Neha Mujawdiya is now the founder and CEO of Indore-based TutorCabin, an ed-tech startup that she started in 2018. From providing door-to-door tuitions to becoming a digital entrepreneur today, Mujawdiya believes she is and will always be a teacher, and teaching kids, especially those who are being deprived of quality education, is what defines her innate purpose.
In an interview with SheThePeople, Neha Mujawdiya talks about her journey, how teaching drove her to start TutorCabin, how teachers have the power to change generations, why we need to respect them more and why entrepreneurship matters if we want to open more horizons for women.
Mujawdiya faced several challenges in her journey to gain an education. She had to walk several kilometres to reach her school in her village, wanted to study math but couldn’t because there were no proper classes for mathematics, and eventually started facing criticism because she raised questions about why no girls were studying further around her.
“Apart from me, my parents had to face a lot of criticism because they let me study. I came out of that place, but I often thought about those kids who don't get quality education either due to lack of facilities, lack of quality schools or due to their gender. It made me want to make education accessible to children across the country, for those residing in rural areas, especially girls from my own village,” she recalls.
She slowly started working towards becoming financially independent and aimed to further her career by starting something of her own that aligned with her purpose of educating kids.
Neha moved to Indore in 2009, and after struggling with admissions because of the ineligibility of her previous degree, she enrolled herself for an ACA course at a private institution after clearing the exam. She soon cracked her MBA entrance as well and finished her degree.
“I haven’t forgotten where I come from, and while I am proud of my roots I also believe it’s not always a good idea to follow cultures and traditions blindly because you’re stuck to a certain idea of who you should be, especially as a woman. I wanted to break the cycle.”
However, it all boiled down to finances. She took up as many classes as possible and saved a decent amount to cover her expenses and save. She would leave the house early in the morning, attend MBA classes, and take home-to-home tuition. Despite running operations and managing the business herself, Mujawdiya does not let the teacher in her get lost in between business. She tries her best effort to offer personal attention to each student, especially the ones who hail from remote areas. “Coming from a small village, I understand the struggles. Education is the most powerful catalyst that can help break cycles of poverty as well,” reflects Mujawdiya.
Mujawdiya set up an office for TutorCabin at a co-working space in 2018. She first built a simple website and started the hiring and training process for tutors. What started with ten tutors in 2018 is now a platform featuring over two thousand tutors.
The platform offers personalised and group classes for students of all ages. The courses cover all classes starting from primary, secondary and college levels and also expand to competitive and entrance exams preparation for students. The 15-person startup made Rs 50 lakh in revenue in FY20-21 and hopes to enrol 2,50,000 students by the end of the year, with ambitions to expand its teaching base to 5,000. She is in talks with several investors for further funding.
Her startup is also in talks with local governments to venture into a space where they can educate children studying in those schools who hold great potential but get held back owing to a lack of resources or opportunities.
Mujawdiya faced several challenges in her journey to gain an education. She had to walk several kilometres to reach her school in her village, wanted to study math but couldn’t because there were no proper classes for mathematics, and eventually started facing criticism because she raised questions about why no girls were studying further around her.
“Apart from me, my parents had to face a lot of criticism because they let me study. I came out of that place, but I often thought about those kids who don't get quality education either due to lack of facilities, lack of quality schools or due to their gender. It made me want to make education accessible to children across the country, for those residing in rural areas, especially girls from my own village,” she recalls.
She slowly started working towards becoming financially independent and aimed to further her career by starting something of her own that aligned with her purpose of educating kids.
Neha moved to Indore in 2009, and after struggling with admissions because of the ineligibility of her previous degree, she enrolled herself for an ACA course at a private institution after clearing the exam. She soon cracked her MBA entrance as well and finished her degree.
“I haven’t forgotten where I come from, and while I am proud of my roots I also believe it’s not always a good idea to follow cultures and traditions blindly because you’re stuck to a certain idea of who you should be, especially as a woman. I wanted to break the cycle.”
However, it all boiled down to finances. She took up as many classes as possible and saved a decent amount to cover her expenses and save. She would leave the house early in the morning, attend MBA classes, and take home-to-home tuition. Despite running operations and managing the business herself, Mujawdiya does not let the teacher in her get lost in between business. She tries her best effort to offer personal attention to each student, especially the ones who hail from remote areas. “Coming from a small village, I understand the struggles. Education is the most powerful catalyst that can help break cycles of poverty as well,” reflects Mujawdiya.
Mujawdiya set up an office for TutorCabin at a co-working space in 2018. She first built a simple website and started the hiring and training process for tutors. What started with ten tutors in 2018 is now a platform featuring over two thousand tutors.
The platform offers personalised and group classes for students of all ages. The courses cover all classes starting from primary, secondary and college levels and also expand to competitive and entrance exams preparation for students. The 15-person startup made Rs 50 lakh in revenue in FY20-21 and hopes to enrol 2,50,000 students by the end of the year, with ambitions to expand its teaching base to 5,000. She is in talks with several investors for further funding.
Her startup is also in talks with local governments to venture into a space where they can educate children studying in those schools who hold great potential but get held back owing to a lack of resources or opportunities.
Stressing on the idea of entrepreneurship for women, Mujawdiya discusses that if we need to empower more women, especially in areas where women are deprived of basic opportunities, empowering them through entrepreneurship and self-dependency is the right way forward. Her contribution, she adds, will be to forever encourage girls to break free from societal cycles and have access to the freedom of choice that comes with education to pursue their respective choices in life.
“It’s your life and if you see that you have a better solution to some existing problem which you wish to implement and work on, then never stop yourself from doing so no matter what. Bank on your inner instincts, creativity and power, and educate yourself every step of the way. Big things will happen if we focus and appreciate the small opportunities, and we need to trust this more,” advises Mujawdiya.