Why I Stopped Posting Every Day And Made More Money
Why I Stopped Posting Every Day And Made More Money
I quit daily posting and my revenue finally grew. Here's what I did instead and the numbers that moved.
I stopped posting every day in October of 2023.
My coach at the time told me I was "killing my momentum." I was burned out, my dad was dying, and my revenue was $1,200 a month after four years of daily posting. Some momentum.
Six months after I stopped, I hit my first $10K month. I was posting twice a week. Sometimes once. I hadn't "cracked" anything. I'd just stopped spending every ounce of my energy feeding an algorithm that was never going to love me back.
The "post consistently" myth, told honestly
"Consistency" became a religion somewhere around 2019, and the gospel was: post every day, on every platform, or you're not serious. It ignores one massive detail. You have a job. A family. A body. A finite amount of creative output before you start phoning it in.
When you post every day on low creative capacity, you don't build a brand. You build a feed full of posts that sound like everyone else's. The advice "just be consistent" wasn't wrong. It was just incomplete. Consistency is necessary. Daily isn't. Those aren't the same word.
I want to be fair about this. Some people post every day and it works for them. Usually because they have teams, or content they're recycling, or a full-time job where posting content is literally the job. If that's you, great. But if you're a person with a job, a house, a family, and roughly two hours of clear-headed time a day, daily posting is a trap dressed as discipline. And if you've been wondering if you're "doing it wrong," the Clocked Out Readiness Quiz will tell you whether it's your content or something else that's actually stuck.
What I did instead, and why it worked
- I went to twice a week. Tuesday long-form post, Friday short post. That's it. Two slots. I defended them like meetings.
- I wrote longer. When I posted less, I had more to say per post. My engagement actually went up because the writing had room to breathe.
- I repurposed ruthlessly. One long post became one email, one short-form clip, one quote-card. Three outputs from one idea. The post worked four places. I wrote it once.
- I spent the freed time on sales. That's the unsexy secret. I stopped posting to spend that time talking to five people a week who might actually pay me. Guess which activity made me money?
- I built a small community instead of chasing a big audience. A hundred real people beats a thousand passive followers every time. This is where I built The Revenue Society instead of buying more ads.
- I let go of the guilt. This took six months. I still feel it sometimes. Then I look at my bank account and remember I'm right.
I'm not telling you to quit social media. I'm telling you to stop using "posting" as a substitute for "selling." Those are not the same verb. If you want the full pattern I now use to turn fewer posts into more revenue, it's all inside Audience to Assets. If you'd rather start in one free community, Small Community, Big Revenue: Why Size Isn't The Metric is a good starting point.
Here's the part I don't say in most rooms. I had to grieve the version of me who thought she was going to "make it" by posting every day. That woman was exhausted. She was also scared. She thought if she stopped, everything would collapse. It didn't. It grew. Not because she quit. Because she chose what to keep and what to let go of.
If you're reading this and you feel seen, I'm not surprised. This is the quiet conversation most women in this space are having in DMs and private texts. Nobody's posting about it publicly because the "consistency" gospel is too profitable for the people selling it. I'll say it out loud so you don't have to.
How to know if you're posting too much
Three signs. One, you've posted this week but you can't remember what any of your posts said. Two, you're posting on platforms you don't actually like using. Three, your sales haven't moved in the last 90 days despite the posting. If any two of those are true for you, cut your posting in half for 30 days. Watch what happens. You can also look up Exploding Topics to see whether your niche is even growing right now. Sometimes the problem isn't you. It's the market.
Less Posting. More Revenue. Fewer Tools.
Clocked Out And Free is the platform I moved to when I got serious about building a business instead of feeding an algorithm. CRM, emails, automations, funnels, one price.
See The Platform →You have permission to stop
You don't owe the internet daily content. You owe yourself a business that doesn't require you to hand over every Tuesday night to caption-writing. For more on the mindset side of this shift, The Capacity Question I Ask Before Every New Project is the follow-up to this post.
If you post twice a week forever and build a real business, you've won. If you post seven times a week and burn out, you've lost. Those are the two outcomes. Pick the one that lets you still be yourself in five years. I'll be here, writing about it, twice a week.
