How To Start A Successful Business As A Creative

The Futur · 2026-05-22 ·▶ Watch on YouTube ·via captions

A business consultant (Kier) advises creative entrepreneurs on the financial and behavioral blind spots that stall business growth. The core argument: talent and hard work get you started, but willingness to change, financial literacy, and disciplined client communication determine whether you scale. ---

Key Concepts

ConceptDefinition
P&L (Profit & Loss statement)Basic financial tracking tool — many creatives earning millions don't know what it is
Job actualizationTracking actual spend against revenue per project to know real profit, not just gross revenue
Gross vs. netGross sale (total billed) is vanity; net profit is what actually matters
System 1 thinkingAutomatic, low-effort decision-making (from Kahneman) — most people default to it, making change extremely difficult
"Stay out of the results"Focus on controlling your presentation/effort, not the outcome — borrowed from 12-step philosophy
The "maybe" trapA non-committal answer wastes the most time; "no" is more valuable because it lets you move on

Notes

The Growth Ceiling Problem

  • Creatives leave art school with talent but little business knowledge
  • Sheer willpower and hard work build the business to a point
  • The same traits that got them there — stubbornness, overwork — then work *against* further growth
  • The first barrier to getting help: unwillingness to change
  • Clients often spend 6 months in coaching telling the consultant why every suggestion won't work

Financial Literacy Basics

  • First question Kier asks new clients: "Do you have a P&L?" — many with multi-million dollar businesses don't know the term
  • Second question: "Do you actualize jobs?" — do you track what you *spent* to deliver each project?
  • Common mistake: confusing gross revenue with profit
  • A $50K job can yield a higher profit percentage than a $500K job — you can't know without tracking

The "Promise of Future Work" Trap

  • Clients sometimes offer reduced pay now in exchange for the promise of more work later
  • **This never happens** — underline it, it never happens
  • You cannot train a client to value your work by discounting it first
  • Often the creative tells themselves the lie — projecting a "relationship" the client never implied

Reading Clients Early

  • Every client interaction is data — listen for what they're *actually* telling you, not what you want to hear
  • Red flags: evasiveness, vague timelines, "I'll get back to you"
  • Key qualifying question: **"Are you the decision maker?"** — most contacts aren't
  • Pain and suffering are predictable; if you sense it, price accordingly (Kier doubles his fee)

Sales Calls and Meeting Goals

  • Every meeting needs a defined goal — a specific "ask" you're working toward
  • Don't ask questions or discuss topics unrelated to that goal
  • Respect that the person across from you is busy and not your friend — this is business
  • The worst answer on a sales call is **"maybe"** — it wastes time without moving anything forward
  • "No" is better: it frees you to move on

Demonstrating Expertise Without Claiming It

  • Every creative's website says the same things: creative, storyteller, honest, easy to work with — meaningless
  • You demonstrate professionalism through **how you ask questions**, not by declaring yourself an expert
  • The questions you ask signal your depth of knowledge more than any bio or tagline

Controlling What You Can Control

  • You have zero control over whether you get the job
  • You have full control over how well you present yourself and your company
  • Walk out of every meeting asking: "Did I do the best I could?" — that's the only metric that matters
  • Reference: *My Date with Drew* — the outcome you imagine while waiting is almost never the real reason

Actionable Takeaways

  1. Get a P&L set up immediately if you don't have one
  2. Start actualizing every job — track spend per project to know real profit margins
  3. Stop quoting gross revenue; always think and speak in terms of net
  4. Qualify every prospect: ask directly if they are the decision maker
  5. Set a clear goal before every client meeting; cut anything from the conversation that doesn't serve that goal
  6. If you sense a difficult client, price the pain into the proposal — at minimum double your rate
  7. Never discount work in exchange for a promise of future work
  8. After every pitch, evaluate only your preparation and presentation — not the outcome

Quotes Worth Keeping

The things that got them there — the willfulness, the determination, the working lots of hours — are now working against them.
It's the bait that traps you — the promise of work tomorrow for bills that need to be paid today.
It never happens. Underline that. It never happens.
Every encounter with a client is information, but people are listening for what they want to hear.
Maybe is the worst — it wastes your time. If you have a no, you move on.
How you talk to people and what you say about yourself — this is what demonstrates that you're a pro.
What you owe yourself in a meeting is to walk out saying you presented yourself and your company in the best way. You have no control over the outcome. None.