In the middle of a busy New York schedule, Neil Bansal, managing director of operations & strategy at OMERS Private Equity, is learning to speak Thai. It is a language of five tones where a slight inflection can turn a greeting into a joke, or a simple ‘come here’ into an accidental comment about a horse.
“In Thai, I’m speaking like a three-year-old,” Bansal laughs. “I say something ridiculous and the locals laugh with me. But that’s part of the excitement. Transformation is meant to be hard. It’s meant to take you to a different type of place than you might be in other parts of your life.”
This pursuit of the "quiet transformation"—the invisible, difficult work of growth—is the thread that pulls together his non-linear career. Whether he is navigating the linguistic hurdles of Southeast Asia or the digital roadmaps of a multi-billion dollar portfolio, Bansal has moved through the world of "cash, booze, and sneakers" with a singular focus: moving past the elegant theory of advising to the messy, rewarding reality of the practitioner.