Ankur Warikoo shares 3 movies that will teach more than an MBA degree. He shares his picks that teach real career lessons

Entrepreneur Ankur Warikoo highlights three films offering crucial career lessons beyond MBA programs. 'The Pursuit of Happyness' demonstrates resilience against overwhelming odds, while 'Rocket Singh: Salesman of the Year' explores ethical entrep...

Ankur Warikoo reflects that he revisits these films for the “invisible emotions” that mirror his own career experiences.
Even the sharpest MBA curriculum can’t always capture the real emotions and challenges of building a career. Ankur Warikoo, entrepreneur and mentor, recently highlighted three films that offer lessons no classroom can fully teach, focusing on resilience, integrity, and entrepreneurial insight. These movies, spanning Hollywood and Bollywood, illustrate the unseen struggles, the emotional grit, and the strategic thinking required to succeed in real-world business environments, making them essential viewing for anyone navigating the unpredictable paths of professional life.

The Pursuit of Happyness

Warikoo’s first pick, The Pursuit of Happyness, showcases how persistence and determination can help a person overcome overwhelming difficulties. It’s a story of resilience that emphasizes never giving up, even when circumstances seem insurmountable. The 2006 movie starrs Will Smith, Jaden Smith and James Karen and is set in 1981.

Plot


Chris Gardner invests his savings in portable bone-density scanners, but financial struggles strain his marriage and leave him homeless with his young son. Despite eviction, jail, and living in BART station restrooms, he secures an unpaid stockbroker internship, maximising client contacts and acing exams while hiding his hardships. Through relentless effort, creativity, and resilience, Chris earns a full-time position, later founding a multimillion-dollar brokerage, proving perseverance can overcome extreme adversity.

Rocket Singh: Salesman of the Year

His second selection, Rocket Singh: Salesman of the Year, may appear as a typical Bollywood drama, but at its core, it’s a startup story. It explores the ethical dilemmas, creative problem-solving, and entrepreneurial thinking that define the startup journey in India’s business landscape. Rocket Singh: Salesman of the Year is a 2009 Hindi satire comedy-drama directed by Shimit Amin and produced by Aditya Chopra under Yash Raj Films.


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Plot

The story follows Harpreet Singh Bedi, an honest commerce graduate played by Ranbir Kapoor, navigating the cutthroat world of corporate sales. Disillusioned by unethical practices at AYS, Harpreet secretly starts Rocket Sales Corporation with supportive coworkers, prioritizing integrity and customer service. Despite initial setbacks, firings, and absorption by AYS, Harpreet eventually regains control, proving that ethical business can thrive even in a competitive, profit-driven environment.

The Social Network

Finally, The Social Network dives into the origins of Facebook, demonstrating how a product is conceptualized, launched, and scaled. Beyond the technical narrative, it captures the complexity of building a business, handling relationships, and navigating competitive pressures in a high-stakes environment. The Social Network, a 2010 American biographical drama directed by David Fincher and written by Aaron Sorkin, starring Jesse Eisenberg as Mark Zuckerberg, Andrew Garfield as Eduardo Saverin, Justin Timberlake as Sean Parker, and Armie Hammer as Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss. The film interweaves two depositions as Zuckerberg faces lawsuits from Saverin and the Winklevoss twins, highlighting the personal betrayals and legal battles behind Facebook’s meteoric rise.

Plot
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The story begins in 2003 when Harvard sophomore Zuckerberg is dumped by his girlfriend, inspiring him to create Facemash, a site rating students’ attractiveness. Its popularity brings him into contact with the Winklevoss twins, who invite him to develop Harvard Connection, a social network exclusive to Harvard. Instead, Zuckerberg collaborates with Saverin to launch Facebook, quickly expanding to Ivy League campuses.

As the platform grows, Sean Parker joins, pushing Zuckerberg to relocate to Palo Alto and rename the site Facebook. Conflicts over ownership, investments, and Parker’s influence lead to Saverin’s dilution and eventual lawsuit, while the Winklevoss twins sue for intellectual property theft. The film ends with Zuckerberg settling both cases and becoming the world’s youngest billionaire.
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Ankur Warikoo's thoughts

Warikoo reflects that he revisits these films for the “invisible emotions” that mirror his own career experiences, from pushing forward when nothing seems to work in your favor, to upholding integrity in challenging situations, and striving to contribute fully across every area of life. He encourages viewers to consider which films might offer them similar insights, extending the conversation to personal and professional growth.
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