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Nikhil Kamath’s Latest Film for The Foundery Asks Whether Entrepreneurship Needs More Struggle Or More Space to Build

Shared on Instagram, the film explores ideas around access, entrepreneurship and whether giving people a head start changes what they are able to create.

Mumbai, 26th June, 2026: Entrepreneurship is usually told through one familiar story: start from nothing, struggle through uncertainty and eventually arrive at success. But what if that isn’t the only way people learn to build? 

That question sits at the centre of the latest film released by The Foundery and shared on Instagram by Nikhil Kamath. 

Created by Nikhil Kamath, Kishore Biyani and Ronnie Screwvala, the film moves away from conventional startup storytelling and instead opens up a broader conversation around how entrepreneurial journeys begin, what conditions help people move faster and whether access should be viewed differently. The film questions one of entrepreneurship’s most familiar ideas: does struggle create entrepreneurs, or does creating space to try create more of them? 

Throughout the film, one recurring idea emerges: entrepreneurship cannot always be taught in traditional ways because the environment keeps changing. Instead of approaching entrepreneurship as a subject to study, the conversation shifts toward whether it is something people understand only once they begin making decisions, taking ownership and working through uncertainty in real time.

That thinking comes through in a line from the film: “Should we call The Foundery a college? No. There, you learn. Here, you earn.” The thought reflects the larger idea behind the format that entrepreneurship may be understood less through instruction and more through participation. 

Set within The Foundery’s residential format, the film explores an idea that comes up repeatedly through the conversation: if people are given access to capital, mentorship and ecosystem support, does it reduce ambition or simply allow them to begin sooner? 

At the same time, the film does not present this approach as universally accepted. Questions around access, privilege and opportunity appear openly within the conversation. Does making entrepreneurship more accessible weaken resilience? Does giving people a head start change how they think? The film puts that thought simply: “We’re not taking anything from them. In fact, we’re giving them wisdom, ideas, capital, resources and ecosystem.” 

Rather than answering every question, the film leaves space for them. One of the central ideas that emerges is that support and ownership do not need to exist in opposition. Participants are not being asked to arrive fully formed or to prove themselves before entering the room. The approach instead focuses on creating conditions where people receive access to conversations, perspectives, mentorship, ideas and capital, while still carrying the responsibility of turning possibilities into outcomes.

The film also moves beyond business in a conventional sense. Conversations touch on how people think, what shapes their decisions and whether exposure to different environments changes what they believe they can build. 

With this latest release, The Foundery continues opening up its process publicly not after outcomes are visible, but while the questions still remain. 

Because the film leaves viewers with one final thought: If more people had access earlier, what would they create? 

Watch the full video here: The Foundery Film

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