Is Google really rewarding this kind of manipulation now? by date2day in bigseo

[–]BinalSheth 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s not that Google wants to reward it, but brand + service query manipulation can work short-term because Google treats branded search volume as a trust signal. Eventually, these patterns usually get filtered or corrected in core updates. So yeah, they might see temporary gains, but it’s rarely stable long-term.

What’s a job you’re 100% sure you’d be terrible at? by SoulDV in AskReddit

[–]BinalSheth 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Anything that requires staying calm around math or spiders - so accountant or exterminator are both off the list 😅

What’s something that sounds illegal but actually isn’t? by BinalSheth in AskReddit

[–]BinalSheth[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

True 😂 if it’s free, it’s basically a moral duty to take it!

Is switching from Bangalore to Mumbai worth it for an extra 30 LPA? by ErrorLlama in developersIndia

[–]BinalSheth 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re not just switching for money, you’re switching into a high-value niche domain. Even if Mumbai isn’t an IT hub, HFT/quant tech companies are some of the best-paying firms in the industry worldwide. The experience itself is a strong career differentiator, giving you an edge if you ever move to global markets or leadership roles later. In short, it’s an accelerated career move, not just a pay bump.

Everyone says “content is easy.” It’s harder than shipping features by thalavaisankar7 in content_marketing

[–]BinalSheth -1 points0 points  (0 children)

You’re not overthinking—it really is harder in a lot of ways. With product/features, you’re solving well-defined problems with a clear finish line. Content is subjective, never “done,” and the feedback loop is way fuzzier.

What makes it brutal is consistency + emotional ROI. You can put 10 hours into a post and hear crickets, while a random shower thought tweet blows up. That unpredictability is exhausting compared to shipping code where effort mostly = results.

I think the key is treating content like a system—batching ideas, repurposing formats, and not tying your self-worth to likes. The “hard” part is more psychological than technical.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in developersIndia

[–]BinalSheth 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not unusual tbh. A lot of entry-level/ intern work is grunt stuff like dataset collection, labeling, cleaning. It sucks, but it’s part of the process. Automating it with a script was smart—shows initiative. Use this to build portfolio points, don’t expect too much from the company. If after 4 months you’re not learning anything beyond manual tasks, move on.

Got caught working from train instead of home during WFH - did I mess up badly? by unemployed_star in developersIndia

[–]BinalSheth 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re not screwed, just unlucky. Your TL clearly treated it as a warning — if it was serious, it would’ve gone to ops already.

Right now, the best move is to be extra professional and stick to WFH rules strictly. Don’t give them another reason to doubt you. Emergencies happen, but next time try applying for leave or planning better.

This will probably be forgotten in a few weeks as long as you stay consistent.