Nemish Laddad is a semi-professional writer, 2nd-year mechanical engineering designing at the University of Glasgow, is merely 17 years of age. He is the author of a closed publishing book called 'MIG's Gatha', (MIG stands for the Maheshwari Industrial Group). The book is a collection of the life and business stories of 150 business individuals from the Maheshwari community, and their families, who are respected figures in the city of Pune and the business world too. Stories include those featuring some personalities who inherited businesses have had things easy initially and yet have managed to make their individual mark by increasing profits to 1000 percent and others who have had very humble beginnings and still have achieved success. The book is close published and therefore isn't available to the general public. There are only a few copies of the book (450 in this case) printed as the target audience of the book are colleagues and acquaintances of the industrialists. So how did he land up writing this book? Nemish is from the Maheshwari community and is young, two things the Board of the community wanted in the writer of the book. They felt a person from within the community would be able to understand and document the stories of the community better. They wanted someone quick in terms of work delivery too. Nemish fit the bill perfectly and snagged the opportunity after some of his previous work was vetted. Now, as everyone knows, writing a book isn't without its fair share of challenges. Scheduling interviews was a problem due to time constraints and several times interviews got delayed, which didn't allow him to work optimally. To solve this, Nemish and the Board decided that 50 of the interviews would be conducted by Nemish, with the other 100 being done by the Board. The template for the same was provided by him. He would also get the Zoom recordings to aid him with data collection. Next was data management. The data influx was quite large, which made its sorting and distribution challenging. Lastly, managing photo shoots with the industrialists and their families, unavoidable urgent work, unavailable individuals finally showing up for an interview, balancing his daily routine of 6-hour daily tuitions with the writing certainly wasn't easy. It is imperative at such times to have an excellent support system, which Nemish, fortunately, had in his family. They played a big part in bringing the book to fruition. Most of the interview coordination was done by his parents Nilesh and Neha. He had a great team to help with the actual writing. His mother Neha did the editing, while his friends Kanishka Nahar and Karan Shah were co-writers. For someone his age and an interviewer, the one thing that stands out is the way he spoke of the entire writing process. When I heard him talk about the entire process, although not easy, it felt achievable. It just reinforced the fact that it’s always possible to reach our goals. Like Nemish, we all face setbacks along the way, however, if we just stick to the plan and trust in ourselves, we will ultimately cross the finish line bestowing us with a feeling of pride and contentment and the journey would be worth it all.