My alarm went off way too late that morning, and I was already spiraling because I had promised to pick up a guest speaker for a workshop on campus. I threw on whatever was clean, grabbed my keys, and headed out. What I did not expect was that by the end of the day, someone would hand me a completely different way of thinking about content creation -- and honestly, about putting yourself out there at all.
Picking Up Someone Who Actually Knows What They're Doing
I was nervous the entire drive. Not gonna lie, I was already mentally preparing for one of those workshops where someone just reads slides at you for an hour and then leaves. But the moment I met the guest speaker, I could tell this was different. They had actual stories, real experience, not just theory they picked up from some course. When they started the workshop in front of everyone at NIAT Ajeenkya DY Patil University, I realized I was about to learn something that could actually matter for my future -- not just for college, but beyond it.
Your first 100 posts are not about being perfect. They are about knowing exactly what message you want to send and showing up consistently to send it.
The 100 Post Theory That Actually Made Sense
The biggest takeaway from the whole session was something called the 100 Post Theory. Basically, your first 100 posts on any platform kind of define your entire creator identity. This hit different for me because I have always thought you had to be amazing from post one, going viral instantly, or you were already failing. But this is way more realistic. You are basically telling the world who you are and what you care about with those early posts, so they need to be genuine. The pressure drops the moment you realize it is not about perfection -- it is about intention and repetition. Show up consistently, stay true to your niche, and after 100 posts you have actually built something real.
Content Niches I Didn't Even Know Existed
The speaker broke down all these different content niches that I honestly did not even know were a thing. I always thought content creation was just vlogs and makeup tutorials, but there is so much more. They walked us through entertainment content -- the stuff people watch to chill and laugh. Information content -- tutorials, tips, educational stuff. Beauty and lifestyle -- personal brand and aesthetic focused. And then low effort content -- which is basically real, unpolished, authentic posts that do not require a production team but still hit hard. Hearing about all these different paths made me realize there is actually something for everyone if you want to create.
- Entertainment -- content people consume to relax and be entertained
- Information -- tutorials, tips, how-tos, educational posts
- Beauty and lifestyle -- personal brand building, aesthetic focused
- Low effort -- raw, unpolished, authentic content that requires minimal production
The Actual Roadmap Nobody Hands You
What I really appreciated was that they did not just throw theory at us. They walked us through a step-by-step process that actually makes sense and is doable. First, you choose your niche -- what are you passionate about? What can you talk about without getting bored? Then you figure out your audience. Who are you creating for? Not everyone. Your people. Once you know that, you pick your platform. Where does your audience actually hang out -- is it Instagram, YouTube, TikTok, a blog? And finally, the most important one: consistency. You have to actually show up and post regularly. I wrote that one down twice. Showing up consistently beats being perfect every single time.
When the Questions Got Real and Winners Were Announced
After the main talk, we got to ask questions directly, and the speaker answered everything honestly. No corporate filter, just real advice. People were asking about monetization, algorithm stuff, authenticity -- all the questions that actually matter when you are thinking about starting. The energy in the room shifted. These were not freshers fishing for generic advice anymore. We were actually thinking about what we wanted to build. Then they announced the winners of the buildathon competition that was happening on campus, and the room exploded. Everyone was cheering and celebrating, and I realized this whole thing was not just a lecture -- it was a community thing. That matters.
I also documented this entire experience on video - if you want to see how it actually felt in real time: