I write content that ranks on Google, campaigns that get results, and pages that turn visitors into customers.
WORKED AND TRUSTED BY TEAMS AT
Hey, I'm
Gopalkrishna
I turn complex ideas, technical products, and quiet small-town beginnings into content that connects, ranks, and drives results.
Today I work as a Technical Content Writer, creating documentation, marketing content, and digital assets across Salesforce, MuleSoft, Salesforce Marketing Cloud, and Nonprofit Cloud environments. Along the way, I’ve written content that’s ranked on the first page of Google, driven double-digit growth in organic traffic, and helped brands go from unknown to unmissable, one well-researched, well-written piece at a time.
I’ve worked with SMEs, marketing teams, and business leaders to turn complicated ideas into content that people actually want to read, and that search engines want to rank.
Roots
My Story
I was born in 1993 in a small village near Tirunelveli, into a family of farmers. We didn’t have much, but we had land, hard work, and a lot of patience. The kind of patience that only agriculture teaches you.
Growing up, I watched my family work the fields season after season, waiting for the harvest, dealing with what nature decided to give or take away. It taught me something early on: results take time, and you don’t stop working just because things are uncertain.
Costly Lesson
My First Business (And My First Failure)
Like a lot of people from small towns with big dreams, I wanted to build something of my own. So I started a travel business.
It was small, it was scrappy, and for a while, it felt like it was going somewhere. Then one day, disaster struck. The car we used for the business met with an accident, and just like that, the business I had put my hopes into came to a stop.
It wasn’t easy. But looking back, that failure taught me more about business than any success could have. I learned that you can lose money, you can lose a vehicle, you can lose a business, but if you don’t lose the will to keep going, you’ll find your next path.
Discovery
Falling into digital marketing
After the travel business shut down, I found myself searching for what to do next. That search led me to something I didn’t expect to fall in love with: digital marketing.
I started reading everything I could get my hands on. Blogs by Sourav Jain, Deepak Kanagaraju, and Harsh Agarwal became my unofficial classroom. There was no formal course, no mentor sitting next to me. Just late nights, curiosity, and a growing obsession with understanding how content and search actually worked.
My first real shot at writing professionally came in an unlikely place, a local Tamil newspaper, where I took on a freelance project writing content in Tamil for the local town audience. It wasn’t glamorous. But it was proof that people would pay me to write. That was enough to keep me going.
New Hope
The CSS Corp Chapter
Before I became a full-time content writer, I spent time at CSS Corp (now Movate) as a Technical Support Engineer, handling chat and voice support for customers. It doesn’t sound like a content job, but it shaped me into one.
I ended up earning the highest number of CSAT (Customer Satisfaction) scores in my team for the month, simply by focusing on how I communicated: clearly, patiently, and with the customer’s actual problem in mind. That experience quietly planted a seed. I realized I genuinely enjoyed the process of putting the right words together to solve someone’s problem. My passion for writing got its first real boost right there, on a support chat screen.
Proof in Words
From Support to Sales to Storytelling
I moved into business development next, first at Photon Infotech and later at Stan Ventures, roles that had nothing to do with “content” on paper, but everything to do with it in practice.
At Photon, I still remember cracking the first level of a deal with McKinsey & Company, purely through a personalized, well-written cold email. No fancy pitch deck. No warm introduction. Just words, chosen carefully, that got a global consulting giant to respond. That moment gave me something I still carry with me: proof that real, thoughtful writing can open doors that seem impossible to open.
Those years in business development taught me persuasion, audience psychology, and how to write with a purpose. Skills I’d later realize are the backbone of good marketing content.
Turning Point
The Social Company
One of the biggest turning points in my career was joining The Social Company.
That’s where I stopped thinking like just a content writer and started thinking like a marketer.
I had the opportunity to create LinkedIn content for founders, executives, and B2B brands, while leading a talented team of content writers. Every campaign taught me something new about branding, storytelling, audience psychology, and how consistent content can shape the way people perceive a business.
More importantly, I learned that good content isn’t about writing more.
It’s about saying the right thing, to the right audience, at the right time.
Unbroken
A Setback
Then, in 2025, life threw me something I never saw coming. I met with a severe accident that fractured my spine and both sides of my pelvis. For six months, I was completely bed ridden, unable to do much more than lie still and heal.
It would have been easy to let that year take everything from me. It didn’t. Even flat on my back, my mind kept circling back to content, to SEO, to the next campaign I wanted to build. My body needed time to recover, but my passion for digital marketing and content writing never once faded.
An accident can take away your ability to walk for a while. It can’t take away your will to create.
New Chapter
Stepping Into Enterprise Tech: Brite Systems
I joined Brite Systems, and that opened an entirely new chapter in my career.
For the first time, I stepped into the world of enterprise technology: Salesforce, AI, and digital transformation. I worked on product pages, technical documentation, case studies, landing pages, email campaigns, LinkedIn content, event marketing, and thought leadership for government and nonprofit organizations.
It challenged me to understand complex technologies and translate them into content that business leaders could easily understand and trust. That experience completely changed the way I approach content.
In fact, some of my work at Brite Systems happened right from that bed, propped up with a back support, laptop balanced in front of me. If I couldn’t stand, I could still write.
Today, I don't just think about writing. I think about business goals. User intent. Search behavior.
And how every piece of content can contribute to meaningful growth.