Many people dream of becoming business owners, building companies, and achieving financial success. But according to Thyrocare founder A Velumani, ownership alone does not define true success. The billionaire entrepreneur recently shared a short yet powerful lesson on leadership and workplace happiness that struck a chord with professionals and aspiring founders online. His message focused not on money, valuations, or titles, but on something far more important: how many people willingly work with you and how happy they feel while doing it. Taking to X, A Velumani shared his thoughts on the difference between being an employer and an employee and how success should actually be measured. According to the Thyrocare founder, success is not simply about owning a company or holding authority over others. Instead, he suggested that real achievement comes from the combination of two factors: how many people work for you and how happy they are while working with you.Mastering leadership skills Velumani explained that these two elements together reveal the true quality of leadership. He further advised aspiring entrepreneurs and professionals to focus on mastering leadership skills first rather than obsessing only over ownership or business titles. According to him, ownership naturally follows strong leadership.— velumania (@velumania) Modern workplaces often focus heavily on growth numbers, profits, and expansion while ignoring employee satisfaction and workplace culture. Velumani’s statement shifted the discussion toward the human side of leadership.MORE STORIES FOR YOU✕« Back to recommendation storiesI don't want to see these stories becauseThey are not relevant to meThey disrupt the reading flowOthersSUBMITDr A Velumani is widely known for building Thyrocare into one of India’s leading diagnostic chains despite coming from a financially modest background. Over the years, he has often spoken about discipline, simplicity, consistency, and leadership through experience rather than management theory. This time, his message reminded people that successful businesses are not built only through capital, products, or strategies. They are ultimately built through people and the quality of leadership guiding them.