Myself and more…

Hari

Hari

More info about me:

tl;dr: I have learned to build websites myself. I have been a freelancer in college days as a web developer and a technical support engineer. I enjoy the process of solving problems and learning about customer issues.

Here’s the long story if you have time:

Like any startup guy, by the end of my teenage years, I started seeing the startup opportunity in almost everything. I have my like minded peers who is also part of the day dream process of building a new venture.

It was ‘only thinking, zero action’ at that time but things got different when we had the lockdown in 2020 – routines were changed, lot of free time and the wide internet to explore.

I would say that was my productive days in terms of learning and acquiring new skills – I was not ‘officially’ learning but I had the chance to try out everything that I was excited about. Fast forward maybe 1-2 months, I started developing websites, trying new web designs everyday, pushing an app to play store, creating an online newsletter, affiliate marketing, and SEO. I had zero customers to support, so there’s not much experience for tech support at that time. 🙁

Apart from web development, my interest in other marketing related works wore off and eventually I started to explore the field of web development. I used an untapped market for my web dev business using cold emailing – I reached out to people who have large fan following but no website. I finally got some corporate clients – Ankur Warikoo and Akshat Shrivastava (they are some of the biggest content creators from India). Started as a web developer and transitioned in to the Tech guy in their small team. (These startups were using WordPress, LMS for courses, and Freshworks/Email for support. We were not developing any product but using a whole lot of 3rd party tools). 

Within months, my daily responsibilities was: 

  1. Technical Support via email (we had an LMS for courses, and in high traffic spikes there are video streaming, and payment related tickets)
  2. Technical integration (integrating 3rd party tools, and overseeing any compatibility issues. WordPress plugin issues was a common thing in our flow)
  3. Website Management (just make sure it’s online and if it’s offline, work with the hosting company to get it resolved.)

Here’s the website I redeveloped while freelancing on my college days: ankurwarikoo.com

Fast forward now, I have completed my Bachelor’s degree in CS, and I’m now part of a training program till February for an exam called GATE CSE.

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