When Sankari Sudhar realized that highly educated women, many with master’s degrees and PhDs, were still sidelined from the workforce, she decided to act. What began as a simple idea to connect women with jobs has evolved into Overqualified Housewives, a platform that blends opportunities, skill development, mentorship, and storytelling to help women reclaim their professional identity.
Driven by her experiences of struggling to find reliable opportunities, Sankari turned skepticism into action. Today, her work empowers homemakers, career returnees, and graduates alike, proving that women’s empowerment is not just about education, it’s about access, confidence, and financial independence. Join us as we dive into the mind of a true pioneer, whose passion for empowerment has sparked more than just a platform — it has ignited a movement that’s reshaping how India views women, work, and financial independence.
1. Can you walk us through the early days of building this platform, what were some key turning points or challenges that defined your path?
When I first started building Overqualified Housewives, I assumed most women we’d support would share a background similar to mine, educated, professionally exposed, and simply seeking a career restart. But the reality turned out to be very different.
Many women who joined had strong academic credentials, master’s degrees, even PhDs, yet had never worked formally. Around 40% of our users hold two or more degrees, while 25% never entered the workforce, often due to cultural or family pressures. For many, higher education was encouraged, but pursuing a career was not. This revealed a crucial gap: degrees alone weren’t enough — women needed practical skills and mentorship to re-enter the job market.
Initially, our vision was to connect businesses with skilled women ready to restart. But we quickly realized opportunities alone wouldn’t work. To make them meaningful, women also needed upskilling, training, and guidance. That insight reshaped our mission, evolving the platform into a holistic ecosystem that offers full-time, part-time, and freelance opportunities, alongside skill-building programs and mentorship.
Another breakthrough was sharing women’s stories. These narratives not only inspired others but also helped break deep-rooted cultural barriers.
Looking back, these early lessons transformed our platform into more than just a career bridge. It became an inclusive space where overqualified homemakers, career returnees, and skilled graduates gain the confidence, tools, and opportunities they need to thrive.
2. Many would hesitate to step into an unconventional space like this. What gave you the conviction to pursue it despite societal norms or market skepticism?
I never spent much time worrying about skepticism or societal norms. My conviction came from lived experience. As a professional, I often struggled to find reliable opportunities, and I saw countless women facing the same challenge. Instead of dwelling on the problem, I chose to build the solution: a trusted space where women can access meaningful work.
From a young age, I’ve believed women deserve choices, to study, pursue ambitions, and achieve financial independence. That belief kept me going, even when others doubted the vision. Skepticism, after all, reflects how deeply society has been conditioned. If we stop sharing stories or raising our voices, nothing changes.
The numbers speak for themselves: in 2024, just 19% of urban, educated Indian women participate in the workforce, even though girls consistently top in academics across India and globally. The gap isn’t education, it’s the leap to financial independence.
What struck me most is that hesitation often comes not from tier-three or low-income families, but from middle and upper-middle-class women, who face cultural pressure despite their degrees. That’s why we focus on storytelling, awareness, and action to normalize women making their own financial choices.
For me, it’s not about resisting society. It’s about creating change so women everywhere can pursue independence with confidence.
3. How does Overqualified Housewives function as a platform—what’s the core model behind connecting skilled women with flexible work opportunities?
At its core, Overqualified Housewives is a holistic platform that connects businesses seeking flexible and skilled talent with graduate women who are eager to restart their careers. Our mission is simple yet powerful: to help women become financially independent while enabling businesses to access a pool of reliable, highly qualified candidates.
Many of the women on our platform, Overqualified Housewives, are career restarters who face significant barriers when re-entering the workforce. One of the biggest challenges is the unconscious bias that exists, especially against mothers. There’s even a term for it, the “motherhood penalty.” Too often, women are unfairly judged as being less committed, less dependable, or too emotional once they become mothers. As a result, businesses hesitate to hire them, even though these women are highly capable and skilled.
We created Overqualified Housewives to break these barriers. Every candidate on our platform is vetted and verified, ensuring that businesses can hire with confidence. Overqualified Housewives operates on a subscription-based model where companies pay a fixed fee to access our women-only talent pool. Unlike traditional hiring platforms, we don’t charge commissions per hire. Instead, businesses get unlimited access to a diverse pool of top-quality candidates, allowing them to scale their teams efficiently.
