Early Exit #39: The Last Finance Update (May 2024)
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Youβre reading Early Exit Club β a newsletterΒ about leaving the 9-5 workforce to build a $20k/month solo business your dream life byΒ Nick Lafferty.
Last time: April Finance Update
Next week: Building the life you want (lessons from early retirees)
Welcome to my last monthly finance update for the foreseeable future. After sharing my income with yβall every month for the last 12 months itβs time to wind down this series.
Donβt worry, the Early Exit Club will continue but the monthly income series has run itβs course and Iβll explain why below.
First Iβll share more about where Iβve been and why you havenβt heard from me in the last four weeks.
I donβt believe in gating my content archive behind a paywall so feel free to browse my previous finance updates which document my journey from quitting my job to earning $40,000 in April.
Where have I been the last four weeks?
I spent the month of May searching for an apartment in Brooklyn and hanging out with my buds like Francis (pictured below).
Francis writes the very good Creator Spotlight interview series for Beehiiv which features behind the scenes stories from the creator economy and tactics that you can implement to grow your own newsletter. My favorite is about how the Cheapskate London newsletter gives away free bottles of gin to their subscribers π.
I didnβt plan to take a break last month but I gave myself permission to put other things aside while I averaged 15,000 steps a day bopping around Brooklyn and making more in-person connections in a month than Iβve made in the entire last year.
And after spending the last year slinging Google & LinkedIn ads for some really cool companies, taking you all on the journey with me by grinding out tons of LinkedIn content, publishing 35 newsletters, and taking more networking calls than one person ever should, it was time for a break.
I needed to prioritize me, my family, and our future life. Hereβs how Iβm doing that.
Work as a means to a dream
As I spent the last month walking around my new neighborhood, I realized I was living a real-life version of the fisherman and the businessman story.
A few months after quitting my job I was a happy fisherman working for myself and building a comfortable life earning $20k/month. That was more money than I ever made as a salary man and it came with less working less hours (and less BS).
But my silly monkey brain kept pushing me to be the businessman in that story. It wanted me to hit even bigger monthly numbers: $30k. $40k. $50k.
Those are shallow goals. Past a certain point more money doesnβt make you any happier.
If I wanted to keep growing my business then Iβd need to go into agency-mode by taking on more clients and hiring people to help me. Long-time readers know how I feel about this. Yuck.
So the monthly finance updates end because Iβve reached the point where I donβt care about them anymore. The finances arenβt the goal anymore.
So what is the goal? Itβs far more qualitative than my previous goals.
I just want to earn enough to live a comfortable life in Brooklyn.
I want to see my friends every week and give them a hug.
I want to do my networking in-person instead of behind a computer screen.
I want to coordinate events here in NYC for the freelance community (reply if you live here and this sounds cool?).
My work is now just a means to live my dream.
Hereβs how much revenue I made last month:
Next week Iβll share a story about how the FIRE community coined one of my favorite phrases, build the life you want, and how Iβm applying that to my freelancing business.
Cheers,
Nick
Hey Nick, I found you through Kenny. I love reading your posts β theyβre inspiring. I live in Brooklyn, work at Google and am focused on getting growth consulting gigs on the side. Iβd absolutely join any meetups in the future and happy to connect any time if your busy schedule allows!
Hey man please let me know if you have plan to run an event! Thanks to a trip to NYC and visiting the Brooklyn Bridge my life changed forever.
I would use my miles to fly out to Brooklyn at anytime. And use as a business experience expense π