If you’ve been following my journey on SaasSkul, you probably noticed something unusual: after an energetic run of daily challenge posts, updates, and “build in public” logs, things suddenly went silent here around the end of February 2026. No new articles, no fresh challenge days, no big announcements. From the outside, it may have looked like I stopped. In reality, I did the opposite. I went heads‑down.
This post is my honest update on where I’ve been, what I’ve been working on since 24 February 2026, and why that silence was a deliberate choice and not a sign of giving up. If you’re an entrepreneur, freelancer, or late‑starter like me trying to rebuild online income from scratch, you’ll probably recognise this phase: the shift from “posting every move” to “quietly fixing the foundation.”
The Last Visible Days: Public Challenge, Daily Logs, and SaasSkul Momentum
Before the silence, I was deep into my public challenge: “From Zero at 60 to My First 100 Dollars Online Again.” I used SaasSkul as my public notebook, documenting:
- Day‑by‑day activities: posting articles, sharing on Facebook, LinkedIn, Instagram, and experimenting with small offers.
- Market recon: reading 20+ posts at a time, understanding how many people are struggling to get real work and real clients.
- Early collaborations: connecting with a few serious people to explore building a small “lead syndicate” that focuses on quality, not just dumping email lists.
By Day 6, the pattern was clear: the outside world mostly saw “quiet” results, but internally a lot was shifting. I decided to complete older, half‑built projects like BlueOceanHub.info so they could finally be used as real assets instead of unfinished ideas. That move alone changed how I think about content, products, and public challenges.
SaasSkul was doing its job: it forced me to show up, to write, to think publicly. But I also realised that posting every single day can become a trap if it starts replacing the real work of building shippable products.
The Pivot: From Daily Posts to Deep Work
Around 24 February 2026, I made a conscious shift. Instead of pushing one more “Day X” challenge update just to keep the streak alive, I moved my main focus into three areas:
- Finishing and positioning my existing platforms
- Overhauling my company formation/SIC project
- Doubling down on content and outreach for my education projects
This meant fewer front‑facing updates on SaasSkul, but a lot more backend work, strategy, and implementation across several sites.
For example, I started extending the discipline of daily logs into structured build cycles: not just “I posted on social today,” but “I completed 85% of a course‑ready site,” “I fixed the funnel structure,” “I added features that match real agency‑level platforms.” That required long, uninterrupted blocks of time that don’t mix well with constant public posting.
18‑Hour Days: Building Funnels, Features, and Foundations
In March 2026, my schedule became brutally simple: 18‑hour workdays focused on shipping a funnel that can realistically get me to my first 100 customers and 10 affiliates in the next three months. No hype, no shortcuts.
The core of that work has been my UK company formation and consulting funnel. I’ve been:
- Designing a clear hero section that speaks to non‑resident founders, freelancers, and agency owners.
- Adding a company name search and SIC code suggestion system directly under the hero, so visitors can immediately start “doing,” not just reading.
- Planning content around SIC codes, not as boring compliance, but as an opportunity map for people who want to escape the typical “Amazon/Etsy/KDP only” mindset and explore underused business models.
Most formation agents treat SIC codes as a checkbox. I want to turn them into a content library that helps people discover fresh, less saturated ways to build digital and service businesses. That means writing, structuring, and eventually publishing a whole series of deep‑dive posts, guides, and examples. It’s not something you can fake in a weekend.
All of this required me to temporarily stop “performing” on SaasSkul and instead behave like a quiet operator: build, test, refine, repeat.
Taleem360, Backlinks, and the Education Side of My Work
While this technical and strategic work was happening on the company formation side, I also put serious energy into my education projects, especially Taleem360. Many of you know me for SaaS, scraping, and automation, but education has always been a big part of my digital footprint.
Taleem360 today represents:
- A large, growing library of textbooks, helping books, notes, past papers, pairing schemes, and test prep resources for students across Pakistan and beyond.
