Most people are not short of talent or effort. They are short of structures that let small, sensible moves add up over years. This book is for readers who suspect that dramatic goals and restless hustling are less effective than quiet, repeatable systems that compound in the background. Across money, skills, and relationships, you learn how to build compounding habits that respect your limits and still move the needle. Instead of chasing tips, you design daily success routines tied to clear feedback, using long term thinking to avoid decisions that reset you to zero. You see how to shape career and money choices so that each year leaves you with more options, not more obligations. The pages translate ideas like optionality and asymmetric bets into concrete behaviours, with examples of network building strategies and skill ladders that fit into a crowded life. Whether you are early in your career or midstream and stuck, the focus is on self improvement habits that are boring enough to keep and powerful enough to change your trajectory. If you want a practical life compounding framework that treats your time, relationships, and attention as assets to be grown, this book gives you a calm, serious way to start.
Compound Your Life
SKU: 9789376556052
$20.99 Regular Price
$17.25Sale Price
- Ravi Khatekar has spent years studying how ordinary people turn small, repeatable actions into what looks like extraordinary luck. Blending experience from business, mentoring, and creative projects, he focuses on how money, skills, and relationships quietly compound over time. His work is driven by a simple belief: most people underestimate what disciplined, low-drama effort can achieve in ten years. Drawing on a practical interest in behavioural economics and systems thinking, he translates abstract ideas about optionality, risk, and flywheels into tools that fit the lives of busy professionals. Ravi often weaves in lessons from Indian and global history, where patient builders reshaped families and communities across generations without fanfare. His writing is designed for readers who are willing to trade drama for depth, and headlines for long-term advantage.


















