The book itself reads like a curriculum built to be taught: chapters that move from the psychological soil of entrepreneurship to the structural scaffolds of institutions and finance; sections that link motivation, market analysis, project formulation, and managerial skills with case studies meant to provoke action. For students and trainers, Khanka offered definitions sharpened for classroom debate, frameworks adaptable to a rural cooperative as readily as to an urban startup incubator. Exercises asked readers not only to know what entrepreneurship is but to design it — surveying markets, assessing resources, drawing cash flows, and pitching ideas with a clear-eyed realism.