At Square Yards, Tanuj Shori says access to capital was never the real problem.
They were backed by serious private capital — individuals with deep experience across private equity, public markets, LPs, and GPs.
The network existed. The doors were open.
But the operating reality was very different.
For years, the business didn’t have long-term visibility.
Sometimes, not even more than three months of salary runway.
Cash flows weren’t stable.
Predictability didn’t exist.
What existed instead was something else:
deep confidence in solvability.
The belief that when the problem shows up, we’ll solve it.
That capital can be raised when needed.
That the business will find a way forward.
Not comfort.
Not certainty.
But courage.
The kind of courage that lets you sleep at night even when the spreadsheet doesn’t.
In this episode of The Blume Podcast, Karthik Reddy speaks with Tanuj Shori about building Square Yards with conviction-led leadership — where belief, resilience, and calm decision-making mattered as much as capital.
🎧 Watch the full episode to hear how Square Yards navigated uncertainty with confidence — and why mindset often matters more than money.Confidence in Uncertainty

