Opportunity··2 min read

Improving Lives With New Opportunities

The mission behind this work — and why opportunity, not talent, is the binding constraint on human potential.

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Manas Majhi
Manas Majhi

Founder, Majhi Group & Majhi OS

Improving Lives With New Opportunities

Every person I have ever hired, placed, or worked with had more potential than their circumstances suggested.

That is not an optimistic statement. It is an empirical one.

Talent is not rare. It is everywhere — in the villages of Kalahandi, in the peripheries of growing cities, in the minds of people who never got the chance to show what they could do. What is rare is not talent. What is rare is access.

Access to information. Access to networks. Access to the right door at the right time — and someone willing to open it.

The binding constraint

When I think about what limits human lives, I keep arriving at the same answer: not capability, but opportunity. The world is full of capable people who never found the opportunity to deploy their capability. The world has fewer capable people who found opportunity and couldn't use it.

This asymmetry is the most important fact about human potential. And it is almost completely ignored by the systems we build to organize society.

Our education systems are designed to sort talent, not cultivate it. Our hiring systems are designed to filter candidates, not discover them. Our economic systems reward proximity to existing opportunity, not the creation of new opportunity. The result is a vast underutilization of the human capital that already exists.

Why this matters

I am not making this argument in the abstract. I grew up in Kalahandi, Odisha — one of India's most underserved districts. I attended a government Odia-medium school. I had no internet, no mentors who had done what I wanted to do, and no clear path forward.

What I did have was curiosity, stubbornness, and an unreasonable belief that the gap between where I was and where I wanted to be could be crossed.

It could. But only because I found access — to information, to people, to a field (executive search) that rewarded the ability to understand other humans. That access was not guaranteed. It was, in many ways, accidental.

The question that has driven everything I've built since is: what if that access were not accidental?

What I'm building toward

This site exists because I believe ideas have leverage. The right framework, named and articulated, becomes transferable. The right essay, written and published, reaches someone who needed exactly that map.

I write about opportunity because it is the lens through which everything else makes sense to me: India's potential, the future of work, the systems that organize hiring, the possibility of better institutions.

Improving lives with new opportunities is not a tagline. It is the actual work.

And the work is not finished.


This is the first essay in the Opportunity collection. Start with Talent Is Evenly Distributed next.