I'm a builder who thinks like a product manager. I focus on clarity, real problems, and creating things people actually use.
People waste time switching between Zomato and Swiggy hunting for the best deal. KnightCraving instantly compares food prices across platforms so users choose smarter — in seconds.
Finding a reliable electrician or plumber is broken. This platform connects households directly with trusted local service providers — no middlemen, no mess.
I don't start with code. I start by understanding who has the problem, why it exists, and whether solving it actually matters. Most features don't need to be built.
A solution people understand and use beats an elegant one they ignore. I optimize for adoption, not admiration.
I map multiple approaches before choosing one. This isn't indecision — it's how you avoid building the wrong thing with confidence.
Being wrong fast is better than being wrong slowly. I validate assumptions early and I'm comfortable scrapping what doesn't work.
I sit with friction before touching tools. Most stated problems are symptoms — I dig for the root: what's actually broken and for whom.
Before committing, I explore at least three structural approaches — evaluating trade-offs in complexity, usability, and feasibility against real constraints.
The final output isn't just functional — it's considered. Every decision has a reason, documented so others and future-me can build on top of it.
I'm an engineering student who thinks beyond just coding and focuses on building meaningful products. I enjoy breaking down problems, validating ideas, and turning them into practical solutions.
Driven by curiosity and the desire to create things that make sense in the real world. Currently exploring product building, experimentation, and real-world problem solving.