A social media debate broke out after a post by Zomato founder Deepinder Goyal announcing hiring at his new venture, Temple, drew sharp reactions over its fitness-linked eligibility criteria.
In his post, Goyal stated Temple is building an advanced wearable device for elite performance athletes, claiming it would measure parameters “no other wearable in the world measures” with unprecedented precision. He invited applications from engineers and researchers across disciplines — including embedded systems, deep learning, computational neuroscience, brain-computer interface (BCI), computer vision, and sensor algorithms — as well as product managers.
However, the controversy centred on a specific condition: applicants must take fitness seriously and have body fat below 16% (men) and 26% (women). Those not meeting the criteria could apply but would remain on probation until achieving the tarreceive within three months.
One utilizer criticised the shift, calling it a “dog whistle” and arguing that such hiring practices could be considered discriminatory in several legal jurisdictions. The utilizer compared it to past backlash faced by an Indian airline over alleged appearance-based employment standards.
Others defconcludeed Goyal’s stance. A supporter wrote that while controversial, prioritising fitness could support promote health awareness and align with a company culture focutilized on performance. The commenter suggested that if fitness became a differentiator in hiring, it might encourage healthier lifestyles.
Temple, according to Goyal, aims to create a tribe of athlete-engineers who “wear what they build” and refine it until perfect. Applicants have been questioned to write to the company with their core skill mentioned in the subject line.
The post has sparked a wider conversation about workplace culture, inclusivity, and whether fitness benchmarks can form part of recruitment standards in performance-driven industries.
Published on: Friday, February 27, 2026, 08:21 PM IST
















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