Through this model, we’re creating a win-win solution: more women gain opportunities to rebuild their careers, and businesses benefit from trustworthy, skilled employees who bring both expertise and commitment.
4. How do you identify and build partnerships with businesses that are aligned with your mission and open to hiring women returning to the workforce?
Our primary focus has always been content marketing. Instead of chasing quick wins, we’ve built a long-term strategy centered on storytelling and meaningful engagement. We don’t just post for visibility; we create narratives that resonate with women who feel overlooked or underutilized.
This approach has allowed us to build trust and authenticity with our audience. Every article, campaign, and social post is designed to educate, inspire, or empower. By consistently delivering value, we’ve been able to grow organically and establish a strong community that identifies with our mission.
At the heart of our strategy is a simple belief: when you lead with value, people respond with loyalty. We’ve seen firsthand how women connect with our stories, adopt that mindset, and find joy in being part of something bigger than themselves. And that, to me, is the most rewarding outcome of all.
5. In your experience, what are the most common barriers skilled homemakers face when trying to re-enter the workforce, and how does your platform address them?
One of the most common barriers women face is finding opportunities that offer true flexibility. Many talented women want to return to work after a career break, but rigid job structures often make it difficult for them to balance personal responsibilities with professional aspirations.
Another major challenge is the lack of awareness about alternative career paths. Too often, women believe they must return to the exact same roles they left behind. But in reality, there are countless opportunities where their skills and experiences can be transferred and valued.
At Overqualified Housewives, we emphasize skill-building, mentorship, and confidence restoration. Our goal is to help women recognize that they are not starting from scratch — they are restarting from a place of experience and resilience. When they adopt this mindset, re-entering the workforce becomes far easier and more empowering
6. How do you manage the delicate balance between being a mission-led brand and a scalable, sustainable business?
Overqualified Housewives has always been designed as a mission-led brand, because the mission is truly at the core of everything we do. From the beginning, I believed that if we focused on creating genuine impact and serving women wholeheartedly, the rest would follow.
When I first started, my expectation was modest, I thought maybe 1,000 women would join within the first year. But to my surprise, in just the first month alone, 500 women came on board. By the end of that first year, the community had grown to more than 10,000 women. Those numbers showed us the power of a mission-driven approach.
It’s the mission that made our platform scalable. It’s the mission that turned it into a sustainable business. When you prioritize solving real problems and delivering value without compromising your vision, growth becomes a natural outcome. And today, with the support of technology, scaling that mission and building a long-lasting, sustainable brand has become even more achievable.
7. Are there any policy or structural changes you’d like to see in the employment ecosystem that could support your vision more effectively?
Yes, Definitely. When it comes to policies that support women, it cannot be the responsibility of just one person or one institution. A woman may give birth, but it takes the combined effort of companies, governments, communities, and families to create an ecosystem where she feels supported, and never guilty, for choosing to work.
Companies, in particular, must step up with stronger policies around flexibility, inclusion, and trust. The workplace environment needs to empower women rather than make them feel as though their choices are wrong. The government also plays a critical role in setting the tone through progressive policies, while communities and families shape mindsets that allow women to pursue their ambitions without judgment.
Unfortunately, many families still view women’s degrees as a status symbol rather than a professional asset. Degrees are often seen as tools to secure a “suitable” match — an engineer marrying an engineer, or a doctor marrying a doctor — instead of being valued for the skills and careers they can unlock. This mindset limits choice and continues to undervalue women’s professional potential.
To change this, we need more open-mindedness, especially in unconventional hiring. Businesses that have embraced this approach are already seeing results, because they’re tapping into talent that would otherwise remain hidden.
India has the highest number of overqualified housewives in the world, an enormous, untapped resource. If companies recognize this potential and commit to offering flexible and reliable opportunities, the payoff could be transformative. As India works toward becoming a global superpower, solving this equation is not just important, it’s essential.
8. Many talented women feel undervalued or disconnected after a career break. How do you personally navigate and address the emotional and psychological aspects of this journey through your platform, beyond just providing job opportunities?
