Why I Never Tell You How Much I Make

Why I Never Tell You How Much I Make

TL;DR: Most online income claims are fake, exaggerated, or cherry-picked. The real business model is selling you a course about making money, not actually making money. Look for verifiable work, not screenshots.

Quick Test: How Do You React to Income Claims?

  1. 1I’m impressed and want to learn their secrets
  2. 2I’m skeptical but curious
  3. 3I assume it’s probably inflated or fake
  4. 4I scroll past without engaging

If you picked option 1, you might be getting played. Every day.

The internet is drowning in articles with titles like “My AI Side Hustle Makes $47,000 a Month” and “How I Built a $252,000/Month Business While Sleeping.” They all follow the same formula. A big number in the headline. Vague descriptions of what they do. Screenshots that prove nothing. And a comments section full of people calling bullshit.

Because it usually is.

The Math Doesn’t Add Up

Think about this logically.

If you’re making $250,000 a month, you’re clearing $3 million a year. You have accountants, lawyers, and probably a small team. Your time is worth thousands of dollars per hour.

So why would you spend that time writing Medium articles for pennies per read?

You wouldn’t. Unless the articles themselves are the product, and you’re the mark.

The real business model isn’t AI lead generation or automated appointment setting or whatever buzzword soup they’re selling. The real business model is selling you a course about AI lead generation. Or coaching. Or a community membership.

The income claims are the marketing. Not the proof.

What Actual Credibility Looks Like

When I tell you I’ve ghostwritten books for executives who raised $30 million in venture capital, that’s verifiable. Those books exist. Those funding rounds were announced. The trail is there if you want to follow it.

When I tell you I’ve published 113 books, you can find them. They have ISBNs. They’re on Amazon. They have reviews from real readers.

When I tell you I spent 45 years as Director of Computer Operations at Trader Joe’s before becoming a full-time writer, that’s a career with a history. People knew me there. The work happened.

None of that requires you to believe a screenshot of a Stripe dashboard.

Real credibility: work that exists in the world and can be examined, results for clients that can be referenced, a track record extending beyond last month, specifics that can be checked.

Fake credibility: big numbers with no context, vague descriptions of “systems” and “processes,” testimonials from first names only, a digital footprint that started six months ago.

The Question You Should Always Ask

When someone makes an income claim, ask yourself: what are they selling?

If the answer is “nothing, they’re just sharing what worked for them,” be suspicious. People don’t give away real competitive advantages for free.

If the answer is “a course or coaching program about replicating their results,” now you understand. The income claim exists to sell the course. Whether the income is real doesn’t matter to their business model.

If the answer is “services to businesses, and they’re using content to demonstrate expertise,” that’s legitimate. I do this myself. I write about writing because I’m a ghostwriter and writing coach. The content shows you how I think. If you like how I think, maybe you hire me. That’s how real book promotion works — building trust before asking for money.

But I don’t need to tell you I make $50,000 a month or $100,000 a month or any specific number. The work speaks for itself. Either I can help you write a book that advances your career, or I can’t. My income doesn’t change that.

Why I Keep My Numbers Private

It’s nobody’s business. My relationship with money is between me, my accountant, and the IRS. Sharing it publicly serves no purpose except bragging or manipulation.

Income varies wildly in my business. A ghostwriting project might be $20,000 or $50,000. Some months I have three clients. Some months I have one. Picking a single number would be misleading either way.

And my income doesn’t help you. Knowing what I make tells you nothing about whether I can help you write your book. It doesn’t make my advice better or worse. It’s just noise.

What helps you is knowing I’ve done this work successfully, for decades, for clients who got real results. That’s what matters.

The Uncomfortable Truth

Most people sharing income claims online are lying, exaggerating, or describing a single exceptional month as if it were typical.

The ones making real money usually aren’t talking about it. They’re too busy doing the work.

I’ve been a professional writer since before the internet existed. I’ve seen every guru trend come and go. The tactics change, but the game stays the same: promise easy money, sell the dream, move on before anyone checks the receipts.

Don’t be the mark.

Look for people with verifiable track records. Look for specifics that can be checked. Look for work that exists in the world.

And be suspicious of anyone whose main credential is telling you how much they make.

Frequently Asked Questions

How can I tell if an income claim is fake?

Check the math. Someone making $250K/month clears $3 million a year. They don’t need to write Medium articles for pennies. Look for verifiable credentials: published work with ISBNs, named clients, specific results that can be checked. If all they have is screenshots and vague “systems,” walk away.

Why do people make fake income claims?

The income claim is the marketing, not the proof. The real business model is selling you a course, coaching program, or community membership about how to replicate their “results.” Whether the income is real doesn’t matter to their business model. You’re the product.

Is it ever legitimate to share income numbers?

Rarely. Legitimate reasons might include transparent business case studies with full context, or publicly traded company disclosures. But random people on the internet claiming six figures? They’re almost always selling something, and the income claim exists to make you buy it.

What should I look for instead of income claims?

Verifiable work: books with ISBNs, named clients, specific results. A track record extending beyond last month. Expertise demonstrated through content, not claimed through screenshots. Someone who shows you how they think rather than how much they make.

Why don’t you share your income?

It’s nobody’s business, it varies wildly month to month, and it doesn’t help you. Knowing what I make tells you nothing about whether I can help you write your book. My 113 published books and clients who raised $30 million in venture capital tell you something. A Stripe screenshot tells you nothing.

Work With Me

Ready to write a book that builds real credibility? Explore ghostwriting services or book coaching services today.

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