: Resource Orchestration vs. Resource Execution

Corporate Role: “Here are your resources. Execute this plan.”

Startup Founder: “Here’s your problem. Find the resources.”

Rajat Singhania emphasized this distinction:

“An entrepreneur should know how to bring resources together and manage them efficiently.”

That’s radically different from managing resources that already exist.

Real Example: The PIERC Ecosystem Play

The startups that got SSIP grants at VSF – Vadodara Start-up Festival 6.0 demonstrated this:

Rideaway Solutions (founder: Dipesh Lokare)

  • Need: Affordable student mobility
  • Resources orchestrated: Two-wheeler inventory, rental management system, campus partnerships, PIERC support
  • None of these resources existed when they started

Destinofy.ai (founder: Ved Sanghani)

  • Need: Accurate construction measurements
  • Resources orchestrated: AI scanning technology, construction industry connections, testing partnerships
  • Created the capability, not joined it

In a corporate role, you’re assigned resources and expected to optimize them.

In a startup, you identify needed resources and figure out how to access them. Completely different muscles.

Lesson 6: Living the "Jar Model" of Prioritization

Kavish Gadia (CEO, ExcelOne; Founder, Stones2Milestones) introduced the “jar model” at his VSF – Vadodara Start-up Festival 6.0 session:

  • Rocks: Non-negotiable priorities (health, family)
  • Pebbles: Commitments (work, responsibilities)
  • Sand: Personal growth and hobbies
  • Water: Distractions

The startup lesson: Rocks must go in first. Everything else fills around them.

Why This Doesn’t Come Up in Placement Scenarios

In corporate roles:

  • Your rocks are defined (work deliverables)
  • Your pebbles are scheduled (meetings, reviews)
  • Your sand is optional (learning budget)
  • Your water is minimized (productivity culture)

In startup founding:

  • You define your own rocks (What’s actually non-negotiable?)
  • Pebbles flood you (Everything seems urgent)
  • Sand gets lost (Personal development becomes “later”)
  • Water drowns you (Distractions multiply)

Learning to protect your rocks when you define what they are? That’s not taught in corporate onboarding.

Kavish Gadia also emphasized managing five key aspects:

  1. Physical fitness
  2. Emotional well-being
  3. Mental well-being
  4. Material wealth
  5. Personal peace

Corporate track: Optimize for #4, often at expense of #1-3 and #5

Startup track: Realize #5 matters more than #4, learn balance the hard way

Lesson 7: The "Scalable Jugaad" Mindset

Rajat Singhania stated:


“Indians are very good at finding alternative solutions, commonly referred to as ‘jugaad.’ If such solutions are scalable, they can become successful business models. Scalable jugaad is nothing but innovation.”

This is a fundamentally different approach to problem-solving than corporate best practices.

Corporate approach:

  • Study industry best practices
  • Adopt proven frameworks
  • Minimize deviation from standards

Startup approach:

  • Find the hacky solution that works
  • Test if it scales
  • Formalize it into a system

Real Example: The 999 Incident

Singhania’s 9-day payment cycle wasn’t based on McKinsey research or industry benchmarking. It was based on a simple question:

“This 90-day cycle is ridiculous. What if we just… didn’t do that?”

Scalable jugaad in action.

Similarly, his IT services company reduced quality checks from three to two:

“What if we just… checked less?”

That sounds reckless in a corporate environment. In a startup finding product-market fit? It’s appropriate risk-taking.

Lesson 8: The Boundary-Breaking Mentality

Rajat Singhania’s entire talk centered on “Breaking Boundaries.” But the boundaries he highlighted aren’t the ones career counselors discuss.

Academic boundaries he broke:

  • Chose accounts over science (against teacher advice)
  • Combined accounts + computer science (considered impossible)
  • Built first accounting software as student project

Industry boundaries he broke:

  • 90-day to 9-day payment cycles (cement)
  • Three to two quality checks (IT services)

Personal boundaries he broke:

  • Entrepreneurship over job (parents from job background)

The Pattern: Boundaries Are Only Visible From Inside

You cannot disrupt industries you’ve only studied. You disrupt industries you’ve operated in.

