{"id":18732,"date":"2021-04-06T14:23:39","date_gmt":"2021-04-06T13:23:39","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/bitcoinprbuzz.com\/?post_type=blog&p=18732"},"modified":"2022-01-31T08:36:03","modified_gmt":"2022-01-31T08:36:03","slug":"why-bitcoin-pr-buzz-is-my-family","status":"publish","type":"blog","link":"https:\/\/wire.bitcoinprbuzz.com\/blog\/why-bitcoin-pr-buzz-is-my-family\/","title":{"rendered":"Why Bitcoin PR Buzz Is My Family"},"content":{"rendered":"
Note: this blog post expresses the author’s personal opinions and does not necessarily represent the views of Bitcoin PR Buzz.<\/strong><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Getting fired was the best thing to have ever happened to me.<\/em><\/p>\n The summer of 2017 was starting out to be the highlight of my career. I had just landed a job as the head of HR for the largest furniture manufacturer in my city.<\/p>\n As an engineer who had migrated to Human Resources, the pay was fantastic considering I had no formal HR certification and the head office was just 15 minutes drive from my home. I did not only feel like a big shot, I was <\/em>the big shot.<\/p>\n Yet just three months down the road, I was fired for failing to deliver on the unrealistic demands of the management.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Once I got over the initial shock (I had never been fired before in my life), I got right down to job hunting. I had a couple of months of savings and I believed that was enough time to get a job, even a temporary low-paying one, to get the ball rolling. I couldn\u2019t have been more wrong.<\/p>\n Four months later, I was still searching and was bankrupt. I would lock myself in my room for days, contacting everyone I knew, begging them to hire me on the lowest position in HR. It would have been a disgraceful fall from being a lead to the least but it was acceptable. I registered on numerous job portals, applying for every vacancy I would even remotely fit in. Unfortunately, there wasn\u2019t any demand for an engineer in HR.<\/p>\n One time, as I purchased groceries (my wife paid for it from her meager salary), I realized I had not eaten anything for more than a day because whatever I could scrounge up would be for my family. The cheapest thing I could get for myself was a small bag of chips, costing less than half a dollar. As I sat in the car going through the tiny snack, I was crying as each chip I ate was a morsel stolen from my then three-year-old daughter.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n As a kid, I had always been excited about technology. Raised in the pre-internet generation, I would go through every magazine and newspaper\u2019s technology section. As I browsed different websites for job ads, I would try to distract myself from chronic depression by browsing tech platforms. The meteoric rise of Bitcoin, an elusive digital currency, caught my eye.<\/p>\n A couple of weeks later, I felt I had enough knowledge gathered to be somewhat of an authority on it. A bit of coaxing by a relative and a little Googling revealed that top freelancing websites had a huge market for content writers in that area. Long story short, I found I had a natural talent for creating content that blockchain developers and platform teams found good enough. By the turn of the new year, I was making enough money to at least feed my family.<\/p>\n The real big break came at the start of February of 2018 when that very person who coaxed me to check out cryptocurrencies asked me if I could do a high-quality article for him as he was overloaded.<\/p>\n <\/p>\nWings Of Icarus<\/span><\/h2>\n
Blockchain Exposure<\/span><\/h2>\n
Bitcoin PR Buzz: My New Family<\/span><\/h2>\n