Education
How to Host a Holi Card Party That Your Friends Will Love?
Host a Holi Party with spectacular card games with a desi touch for your family! Read this article for tips and tricks on how to throw your best party yet!
Holi is a festival where people forget bitter past and come together to celebrate and love each other. It is a festival of positive vibes, excitement, unlimited fun, dance, love, water guns and cheer! Play some awesomatic online card games for Holi this 2020!
Have a colorful invitation
I’m sure when you want to invite guests to your holi party, you send out invitations. It’s holi, keep your invitation cards colorful and attractive. Who wouldn’t want to be a part of your holi party? You can always send some gulaal and a box of sweets along with the invites. Of course e-invitations are an alternative but guys, it's holi!! Point is even if they are e-invitations keep them colorful.
The color-vigour
Since holi is all about colours, pla the colours at your party. Try avoiding the colours that contain hard chemicals and opt for organic colours. It is quite a task to uncolour yourself from the holi colours. They might be slightly expensive but are always safer and skin-friendly. Save as much water as possible. Try Playing dry holi instead.
Dress up for the party
Quite often people prefer dressing up in white on holi. Yet again it is a choice. Dress up pretty. Try floral tunics, avoid accessories, colorful footwear and just be comfortable in what you are wearing. For those who can not do without makeup can use light and waterproof makeup. Do not dress up shabby for a holi party in some old garment. It's a big no no!
The Frolicking games
Now, onto the most important part of your party: the games. Dive into amazing card games such as Andar Bahar, Teen Patti, Jhandi Munda, Rummy, etc. Playing these games on online casinos is great, but playing it with your loved ones will give you a whole other experience.
These games are made interesting with money, so be sure that no one cheats. This is the only way that will guarantee fun in your card game party. You can keep the mood light and have a wonderful time!
Delightful Decor
Try to keep a theme for your party and have matching decor. Guests would always love to have a pleasing ambience. You could always have colorful paper lanterns, colorful balloons, streams, colorful drapes to spruce up the place. Make sure the place looks cute. You would love it yourself when you see your cute party pictures.
Holi specific music
Party incomplete without music and dance? Yes, ofcourse. Compile all trending and evergreen holi and bollywood songs and add them to your playlist. This will keep the party alive. Dhol beats played at regular intervals would add to the fun. If i was a guest at such a party i’m sure i wouldn’t be able to resist myself from shaking a leg. Dance with your family and friends. Don’t be hesitant just this one day.
The brimming beverages
How can a holi party not have ‘bhaang’? Holi parties can also other drinks like cocktails, mocktails, juices to quench your thirst. Traditionally, it is called ‘thandai’ and guests of all ages and tastes love ‘thandai’ .
The gratifying gifts
After ambience and food the next eye catching part of a holi party are the gifts. Winners of the games organised can also be given gifts as a token appreciation. Special holi gifts include kurtis, chocolates, gujiya, T-shirt, sweet boxes, beauty care kits, dry fruit box, decorative items, fancy idol of Radha-Krishna or maybe even colours (gulaal).
Make your party as colorful as you can with all of these tips and tricks! The fantastic card games mentioned above will surely make your party the talk of your family for a good while! If Sharma uncle thinks he throws the best parties, wait till he comes to yours! Happy Holi!
Education
Scaler appoints new heads for its online and offline businesses
Amar Srivastava becomes chief executive of the online business and group chief product officer; Vidit Jain takes charge of the offline schools
BENGALURU: Scaler is shuffling its top deck as the AI skilling race heats up. The Bengaluru-based tech education company has elevated two senior executives to lead its online and offline businesses, signalling a sharper push into an AI-driven market.
Amar Srivastava, previously senior vice president for product and business, has been appointed chief executive of the online business and group chief product officer. Vidit Jain has been elevated to senior vice president and head of Scaler School, taking charge of the company’s offline education units, the Scaler School of Business and the Scaler School of Technology.
The company has also recently appointed Ratnakar Reddy as head of enterprise for India and the Middle East and North Africa, with a brief to drive partnerships with governments and enterprises for AI-led skilling programmes.
Abhimanyu Saxena, co-founder of Scaler, said the promotions reflect the company’s confidence in both leaders and the direction it is heading. “Amar and Vidit have been central to Scaler’s journey, and their elevations reflect our conviction in their leadership and the direction we are shaping as a company,” he said. “With leadership now in place across the business, we remain focused on building engineers the world’s best companies want to hire. In an AI-first economy, that mission is more urgent and more achievable than ever. Our next chapter is centred on building an AI-native workforce from India, equipped to compete in a technology-driven global economy.”
Srivastava brings over a decade of experience building education-focused ventures. He previously founded Intellify and was part of the early team at Doubtnut. At Scaler, he will lead the online business with a focus on growth, profitability and expansion into new segments, while strengthening the product ecosystem across the group. He is blunt about what the AI economy actually needs. “The AI economy does not have a shortage of tools. It has a shortage of engineers who can think clearly, build reliably, and keep learning as the ground shifts. That is what we are building toward,” he said.
Jain brings more than 15 years of experience across startups and consulting, including stints at MPL and McKinsey and Company. He will oversee growth and profitability of Scaler’s offline business. His priorities are immediate and unambiguous. “The offline experience is where depth gets built, and that depth is critical in the AI era. Over the next 12 months, our focus will be on consistent growth, stronger unit economics, and delivering outcomes for students while building long-term employer partnerships,” he said.
Founded in 2019, Scaler is valued at $710 million and backed by Peak XV Partners, Tiger Global and Lightrock India. Its parent firm, InterviewBit, has featured on the Financial Times’ Asia Pacific High Growth Companies rankings every year from 2021 to 2025. On average, Scaler’s learners see a 4.5x return on investment and a salary increase of around 126 per cent.
With leadership locked in across every business unit, Scaler is betting that the next wave of global tech hiring will be won or lost on the quality of engineers coming out of India. It is a big bet. But the numbers, and the promotions, suggest the company is in no mood to hedge.







