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It was three years since I had joined. I loved the bank and the culture but it was starting to become a drag. You only made proposals for pre-approved companies. If you made proposals for some new interesting companies that weren’t on the approved list, they were invariably rejected because banks were traditionally risk averse. And it was the days of consortium lending. So SBI would get the lion’s share and then you would have Citibank coming in. ABN AMRO would get a 5-10% share of the pie. I was starting to feel restless. I knew it was time for a change when I started looking at the clock frequently, eager to get home. By then, I was certain that I wanted to be closer to the consumer and in marketing. Luckily enough I managed to get two offers, one from Ajay Banga, who was then with PepsiCo Foods. They were launching Pizza Hut at the time. The second was from the Arvind group, which had just launched Lee and Arrow brands. I was leaning more towards PepsiCo. Around the same time, my childhood friend Sanjay Bansal who was with KPMG told me about a client of his, AMF Bowling. An American company with a billion dollar revenue, they had set up bowling alleys in China and wanted to enter India. They were looking for someone to head the India business. Bowling was still not as popular then. There was one bowling alley in Qutub Hotel — four lanes and no automatic equipment. It was a treat to go there and bowl but it was expensive even back then. It was Rs.100 for the first game and Rs.75 for the second. Ajay Bijli and Shahrukh Khan were regulars. Sanjay told me that Chris Brown, head of international development, was in town and suggested I meet him. The one-hour meeting stretched to more than three and a half hours at the Hyatt Delhi. Brown told me they had set up 10,000 lanes in China and India had the potential for at least 1,000 lanes. We had no multiplexes and malls back then, but I was really excited. I was 25-26 and at that age, you had no fear of failure. You felt you could do anything. So I went back to Sobti and told him I was quitting. He was livid that I would give up banking for something as bizarre as bowling. He was so angry that he didn’t speak to me for a year. Thankfully, all is forgiven now. At AMF, I tried every trick in the book to make bowling a success. But during those four years, India got all of 200 lanes with only Phoenix Mills in Mumbai where we laid a 20-lane bowling alley, coming close to the kind of projects we wanted to do. Even that we signed at a 30% discount. There was no large-scale development and the hardest lesson learnt was that I would never back a business in India based on real estate. I think I met almost every real estate developer in the country and almost double the number of people who claimed to own real estate. Many agents passed the property as their own. In my first year at AMF I was taken for a ride many times. But soon, the business made me street-smart and it was something that would help me throughout my life. Soon, over the first chai, I was able to tell when a person was the real owner or an agent, whether the property was encumbered or had a clear title.