S

Sakshi

Student | Building codes & chasing dreams

Student | Building codes & chasing dreams

Endorsements

Recently Active

About Me

Dronacharya group of institutions

Class of 2027

Greater Noida, Uttar Pradesh, India

Interests

Product management
Business
Product development

Interview Questions

BLACKBOX AI

Content Growth At Blackbox Ai

BLACKBOX AI Profile Image

What strategies do you use to make content go viral?

[18:19, 9/9/2025] Cassiopeia: I don't treat virality as luck - i treat it is as a formula . My strategy has its three pillars 1. Viral psychological hooks: every viral post start with an emotional trigger: relatability, surprises or status. for a students that could be the 'struggle of 2 a.m. and coding session'. for developers, it could be 'that one bug you can't fix'. I always design the first 3 seconds (headline, hook, visual) to spark curiosity or recognition 2. Platform native formats- I never repurpose blindly. what goes viral on X ( threads) it's not the same as Instagram reels. i study platform- specific trends and then adapt the content e.g. coding memes as carousels on LinkedIn vs 15s skits on reels

[21:06, 9/9/2025] Cassiopeia: 3. Iteration Engine- I treat content like experiments. i post multiple formats around the same idea, track engagements( saves, shares, watch time) and double down on what hits. this lets me scale from 1 viral post to 10, repeating the DNA To stand out, I'd also tap into community- powered virality: inviting students/developers to share their own stories then featuring them. when people see themselves in content, they share it which multiplies reach organically. My goals isn't just one viral post, but building a system where content has a repeatable chance to resonate and spread

BLACKBOX AI

Content Growth At Blackbox Ai

BLACKBOX AI Profile Image

How would you create content that resonates with a student and developer audience?

To create content that resonates with students and developers, i would start by understanding their daily struggles and goals. students often look for motivation, career tips, and relatable stories, while developers want practical coding insights, new tools, and a bit of fun to break the monotony. I'd mix educational content (like quick coding tips, how to threads, tool breakdowns) with relatable and entertaining formats ( memes, storytelling, short videos). for example, a post like '5 coding mistakes every student developer makes ( and how to fix them)' or a funny reel comparing 'exam deadlines vs coding deadlines connects instantly. To stand out, I'd also use interactive formats like polls, mini coding challenges, or community showcase letting students and developers see their work featured. this way the content doesn't just talk to them, it talks with them. My focus would be to keep the tone authentic, add value in every piece and create a space where students and developers feel represented and inspired

Your Privacy

We use cookies on our site to enhance your user experience. By clicking Accept below, you agree to our use of cookies.

For more detailed information, please refer to our Worker and Company Terms of Service as well as our Privacy Policy.

To opt-out of our use of cookies, click here.