Placement track: Study industries from outside, join established ones

Startup track: Enter industries, see inefficiencies from inside, rebuild

The vantage point is everything.

Lesson 9: The Four-Stage Journey No One Warns You About

Rajat Singhania outlined the universal entrepreneur path:

  1. They ignore you
  2. They laugh and demotivate you
  3. They resist you
  4. They claim they encouraged you from the start

This isn’t discussed in campus placement talks because it doesn’t fit the “prove yourself through credentials” narrative.

Why This Matters

In corporate environments:

  • Credentials open doors
  • Performance reviews provide validation
  • Career progression is visible

In startups:

  • You’ll be ignored initially
  • Mockery is the first response
  • Resistance comes when you start gaining traction
  • Retroactive credit-taking is inevitable

Learning to persist through stages 1-3 without institutional validation? That’s a skill placement prep doesn’t build.

Lesson 10: Ownership Mindset vs. Employee Mindset

Manan Vasavada emphasized during his VSF – Vadodara Start-up Festival 6.0 session: “When individuals work with an ownership mindset, they naturally grow into leaders.”

But what does “ownership mindset” actually mean in a startup context?

Corporate ownership:

  • Take responsibility for assigned work
  • Think beyond your job description
  • Improve processes within your scope

Startup ownership:

  • The business succeeds or fails based on your decisions
  • There’s no “not my job”—it’s all your job
  • Every decision has direct consequence for survival

The Emotional Weight Difference

Mayank Pareek spoke honestly about startup reality:

  • Family time often gets neglected
  • Personal comfort gets sacrificed
  • Financial security is uncertain
  • Stress and pressure are constant

He didn’t sugar-coat this. Because the placement narrative of “work-life balance” and “great benefits package” creates false expectations.

Startups require different sacrifice patterns. Not worse. But unacknowledged differences create painful surprises.

What VSF - Vadodara Start-up Festival 6.0 Actually Demonstrated

Let’s look at what the festival revealed through actions, not words:

250+ startups incubated through PIERC:

  • These weren’t class projects or hackathon submissions
  • Real businesses, real customers, real revenue
  • Proof that student entrepreneurship scales

₹100+ crores in investments raised:

  • Someone with skin in the game validated these ventures
  • Not institutional money—actual investors

1400+ jobs created:

  • Not filled. Created.
  • The difference between being a job-seeker and a job-creator

₹40+ crores in revenue generated:

  • Not projected. Actual.
  • Markets voted with real money

This isn’t theoretical entrepreneurship. This is the parallel track happening while placement season runs.

The Skills Matrix: Placement vs. Startup

Let’s get specific about capability differences:

Skill Corporate Role Startup Founder
Problem Definition Given defined problems Must identify problems worth solving
Resource Access Assigned budget/team Must orchestrate from zero
Failure Tolerance Avoid failure Learn from cheap failures
Decision Speed Follow approval chains Make calls with incomplete data
Credibility Source Company brand Personal conviction + proof
Customer Discovery Research handed to you Talk to strangers yourself
Sales Sell established products Sell before product exists
Validation Performance reviews Market payment

Neither is “better.” They’re different paths requiring different muscle groups.

But the placement narrative pretends the startup path doesn’t exist—or that it’s “for later.”

What This Means for Students at Parul

PIERC’s existence is an acknowledgment: both tracks have value.

But here’s what VSF – Vadodara Start-up Festival 6.0 made clear:

The startup track has a window. You can do corporate later (post-MBA, after kids, during semi-retirement). You cannot do cheap student entrepreneurship later.

The speakers who succeeded?

  • Started young (most during/immediately after college)
  • Failed fast (when consequences were minimal)
  • Iterated based on real market feedback (not case studies)

Poyni Bhatt’s masterclass emphasized: Campus is the perfect place for co-founder discovery and risk-taking.

