Puja Prasad is a LinkedIn creator based in Gurugram, Haryana, India with 19,718 followers, focused on Finance Education, Finance Tips, and Business Strategy content. Posts average 172 likes and 1.1% engagement. Has worked with brands including ASBL, Stable Money, Dot, Stable Money, and Honasa on marketing campaigns.
🤝
9% of my posts go viral. Yours could be next
Ready to collaborate?Let's give your brand a boost with some creative ways & authentic marketing!
dummy@mail.com
+91 9999999999
🔒
🫱🏼🫲🏽
Profile Highlights
A quick glance at some key stats
19,718Total Followers
173Avg Likes
51Avg Comments
1.2%Avg Eng.
7Past Collabs
💭
Engagement Over Time
Visualization of how my engagement on posts has evolved
LatestOldest
📆
My Activity & Engagement Calendar
Visualizing posting frequency and audience engagement over the last 6 months
Influencer Activity & Engagement Calendar
Visualizing posting frequency and audience engagement over the last 6 months
Engagement:
Low
Below Avg
Above Avg
High
February 2026
M
T
W
T
F
S
S
March 2026
M
T
W
T
F
S
S
April 2026
M
T
W
T
F
S
S
May 2026
M
T
W
T
F
S
S
June 2026
M
T
W
T
F
S
S
July 2026
M
T
W
T
F
S
S
Feb 2026
Mar 2026
Apr 2026
May 2026
Jun 2026
Jul 2026
M
T
W
T
F
S
S
M
T
W
T
F
S
S
M
T
W
T
F
S
S
M
T
W
T
F
S
S
M
T
W
T
F
S
S
M
T
W
T
F
S
S
Hover over cells to see post details and engagement metricsTap cells for details
You paid for 2GB. Used 1.5GB. And somehow… the remaining just vanished.
That’s what Raghav Chadha questioned in Parliament, comparing it to a petrol pump taking back unused fuel.
If something is paid for, why should it disappear just because the day ends?
Three ideas stood out:
1. Unused data should roll over so people can use it when they actually need it
2. Unused data could turn into value like discounts or credits on the next recharge
3. Unused data should be treated as an asset that can be shared with family or friends
He also described data as “digital oxygen” in today’s world. And that raises a simple thought:
If we’ve already paid for it, should we ever lose it just because time ran out?
Life tested her in ways most people would not survive, yet she rose higher than anyone imagined.
Droupadi Murmu was born in a small tribal village in Odisha, far from power, privilege or opportunity. She began with a simple life, worked as a teacher, served as a clerk, and built everything through persistence.
Then life took away almost everything she loved. She lost her husband, her sons and her mother, pain that could have ended anyone’s journey.
But her story did not stop there.
She kept moving, kept serving, stepped into public life, became Governor of Jharkhand, and went on to become India’s first tribal President.
From a woman fighting personal storms in silence to leading the world’s largest democracy, her journey shows how far strength and purpose can take someone.
She once fought to hold life together. Today, she stands at the highest office of the nation.
That is not just a rise. That is history.
Most people don’t lack money. They lack the confidence to start.
We keep waiting for the right time, more savings, or less risk. But confidence doesn...
Honasa Consumer Ltd. ’s 2024–25 report caught my attention because it’s not the usual “here’s what we did” story.
Ghazal Alagh and Varun Alagh are cl...
Lately I’ve been trying to stay updated on what’s happening in the world without getting overwhelmed, annoyed, or lost in 47 tabs.
That’s when I foun...
Lately I’ve been trying to stay updated on what’s happening in the world without getting overwhelmed, annoyed, or lost in 47 tabs.
That’s when I foun...
Budget sheets? Crystal clear. My lenses? Not so much.
A few weeks back, I was deep in a P&L model when I realized I was squinting harder than analyzi...
Let’s be real, adulting is a lot.
Budgets, bills, saving, investing… it gets overwhelming.
But every now and then, there's that one simple move that ...