The Case Room · Grades 8–11

Don't let your child choose a career the same way they choose lunch

Most teenagers guess their way through big decisions. Yours will learn to make one by decoding cases that broke or built billion-dollar companies.

12 seats · Message us to confirm yours.

The Problem

Every input your child has about their future came from someone else's life

Yours. Their friends'. What looks good on Instagram. What the topper in class picked.

Your child has rarely been handed a real decision. Did school train them to think this way?

It didn't, but The Case Room does

What happens inside
01

Your child shadows an industry expert first. Asks anything. How did you get here? What does a Tuesday look like? Was it worth it?

02

Next, your child solves a case study. A real scenario. Alone. Makes decisions. Then finds out what happened.

03

If your child loves it, they know where to go next. If they don't, they've saved themselves years on the wrong path.

What's in it for your child

What they walk away with

01
A written analysis
Your child's thinking on paper. How they read a hard problem, questioned it, and took a position. Most students their age have nothing like this to show.
02
A field guide
Your child reads it and either pursues this field further or crosses it off the list. Either way, they stop guessing.
The Two Cases

The same cases studied at Harvard Business School and IIM

Your child works through them before they've picked a stream

Product & Technology
The $600 Mistake
Sony PlayStation · 2006
Sony's most powerful engineer spent five years and four billion dollars building a chip he believed would change the world. Priced it at $599. Watched Nintendo sell five times as many units at less than half the price.
How does the most powerful company in gaming lose to a cheaper, simpler competitor?
Covered in Sessions 1 & 2
Business Strategy
The Can That Changed Everything
Red Bull · 1987
A bored toothpaste salesman sat in a Bangkok taxi, jet lagged and miserable, and drank something a local handed him. He quit his job, ignored every focus group that said it would fail, and built a brand now worth more than eight Air Indias without owning a single factory.
How do you build a market that didn't exist?
Covered in Sessions 3 & 4
12 seats only
Choose your cohort

Your child will choose a direction soon
Most do it by assumption Yours doesn't have to

₹19,999
4 sessions over 2 weeks · 2 cases · 12 seats per cohort
Cohort 2 Jun 27 – Jul 8
Session 1 · Sat, Jun 27
Session 2 · Wed, Jul 1
Session 3 · Sat, Jul 4
Session 4 · Wed, Jul 8
Cohort 3 Jul 11 – Jul 22
Session 1 · Sat, Jul 11
Session 2 · Wed, Jul 15
Session 3 · Sat, Jul 18
Session 4 · Wed, Jul 22
Grades 8 to 11 only · 12 seats per cohort