In a quiet village in Pune district, far from any startup hubs or big tech campuses, a young man decided to teach himself how to code. With no degree, no formal training, Pandit Dhamdhere entered a space where talent and persistence mattered more than certificates. Today, despite a recent setback, his journey proves that passion and persistence can overcome even the most challenging circumstances.
While working 16-hour days for $100 a month, he would spend another 4 hours at night learning JavaScript and Solidity, often sleeping only 4 hours before starting over again. In 2020, a single introduction to Web3 changed the direction of his life.
Pandit’s journey is a reminder that in Web3, you don’t need perfect conditions, you need the courage to start and the persistence to keep going.
This conversation with Pandit reveals the mindset needed to keep building despite self-doubt, the power of community in an online-first industry, and why sometimes the biggest battles aren’t with code but with your own limiting beliefs. His story is still being written, and the recent interview rejection that crushed his four-year dream might just be the setup for something bigger.

The Interview: Pandit Dhamdhere on His Web3 Journey
1. Tell us a bit about yourself.
Pandit Dhamdhere: I’m Pandit Dhamdhere, and I’m from a village in Pune district, Maharashtra. I was recently laid off from the company I was working for, so currently I’m working part-time with many startups while building my own stuff.
2. What were you doing before Web3?
Pandit Dhamdhere: I’m a college dropout from 11th standard, and I come from a farming background. That was pretty much my reality before I discovered this space.
3. How did you first hear about Web3?
Pandit Dhamdhere: I first heard about Web3 on Twitter back in 2020. That’s where it all started for me.
4. What was your first step into the space?
Pandit Dhamdhere: While I was doing JavaScript and frontend stuff, a friend introduced me to Solidity. I loved it immediately and started with the basics. My first project was creating an ERC-20 token after doing the usual Hello World programs.
5. What was one big challenge you faced early on?
Pandit Dhamdhere: The challenge wasn’t really technical. It was a battle with myself. It was hard to believe in myself because I don’t have a degree. I used to think, “You’re learning and building, but who’s going to hire you when you don’t have a degree?” That self-doubt was the biggest obstacle.
6. What helped you push through?
Pandit Dhamdhere: The Twitter community and some of my friends who helped me throughout my journey. I used to ask questions by DMing people on Twitter and Discord. I would ask questions to people in Twitter Spaces. That helped me a lot. It’s really the community that kept me going.
7. What are you most proud of so far in your journey?
Pandit Dhamdhere: I’m proud of the skills I learned despite unfavorable conditions. Once upon a time, there was a period in my life where I had to work 16 hours for $100 a month, and I used to learn and code for 4 hours and sleep for 4 hours. I’m proud that I didn’t give up during that time.
8. Any major failure or learning moment?
Pandit Dhamdhere: Recently, I failed to crack an interview at one of the biggest Web3 startups, which I’ve been dreaming to work with for the last 4 years. That was a major setback, but it’s also a learning moment about persistence and not giving up on your dreams.
9. Where can people find or follow your work?
Pandit Dhamdhere: You can find me @panditdhamdhere on X and LinkedIn.
What makes Pandit’s story special isn’t just the skills he learned or the projects he built. It’s proof that in this space, hard work matters more than having the right degree. When he messaged strangers on Twitter asking for help, he found something powerful: people who were willing to teach and guide him.
The numbers tell his story best. Four hours of sleep, four hours of learning, sixteen hours of working just to survive. Most people would have given up. Pandit kept going, choosing to grow even when it was the harder path.
This space needs more people like Pandit, who know what struggle feels like and still choose to build. His story is far from over.
Read to start your own journey no matter where you come from? Do what Pandit did: start building, ask questions, and don’t let doubt stop you.
Want to build, learn, and grow in the Web3 space alongside like-minded developers? Join the BlockchainHQ community where builders share knowledge, collaborate on projects, and support each other’s growth. Sign up from here: https://blockchainhq.xyz/auth and follow us on X https://x.com/blockchainhqxyz to become part of our invite-only Telegram community where the real conversations happen.

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