Outlook Money Outlook Money, March 2018 | Page 39

Special Photo: soumik kar lifelong misery. In 2011, Kanika was having a laid-back ladies’ night-in with her mother, bingeing on junk food and laughter, when her medical test results arrived — stating she had cancer. “In a few minutes, my life was completely turned around and everything felt surreal,” she recalls. Though she spent the following two days absorbing the full impact of the diagnosis, she also realised that the only way to avoid falling into an abyss was by reminding herself of her goals. “I said to myself,” she says, “It’s time to defeat cancer. Fighting was my only option.” Armed with raw tenacity, she battled her way through treatment, one optimistic visit to the hospital at a time. She utilised her bedridden days not in self-pity, but in thinking up the details of the private aviation enterprise she planned to launch once she fully recovered. “I spent those eight months analysing, planning and structuring my vision, and I made it happen. In the end, it’s all about making it happen.” Power point: Kanika says that the best way to triumph over a tragedy is to imagine you coming out of it not just as a survivor but as a winner. “Once I believe in something, my actions automatically work towards achieving it. So then the question was no longer, “Will I recover?” It quickly became, “Who will I be when I do recover?” Immerse yourself in purpose, not pain Sandhya has started a trust at her hospital that helps widowed and abandoned women pay for their daughters’ education. “I can understand their pain and want to do my bit,” she says. Her empathy stems from her own past — she lost her husband to a sudden heart Kanika Tekriwal CEO & Co-Founder, JetSetGo Aviation In India, private aviation (and aviation in general) has always been tacitly considered a gentlemen’s club and it was rare for women to rise to high positions. However, Kanika’s business acumen and passion for aviation enabled her to transform the private aviation market. She was only 17 when she set up the aviation division for a real estate major, on a part- time stint with the company. Later, while pursuing higher studies in business administration from Coventry University in London and working simultaneously in business development for an aviation company there, she realised the untapped potential of the charter market in India. In 2014, Kanika launched JetSetGo, which now operates India’s largest private jet fleet as the single largest market stakeholder (20 per cent) among all players in the industry. Her clients include tourists who want to be transported to remote spots that airlines don’t cater to, executives who want to fly in for a meeting at factories located in middle-of-nowhere terra