The secret to growing an audience in 2026 isn’t perfection or polish, and it certainly isn’t mastering the art of the AI prompt. It’s simply showing up as your imperfect, opinionated self—before you’re ready. Here’s why that matters, and how you can start.
After seven years of daily email, I’m redesigning my content system for 2026. Lets break down how I’m publishing more in public, supporting weekly, long-form content with social, and using simple systems to grow visibility and trust.
Facing a big project and feeling so overwhelmed you don’t even know where to begin? Here’s a simple, 7-step system to turn that stress-inducing project into doable tasks.
Wanna know a secret? You don’t need another tool or tactic. You’re not wrong or lazy or “not cut out for this.” You’re just missing one key piece: better systems.
You don’t have to be a superhuman content machine to publish consistently. You also don’t have to delegate your thoughts and ideas to someone (or something) else. You just need a good system. You can borrow mine if you like.
Do you ever feel like you’re putting in all the work and have nothing to show for it? Maybe it’s time to take a step back and figure out what’s really going on. Here’s how.
What if you could just know, without a doubt, what to focus on next in your business? What if you could find the right direction to take, so you can stop spinning your wheels? You can, just by asking one simple question.
Quick: make a list of everything you need to run an online business. My guess is, your list has at least 20 items on it, maybe more. What if I told you there are only three requirements for running a business, and that all those extras are the cause of your overwhelm?
What if I told you the best way to grow your business isn’t to do more, but instead to subtract things? A streamlined, focused business with on-brand offers and fewer moving parts will always earn more than the scattershot approach that seems so popular.
You don’t have to take on big new projects to grow your business. You can (and should) start with what you’re already doing. Make improvements there instead of branching out into new areas. Here’s how to get started.
Imagine knowing exactly what it will take to grow your business. That’s what I discovered thanks to a simple spreadsheet, and the lesson I learned is one you can use, too.
If you think having systems will cramp your style or stifle your creativity, we need to have a word (or 1,163 of them). Systems give you back your freedom. I’ll show you how.