Welcome to FunEmployed

Welcome to FunEmployed

I experiment with work, making, and business — and share what actually works.

I’ve been building things for a long time.

Sometimes that’s physical things — products, projects, prototypes.
Sometimes it’s less visible things — systems, campaigns, businesses, ideas that may or may not work.

What I haven’t done well until now is documenting the process.

So this is me fixing that.


Why FunEmployed exists

I don’t feel particularly “employed” in the traditional sense — but I’m also not chasing the hustle-guru version of entrepreneurship.

Most days, I’m just:

  • Trying things

  • Learning what works (and what doesn’t)

  • Adjusting in real time

FunEmployed is where I’m going to share that process honestly.

No polished case studies.
No overnight success stories.
No pretending I knew the outcome ahead of time.

Just real experiments with work, making, and business — shared as they happen.


The first experiment: a very late holiday launch

A good example of this is my last holiday push.

I launched it way later than I should have.
It wasn’t perfectly planned.
It definitely wasn’t optimized.

Sales were… fine.

But something else surprised me.

I started capturing emails — about 40 of them — from zero.

That changed how I think about what “working” actually means.

Over the next few posts and emails, I’ll break down:

  • What I did last minute

  • What didn’t convert

  • What did work (unexpectedly)

  • What I’d do differently next time

Real numbers. Real lessons.


What you’ll find here

If you follow along, you’ll see:

  • Behind-the-scenes looks at projects I’m working on

  • Experiments I’m running (big and small)

  • What I learn from launches, ads, content, and products

  • What I’m doubling down on — and what I’m killing

This is a process log, not a sales blast.

If I try something and it flops, you’ll hear about that too.


If that sounds useful…

You can join the FunEmployed newsletter here:
👉 JoinTheFunEmployed.com

No pressure.
You can unsubscribe anytime.

But if you like learning by watching real work unfold — I think you’ll enjoy following along.

Back to blog

Leave a comment

Please note, comments need to be approved before they are published.