Byline over blue tick. Depth over dopamine.

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Banu Mushtaq isn’t trending. She doesn’t tweet. With just 108 followers on X (formerly Twitter), her online presence is barely a whisper. And yet—this Booker Prize-winning author, with 12 powerful books to her name, has altered conversations, shaped thought, and left an imprint on generations of readers. Her story is a quiet rebellion against the myth of virality.

In today’s digital echo chamber, we’re told that influence means numbers: likes, shares, retweets, reach. But real impact doesn’t flash—it echoes. It lingers. It grows over time.

Mushtaq’s silence online is not a void; it’s a statement. Her work lives offline, in pages dog-eared by readers, in minds shifted by her stories. She reminds us that the work matters more than the noise.

For journalists, writers, and creators watching their thoughtful posts go unnoticed while fluff content dominates the feed—take heart. Algorithms are designed for engagement, not excellence. They can’t measure your nuance, your integrity, your courage.

True journalism isn’t measured in likes—it’s measured in consequences.

Did it reveal something hidden? Did it speak truth to power? Did it move someone to think, or act, or feel?

So don’t chase virality. Chase value. Chase truth. Whether you’re crafting a feature, writing fiction, or producing longform investigative work, trust the process. The right readers always find their way.

A blue tick might give you credibility for a moment. But a byline, grounded in truth and purpose, builds legacy. It’s not about being everywhere—it’s about mattering somewhere, deeply.

Because in the end, it’s not how loud your voice was—it’s how long your words are remembered.

Write like it matters. Because it does.