Not because campus makes startups easy. Because campus makes startup failure recoverable.

The Questions You Should Be Asking

Instead of “What’s the average package?”, consider:

1. What problems do I care enough about to solve for years?

Placements optimize for salary. Startups require caring about the problem itself.

2. Am I energized by uncertainty or drained by it?

Corporate roles minimize uncertainty. Startups maximize it.

3. Do I want to learn systems or build them?

Neither is wrong. Know which energizes you.

4. Can I handle public failure?

Placements fail privately (performance reviews). Startups fail publicly (market rejection).

5. What does success mean to me in 10 years?

Rajat Singhania’s insight: “Money and fame will not be the top priority—satisfaction will.”

The Action Step Reality

If VSF – Vadodara Start-up Festival 6.0 convinced you that the startup path has merit, here’s the dirty truth:

Reading this changed nothing.

Knowledge without action is academic. The gap between reading about entrepreneurship and actually starting is vast.

What Actually Starting Looks Like

This week:

  • Pick one campus inefficiency
  • Talk to 5 people about it
  • If they confirm it sucks, ask: “Would you pay ₹X to fix it?”

This month:

  • If 3/5 said yes, build the absolute minimum testable version
  • Not perfect. Not scalable. Just: Does this solve the problem?

This semester:

  • Put it in front of 10 potential customers
  • Learn what breaks
  • Iterate or kill it

By graduation:

  • You’ll have real startup experience, not theoretical knowledge
  • That experience compounds whether the startup succeeded or failed

Because here’s what placements can’t teach: the courage to start.

The Bottom Line from VSF - Vadodara Start-up Festival 6.0

The speakers weren’t arguing against placements. They were demonstrating an alternative path.

A path where:

  • You create jobs instead of filling them
  • You learn boundary-breaking instead of boundary-respecting
  • You develop failure literacy instead of résumé perfection
  • You build ownership mindset instead of employee mindset

Both paths create value. But only one teaches you how to build from zero.

Rajat Singhania managed six startups simultaneously. Mayank Pareek built a scholarship platform that outranks giants. Anurag Sundarka turned book publishing into a ₹10+ crore business.

They didn’t get there through placement preparation. They got there through the hard lessons that only real startup journeys teach.

The question isn’t whether you should choose startups over placements.

The question is: Which lessons do you need to learn while learning is still affordable?

FAQs

+ 1. What lessons do startup journeys teach that placements don’t?

Startup journeys teach skills like selling ideas, handling uncertainty, building systems from scratch, managing failure, and making decisions with limited information.

+ 2. Why are real startup experiences valuable for students?

Startup experiences help students develop problem-solving, leadership, and resilience skills that are difficult to learn through traditional academic or corporate training.

+ 3. What is the difference between corporate learning and startup learning?

Corporate learning focuses on optimizing existing systems, while startup learning focuses on creating new solutions, testing ideas, and adapting quickly to market feedback.

+ 4. How does PIERC support students interested in entrepreneurship?

PIERC provides mentorship, startup incubation, SSIP funding, prototyping labs, networking opportunities, and connections with investors to help students develop and scale their ideas.

+ 5. Can students pursue entrepreneurship while preparing for placements?

Yes. Many students explore startup ideas alongside academics or placements, gaining entrepreneurial experience while keeping career options open.

About Vadodara Startup Festival 6.0

India’s Largest Startup Carnival brought together entrepreneurs, investors, students, and innovators at Parul University from January 21–23, 2026. Through signature talks, masterclasses, pitch sessions, and real startup exhibitions, VSF – Vadodara Start-up Festival 6.0 created outcome-driven innovation opportunities for Gujarat’s entrepreneurial ecosystem.

Learn more about PIERC’s incubation programs at www.pierc.org

Possibilities that help you turn ideas into real startups!

Open for admission year 2026-27

Apply now apply
Need guidance? Your PU coach is here! ⚡