
🧬 Working 3 Jobs at Harvard: How Desperation Built Conviction | Krish Ramadurai (1/4)
"You’ve just got to embrace the suck. When everything sucks, you just execute against it. It's nice because then when that situation happens again, which adult life works like that all the time, you can be more systematically prepared." In this episode of The Biotech Startups Podcast, we explore Krish Ramadurai's unconventional journey from Chicago's South Side to becoming a Partner at AIX Ventures. Krish shares how a career-ending femur fracture during his track and field career redirected his path from Johns Hopkins to the University of Illinois, where he discovered the intersection of hard science and business that would define his future. Krish takes us through his audacious approach to getting into Harvard—auditing classes before formal admission, working three jobs simultaneously to afford tuition, and sending over 500 cold emails to find research opportunities. He reflects on how working alongside figures like US Secretary of Defense Ash Carter, CIA Director David Petraeus, and Nobel Prize winner Mike Kremer at the Belfer Center shaped his understanding of applied science and policy intervention. Most importantly, Krish emphasizes how rejection built conviction, turning financial desperation and constant setbacks into the foundation for his success in venture capital.
The Biotech Startups Podcast · Excedr
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Show Notes
- From Superhero Scientists to STEM: How growing up with a cardiologist father and fascination with the scientists behind Marvel superheroes sparked his interest in biotechnology and applied research
- Pivoting After Injury: The femur fracture that ended his track career and forced an unconventional path to higher education
- The Unconventional Harvard Path: Auditing graduate courses before admission, juggling three jobs, and leveraging one connection into a full graduate school opportunity
- Building Conviction Through Rejection: How sending 500+ cold emails and facing constant rejection taught resilience and self-understanding that would prove essential in venture capital
- Applied Science in Action: Working on biological water filtration in Sub-Saharan Africa, collaborating with global policy leaders, and transitioning from think tank work to venture investing
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