I wrote my first blog post on September 17, 2008, five days into a market crisis that changed the way I thought about economies, markets and business, and I posted it on Google Blogger. In the fourteen years since, I have added 635 more posts, on topics ranging the spectrum in finance, and I am grateful for all of the people who have read or browsed through these posts (21.6 million, if the Google counter is to be believed). In the course of writing these posts, I have been forced to rethink and reexamine my core beliefs about markets, and frame my thoughts in a way that appeal to a broader audience. My posts are long and verbose, and I am sorry for that failing, but the 9000+ pages that they comprise have given birth to at least two books, allowed me to update my other eight and given me the raw material for my teaching. In short, almost every new idea that I have had, every company that I have valued and every one of my investment thoughts in the last fifteen years has shown up first on my blog.
Hello Sir, you mentioned there are many writers you like to read on substack. I am in the search of those who write like you (cover topics or events comprehensively in a detailed manner). Looking forward to your recommendations.
Hello, thank you for sharing your experience. I’m considering making the transition from Blogger + Mailchimp to Substack. When you say that people who like Blogger can continue to read there, do you mean that you publish each post to Blogger and Substack, or is Blogger at this point only hosting your archive?
Welcome to Substack! I look forward to reading your blogs in the 21st century.
Kaboom!
Honestly great move. Blogger was good in its time but today you needed to be on a more modern platform.
Hey Aswath nice to see you on the platform. We miss you here in Chatham!!
Hello Sir, you mentioned there are many writers you like to read on substack. I am in the search of those who write like you (cover topics or events comprehensively in a detailed manner). Looking forward to your recommendations.
Hello, thank you for sharing your experience. I’m considering making the transition from Blogger + Mailchimp to Substack. When you say that people who like Blogger can continue to read there, do you mean that you publish each post to Blogger and Substack, or is Blogger at this point only hosting your archive?
Thanks.