The Commerce Kid's Guide to Tech
My unconventional journey from balance sheets to code. Why starting late in tech is actually an advantage.
The Commerce Kid's Guide to Tech
I started as a commerce student at Saraswati College of Engineering in Kharghar, Navi Mumbai. Today, I'm a full-stack developer with an ISRO ML certification, building AI products used globally.
Starting late in tech was the best thing that ever happened to me.
The Unconventional Path
While my peers were learning data structures in their first year, I was studying balance sheets and taxation. When they were building their first websites, I was calculating profit margins.
This "late start" gave me something far more valuable than a head start: business intuition.
What Commerce Taught Me About Code
1. Systems Thinking
Commerce is all about systems—financial systems, supply chains, market dynamics. This translates directly to software architecture.
When building Gitskinz (my GitHub profile generator), I didn't just think about the code. I thought about:
- User acquisition
- Retention metrics
- Conversion funnels
- Market positioning
2. User Problems > Cool Tech
Commerce students learn to start with the customer and work backward. We ask: "What problem are we solving, and will people pay for it?"
This mindset helped me avoid the trap most developers fall into: building impressive tech that nobody needs.
3. Resource Constraints
Business students learn to maximize ROI. In tech, this means:
- Choosing the right tools (not the newest)
- Building MVPs that ship
- Validating before scaling
The Self-Taught Advantage
Being self-taught forced me to develop meta-skills:
Learning How to Learn
I didn't have a structured curriculum. I had to:
- Identify knowledge gaps
- Find quality resources
- Build projects to validate learning
- Teach myself to stay motivated
These skills matter more than knowing React.
Building in Public
Without a CS degree to showcase, I had to prove myself through projects:
- Gitskinz: 60+ templates, used globally
- NbAIl: HackHazards 2025 winner
- NutriSnap: First app with proper Indian food support
- Shopwiz: Conversational AI shopping assistant
Each project solved a real problem for real users.
Connecting the Dots
My commerce background helps me understand:
- Why a startup needs a product
- How to monetize effectively
- When to pivot or persist
Combined with technical skills, this makes me a stronger builder.
From Mumbai with Perspective
Starting in Mumbai's tech ecosystem—away from the Silicon Valley echo chamber—taught me that:
Not everyone's problem looks like a San Francisco tech worker's problem.
This is why NutriSnap includes Indian food (most nutrition apps don't). This is why I think about internet costs when building apps. This is why I focus on problems that matter.
What I Learned the Hard Way
1. Imposter Syndrome is Universal
Every developer feels it. CS degree or not. The difference? I learned to focus on shipping instead of credentials.
2. Certifications Matter Less Than Projects
My ISRO ML certification opened doors. But you know what opened more? Having live projects that solve real problems.
3. Community is Everything
The developer community in Mumbai, online communities, and hackathons taught me more than any course. Winning HackHazards 2025 validated that unconventional paths work.
Advice for Late Starters
Start Building Today
Don't wait until you "know enough." I started building when I barely understood JavaScript. You learn by doing.
Pick a Real Problem
Find something that frustrates you daily. Build a solution. Even if it's ugly, if it works, you've created value.
Document Your Journey
I wish I'd started blogging earlier. Your struggles help others. Your successes inspire beginners. Your failures teach lessons.
Leverage Your Background
Your non-tech background is an advantage, not a liability. You see problems others miss. You ask questions others don't think to ask.
The Mumbai Advantage
Being based in Mumbai (specifically Kharghar, Navi Mumbai) means:
- Lower cost of living = more runway to experiment
- Diverse problem spaces = unique product opportunities
- Global mindset + local context = better products
Where I Am Now
- Full-stack developer specializing in React, Next.js, and AI
- ISRO-certified in machine learning
- Microsoft-certified SQL developer
- Hackathon winner (HackHazards 2025)
- Founder of Gitskinz
And I'm just getting started.
The Real Secret
Starting late in tech isn't a disadvantage. It's a different starting point with unique advantages:
- More life experience
- Better understanding of user problems
- Stronger work ethic (you chose this)
- Clearer sense of purpose
Your Turn
If you're a late starter, remember:
- Your background is an asset
- Self-teaching builds valuable meta-skills
- Projects matter more than credentials
- Community accelerates learning
- Ship early and often
The best time to start was yesterday. The second-best time is now.
From Kharghar, Mumbai to the world. If a commerce kid can become a developer, so can you.