
For decades, access to technology careers has been filtered through one primary lens: a college degree. But what if capability, not credentials, was the true indicator of potential?
That question led to the birth of Xcelevate Skills Foundation, a model that is quietly reshaping how young people from underserved backgrounds enter corporate India.
This is the story of how a bootcamp became a bridge to boardrooms.


In 2021, what began as an internal initiative inside NatWest evolved into something far bigger.
The goal was simple. Can we identify high-potential youth without formal degrees, train them rigorously, and help them succeed in a global enterprise environment?
The early pilots proved something powerful:
There was no dilution of standards. And this was certainly not charity hiring.
It was structured capability building that was proven over and over again.
Xcelevate’s approach goes far beyond technical instruction.
Apprentices are trained in:
We were clear about one thing. We did not want just surface level exposure. It had to be real industry-grade preparation.
Depending on hiring demand, domain modules are included:
Apprentices don’t just learn to code, they learn to operate in enterprise ecosystems.
Most skill programs underestimate this layer. For Xcelevate it is at the core. And this is why we try various experiments to help apprentices improve their communication.
The curriculum includes:
In a unique approach, even theatre-based learning is used where we bring in professional facilitators to teach communication through drama.
Before formalizing as a foundation, residential bootcamps were run in collaboration with Navgurukul, including at their Sarjapur campus in Bangalore.
Students lived, learned, debated, solved problems, and prepared for mock interviews together.
The environment was immersive and the expectations were high. Only then could we ensure that the standards matched corporate benchmarks.
This was not “training for employment.” It was professional transformation.
One of the most transformative outcomes has not been individual placements. It is policy shifts.
Three multinational companies, including NatWest, have waived degree requirements for specific roles. This change does not benefit only Xcelevate apprentices. It opens doors for thousands of others!
Additionally, several employed apprentices are now pursuing undergraduate degrees via distance learning which is funded entirely by their employers.
The model doesn’t bypass education. It expands access to it.
In its early years, there was no repayment expectation from apprentices.
As Xcelevate scales, a sustainability model is emerging:
Graduates are encouraged, not mandated, to donate a portion of their salary for one year after employment, helping sponsor the next cohort.
The annual operating budget currently stands at approximately INR 50 lakhs, projected to grow to INR 1 crore next year as the foundation scales steadily and responsibly.
This is not venture-funded disruption.
It is disciplined, mission-driven growth.
Mentors include:
Most training is delivered in person, supplemented by remote sessions where needed.
Mentors are coached on pedagogy that includes practical assignments, feedback loops, and mock interviews to ensure that learning translates to employability.
This is not academic instruction. Rather, it is apprenticeship in the truest sense.
The real shift is philosophical.
Xcelevate is not about charity. It is about agency.
It asks corporations these questions:
And the results speak clearly.
Young people who once had no corporate access are now software engineers, analysts, and professionals inside global enterprises.
From bootcamp classrooms to enterprise boardrooms not by accident, but by design.
India does not lack talent. What it lacks are bridges. And Xcelevate is building one.
If more companies begin to rethink hiring norms, invest in skill-first pathways, and collaborate across industry and non-profits, imagine how the impact will scale far beyond just one foundation.
It’s only when access changes that outcomes change as well.




At Xcelevate, we don’t give handouts; we build long-term, life-changing careers. Through community partnerships, bootcamps, and a powerful underprivilege assessment model, we uplift India's most overlooked youth into high-potential professionals.
1 Anita Society, Nr. Vishwakunj Cross-roads, Narayan Nagar Road, Paldi. Ahmedabad – 380007. Gujarat. India.
