What happens when someone with no technical background, no capital, and no connections decides to build something anyway? You get Shahzada, a 25-year-old entrepreneur whose story is less about resources and more about relentlessness.
Growing up in a third-tier city in India, Shahzada had none of the typical advantages associated with entrepreneurship. No tech background. No business family. No roadmap. What he did have was a sharp eye for problems and an even sharper refusal to quit.
How it All Started
His first venture, SBG Seva, was a local cake brand built entirely from scratch. No paid advertising. No agency. No budget. Just raw content created by a young man who believed that if you give people something worth watching, they will find you. In just a few months, SBG Seva was competing with the most established cake shops in his city, not because of a superior product alone, but because of the emotional connection the brand built through content. Customers didn’t just buy cakes. They followed the story.
That was the moment Shahzada realized something most marketers take years to understand: content is not promotion. Content is trust.
Six Years of Building in the Dark
What followed was not a straight line. It never is for people who are truly building.
Shehzada moved into faceless content creation on Instagram, then into growing personal brands, then into high-ticket sales for two years, and back again into content with more leverage — each chapter teaching him something the previous one could not. He worked with big names in the industry. He built audiences from zero. He learned what makes people stop scrolling, start believing, and eventually, start buying.
But the turning point came when he discovered SaaS.
“What excited me about SaaS was simple,” he says. “Massive value for a tiny price, and the ability to help thousands of people at the same time. That scalability — that’s what got me.”
For someone who had spent six years figuring out how to make people care about a brand, SaaS felt like the natural arena. Not just to market, but eventually, to build.
Delivering at the Highest Level
Today, Shahzada leads a focused content team working with a global EdTech SaaS company currently generating over one million dollars in monthly revenue. Every single month, his team drives over 150 million organic views for the brand — not through paid campaigns, not through shortcuts, but through content strategy built on six years of ground-level experience.
The results speak the language every SaaS founder understands: reach, trust, and conversion.
This is not a coincidence. It is the output of someone who has spent years studying what makes content work, not in classrooms, but in the field — testing, failing, adapting, and going again.
The Next Chapter: A Vision
Shahzada’s vision goes far beyond marketing.
He sees a world where technology is not just a corporate tool — but a daily companion that helps real people live better, work smarter, and break free from limitations that formal education, bad habits, and inefficient systems have kept them stuck in for years.
The problems he wants to tackle are not boardroom problems. They are human problems. Productivity. Habits. Fitness. Career growth. The kind of problems millions of people face every single day but never find a tool truly built for them.
“SaaS is not just for businesses,” he says. “It should make life better — for the student, the professional, the person trying to build a better routine. That is the kind of tech I want to build.”
The roadmap is not one product. It is many. Each one small, sharp, and powerful. Together, a body of work that reflects one consistent belief — that the best technology does not make you dependent on it. It makes you more capable without it.
The Philosophy That Drives It All
Ask Shahzada what separates those who make it from those who don’t, and his answer is disarmingly simple:
“A winner is nothing but a loser who tried one more time every single time he failed. If you don’t have the quality to give up, you are not going to fail. ”
He is equally clear about the trap he wants other young entrepreneurs to avoid:
“Don’t get too attached to a certain idea, a certain company, or a certain career because nothing is permanent. Things change. And that’s okay. At the end of the day, what matters is how useful you are being in someone’s life. Regardless of what business you build or what startup you launch, provide value, be useful to people, and the money will follow.”
For a young man who started with nothing but a camera, an idea, and a city no one had heard of, Shahzada is only just getting started.
