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Welcome to February 2026’s Monthly Memo. If you’re new here, each month I share my income, expenses and what I’m working on now. In today’s memo:
Grab a cup of tea, let’s dive in. The Freedom MetreWhen I was a dentist, I hated how my income was tied to my time. As a writer, I began tracking leveraged income (scalable assets) because what you measure, you improve. I started the Freedom Metre in January 2023. I’d made $89,360.77, and 35.82% was low leverage. Today’s figures: At the start of Jan, I put a stop to all revenue-generating activities that would take time from the book. This initially caused me a lot of anxiety. But I’ve been thinking a lot about Naval Ravikant’s advice on making money in bursts: "If you're willing to bleed a little bit every day but in exchange you'll win big later, you will do better. That is, by the way, entrepreneurship. Entrepreneurs bleed every day. They're not making money, they're losing money, they're constantly stressed out, all the responsibility is upon them, but when they win they win big.” This was easier to execute when I was starting my business, because there were no opportunities to make money. But saying no gets harder the more leverage you build. This means the reward for doing so only increases. I’m convinced the book is a great bet. Not just financially, but for my life, too. I want to produce something I am truly proud of, and that means making sacrifices. That said, we still made over 5 figures this month. Let's take a look at the numbers, and I’ll explain how. February’s income:Gross: $12,863.19Expenses: $6,353.34Net: $6,509.85Income breakdown
The partnership program is my 1-1 high-ticket offer. I launched it officially 3 months ago, but ran a beta 12 months ago. My first client went from zero clients and no plan, to scaling an offer he enjoys and writing about ideas he believes in (recently he landed two $3k packages in 2 days—I was more happy for his wins than my own!). He was happy to renew. I had doubled my prices since we started ($10k for 12 months, to $100 for 6 months), so we met halfway with $7.5k I’ve loved working 1-1 with people. Some are experts, some hadn’t written a word before we began together. The range of problems is fascinating, and I learn more about my readers every day. I’ll share more about how I built my program soon. One lesson I’ve learned though is the importance of boundaries. I want to do my best work for my clients, so I set a cap at 5. I tell them I am available every day, but only after my writing is done. This is a great win-win, and something I will continue to offer in the future. (You should be unreachable for at least half your day.) If you think you might be interested in working with me, you can hop on the waitlist by clicking here. The product revenue has come almost entirely from my welcome sequence. I set up a small ‘book funnel’ with product upsells, and this has let me advertise in newsletters such as Justin Welsh and Jay Clause at a profit. It’s been nice to not rely on social media for newsletter growth, which I’m sure you can imagine. Expenses: $6,353.34Notable Expenses:
My monthly running costs are around $7k. This includes paying my lovely VA, Vim, $2k/month, advertising on meta, and software. $7k might sound like a lot to some (and not much to many), but it feels about right as a bigger ‘solopreneur’. Every investment is designed to save time and maximise impact. Audience:Total Followers: 274,842Followers gained: 1,654I made a decision last month to focus almost solely on X and YouTube. This was partly because I detest social media and wanted to focus on my book. But also because I realised I actually really enjoy X. The only reason I pulled away from it was because it is harder to grow there. But when I removed my desire from results and started having more fun, it picked up. This is a lesson I am constantly relearning. Written social content now takes around 2 hours per month. I’ve sent 2-3 emails for 5 years now and haven’t missed a day of social media content. Vim has been reposting, reusing, and redistributing old ideas. I just do quick edits and hit OK. This has freed up more space to focus on YouTube. We crossed 1,000 subscribers, and this week, I had my first semi-viral video. It’s a lot of fun to start a new platform. But only when I treat it like a game. With any project now, I constantly remind myself: the purpose is play. Let’s talk about cleaning your email list. Newsletter:Total readers: 25,760New subscribers: 1,264Unsubscribes: 462Net growth: 802Every 6 months, we run an automated list clean—removing subscribers who haven’t opened in 3 months. This involves two weeks of ‘recovery emails’. When my VA texted saying 10,000 readers had been removed, I felt like she chopped off my left leg. The pain is mostly my ego, but also that I am not sure if it was the right move. Standard advice is to clean your list regularly, as unopens can impact deliverability. But I have realised that I, as a subscriber to other lists, go cold for long periods of time. Eventually, a subject line catches my eye, and I am delighted to dive through someone’s backlog. I also feel gutted when I realise I no longer receive someone’s emails. I saw Daniel Throssell, an email writer I respect, send an email explaining why he doesn’t clean his list. Ben Settle said this, too. I’m not sure what my future response will be, but the more I build my business, the more I operate under one framework: Market the way you like to be marketed to. So we might relax on the list cleaning for a while. On a positive note, we’re back over 1k new subs per month, and I improved my welcome sequence, so the unsubscribe rate is lower too. Can I help you build your business?I’ve had a lot of questions recently around business models and execution. In 2 weeks, I will be holding a workshop for entrepreneurial writers who want to set up a systemised (and semi-automated) approach to attracting an audience, earning trust, and building quality offers people want. If this sounds like your cup of tea, click here to hop on the waitlist. Otherwise, cheers for reading. Here’s a round-up of some of the previous content this month: Some stuff you might’ve missed:
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On a mission to become a better writer, thinker, and entrepreneur • Ex-dentist, now building an internet business (at ~$500k/year)
Before we dive in: Turn Every Customer Win Into $5k-$20k With These 4 Email Templates Francis Nayan runs a newsletter to help you make more money and enjoy more freedom through monetizing emails. When you join today, he'll send 4 high performing case study emails he uses to turn every client win into more sales (so you can too). SWIPE THESE EMAIL TEMPLATES Read this on our website instead This week, I asked Carolina, the girl I am seeing, to be my girlfriend. We met 4 months ago in Iguazu...
Before we dive in: I crossed my first 1,000 subscribers on YouTube! Thank you if you’ve been watching. It’s been really fun starting something from scratch. I’ll share some lessons on this next week, but I’d love to extend an invitation to subscribe for now. I share advice I wish I heard when I started writing online. 1-2 videos per week. Ruggedly handsome, charming British man. What more could you want? CHECK IT OUT HERE Read this on our website instead “I need 5-6 hours a day for my book.”...
Before we dive in: Become a better storyteller Lawrence Yeo from More To That is one of my favourite writers. Why? Because of his storytelling. He is amazing at captivating his audience, and with the rise of AI, you must be, too. I’ve doubled down on storytelling this year because connection is everything. Lawrence created a free 10-day email course sharing his best ideas. It’s great (I’m taking it, too). SIGN UP HERE Read this on our website instead I just crossed 1,000 subscribers on...