Hi. I’m Abhishek.
I write about software and AI. Sixteen years building products and solutions, doing consulting, and transforming business processes. My background is in intelligent automation.
Lately I’ve built multiple business solutions and applications using agentic coding, then worked with engineers to evolve them into production systems. The goal is never just the app. It’s changing how the work actually gets done.
How I got here
I got into banking software by accident
Thought I'd end up in policy or research. Ended up writing business requirements for capital markets systems instead. Sixteen years later, I'm still here, and honestly the puzzles only got more interesting.
I've built things that actually shipped
I've built multiple business solutions and applications using agentic coding, then worked with engineers to evolve them into production systems. Commercial lending platforms. Insurance underwriting triage. ESG reporting tools. Risk analytics with actual ML underneath. Not slide decks. Working software that someone had to maintain on a Monday morning.
I care about the process, not just the product
A lot of my work has been about transforming how business processes run. Mortgage onboarding. KYC and AML compliance. Document processing. Workflow orchestration. The unglamorous work of making slow operations less slow. I've spent years inside banking and financial services learning where the friction actually lives, not just where the UI looks broken.
Intelligent automation came first. Agentic AI came next.
My background is in intelligent automation. That world was about rules, workflows, and getting documents from one place to another without someone manually clicking through twelve screens. Agentic AI is the next chapter of the same story. Now I build systems that can reason through a workflow, not just follow one. I still pair closely with engineers to make sure those systems survive production.
Things I believe
(and occasionally say out loud in meetings)
The best software comes from people who understand the problem, not just the syntax.
This is why I never fully left the business side. Also why I never fully left the code.
Automating a bad process just gives you a faster bad process.
Transforming the process is the harder and more interesting part.
I'm better at understanding systems than reading a room.
Sixteen years building products. This has not improved.
Most enterprise demos are 80% theatre and 20% engineering.
I've done the theatre. I've also fixed the thing when the demo crashed. Both are skills.
An MBA was useful. Mostly for winning a national business simulation championship.
I bring this up more often than strictly necessary.
Right now
Building
- Business solutions with agentic coding
- Evolving prototypes into production with engineers
- Agentic AI that changes how work gets done
Thinking about
- Where agentic AI actually transforms business processes
- Whether vibe-coded apps can survive contact with production
Using
- Cursor
- Claude
- Next.js
- Convex
- Too much coffee
Economics from Delhi University. MBA from MDI Gurgaon. Background in intelligent automation. Based in Pune.
If any of this resonates, or if you’d rather argue about whether vibe coding is a phase or a revolution, I’m easy to find.