Each and every Indian city has just one — the chai tapri operator whose son now operates a logistics corporation, the tailor's daughter who grew to become a vogue entrepreneur, the car driver's relatives that designed a small transport empire. These tales get instructed at weddings and relatives features. They seldom get told on Google. A Wiki
Log Kya Kahenge — But What Does Google Say?
Every Indian home has listened to this line a minimum of after: "Log kya kahenge?" What will persons say? Developing up, it resolved which university you picked, which job you took, even who you married. But there's a new edition of this concern now, and it issues a lot more than the aged a single at any time did: "Google pe kya aata hai?" What doe
From Chai Tapri to Corner Office: Documenting the Indian Hustle Story
Every Indian city has one — the chai tapri owner whose son now runs a logistics company, the tailor's daughter who became a fashion entrepreneur, the auto driver's family that built a small transport empire. These stories get told at weddings and family functions. They rarely get told on Google. A Wiki Built for These Exact Stories That's t
The Side Hustle Generation Needs a Digital Resume, Not Just Instagram
Every second person in India today has a side hustle. A YouTube channel on weekends, a D2C brand run from a spare room, freelance design work between a 9-to-5. Bharat's hustle culture is real, and it's growing faster than any resume template can keep up with. But here's the problem — Instagram reels disappear into the algorithm within 48 hours
Why Every Indian Startup Founder Is One Google Search Away From a Missed Deal
Picture this: an investor is about to wire funds into your startup. Before the term sheet gets signed, someone on their team Googles your name. What comes up? A five-year-old college fest photo? A random news mention that's more noise than signal? In India's fast-moving startup ecosystem, this five-second search can quietly make or break a deal.