After a career break, many women naturally feel undervalued and disconnected. But the first step is reminding them they’re not alone, and that taking time off is absolutely okay. Bringing life into the world is the most important work there is, and pausing a career for it should never diminish confidence.
That’s why we run skill development programs, where industry experts engage with our women weekly. This keeps them connected to current trends, helps them decide whether to return to their field or pivot to something new, and shows them the paths others have taken.
My own journey reflects this: I began as an engineer, worked in IT, then chose entrepreneurship for a more meaningful second innings. Likewise, a banker can become a designer, or an IT architect can transition into teaching. With the right skills and community, every path is valid.
By showcasing real women who’ve successfully restarted, we prove that it’s possible, and that confidence fuels the leap to the next level.
9. In building Overqualified Housewives, how have you balanced honoring the traditional roles many women embrace with empowering them to reclaim their professional identities on their own terms?
When we launched Overqualified Housewives, a common misconception surfaced: some people assumed we were devaluing homemakers. That couldn’t be further from the truth.
Our mission is simple — every woman deserves a choice.
At one stage in my life, I chose to be a homemaker because it was the best decision for my child. Many women make the same choice, and if caring for their families gives them identity, joy, and belonging, that is equally powerful and valid.
But choice works both ways. Some women may want to freelance for a few hours a day. Others may crave full-time careers beyond traditional roles of wife, mother, or daughter-in-law. If they feel unfulfilled by only household responsibilities, they must have the opportunity to pursue something more.
We are not putting down housewives. We are saying women should have the freedom to define their own paths, whether that’s managing a home, freelancing, or building a career.
10. What role do you believe technology and digital platforms must play in redefining women’s participation in the workforce, particularly in contexts where social expectations are deeply entrenched?
Technology has been a game-changer for us. When we started nearly three years ago, just before COVID-19, remote work was considered a privilege reserved for senior professionals. For most, it wasn’t even an option.
Then the pandemic changed everything. Suddenly, work-from-home became mainstream, internet access expanded even into Tier 4 towns, and laptops and digital tools became widely available. This shift opened new doors for women to upskill, connect with like-minded professionals, and re-enter the workforce.
Of course, technology is a double-edged sword. Its impact depends entirely on how we use it. But when applied with purpose, it enables scalability, flexibility, and access, making it possible for women everywhere to pursue meaningful careers.
11. Looking back, what’s the most unexpected lesson you’ve learned about leadership or impact while driving a mission that intersects entrepreneurship with social change?
One of the most unexpected lessons I’ve learned is realizing my privilege, to have a supportive family, quality education, and the freedom to choose my own path. Not everyone, whether man or woman, has this choice. And with privilege comes responsibility: we must use it to create impact and add value to others’ lives.
Working for social change has shown me many stories that are difficult to accept. Some women we aim to support aren’t ready to take the leap, no matter how much we encourage them. At times, our efforts feel wasted. But that’s part of the journey.
The key is persistence. Change doesn’t happen overnight. Just like water slowly shapes stone through constant drops, impact requires steady effort, regardless of immediate results. Entrepreneurship is never easy, and building a social-impact venture is even harder. Yet, what matters is showing up consistently, pushing forward, and delivering on our mission.
That’s the real lesson — to keep striving, even when outcomes are uncertain.
12. When you’re building something that challenges traditional norms, like the idea that homemakers are ‘underutilized’—how do you handle resistance, not just from the market, but from within the very community you’re trying to uplift?
Of course, there will always be underutilization and resistance when we challenge traditional norms. But what I’ve learned is this: while a few may openly criticize on social media, many more are silently watching and slowly changing their mindset. Over the past three years, I’ve witnessed remarkable shifts, especially among men.
One man told me that after following Overqualified Housewives, he finally understood his wife’s struggles. With his support, they launched a social media agency together. Another founder shared how his sister, once discouraged from studying, fought through resistance, built a career, and later funded his college fees, a turning point that reshaped his views on women’s financial independence.
These stories prove that our work doesn’t just empower women. It also empowers men to become allies. Actual change happens when both men and women support each other, breaking cycles of bias and unlocking real potential.