I've been called many things in the last six years — content strategist, growth marketer, prompt engineer, COO, AI trainer.
The titles changed. The mission didn't: help people build businesses they can actually run, with tools they can actually use.
How I went from content marketing to AI training — and why I built a bilingual practice serving creators in two markets at once.
I've been called many things in the last six years — content strategist, growth marketer, prompt engineer, COO, AI trainer.
The titles changed. The mission didn't: help people build businesses they can actually run, with tools they can actually use.
I grew up in Kanpur watching my father, Yaser Shamim, build and rebuild businesses across affiliate marketing, adtech, and digital agencies. Numbers were dinner conversation. Funnels were bedtime stories.
By the time I finished my education, I knew two things with certainty: I wanted to build, not work for, a company. And I wanted to work where the gaps were — places where the demand was real but the supply was either generic or absent.
"The Indian creator economy was exploding, but the training serving it was still imported from Silicon Valley — overpriced, English-only, and disconnected from how Indians actually consume content."
Those years were spent in the trenches — running campaigns, analyzing what actually moved metrics, and learning a hard truth: most online education sells motivation, not method. People paid for hope. Very few people paid for a working system.
ChatGPT broke into the public consciousness. Midjourney followed. Suddenly every content creator I knew was asking the same question: "How do I actually use this?"
The answers they were getting were either too technical (engineer-led tutorials) or too superficial (influencer hype). Nothing in between. So I started teaching — small workshops first, then cohorts, then in-house programs at SparkUp Creative LLC, where I serve as Co-Founder & COO.
I earned my certification as an AI Trainer and was further trained by an industry leader in content creation. Not because the certificate is the achievement — but because in a market full of self-declared experts, credentials become a way to signal: I take this seriously enough to be tested on it.
"I stopped teaching tools. I started teaching workflows. The difference is everything."
By early 2026, the prompt-selling market had hit its ceiling: $200 PDFs that went stale in 90 days, no support, no updates. Buyer resentment was building. The opportunity wasn't to compete on price — it was to operate above the entire category.
CreatorOS launched as the answer: credentialed, niche-specific, quarterly-updated AI workflow systems built for content creators. Three tiers, six product lines, two languages, one ecosystem. Backed by SparkUp Creative's six-year operational track record.
This site — areebacreates.com — is the personal authority brand that connects everything. CreatorOS is the product. SparkUp is the engine. Areeba Hasan is the operator. The three are deliberately separate, deliberately connected.
The most interesting people I know aren't single-track operators. I write, I research, I plan ventures that have nothing to do with AI — because cross-domain thinking is the only real moat in a fast-moving market.
A few things on my desk right now, alongside the AI work: