The Irregular Income Method — The Self-Made Naija Journal
The Self-Made Naija Journal
Real Money Lessons for People Who Work for Themselves
Personal Finance  ·  Self-Employment  ·  Nigeria

How a Lagos Business Owner Finally Stopped Watching His Hard-Earned Money Disappear — Without Getting a New Loan, Cutting All His Expenses, or Waiting for a Bigger Contract

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You ran this month hard.

You were up early. You followed up on the client who had been dragging their feet for two weeks. You delivered the job cleanly. You chased that invoice until the bank alert finally came through.

And the money came in. Real money. The kind that should make you feel settled for a few weeks at least.

But here you are — days later, maybe weeks later — looking at your account balance and asking the same question you have been asking for two, three, maybe five years of running your own business.

Where did it go?

Not because you were careless. Not because you were living above your means. Not because something dramatic went wrong. But somehow — between the business expenses, the supplier payments, the rent, the family needs, the things-that-just-come-up, the client who still owes you from last month — it vanished. Again.

And now you are starting a new month hoping for another strong contract. Again.


You are not broke. Let us be clear about that. You run a real business. Clients know your name. Work comes in. You earn money that many employed people would genuinely consider good money.

But the money does not stay.

Every strong month gets eaten up by the weak months that follow. You never quite know which kind of month is coming next. So you hold tight in the good months and manage quietly in the lean ones.

You have told yourself: "Next month I will save."

You have told yourself: "Once I land that contract, things will settle down."

You have told yourself: "I just need to be more disciplined."

If any of those things had worked, you would not be here reading this.


You have tried to budget. But how do you build a sensible budget when you genuinely do not know what you will earn next month?

You have tried to save. But how do you save 20% when some months you barely cover your operating costs?

You have read the financial advice. "Track your spending." "Pay yourself first." "Cut unnecessary expenses." Every book, every YouTube video, every well-meaning WhatsApp forward says roughly the same things.

Good advice. For someone with a salary. For someone who knows exactly what lands in their account on the 25th of every single month without fail.

That is not you.

You work for yourself. You built something. Nobody writes your salary slip. Your income rises and falls like a market chart — ₦600,000 one month, ₦80,000 the next. No one tells you which kind of month is coming.

And every piece of financial advice you have ever received was designed for the person with a fixed, predictable salary. Not for you.

That is the real problem. Not your discipline. Not your effort. Not your luck. The system you were handed was built for someone else's life.

Drop everything you are doing right now and read every word that follows.

Because I am going to show you exactly how I fixed this — using a method I built from scratch for the way self-employed people in Nigeria actually earn and live.

"Because I'm about to share the exact five-week system I now use every single month to budget, protect, and build real savings — even when my income is a completely different number every month."

First, let me tell you who I am — and who I am not.

I am not a financial advisor. I do not hold a degree in accounting or economics. I have never worked at a bank, an investment firm, or any kind of financial institution.

My name is Okey. I run a corporate branding, sourcing, printing, and gifting business here in Lagos. I have been self-employed for years.

I know what it feels like to close a solid contract in March and then sit in April wondering how you will cover basic costs. I know the exact sensation of watching your account balance drain steadily between projects, with the next income still weeks away. I know the 11pm thought spiral when the numbers simply refuse to add up.

I lived in that cycle for longer than I want to admit here.

The first thing you should know: what I am sharing is not theory. It is the exact method that changed my own financial reality as a self-employed business owner in this same market.

The second thing: I resisted documenting this for a long time. It felt personal. But too many people I know — fellow business owners, friends running their own thing — are still stuck in the same cycle I was in. And there is genuinely no good resource out there built for how self-employed Nigerians actually live and earn.

So I built one.

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Let me tell you what my financial life looked like before I figured this out. All of it.

My business was real. Clients were real. Revenue was real.

Some months were genuinely strong. A corporate gifting contract would come through. A branding job for a new company. A bulk printing order before a major event. The money would arrive, and for a few days everything felt manageable. I would clear what needed to be cleared, pay who needed to be paid, reinvest back into the business. I would feel settled.

Then the lean period would arrive. Sometimes it was predictable — January is always slow, everyone recovering from December. The quiet middle stretch of a quarter when no client seems to be making decisions. But other times it came with no warning at all. A project delayed. A contract that did not materialise the way it was supposed to. A client who simply stopped responding.

