Acharya Prashant, returning to his alma mater IIM Ahmedabad after 17 years, reflects on the significance of the campus in his life, stating that many things started there. He mentions his intention to connect the current moment to his experiences at the institution. Addressing the theme of "Profit beyond Profit," Acharya Prashant explains that material profits are not an end in themselves but are for the sake of the person who will benefit from them. He notes that while material gains can enhance the quality of life, they often fail to bring about the necessary inner change. The true profit, or the "profit beyond profits," is this inner transformation. He urges the audience to continuously assess whether their pursuit of profit is genuinely delivering this deeper benefit. Profits are a means, and one must question what they are a means to. The ultimate aim is an enhancement in the quality of life of the profiteer, which requires an inner change that material profits often fail to provide. He distinguishes between knowledge of the external world (objects) and knowledge of the self (the subject). He states that most literature provides knowledge about objects, but wisdom literature offers knowledge about the self, the one to whom all knowledge comes. This self-knowledge is paramount because all pursuits are ultimately for the self. Without it, actions become mechanical and one loses sight of the purpose. Success, he argues, is not a social norm but a subjective freedom from one's unique bondages. It is about becoming better compared to one's previous self, not in comparison to others. Therefore, each individual must define their own success. Acharya Prashant describes two types of entrepreneurship. The first is a conventional, quantitative pursuit, an extension of one's past conditioning, chasing numbers like percentages, CGPA, and CTC. The second type is a "love affair," an expression of the best within oneself, driven by a mission rather than ambition. When a venture is a love affair, its growth mirrors one's inner growth, and there is no desire to sell it for profit. He also explains his presence on social media platforms like TikTok, stating that a spiritual person must venture into the "murkiest of places" to bring light. He sees it as his mission to reach the young, vulnerable, and impressionable audience on these platforms. To find one's mission, he advises starting by identifying what is not worth doing, thereby narrowing down choices. He encourages looking at both the external world to see what needs to be done and the internal world to see what needs to be addressed within. When you know your work is truly important, the knowledge itself becomes the motivation, and you no longer need external validation. This inner conviction provides the energy to continue, independent of external situations. He concludes that spirituality is for adults and not about juvenile competitions. It is about responding to life's questions with the best of one's ability, based on a deep understanding of oneself and the world.