logo
This CEO's startup has raised $92 million and is backed by Sundar Pichai. He shares his 'superpower' tip for aspiring entrepreneurs

This CEO's startup has raised $92 million and is backed by Sundar Pichai. He shares his 'superpower' tip for aspiring entrepreneurs

CNBC5 days ago
Given the ups and downs of the startup journey, the biggest "superpower" that entrepreneurs can have is the ability to ground themselves, said Caesar Sengupta, co-founder and CEO of fintech startup Arta Finance.
"There's so much noise in the world," Sengupta told CNBC Make It. The entrepreneurial path can be highly volatile, and founders will be pulled in many different directions, so being able to filter out what's important from all of the noise is key, he added.
His no. 1 strategy for this is simple: "start meditating."
"I wish three years back, somebody had sat me down and said: 'Dude, like everything else [will] be fine. Just sit yourself down and meditate ... know when to tune out," he said.
Prior to co-founding the fintech startup in 2021, the 49-year-old spent about 15 years at Google where he led major projects such as Google Pay and the company's "Next Billion Users" initiative.
It was at that big tech company where Sengupta met his co-founders and some of his first angel investors, including the CEO of Google, Sundar Pichai.
To date, Arta Finance has raised over $92 million and is backed by prominent investors such as Sequoia Capital India and Ribbit Capital.
There is a massive shift you experience going from working in a big company to building a startup, says Sengupta. Not only can you lose all sense of work-life balance, but risk also takes on an entirely new meaning.
In a big company, risk is more contained. At a startup, "you're just much more fragile," said Sengupta.
"If you ask any entrepreneur who's been in a large company, it's a pretty scary leap late in your life. I would say there are days where you feel ... 100%, and there are days where you're like: 'Oh my God, what did I just do?' But I think that's what I love about it," he added.
Additionally, in a startup environment, it is really easy to get completely drawn in, "to the detriment of yourself, your family, your health [and] your mental health," said Sengupta. "But ultimately, it's about how [you] confront the ups and downs of life."
That's why it's important to take care of your mental and physical health, he said. On a daily basis, he tries to allocate five to ten minutes a night to sitting alone and meditating.
He also uses exercise as a way to meditate. "I realized [that] cycling, for me, is not just physical exercise, but it's one of the only times where no one can reach me … So forcing myself to be on that thing for an hour or two just makes me meditate," he said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Howard Lutnick says he's fine with Nvidia selling its 'fourth best' AI chips to China
Howard Lutnick says he's fine with Nvidia selling its 'fourth best' AI chips to China

Business Insider

time14 minutes ago

  • Business Insider

Howard Lutnick says he's fine with Nvidia selling its 'fourth best' AI chips to China

The Trump White House says it's content to allow Nvidia to tap into the lucrative Chinese market. "We don't sell them our best stuff, not our second best stuff, not even our third best," Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said on CNBC Tuesday afternoon. "I think fourth best is where we have come out that we're cool." Nvidia announced on Monday that the Trump administration has signaled it will allow the company to sell its China-specific H20 chip once more. The news sent shares of the world's most valuable company, which eclipsed $4 trillion in market cap last week, even higher. Nvidia's H20 was designed to be technologically inferior. As Lutnick said, the company also sells three other chips that far surpass the H20's power. Nvidia is already preparing its transition from Blackwell (its most powerful chip) to Blackwell Ultra and has plans for its next superchip, "Vera Rubin." CEO Jensen Huang has pushed to sell the company's prized chips to China. Before the news, Nvidia said it had lost $8 billion on unshipped orders. The announcement came after Huang met with President Donald Trump at the White House last week. Lutnick said that the administration shares Huang's view that cutting China off completely from the chips needed to power artificial intelligence advancements won't starve China's AI industry. "So the idea is the Chinese are more than capable of building their own, right? So you want to keep one step ahead of what they can build so they keep buying our chips, because, remember, developers are the key to technology," Lutnick said. In the end, Lutnick said, it's better if China becomes reliant on the US for chips. "So you want to sell the Chinese enough that their developers get addicted to the American technology stack," he said. And that's the thinking. Donald Trump is on it."

Trump AI czar David Sacks urges Musk to reconsider third party push
Trump AI czar David Sacks urges Musk to reconsider third party push

The Hill

time18 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Trump AI czar David Sacks urges Musk to reconsider third party push

David Sacks, President Trump's artificial intelligence (AI) and crypto czar, urged tech billionaire and friend Elon Musk to reconsider his recent third-party push, arguing his political goals could be achieved through the Republican Party. Sacks, a Silicon Valley venture capitalist, also said that he hopes Musk repairs his relationship with Trump, as the two had a public falling out over the president's 'big, beautiful bill' that ended up being signed into law on July 4. 'Look, I work for the president, and Elon is a good friend, and I hope that one day there will be a reconciliation. I do believe that Elon's objectives politically can be achieved and can best be achieved through the Republican Party and I hope to convince him of that one day, and I hope that there'll be a reconciliation, because I think Elon, and the President, there were once very good friends and I hope they will be soon again,' Sacks, a Silicon Valley venture capitalist, said during his Tuesday appearance on CNBC' 'Money Movers.' Musk, who spent nearly $300 million to help get Trump elected during the 2024 presidential election, announced the 'America Party' earlier this month, a third-party group that Musk hopes could rival the Republican and Democratic Parties. Musk has railed against Trump's massive spending and tax bill, warning that the legislation would balloon the national debt. The president has said that Musk's opposition to the bill is because of the incentives for electric vehicles (EVs) being yanked. The relationship between Musk and Trump turned contentious, months after Musk forcefully campaigned for the president on the trail and was eventually tapped to head the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). The two appeared to have eased tensions, only to again start throwing jabs at each other earlier this month. Trump slammed Musk's idea for a third party as 'ridiculous.' 'He even wants to start a Third Political Party, despite the fact that they have never succeeded in the United States – The System seems not designed for them,' Trump wrote on July 6. 'The one thing Third Parties are good for is the creation of Complete and Total DISRUPTION & CHAOS, and we have enough of that with the Radical Left Democrats, who have lost their confidence and their minds!'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store