And here is the thing about being self-employed in Nigeria that nobody prepares you for, no matter how long you have been at it.

Your bills do not go on holiday when your contracts do.

Suppliers still need their money. The workspace rent does not negotiate with your income cycle. If you have staff, they still need to be paid. Your household — your family — still needs to be taken care of. And the business still needs to function, even in the slow months, because the moment you let things slip, you fall behind on the next strong month too.


I started doing what I now know almost every self-employed person does, even when we do not realise it.

In the good months, I spent freely. I cleared everything, sorted everyone out, invested in the business, felt generous. I told myself that was the responsible thing to do. And to be fair — most of it was. But the part I was not doing was protecting the surplus. There was always a surplus in the good months. I was just not setting it aside in a way that could carry me through the months when the money was slow.

I was living contract to contract and calling it running a business.

The pressure accumulated slowly, then suddenly. There were months when I was running the business and managing the household from the same pool of money, with no real separation between the two. A family emergency would eat into what should have been business reserves. A delayed client payment would affect personal commitments that had already been made. Everything was connected to everything else. When one thing shook, all of it shook.

I watched that pattern go on for too long before I finally decided — properly, seriously — to do something about it.

Everything I Tried That Did Not Work

I want to be honest with you about what I tried before I found something that actually worked. Because you have probably tried some of these yourself.

  • Elaborate Excel spreadsheets with fixed monthly categories. I built them. I colour-coded them. I updated them dutifully for about three weeks. Then my income changed, the categories stopped making sense for the new reality, and the whole thing became more stressful to maintain than to ignore. The spreadsheet assumed I knew what I would earn next month. I never did.
  • Budgeting apps. I downloaded several of them. Every single one opened with the same question: "Enter your monthly income." What number was I supposed to enter? My monthly income in January was ₦92,000. In March it was ₦580,000. In June it was somewhere in between. The app could not handle that. And neither could the budget it tried to build for me.
  • The "pay yourself first" rule — save 20% before you spend anything. This is logically clean advice. It is practically impossible when 20% of what you earned this month is less than your most basic operating cost. I tried it in a lean month. It lasted five days.
  • A fixed savings plan from my bank. Monthly standing order, fixed amount, locked savings account. Designed entirely around someone receiving the same amount every 30 days. I missed contributions in lean months, felt terrible about it, and eventually stopped the plan entirely because the guilt was not helping anything.
  • Advice from people who had never been self-employed. Well-meaning friends and family with salaried jobs, giving me advice from a completely different financial world. "Just track everything." "Only spend on what you need." "Set a budget and stick to it." All valid for their situation. Completely disconnected from mine.
  • Telling myself I would "sort it out next good month." This is the most dangerous trap of all, because you keep believing it. Good month arrives. You feel good. You mean to save. But the lean months before it already spent the surplus forward, and the cycle continues.

The Thing I Finally Understood

It took me longer than I am comfortable admitting to see the actual problem clearly.

The problem was not that I lacked discipline.

The problem was not even the irregular income itself.

"The real problem was that I was trying to run an irregular income life using a system designed entirely for a fixed salary life. That is like trying to navigate Lagos roads with a map of Abuja. The map is not wrong. It just has nothing to do with where you are."

Every financial tool. Every budgeting method. Every savings framework. Every piece of advice I had ever received — all of it assumed a predictable monthly income. None of it was built for me. None of it was built for any of us who earn the way self-employed people earn.

So I stopped trying to adapt those tools to my life. I started building something from scratch — a system designed specifically around how irregular income actually works.

It took months of trial and error. Some of what I built worked immediately. Some of it needed adjusting. I made mistakes, recalibrated, kept going. But eventually the pieces came together into something coherent, something I could follow without thinking too hard, something that actually worked regardless of whether that month was strong or slow.


What Changed When I Found the Right System

The first shift was in how I thought about income. I stopped budgeting based on what I hoped to earn in any given month. I started planning around my baseline — the minimum I could realistically count on even in a difficult period. Not my best month. Not my average. My reliable floor. This alone removed most of the panic from lean months, because I had built my commitments around what I could always handle, not what I could sometimes handle.

