Sabeer Bhatia calls out India’s education system and work culture, urging a shift from managerial obsession to real problem-solving and coding
April 9, 2025: New Delhi:
Hotmail co-founder Sabeer Bhatia has stirred up fresh debate around India’s engineering talent and startup culture, sharply criticizing the country’s focus on management roles over hands-on innovation. Speaking on a podcast, Bhatia said “99% of Indian engineers just give gyaan (unasked advice)” instead of actually building or creating impactful solutions.
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“Where is the work ethic? Where are the engineers building real products with their own hands?” he asked.
Bhatia lamented how India glorifies business figures who prioritize outsourcing and body-shopping over genuine software development. “We call them software gurus—even though they haven’t written a line of code themselves,” he said, alluding to India’s misplaced admiration.
“India Needs to Respect Coders”
Bhatia stressed the urgent need for a cultural shift, saying India can never become truly innovative unless it starts valuing those who code, build, and solve problems.
“We need to stop worshipping management titles and start respecting people who write code and think critically.”
He called for a complete overhaul of India’s education system, particularly in engineering, where outdated syllabi still dominate. Comparing India to China, he noted, “China subsidizes education for all. In India, it’s a luxury. Many just earn a degree, get married, and chase dowries. What kind of mindset is that?”
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Tech As a Fix, But Critical Thinking Is Key
Despite the harsh critique, Bhatia remains optimistic. He believes technology can bridge the gap, especially if used to teach critical thinking, problem-solving, and real-world application.
“We can build an app that teaches critical thinking. Innovation doesn’t come from textbooks—it comes from solving real problems.”
Reflecting on his own journey, Bhatia said Stanford taught him to think forward, while “IITs are still stuck in the past.” While academic scores got him into Apple, it was real-world learning that helped him build Hotmail, one of the world’s first web-based email platforms.
His statements echo concerns raised by India’s G20 Sherpa Amitabh Kant, who recently emphasized the need to reform technical education in India’s top institutes like IITs to stay globally competitive.
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Sabeer Bhatia, Indian engineers, Hotmail co-founder, Indian education system, engineering in India, innovation in India, IIT criticism, tech education reform, software development India, body shopping, startup culture
