From ₹100 in Pocket to UK Company: The Founder's Path
The story of how a college dropout from Pune who ran away with ₹100 built a UK-registered publishing infrastructure company.
The Beginning
In 2016, a 19-year-old ran away from Thane with ₹100 in his pocket. He ate vada pav, bought a train ticket to Pune, and started looking for ways to earn money.
He found Amazon KDP. He invented a writing method he called "The Vomit Method." He wrote 100+ books in a few years. He earned over ₹1 crore before age 25.
Then he lost it all.
The Fall
₹2 crore spent — more than double what he earned. An MLM scam. Stock market losses (₹20 lakhs in DHFL, which collapsed). A Jordan trip that cost ₹16 lakhs. Generous spending on friends and a relationship that didn't work out.His father sacrificed retirement savings to clear the debt.
Then Amazon blocked his account — false accusations, ₹25 lakhs in unpaid royalties. Draft2Digital rejected his catalogue: "We are a small company for small authors. We cannot support such a huge catalogue."
For four years (2020-2024), the 1,500+ books sat in the dark.
The Phoenix
In 2024, AI technology made restarting possible. What had been an impossible manual task — restructuring, reformatting, and republishing 1,500+ books — became feasible with AI assistance.
At 28, Atharva Inamdar returned to college (B.Com Marketing, ASM CSIT College, SPPU, Pune) and simultaneously began rebuilding:
- The Book Nexus — Indian proprietorship for publishing operations
- atharvainamdar.com — Author platform with 68 books readable online
- BogaDoga Ltd — UK private limited company (registered August 2025) for international infrastructure
Why BogaDoga Exists
BogaDoga exists because the founder learned a brutal lesson: platform dependency kills.
When Amazon blocked his account, everything disappeared. When Draft2Digital rejected him, there was no backup. The books, the revenue, the audience — all gone because they belonged to someone else's platform.
BogaDoga is the infrastructure that ensures this never happens again. Self-hosted. Self-owned. Zero platform risk. The archive belongs to the author, published through entities the author controls.
That's not a business strategy. That's survival instinct formalised as a company.
— BogaDoga LtdBogaDoga Ltd
Publishing & Digital Innovation, London