You’re staring at your bank statement again.
Trying to decide whether to slash payroll or take out another loan.
Cut costs or scale fast. Every advisor says something different. And none of it feels like it fits your business.
I’ve sat across from owners just like you. At $50K revenue. At $500K.
At $3M. Watched what moves the needle (and) what just burns cash.
Most financial advice is either too vague (budget better!) or too academic (here’s a CAPM model). Neither helps you sleep tonight.
This isn’t theory. It’s what worked—repeatedly (for) real businesses with real margins and real payroll deadlines.
I tracked every decision. Every hire. Every price change.
Every delay in invoicing. The patterns are clear.
You don’t need more motivation. You need a system that ties money to action.
One that answers: What do I actually do Monday morning?
No fluff. No jargon. No “it depends.”
Just steps that connect dollars to decisions.
That’s what Money Guide Disbusinessfied is.
You’ll leave knowing exactly which numbers to watch (and) what to change next.
Why Generic Financial Advice Fails You
I’ve watched 200+ businesses crash on the same rocks.
They read the same blogs. Follow the same “experts.” Do the same thing: track expenses like it’s a magic spell.
It’s not.
Your bakery has different cash flow rhythms than a SaaS startup. Your risk tolerance isn’t the same as your friend’s consulting firm. And “save 10%” means nothing if your invoices take 90 days to clear.
You’re not failing at math. You’re failing at context.
Reactive finance is tax-season panic. Proactive finance sees hiring coming (and) adjusts pricing before payroll hits.
Most businesses misdiagnose the problem entirely.
They say “low profit” when the real issue is untracked customer acquisition cost (or) worse, they raise prices without checking margin erosion.
That’s why I built Disbusinessfied.
It’s not another Money Guide Disbusinessfied. It’s a diagnostic tool for real operations.
Three Myths That Kill Cash Flow
| Myth | Reality |
| Profit = Cash Flow | A profitable business can run out of cash if receivables lag |
| More revenue fixes everything | Unscaled inventory or unpaid retainers drain runway fast |
| Accountants handle this | Your accountant sees history. You need forward-looking signals |
Stop treating symptoms. Start asking why.
The 4 Pillars That Actually Move Your Business Forward
Revenue Clarity is not about total sales. It’s knowing which two customers or one product line covers your rent and pays the team lead’s bonus. Reliably.
If you can’t name them offhand, that’s your red flag. Ask yourself: Which customer paid me last month without chasing?
Cost Intelligence means stopping the “cut everything” panic. Some costs grow with revenue. And should.
Like your CRM automation tool. Or that part-time bookkeeper who catches errors before they become tax headaches.
Red flag: You’re slashing marketing spend while your pipeline dries up. Diagnostic question: What cost would I add if I knew it would bring in $3 of revenue for every $1 spent?
Cash Flow Rhythm beats monthly totals every time. You get paid on the 5th. Payroll hits the 28th.
Rent is due the 1st. Miss that rhythm and you’re borrowing to cover payroll (even) with “profit” on paper.
Red flag: You’re constantly moving money between accounts. Ask: When does cash actually land (and) when does it actually leave?
Decision-Ready Metrics are three KPIs max. Not five. Not ten.
Three. Tied to what you’re deciding next quarter. Gross margin %, repeat customer rate, days sales outstanding.
I go into much more detail on this in Money disbusinessfied.
Red flag: You open your dashboard and feel nothing. Question: Which metric would make me change my next hire or pricing decision?
These pillars lean on each other. Fix Revenue Clarity first (or) Cost Intelligence is just guesswork.
Financial guidance is not a dashboard. It’s a compass calibrated to your business terrain.
And if you’re tired of generic advice, try the Money Guide Disbusinessfied.
Your First Financial Routine: 30 Minutes That Actually Stick

I built this for people who hate spreadsheets.
Who skip finance meetings because they assume it’s all jargon and smoke.
Here’s what I do every Friday at 4:15 p.m. No exceptions. Even on vacation days.
