Business & Entrepreneurship - Person

Dhirubhai Ambani

Entrepreneurship, scale, ambition, and building from limited beginnings.

Why This Topic Matters

This topic gives students a chance to connect a story or life example to practical leadership. The goal is to discuss, question, listen, and apply the lesson.

Reading

Dhirubhai Ambani is remembered as one of India's most influential entrepreneurs. His journey is often discussed as an example of ambition, market understanding, and building a large business from modest beginnings.

Entrepreneurship requires noticing opportunities that others may ignore. It also requires courage, persistence, and the ability to bring people, capital, and systems together.

For teenagers, Ambani's story opens discussion about ambition and responsibility. Building big companies can create jobs and change markets, but entrepreneurs must also think about ethics, trust, and long-term impact.

As you read, pay attention to the choices, challenges, and values in the story. These details will help you prepare for a meaningful group discussion.

For teenagers, the most important part of Dhirubhai Ambani is not memorizing names or dates. The deeper goal is to ask what kind of person the story is training us to become. The leadership skill for this page is Entrepreneurial Drive. That means students should look for examples of responsibility, self-control, courage, humility, or clear thinking, and then connect those examples to school, friendships, family, and community life.

A strong presenter should explain the background, the turning point, and the lesson. The background tells the group what is happening. The turning point shows the choice or challenge. The lesson explains why the story still matters today. This structure helps the presenter speak clearly and helps listeners prepare thoughtful comments.

During discussion, avoid giving only one-word answers. Support your ideas with a reason from the reading and an example from real life. You may agree or disagree respectfully, but the goal is to think deeply together. When students listen carefully, ask better questions, and build on each other's ideas, the club becomes more than a reading group. It becomes a place to practice leadership.

After the session, try the practical takeaway: Identify one local need and imagine a small business that could serve it. This turns the reading into action. The best lessons are not only remembered; they are practiced in small choices during the week.

Vocabulary

  • entrepreneur
  • scale
  • ambition
  • market
  • opportunity

Discussion Questions

  1. What does entrepreneurial drive mean? Explain your thinking with evidence or an example.
  2. How can someone notice opportunity before others do? Explain your thinking with evidence or an example.
  3. Why do ethics matter when a business grows large? Explain your thinking with evidence or an example.
  4. What value is most important in this reading? Explain your thinking with evidence or an example.
  5. How can students practice this lesson? Explain your thinking with evidence or an example.

Leadership Takeaway

Entrepreneurial Drive: Identify one local need and imagine a small business that could serve it.

Optional Challenge

Prepare a one-minute mini presentation explaining one challenge this leader faced, one value they demonstrated, and one habit students can practice from their life.

Student-Created Question