When I published my first book, I thought it would change everything.
Spoiler: It didn’t.
No flood of readers.
No media calls.
No client inquiries.
But something changed after Book #3.
And then again after Book #5.
By Book #8, I noticed a pattern:
– I was showing up in Google searches.
– My name was getting mentioned in comments.
– People were quoting my work before they met me.
That’s when I realized—books don’t just sell.
They brand you.
Each book became a digital breadcrumb leading back to me.
Each one said: “Hey Google, Neera Mahajan knows her stuff.”
So Google created a profile page for me.
I don’t even need a website now.
Google has put all my work under my name.
So here’s what I’ve learned:
Write what you want to be known for
Your book topic will become your Google identity.
Don’t chase trends.
Your book should age well, like a good wine.
(Or at least, a decent Shiraz.)
Think beyond the book.
Chop it into blogs, quotes, podcasts.
Be everywhere in your niche.
If you want people to find you
(clients, partners, media)
give Google something worth indexing.
For me, that started with a book.
And then another.
And another.