India Latest News
Agency News

Ritesh Singh Launches The Silent Veto, a New Book on the Co-Founder Dynamics That Quietly Decide Whether Startups Survive

Ritesh Singh Launches The Silent Veto, a New Book on the Co-Founder Dynamics That Quietly Decide Whether Startups Survive

Drawing on more than 25 years in business, the entrepreneur and advisor introduces Partnership Intelligence, a discipline for building co-founder relationships that last.

New Delhi, India — Startup success is usually measured in funding rounds, valuations, product launches and growth curves. Yet many capable ventures come apart for reasons that never appear on a financial statement. Entrepreneur, business leader, and founder advisor Ritesh Singh addresses that overlooked reality in his new book, The Silent Veto, a study of the co-founder relationships and boardroom dynamics that shape a company long before any of it becomes visible on a balance sheet.

The book takes its name from a pattern Singh observed and later lived through — the accumulated weight of what founders do not say to one another. Decisions are not openly refused. They are delayed, sidestepped or quietly blocked, without a single direct conversation. Over time that silence erodes trust, blurs accountability, and weakens a company from the inside, often years before the trouble becomes visible.

Where most startup books concentrate on fundraising, scaling, and product-market fit, The Silent Veto examines the human side of building a company: how co-founders choose one another, how they drift apart, and how partnerships can be designed to hold under pressure. Singh frames this work as Partnership Intelligence, the discipline of building and maintaining the relationships that determine whether a company reaches its potential.

“Most companies do not fail in one dramatic moment,” said Ritesh Singh, author of The Silent Veto. “They weaken slowly, through delayed conversations, unclear authority, and disagreements that are never spoken aloud. By the time the damage shows, trust has already gone. I wrote this book so founders can see that erosion early, name it, and act on it while they still can.”

The book gives readers working tools rather than theory alone. Among them are the Fit Radar, a four-dimensional way to assess compatibility before committing to a co-founder; the Architecture of Resilience, a set of principles for designing partnerships that adapt as people change; and practices such as Dynamic Alignment and Structured Honesty for surfacing hard truths before they harden into Relationship Debt. It is written for founders, leadership teams, investors, board members, and advisors who would rather prevent an organisational breakdown than manage one.

Early readers have responded to that focus.

“Our era adulates startups, yet the high failure rates overlook a key ‘silent killer’ factor of founder dynamics. The Silent Veto spotlights this issue, and offers a very useful approach from a real life protagonist’s perspective to identifying and dealing with many typical patterns in founder relationships. I heartily commend this book and eagerly look forward to the awareness and capability building efforts it will help catalyse,” said Pavan Gandhok, Director, IDEATE LAB & JGU Family Business Centre.

“Enduring success is never built in isolation. It is built on partnerships that are valued and safeguarded over time,” said Sanjeev Mehtani, Chief Sales Officer, Acer India.

“The right partnership is the most powerful business asset a founder can hold — more valuable than capital, more durable than strategy,” said Arvind R. Vohra, serial entrepreneur and angel investor.

“The strength of a company is not only its product or its funding. It is the quality of the relationship between the people who built it,” Singh said. “Capital can be raised and strategy can change. A partnership that has lost trust is far harder to rebuild. Partnership Intelligence is about protecting that relationship before it fractures, not after.”

Much of the book comes from lived experience. Drawing on his own partnership that broke down, Singh examines, systematically, why bright and well-intentioned people so often come apart while building something together. The Silent Veto turns that experience into a practical framework any founding team can use.

About Ritesh Singh

Ritesh Singh is an entrepreneur, consultant, and advisor to founders and leadership teams, with more than 25 years across media, entrepreneurship, leadership, and consulting. He has held senior leadership roles including National Director at MEC (GroupM) and strategy roles at Starcom MediaVest Group, and went on to build one of India’s largest independent digital marketing companies. Across that career he has built ventures, raised capital and navigated growth, exits, and partnerships, working with founders and organisations across industries and international markets on growth, positioning, communication, and organisational clarity. He runs EspressoShot Consulting, where he advises founders, brands and leadership teams while building the next stage of his own entrepreneurial work. Much of his writing draws on the conviction that most business problems are, at their core, human problems.

Media Contact:

Ritesh Singh

Author – The Silent Veto | Entrepreneur | Advisor to Founders & Leadership Teams

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ritzingh/

Related posts

From Play School Meals to 11 Corporate Cafeterias: How Sujita Mishra Built Aryan Delight Across NCR

cradmin

Bloom Agency Strengthens Its Position as a Leading Digital Marketing Agency with Advanced SEO and Web Solutions

cradmin

ITK Education is set to launch “ACEMA Edu ERP Version 3.0”- Advanced Unified Education Management System Aligned with India’s New Education Policy

cradmin