Sachcho means truthful.
That meaning is not just a name. It is the rule behind everything we publish.
If it is not honest, it does not belong here.
sachcho is an independent publication built by people who understand Nepal's study-abroad system closely and believe this kind of space should exist — a space where students and families can hear the truth before pressure, paperwork, and promises take over.
The study-abroad journey in Nepal is broken at the information layer. Students and families often make life-changing decisions with incomplete, biased, or overly optimistic information. Many enter the process without fully understanding the financial risk, academic fit, emotional pressure, or long-term consequences of the path they are choosing.
By the time many students reach a consultancy, they are already confused, pressured, or emotionally committed to going abroad somehow. That is why truth must come earlier.
Sachcho exists primarily for Nepali students and families, but the conversation is bigger than them alone. Anyone who influences a student's decision — counselors, consultancies, educators, institutions, relatives, friends, and society — also has a responsibility to think honestly about the student's real interest.
We may write for students.
We may write for families.
We may sometimes write to the system.
But the side we stand on does not change.
We stand on the side of the student's genuine wellbeing.
Dreaming of a better future is not wrong. Wanting better education is not wrong. Wanting exposure, independence, opportunity, or a different life is not wrong. The problem begins when that dream is shaped by half-truths — when students are told only the success stories, when families are shown the opportunity but not the full cost, when advice is influenced by commission, limited tie-ups, destination trends, or business interest.
Sachcho publishes honest, evergreen articles about the study-abroad decision. We write about student readiness, family pressure, financial honesty, consultancy questions, emotional preparation, course and country confusion, and the hidden risks students should understand before deciding.
The goal is not to create fear.
The goal is to create clarity.
Sachcho will not process applications. It will not promise visa success. It will not recommend specific universities. It will not rank consultancies. It will not take commission from student decisions. It will not publish content only because it is trending.
This boundary matters.
Because the moment advice becomes connected to commission, the student's interest can become secondary.
A country is not automatically good or bad. A consultancy is not automatically right or wrong. A pathway is not automatically suitable because someone else succeeded through it.
The right decision depends on truth: academic readiness, financial strength, emotional maturity, family situation, and long-term purpose.
Studying abroad can change a student's life.
But it should not begin with blind trust.
It should not begin with false confidence.
It should not begin with pressure.
It should not begin with a dream sold as a guarantee.
It should begin with truth.
That is what we believe.