Acharya Prashant explains that the purpose of one's work and the purpose of the Gita are not just different, but exist in two separate dimensions. The Gita was spoken to Arjun to free him from delusion, attachment, greed, body-consciousness, and the sense of 'mine'. This is the purpose of the Gita's author, Shri Krishna: to make Arjun realize that he is not the doer, to remove his attachment to action, to the world, and to his loved ones. The Gita aims to help one understand who they are, what humanity is, and to know the supreme element, the Truth, thereby liberating them from all that is futile. In contrast, the speaker questions the purpose of those in management. He asks if they are in management to be free from body-consciousness or if their companies work to remove the darkness of ego and the sense of doership from people's minds. He asserts that these institutions do not work to help their customers achieve renunciation from intoxication, possessiveness, and attachment. Shri Krishna's purpose is to teach Arjun to get rid of worldly bondages, whereas the corporate world misuses the Gita to sell more products, motivate employees to produce more, get ahead of competitors, earn more money for their families, and gain fame and promotion. The entire commercial system is designed to keep people entangled in the world's net. The speaker calls the concept of 'Management Principles from the Bhagavad Gita' a foolish, fallen, and wicked idea, akin to a demon selling the divine word for the sake of the market. The fundamental principle of a company is to maximize shareholder profit. This is the opposite of the Gita's message, which is to break free from bonds. The speaker states that if a company's employees and customers truly understood the Gita, the company would cease to exist. Therefore, any use of the Gita in a corporate setting involves distorting its meaning, misinterpreting its verses, and creating false contexts to serve commercial interests, which is a complete perversion of its original intent.