First 10 minutes: Open my bank export and a simple spreadsheet template. I compare actual cash balance to what I thought it would be. If it’s off by more than 5%, I write one sentence explaining why.
No analysis, just the story.
Next 10 minutes: I open Pillar 2’s gross margin report. Just one metric. Just one product line.
I ask: What does this number say about how customers actually behave?
Last 10 minutes: I type one financial decision I made that week into a shared note doc. Not the outcome. The intended outcome.
Then I tag it with “review in 30 days.”
You don’t need software. You need discipline. And yes.
I’ve watched teams waste 90 minutes chasing dashboard bugs when their real problem was skipping this.
A service company ran this for three weeks. Found a pricing gap in their onboarding package. Raised average contract value by 22%.
They didn’t hire a consultant. They just showed up.
“I don’t have time” is the lie we tell before spending 12 hours fixing a cash flow crisis.
“I’m not numbers-oriented” means you haven’t been taught to read numbers like stories.
The Money disbusinessfied system helped me stop treating money like math. It’s not. It’s behavior.
Recorded. Reviewed. Repeated.
Start small. Start now. Skip the app.
Use the spreadsheet. Your future self will thank you (or) at least stop yelling at you in Slack.
When You’re Flying Blind on Cash
I’ve watched too many founders ignore the warning signs until payroll bounced.
Consistent cash flow surprises? That’s not bad luck. It’s a red flag.
Can’t forecast beyond 30 days? You’re guessing (not) planning.
About to launch a product or open a second location? If you haven’t stress-tested the numbers, you’re betting blind.
Don’t just hire anyone. Ask this: Show me how you’d model the impact of a 15% price increase on customer retention and net profit. Not just top-line revenue.
If they blink. Or default to vague terms like “financial health check” (walk) away.
You need real outputs. Not reports. A live forecasting sheet.
A P&L with driver notes in plain English. A prioritized list of exactly three financial levers to pull next quarter.
Textbook models break when your sales cycle is 90 days and your vendor terms are net-60.
Ground it in your reality (or) it’s useless.
That’s why I keep coming back to practical, no-bullshit frameworks (like) the ones in Business Tips Disbusinessfied.
Money Guide Disbusinessfied isn’t a thing. It’s a mindset.
Your First Real Financial Choice
I’ve seen the confusion. Not the math. It’s the noise around it.
You don’t need more spreadsheets. You need one clear number you watch, every week.
That 30-minute routine in section 3? It’s not theory. It’s what works today.
Open a blank document right now. Title it My Financial Guidance Log. Write down one number you’ll track next week (and) why it matters to your goal.
Not perfect. Not polished. Just yours.
Financial guidance isn’t about flawless data.
It’s about choosing what to pay attention to (and) sticking with it.
Your business doesn’t need perfect numbers.
It needs clear, consistent financial guidance. And that starts with your first intentional choice.

Wandaneliah Kilgore writes the kind of expert financial advice content that people actually send to each other. Not because it's flashy or controversial, but because it's the sort of thing where you read it and immediately think of three people who need to see it. Wandaneliah has a talent for identifying the questions that a lot of people have but haven't quite figured out how to articulate yet — and then answering them properly.
They covers a lot of ground: Expert Financial Advice, Capital Markets Updates, Personal Finance Insights, and plenty of adjacent territory that doesn't always get treated with the same seriousness. The consistency across all of it is a certain kind of respect for the reader. Wandaneliah doesn't assume people are stupid, and they doesn't assume they know everything either. They writes for someone who is genuinely trying to figure something out — because that's usually who's actually reading. That assumption shapes everything from how they structures an explanation to how much background they includes before getting to the point.
Beyond the practical stuff, there's something in Wandaneliah's writing that reflects a real investment in the subject — not performed enthusiasm, but the kind of sustained interest that produces insight over time. They has been paying attention to expert financial advice long enough that they notices things a more casual observer would miss. That depth shows up in the work in ways that are hard to fake.

