Born to a poor family—his father was a peon in Wai near Pune—Lokhande graduated as a private student. But when the idea of building a rural marketing database struck roots, he forsook a cushy marketing job and his own trading outfit to scour 4,000-odd villages, ploughing back his nest egg, piling credits with everyone from the local grocer to his daughters’ school, striking direct contacts with opinion leaders in villages and recording obscure details of the local economy.