Shailendra Singh
He dreamed of playing cricket for his country. Instead, he changed India's entertainment industry. But the story starts long before Sunburn or Bollywood or the National Awards. It starts with a boy fleeing communal riots in Karnataka, arriving in Mumbai with nothing, and spending his afternoons in a darkened cinema with his mother and three samosas.
Shirdi Ke Sai Baba (1977) — one of the films his mother mistook for a documentary. Seven times.
Shailendra Singh grew up in a family that had escaped communal riots near his father's sugar mill on the Karnataka border. They settled in Mumbai — barely affording the hotel room they called home. His ADHD and dyslexia went undiagnosed through school. He struggled to read. He was ashamed of it.
But his mother had other ideas about education. She would drag him to Geeta and Lotus Cinema every afternoon — Garm Hava (1973), Shatranj Ke Khilari (1977), Shirdi Ke Sai Baba (1977) seven times because she was convinced it was a documentary. The torture became a passion. Cinema taught him what school couldn't. Stories became his first language.
His father said cricket was not a real career. So Shailendra went to the Taj Mahal Hotel as a steward. Then to England, for county cricket. Then back to Mumbai, to join his brother's three-year-old advertising firm, Percept Ltd.
What followed was 28 years that changed Indian entertainment. But he never forgot where he came from. The boy who couldn't read properly became a #1 bestselling author. The boy who dreamed of cricket brokered the largest sponsorship deal in the sport's history. The boy who grew up in one room helped build an empire — and then chose to walk away from it.
Shailendra Singh — cricket was always the dream.
Shailendra Singh with his father, the late Mr. Mangal Singh.
In 2013, Shailendra Singh almost died. A cardiac arrest after the loss of his father brought him face to face with every question he had spent decades avoiding.
Are you truly happy? Are you on the right track? Is this the life you actually want?
His answer, and India's answer with him: F?@k Knows. The book that followed became the HT-Nielsen #1 bestseller within 45 days. Not because it had answers — but because it was honest about not having them.
Shailendra Singh sees connections others miss. He starts things before others see the opportunity. He doesn't stay in one lane because he was never able to. Twenty-three startups in twenty-three years isn't ambition — it's a way of thinking.
Now he dreams even bigger. Focusing on the storytelling that has been the base of all of his success, Shailendra approaches it with no expectations and therefore, no limits. Made in India, for the world.
Keynote address — Night Mayor's Summit, Amsterdam, 2016.