{"id":28634,"date":"2021-10-01T13:56:02","date_gmt":"2021-10-01T18:56:02","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.indianeagle.com\/travelbeats\/?p=28634"},"modified":"2021-10-03T14:51:50","modified_gmt":"2021-10-03T19:51:50","slug":"freshworks-girish-mathrubootham","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.indianeagle.com\/travelbeats\/freshworks-girish-mathrubootham\/","title":{"rendered":"Girish Mathrubootham, an Indian from Small Temple Town Making it Big on Wall Street with $13-billion Company"},"content":{"rendered":"
The man who was told that he was only good enough to be a rickshaw puller is going to be a tech billionaire on Wall Street in the near future.<\/strong> His journey from a small town in India to NASDAQ is an inspiring story of a common man with big dreams. He is none other than Rathnagirish Mathrubootham, the co-founder and CEO of Freshworks with headquarters in California. Freshworks, which recently made international headlines for its blockbuster IPO on Wall Street, is worth $13 billion. It is the first Indian startup to have listed on a US stock market.<\/p>\n The son of a retired banker from the small town of Trichy in Tamil Nadu, Girish Mathrubootham rose over a typical middle-class background<\/strong> where success is measured by scores in school exams and a well-paying corporate job. His not-so-good score in the grade 12 and the entrance exam for engineering earned him scornful glances from family, relatives and neighbors. Today, Freshworks CEO Girish Mathrubootham\u2019s net worth is $700 million, which is hundreds of thousand times more than his academic scores. His philosophy is, \u201cDon\u2019t react to criticism. Don\u2019t respond to the cynics. Rather use it to fire to do something creative.\u201d<\/p>\n When the US job market crashed over the dotcom bubble burst in 2001, he moved back to India.<\/strong> The September 11 attacks hurled a further blow to the US economy which was on its knees due to the NASDAQ crash at the turn of the millennium. It resulted in the loss of around 2 lakh jobs in Silicon Valley between 2001 and 2004. Girish whose salary was $85,000 per annum in 2001 took up a job for the monthly salary of Rs 40,000 in 2005-06. In his father\u2019s eyes, Girish, with a 2BHK home loan, was not as successful as his friends who were well-settled then. He believes,<\/p>\n \u201cPeople\u2019s definition of success is different. I was looking at being happy. So I was going after what made me happy, not chasing money. I was enjoying my career, building products and having fun, my friends knew that but I think that was okay.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/p>\n