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A UK consultant Left London To Find A 'Goodspace' In Delhi. Here's Why |
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10-1-2025 | |||
Liam Fallon, a former consultant from the UK, left the comfort of London to join a disruptor in India: Goodspace. His decision to leave behind a stable career in the UK and venture into the Indian startup ecosystem symbolizes the country's rise as a global startup hub, where talent, opportunity, and innovation intersect. Here’s why Mr. Fallon believes the future lies in India. No time like the present In 2014, Liam Fallon was being rushed to Stanford Medical Centre with meningitis. That is what paralysed his father, and Mr. Fallon feared the worst. He was staying in Palo Alto, and had visited the home of Steve Jobs, the Headquarter of Oracle, and was working for a biotech company. The owner of Abaxis had made a big impression on him, and lying on the hospital bed, he realised that to build something new, you have to be with the right people, at the right time and place. Where is the right time, right place, now? Kalaari Capital, a Venture Capital fund talks about India Alpha. Stellaris Venture Partners have said ‘no other country in the world today has the momentum India has’. $10-15T of new GDP will be created in the next two decades because of a young population, unique public digital infrastructure & vibrant capital markets. Mr. Fallon made a decision to be part of that growth story. Two years later, Liam Fallon, has left the comfort of consulting, left his family in the UK, and is working at a technology company that uses AI to help companies find the best people for their jobs. From London To Delhi: A Life-Changing Decision ‘I left the UK and consulting because India is going to leapfrog legacy tech and change everyone’s world’ explains Mr. Fallon. This is what happened in China, with companies like ByteDance, and Huawei, and now it is India’s turn. India is the world’s 4th largest capital market. It's the 3rd largest VC ecosystem. For Mr. Fallon, it’s worth swapping the fish and chips for chole bhature. Not just about the money There is a race around the world for who can invent Artificial General Intelligence, and who can put AI to work. Time Berners Lee invented the internet, and it changed the way we all work. Right now, AI is changing the way we work, but who is making that happen? Liam Fallon says that after meeting Vinay Pasricha and Saksham Sandhu, Goodspace is leading the way. They are on the cutting edge of making AI work in the workplace. Goodspace is taking the newest models, and solving all of the problems of hiring and recruitment. One day Mr. Fallon walked into the offices as a consultant, and 6 months later, he joined the team. He says he could see they had the technology and were close to vision of using AI agents to help companies find the right people to build a better future. No other recruiting platform ensures feedback after every single interview. No other platform gives a comprehensive report to an hiring manager on every single candidate. Can any other platform do this in just 60 minutes? It is only possible with Goodspace’s AI technology. This was improving the lives of professionals in India. Mr. Fallon has seen professional who used Goodspace move into better jobs, being treated with more respect. He felt that working with Goodspace was the best way to unlock India’s talent potential, and shape the future of AI. But where exactly are the opportunities? Goodspace and recruitment using AI is what Mr. Fallon is working on full time now, but he says there are many other opportunities that will make everyone’s lives in India better. Kanika Agarrwal and the VC firm IndiaQuotient recently shared a list of these opportunities that need startups like Goodspace, to work on. The first is big ticket loans, which are untouched by tech. In the UK, buying a house takes around three to six months, but much of the process can be automated. India can use the India stack to leapfrog the legacy systems. Secondly, robotics and AI has become more democratized. IndiaQuotient asks, 'Can the small factory also automate now?’ Mr. Fallon describes walking through chair factories in Faridabad with melting plastic sticking to his indian-made italian shoes. A new plastic recycling machine takes cement bags in one end, and produces clean plastic granules out of the other end. One chair gets made every 50 seconds. IndiaQuotient makes the argument that purchasing power and lowering price points are bringing automation into the factory. Mr. Fallon says that seeing this level of automation made him realise where India is heading. 'Brilliant people with a vision and work ethic like Sushil Aggarwal (AVRO) are making it happen', he says, smiling. Third, Indians are having fewer kids and spending more on them, as IndiaQuotient points out. Liam Fallon said that meeting Chitranshu Mahant of Primebook, was eye-opening, and a great example of parents investing in their children’s education and a startup facilitating this. Primebook has sold more than 40,000 made-in-india education-first laptops. India is the largest consumer of Facebook, Instagram, SnapChat, WhatsApp and Youtube. ‘India is a net importer of software. Where is homegrown Gmail, MS Office and Salesforce?’ asks Kanika Agarrwal. At Goodspace, Liam Fallon says he joined Goodspace precisely because it is the made in India next-gen platform to take on traditional hiring platforms. He thinks that if talent can find its calling in the right role, India will grow. When will services 2.0 come? India is an IT Services nation. How does India reimagine it in a post GPT era?’. Kanika Agarrwal has asked. Mr. Fallon says this is what the team has built at Goodspace. India has a large job market with legacy platforms such as Naukri still dominating, but it's rife with spam and scams. Just because there is opportunity, it doesn’t mean it will be easy. Liam Fallon says that only 40% of India’s telecom towers are fiberised, which is way below the 85-90% fiberisation levels in China. On the one hand this shows you the barrier for high-bandwidth applications for market penetration, but on the other hand it indicates the massive potential upside. Another challenge is what Bala Srinivasa, MD of Arkam Ventures explains. ‘When building for Middle India, trust is the real moat. If you aim to reach 50-100 million consumers in Middle India, your ability to understand what drives trust is more important’ than improvements, because '...in most cases [it is] the first time they are choosing a digital first alternative to replace habits built over decades'. This is also a challenge for Goodspace. How can Goodspace unlock India’s potential? When asked why he came to India to work on Goodspace, Mr. Fallon quotes Ankur Nagpal from Vibe.VC who says 'if you’re thinking about investing in India, one deep value argument is that talent and opportunity and not equally distributed. Talent in America and the UK is much more likely to be discovered. The population is so vast here that a lot of talent goes untapped.' Mr. Fallon is head of partnerships and growth at Goodspace because he believes that it is the only platform for the best talent to find the best jobs. This is key for India’s growth story, he says. Why India? When asked why India, Mr. Fallon’s response is simple: "The opportunities for startups here are unmatched anywhere in the world." Having worked across five countries, including the UK, Germany, and the US, he has never witnessed the kind of opportunity and hustle he has seen in India. “The energy here is different. Delhi NCR, in particular, has this unstoppable energy — it makes me think of what New York City must have been like 30 years ago,” he adds. Mr. Fallon is confident that India will lead the next wave of global innovation, and he’s eager to contribute to that transformation. In the end, Mr. Fallon’s journey from London to Noida is not just a career change, but a leap toward a dynamic future. His move to India symbolizes the country's rise as a global startup hub, where talent, opportunity, and innovation intersect. For Mr. Fallon, Goodspace is the perfect platform to make a lasting impact — not only in the recruitment sector but in helping to shape India’s place in the global startup ecosystem. (Disclaimer: The above press release comes to you under an arrangement with NRDPL and PTI takes no editorial responsibility for the same.). PTI PWR PWR Source: PTI |
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