Readable in a single sitting. Practically useful for years. The chapter on starting before you feel ready is the one I needed at 23 and nobody gave me.
How young founders turn ideas
into momentum without
losing themselves.
Build Good Things is an honest, practical guide to starting something real, and seeing it through. Built around five principles that work.
No spam. Just a quiet note when the book is ready.
Most founders are not walking around with perfect plans and unshakeable confidence.
They are learning in public. Improvising more than they admit. Trying to stay steady while the ground keeps shifting. And quietly hoping nobody has noticed how much they are figuring it out as they go.
Real business is not polished all the time. It involves making consequential decisions with incomplete information, staying composed when you do not feel it, trusting people before you have evidence to fully justify the trust, and building things without being certain they will work.
Most of the business books on the shelf were written from the comfortable position of knowing how it turned out. The messy middle has been edited out for narrative clarity.
This book is written from inside it.
The world does not need more noise. It needs better businesses, built by better people, for better reasons.
Five principles. Applied consistently.
One clear direction.
The Good Things Method is the operating system behind the book. Five principles that give you the best possible chance of building something that lasts, without losing yourself in the process.
"Good businesses are not built from hype. They are built from genuine usefulness, from trust earned through consistent action, and from the kind of steady effort that compounds over time into something significant."
This is not a book about thinking bigger or moving faster.
It is a book about building well. Not perfectly, not impressively. Just well. With honesty. With genuine attention to the real problem in front of you. With care for the people who will use what you build.
The book draws on real experiences across businesses built and broken, capital raised and lost, teams kept on through nine months without a salary, and the slow, unglamorous work of doing what you said you would do. Consistently. In the small moments. When it costs something.
That sounds simple. It turns out to be rare.
Fifteen chapters. Five parts. One honest account of what building actually requires.
Written for young founders who are already in it, and want to do it better.
Build Good Things works through five principles: Notice, Start, Test, Trust and Sustain. Each comes with real stories, hard-won insight and practical ideas that transfer from the page to the room.
It is not written from the comfortable end of hindsight. It is honest about the nights staring at the ceiling, the decisions made badly under pressure, the team kept on for nine months without a founder taking a pound. The parts people do not post.
- • Five parts: Start Real · Move With Clarity · Build Trust · Build With People · Build Without Breaking
- • Real stories: from Holiday Inn night shifts to VC conversations, from administration to starting again
- • Business and personal growth actions at the end of every chapter
Not a formula. A different way of working.
Readers say it is not the method that changes things. It is the permission it gives them to do things differently.
This book was written for you, if…
- You are early in building something and want a foundation that will actually hold under pressure.
- You have been preparing for long enough that you suspect preparation might be the problem.
- You are moving fast but something feels unsolid, and you cannot quite put your finger on what it is.
- You want to build something that genuinely matters, not just something that looks good on a pitch deck.
- You are tired of business content that sounds smart and transfers to nothing.
This book is not about building the biggest thing. It is about building something worth building.
What early readers say
Most business books are written from the other end. This one is written from inside the process. You can feel the difference on every page.
The five principles gave me a framework I actually come back to. Not in a theoretical way. When I'm stuck, when I'm deciding, when I need to remember what we're building and why.
Thinking about building well.
The most common story nobody tells
Most people do not fail because they started badly. They fail because they never started properly at all. On why preparation is often just fear with better stationery.
Read →Nine months without a salary
What it actually felt like to keep a team on full pay while taking nothing myself. Reliability is easy when things are going well. The real test is what your word costs you when they are not.
Read →This is chapter three, not the ending
What a mentor said when my business went into administration, and why it mattered more than it sounds. On optimism without denial, and how to hold both things at once.
Read →
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I will send you a quiet note the moment Build Good Things is live. Thank you. It genuinely means something.