- A foundation for an education ERP vision that can serve schools globally, not just as a “PDF site” but as a proper management and learning platform.
During this “silent” period on SaasSkul, I:
- Sent outreach and backlink emails to education sites, tutors, and organisations like Educations.pk and Pakistan Academy, positioning Taleem360 as a valuable partner for students and institutions.
- Clarified the messaging: Taleem360 is not just a notes provider; it’s evolving into a broader education platform and, in parallel, I’m aligning another ERP‑focused brand for school management.
- Used these conversations to understand what schools, tutors, and students actually need, so future features and content are grounded in real demand rather than assumptions.
In short, while SaasSkul went quiet, I was in the background building relationships, strengthening domains, and giving my education projects a stronger strategic direction.
Why I Chose Not to Cross‑Post Everything to SaasSkul
You might ask: if I’m doing so much, why not just keep posting it all here? It’s a fair question.
The honest answer: not every type of work makes a good daily public update.
A lot of what I’ve been doing the last few weeks has been:
- Long, repetitive implementation sprints (tweaking funnels, testing flows, fixing tiny UX details).
- Sensitive experimentation (pricing, offer design, and affiliate terms) that I don’t want to publish prematurely.
- Partner and backlink outreach that involves other people’s brands, which I prefer to summarise after the dust settles, not during.
I didn’t want SaasSkul to turn into a stream of “Today I fixed one more button” type posts. Instead, I chose to step back, build properly, and then come back with a clearer story:
- Here’s what changed.
- Here’s what I shipped.
- Here’s how it fits into the bigger “From Zero at 60” journey.
This article is the first step of that comeback.
What This Means for SaasSkul Going Forward
Silence on a platform can mean two things: either the creator quit, or they’re working on something bigger than the next post. In my case, it’s the second.
Here’s how I plan to use SaasSkul in the next phase:
- Fewer, deeper updates: Instead of daily logs, I’ll publish more substantial posts that summarise phases of work: product milestones, funnel changes, content libraries, and real results.
- Case‑study style content: I want to show how specific moves – like adding SIC code helpers, building backlinks for Taleem360, or structuring a formation package – actually impact leads, conversions, and revenue.
- Open‑book lessons for late‑starters: I’ll keep the original spirit of the “From Zero at 60” challenge alive, but in a more strategic, less noisy format. That means sharing both wins and mistakes, but with more context and data.
If you’re still here, reading this, it means you’re interested in more than motivational quotes. You want to see the real work. That’s exactly what I intend to share.
A Note to My Regular Readers and Followers
If you checked SaasSkul in the past few weeks and felt disappointed or worried that I had abandoned the journey, thank you. It means this project matters to you.
I want you to know:
- I haven’t stopped. In fact, I’m working harder and more deliberately than before, often on 18‑hour days to get the foundations right.
- My “absence” here was a strategic pause, not a retreat. I chose to invest time in building assets – funnels, content libraries, partnerships – that will make future posts more valuable and grounded.
- When I publish from now on, I want each article to feel like a proper chapter in this journey, not just a checkmark for “I posted today.”
If you’re also in a season where you’re working quietly, away from the algorithm and away from daily likes, I hope this post gives you permission to do the same – as long as you are truly building, not hiding.
Closing: From Quiet Work Back to Public Building
From 24 February 2026 till today, my main focus has not been on posting at SaasSkul, but on building the underlying machines: a more powerful company formation funnel, a richer SIC content library, stronger education assets via Taleem360, and real‑world partnerships. That required me to go quiet here for a while.
I’m now ready to reconnect these two sides: the quiet builder and the public storyteller. In the coming weeks, expect more detailed breakdowns of what I’ve built, why I built it this way, and how you can reuse those lessons in your own projects – whether you’re 20, 40, or, like me, restarting at 60.
Thank you for your patience, your trust, and your messages during this “silent” period. The journey continues – just with stronger foundations than before.
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