Make Your Name Matter

My Name Has Good SEO

I don’t have a massive following. Never went viral. Don’t work at a company anyone’s heard of unless they’re deep in the weeds of Pakistani tech circles.

Most of the content I’ve put out over the years has landed quietly. A few hundred views here. A handful of comments there. Nothing that would make an algorithm sit up and pay attention.

And yet — if you Google my name, you find me.

Not buried on page three behind some dentist in Ohio or a professor in Lahore. Me. My stuff. My work.

This isn’t an accident. It’s also not that hard.

Here’s what I actually did:

I picked one username — @saqibtahirpk — and used it everywhere. LinkedIn, Substack, GitHub, Discord, everywhere I show up. No variations. No clever handles that seemed cool in 2019. Just consistency.

I built a basic website. saqibtahir.com. Nothing fancy. A few blogs, some links to things I’ve shipped, a way to contact me. It’s not winning design awards. But it exists, and it’s mine.

I wrote detailed job descriptions on LinkedIn. Not “Product Manager at XYZ” — actual context. What I built. What I learned. What I’m working on now. The kind of stuff that gives Google something to index and gives strangers a reason to reach out.

I started writing on Substack through SK NEXUS. Long-form thinking that lives somewhere I control, not just posts that disappear into a feed after 48 hours.

That’s it. That’s the whole playbook.

No growth hacks. No engagement pods. No “building in public” theater where every shower thought becomes a thread.

Just showing up consistently, under the same name, with enough signal that someone curious can actually find me.

The uncomfortable truth? Most people skip this part.

They chase followers before they’ve even made themselves findable. They optimize for reach when they haven’t solved for recognition.

In 2026, with AI-generated content flooding every feed and attention fragmenting by the minute, being discoverable is the new differentiation.

Not being loud. Being locatable.

You don’t need to be famous. You need to be Google-able.
And that’s a much lower bar than most people think.

With or without my help – I wish you the best.


The Wandering Pro is a quiet, steady corner of the internet for people figuring out their next move in tech.

Whether you’re a freelancer, a junior developer, or someone building something for the first time – this is a space for showing up, learning, and making progress at your own pace.

If that sounds like what you need, come be a part of it.