My Worst Investment Ever Podcast
Business:Investing
BIO: Sampark Sachdeva has 12 years of corporate experience across Asian Paints and other businesses.
STORY: Sampark let the security of his corporate job distract him from building a business out of his love for training. It wasn’t until COVID struck and he found himself without a job that he decided to work on the plan. The business turned out to be a huge success.
LEARNING: Nothing good comes easy. Don’t let job security restrict you from pursuing your entrepreneurial dreams.
“No matter how bad your situation might be, the victim card can only be played once. You can’t keep playing that card again and again.”Sampark Sachdeva
Guest profile
Sampark Sachdeva has 12 years of corporate experience across Asian Paints and other businesses. He was awarded the best digital coach of 2021 at the India coaching awards. He was a TEDx speaker in 2020 and won the LinkedIn Spotlight Award in 2019, recognizing him as one of India’s top content creators. Paul Ryder and Oracle also awarded Sampark as a top marketing and sales professional in 2019.
Sampark has trained over 20,000 people across 125 sessions across 10 countries. He has over 125,000 followers across social media channels.
Worst investment everSampark had an excellent corporate career. He was with Asian Paints, India’s largest paints company, for over five years. In 2015 he moved to Ola, the Indian Uber, and was there for three years. Then he moved to Oyo, the country’s largest hospitality brand, for another two years. Sampark won the Top 100 Marketing and Sales Professionals Award during this career journey. So yes, everything was going well on the corporate side.
On the passion side, Sampark had been writing on LinkedIn for close to six years. He’d posted over 2000 posts in 2019 and won the LinkedIn Spotlight Award. Everything seemed rosy, and Sampark felt this was the time to take off.
In 2020, Sampark moved into a new role in the same organization. But that’s when COVID struck. He was in the hospitality industry, leading corporate events. He had just been in that role for a few months when the lockdown occurred. In one day, everything stopped.
Sampark sat down with his family, and they looked at their savings. They could survive for a couple of years with what they had. Sampark decided to explore a plan he had put on the back burner. Sampark loved training, and after getting the content creator award, he consulted his mentors on how to make something out of his love for training.
They all advised him to work on the plan for the next three to four years and then look at how to do it long-term. But when the lockdown started, the three-year plan became an overnight plan. Sampark decided to give himself four months to execute the plan. If it didn’t work, he still had a corporate career to return to after the lockdown.
At the end of four months, Sampark did a review and realized the training business was going better than he expected. He gave himself another four months, and it was still going well. He continued doing it until April 2022, when an old boss offered him a job. Sampark turned down the job because his business was doing well. He had trained close to 80,000 people and had a lot of clients in the pipeline. Sampark’s only regret is having waited for so long to start his passion venture.
Lessons learnedAlways have confidence, be positive, and leave your comfort zone. Keep reinventing yourself, learning, and upskilling.
Sampark’s recommendationSampark recommends two online courses on his website:
Sampark’s number one goal for the next 12 months is to go full throttle into corporate training across three verticals: personal branding and LinkedIn, sales and marketing, and employee capability building.
Parting words“Be positive. Be confident and keep building on your brand. Trust me, sooner or later, you’ll reach where you want to go. I might be a little later due to whatever obstacles that come by, but you’ll reach where you deserve to be.”Sampark Sachdeva
[spp-transcript]
Connect with Sampark Sachdeva
Therapong Vachirapong – You Need to Take Risk to Earn a Return
Carolyn McClanahan – You’ll Never Be Smart Enough to Beat the Market
ISMS 36: Larry Swedroe – Two Heads Are Not Better Than One When Investing
Luke Gromen – Start Small, Then Grow as You Learn
Jason Brown – You Never Go Broke Taking a Profit
ISMS 35: Larry Swedroe – Great Companies Are Not Always High-Return Investments
Chris Vermeulen – Find What You’re Passionate About
Kenny Rose – Don’t Invest in Anything You’re Not Fully Educated In
ISMS 34: Larry Swedroe – Consider All Hidden Costs Before You Invest
Chong Ser Jing – Pay Attention to What Drives Business Results
James M. Dahle – Don’t Buy More Insurance Than You Need
Harley Bassman – Sizing Is More Important Than Entry Level
Mike Philbrick – Just Because You’re Winning Doesn’t Mean You’re Smart
Sam Burns – Understand What You’re Really Betting On
Jay Pelosky – You Can Be Right but at the Wrong Time
Reuben Mattinson – Have Solid Proof That Trading Is Happening and It’s Regulated
Jerry Parker – Understand Your Investing Capabilities and Limitations
ISMS 33: Fed Success! High LT Rates & Recession Coming
William Cohan – Get the Numbers Right Before You Invest
Neil Johnson – Take the Profit When You Can
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The emPOWERed Half Hour
U.S Property Podcast
Aligned Money Show
Dubai Property Podcast
The Ramsey Show
The Clark Howard Podcast