Napblog

Pugazh as Blogger – Part 1 {Founder & CEO of Napblog.com}

Founder & CEO, Napblog — More Importantly, a Blogger

I am writing this with quiet pride.

Not because of a title.
Not because of a company.
But because I am completing my 100th month of blogging — more than 3,000 days of writing.

On August 17, 2017, I published my first blog article.
The topic was simple: “What is Blogging?”
The platform was basic: Google Blogger.

No strategy deck.
No monetization plan.
No personal brand framework.

Just a young mechanical engineering student, a blue diary, and a need to think clearly.

Eight-plus years later, here I am — founder of Napblog — still writing.
Not because I have to.
But because I cannot not write.

This article is not advice.
It is not motivation.
It is not storytelling for engagement.

This is evidence.


Before Blogging: The Blue Diary Phase

Before the internet saw my words, paper did.

In 2016–2017, I maintained a small blue diary.
Every day, I wrote:

  • What I learned
  • What I didn’t understand
  • What scared me
  • What I wanted to become

At that time, my immediate goal was clear:
Shortlist universities for Summer 2017.

But something else was happening subconsciously.

Writing gave me:

  • Clarity of thought
  • Emotional regulation
  • Pattern recognition

I didn’t know the term metacognition then.
I was simply thinking by writing.

That habit never left me.

Blogging was not a leap.
It was a natural extension.


The First Blog: August 17, 2017

My first blog was not confident.
It was not polished.
It was not SEO-friendly.

But it was honest.

I wrote about:

  • What blogging meant to me
  • Why people write
  • How beginners should start

I used Google Blogger because it removed friction.
No domain obsession.
No design paralysis.

Just write.

That single decision — choosing ease over perfection — shaped the next 100 months.


Discovering a Mentor Without Meeting Him

Around the same time, I discovered Deepak Kanakaraju, founder of DigitalDeepak.com.

I did not meet him.
I still haven’t.

But I learned from him extensively through:

  • Newsletters
  • YouTube videos
  • The 100-Day Digital Marketing Course
  • E-books
  • Internships
  • Alpha Club
  • Mentoring sessions
  • Mastermind discussions
  • Live workshops

What stood out was not tactics.

It was clarity.

His work demonstrated something critical:

Marketing is not manipulation.
It is structured communication.

That principle quietly embedded itself into my thinking — long before Napblog existed.


Falling in Love With Writing (Without Realizing It)

I did not “decide” to become a writer.

I became one by repetition.

Every blog post helped me:

  • Slow down my thinking
  • Validate ideas
  • Remove assumptions
  • Replace imagination with evidence

I strongly dislike hallucination writing — content without grounding.
I never wanted to sound smart.
I wanted to be accurate.

Writing forced accountability.

If I claimed something, I had to:

  • Test it
  • Experience it
  • Observe outcomes

That discipline shaped not just my blogging — but my leadership later.


Flow State: Writing for Its Own Sake

There is a psychological concept called Flow State:

Being completely involved in an activity for its own sake.

That is how I write.

Not for:

  • Likes
  • Shares
  • Algorithms
  • Virality

But because writing places me in deep focus.

Time disappears.
Noise fades.
Only thought remains.

That is why consistency became natural.


Evidence Over Imagination

Over the years, I have:

  • Shared resources with strangers
  • Emailed mentors I had never met
  • Sent PDFs to people who didn’t ask
  • Apologized for delayed replies
  • Admitted my English was not perfect

You can see the evidence:

  • Old emails
  • Early blog dashboards
  • Traffic maps
  • Archived drafts
  • Clumsy grammar
  • Honest effort

I am not embarrassed by them.

They prove continuity.


From Mechanical Engineering to Marketing Thinking

My background in mechanical engineering shaped how I blog.

I think in:

  • Systems
  • Inputs and outputs
  • Feedback loops
  • Failure modes

Blogging became my sandbox.

Each article was a test:

  • Will this idea hold?
  • Does this logic break?
  • Can someone replicate this?

That mindset later became Napblog’s first principle:

Marketing is providing the right information, at the right time, to the right people.


The Compound Effect of Daily Actions

From Month 1 to Month 100:

  • I never waited to be “ready”
  • I never hesitated to reach out
  • I never hid behind introversion

I contacted people via:

  • LinkedIn
  • Email
  • Phone
  • In person

This went against my childhood conditioning.

But I intentionally practiced:

  • Listening like a leader
  • Speaking with clarity
  • Writing with responsibility

Not to appear like a leader —
but to become one.


Blogging Was the Training Ground for Napblog

Napblog did not begin as a company.

It began as:

  • Thought discipline
  • Documentation habit
  • Learning archive

Before there were interns, clients, or platforms —
there were blog posts.

That is why I say this clearly:

I am a founder because I was a blogger first.


Why This Matters (Even If No One Reads It Today)

I do not know who will read this:

  • This year
  • Next year
  • Or in the next 3–7 years

But I know this:

Daily actions compound.
Outcomes become predictable.

If even one aspiring marketer reads this and realizes:

  • Consistency beats talent
  • Writing builds thinking
  • Evidence outlasts hype

Then this 100-month journey has already paid off.


Closing Thought

I am proud — not of success — but of continuity.

Titles will change.
Companies will evolve.
Markets will shift.

But the habit of sitting down and writing honestly —
that stays.

This is Part 1.

The story continues.


Pugazh
Founder & CEO, Napblog
More importantly, a Blogger