90,000 Hours

You’ll spend 90,000 hours at work in your lifetime. How do you make that time count? 90,000 Hours is a weekly podcast from the newsroom of The Ken that helps you navigate today’s changing world of work, where the traditional 40-year career is gone, entry-level jobs are being replaced by artificial intelligence, and staying relevant means constantly reinventing yourself. Hosted by Rahel Philipose and Vidhatri Rao, the show features conversations with the people creating, breaking, and rewriting the way we work.

  1. 29/09/2025

    AI broke the job hunt. Here’s what’s replacing it

    Do you remember the first job you ever applied for?  Maybe it was during your college placement cycle. Or perhaps it was a frantic search on Naukri.com or LinkedIn right after graduation.  However you did it, and whatever role it was for, the struggle was more or less the same. You probably spent hours tweaking your résumé, asking a friend to review your cover letter, even rehearsing answers in front of a mirror for that dreaded interview round.  That was the old way of applying. It was slow, deliberate, and more often than not, exhausting.  Fast forward to today, and that old slog feels almost quaint.  Today, a founder posts one role and wakes up to hundreds, sometimes thousands of applications.  Most look perfect: tailored résumés, keyword-rich cover letters. But half were evidently written or polished by AI. By the first screen no one’s sure who actually did the work. Recruiters don’t trust résumés. Candidates don’t trust filters.  Which is why, some employers are starting to rewrite the hiring funnel.  In this episode of 90,000 Hours, we explore how.  Featuring insights from:- Manav Garg, Founding Partner, Together Fund- Abhimanyu Saxena, Co-founder, Scaler- Sanam Rawal, Founding Partner, Metamorph Listen in to understand the new rules of getting hired and how to stand out in an age when everyone looks perfect on paper. Write to Rahel with your thoughts on the episode or something you have noticed at work that you would like her to explore next: rahel@the-ken.com

    26 min
  2. 21/07/2025

    Pitches, pickleball, and the new rules of networking

    For decades, networking was about being seen: showing up in the right rooms, handing out the right cards, and saying the right things. Today, a new generation of founders and VCs is rewriting that script with sweat, sneakers, and a shared goal to win the next point. In this debut episode of 90,000 Hours, host Rahel Philipose heads to a pickleball court in Bengaluru to explore how the startup world is quietly staging a revolt against traditional networking. You’ll hear from: 🎾 Arjun Vaidya – Founder of Dr Vaidya’s and now an investor at V3 Ventures. He’s launched Pickle & Pitch, a new way for founders to raise capital on the court, not in a conference room.🎾 Vaniya Dangwal – Former professional tennis player and founder of Courtside Club. She’s bringing startup folks together through curated sports mixers, where the serve matters more than the sales pitch.🎾 Piyush Jain and Pravruth BH – Founders of Sprentzo, a platform building grassroots sports communities across India. Their fastest-growing sport? Pickleball. Why are people trading name tags for paddles? What happens when connection becomes the goal and not the card you walk away with? And what does it say about the future of work? This episode is about something deeper than just a game. It’s about belonging, access, and how we build relationships that actually matter over our 90,000 hours. Tune in. 🎓 Are you an Indian student in the US or recently graduated? Tell us what your journey’s been like: Take the survey

    19 min

About

You’ll spend 90,000 hours at work in your lifetime. How do you make that time count? 90,000 Hours is a weekly podcast from the newsroom of The Ken that helps you navigate today’s changing world of work, where the traditional 40-year career is gone, entry-level jobs are being replaced by artificial intelligence, and staying relevant means constantly reinventing yourself. Hosted by Rahel Philipose and Vidhatri Rao, the show features conversations with the people creating, breaking, and rewriting the way we work.

More From The Ken

You Might Also Like