The second shift was separating my money into clear, distinct layers with defined purposes. Not complicated investment accounts requiring a banker's expertise. Simple, deliberate allocations — business operations, personal life, short-term emergency reserves, and longer-term savings — with money flowing to the right place automatically every time income arrived.

The third shift was a monthly reset process. Twenty minutes at the start of each month to look at the previous month's real numbers and recalibrate the system accordingly. This turned the method into something that got better over time instead of breaking down.

Within three months, something had genuinely changed.

I had my first real emergency reserve. Not a promise to myself. Not an intention. An actual cash reserve sitting in a designated place — money specifically positioned to protect me when a client delayed, when the month ran slow, when something unexpected appeared. And something unexpected always appears.

For the first time in years, a lean month felt like a managed inconvenience rather than a small financial crisis that threatened everything else.

And perhaps more significantly: the same money I had always been earning started staying.

I had not increased my revenue. I had changed the system that money moved through. That turned out to be the thing that mattered.


Why I Wrote All of This Down

I started sharing what I had built with a handful of friends and colleagues dealing with the same cycle. Another business owner in Lagos. A freelance professional. Someone running a food operation. A logistics contractor.

The same shift happened with all of them. Not overnight, and not identically — every business is different, every income pattern is different. But the core change was consistent: money started accumulating rather than disappearing, lean months stopped being emergencies, and for the first time in years, they were building something that actually moved in the right direction.

After the fifth or sixth person asked me to sit down and walk them through it from the beginning, I made a decision. I was going to write the whole thing down — every step, every tool, every decision framework — structured clearly enough that any self-employed person could follow it without needing to sit with me personally.

That is this guide.

Introducing

The Irregular Income Method

"How Self-Employed Nigerians Can Finally Budget, Protect, and Build Savings Without a Fixed Monthly Salary — Because Working Hard Was Never the Problem. Keeping What You Earn Is."

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Inside this guide, you will discover:

W1
Income
Audit
W2
Baseline
Budget
W3
Protection
Layer
W4
Savings
Architecture
W5
90-Day
Rhythm
  • Week 1 — The Irregular Income Audit: the exact process for mapping your real earning patterns across the last 12 months so you can finally see what you are actually working with — not what you hope to earn, but what your business reliably produces in its worst, average, and best months. Most people have never done this clearly.— Pg. 4
  • Week 2 — The Baseline Budget System: why building your budget around your best month is the single biggest mistake self-employed earners make, and how to build a budget anchored to your reliable floor instead — a budget that protects you even in your worst months and lets your good months actually build something.— Pg. 14
  • Week 3 — The Protection Layer: how to build an emergency reserve that actually works for self-employed people (not the standard "three months of expenses" advice that was designed for salary earners), including exactly how much to target, how to build it fast, and where to keep it so it is available when you need it but not too easy to touch when you don't.— Pg. 24
  • Week 4 — Savings Architecture for Variable Earners: the layered savings framework for people whose income changes every single month — including a clear decision tree for what to do when a big contract month arrives versus a lean month, so both work in your favour instead of one cancelling out the other.— Pg. 34
  • Week 5 — The 90-Day Money Rhythm: the 20-minute monthly reset process that keeps the entire system functioning without requiring daily tracking, financial discipline you have to force, or expertise you don't have. This is what turns a five-week exercise into a permanent way of managing money.— Pg. 44
  • Five practical tools included: the Baseline Income Calculator, the Variable Budget Template, the Cash Flow Stress Test (this one will shock you), the Savings Architecture Chart, and the Monthly Reset Checklist. All ready to use on the day you download the guide.— Pg. 52

And the best part? You do not need to be a financial expert. You do not need a complicated app or system. You do not need to earn more before you start. This is the exact method I built for myself as a self-employed business owner in Lagos — running on an income that changed every single month — and the same one I have walked other self-employed Nigerians through.

What Other Self-Employed Nigerians Are Saying

Real feedback from people who have worked through the method. Add yours below when you have read it.

📌 Note for Okey: Replace each placeholder card below with a real testimonial when you receive one. Keep the card structure exactly as it is — swap in the real name, location, time since purchase, and testimonial text. Delete this yellow notice box when you go live. You can also remove the "⚠ Placeholder" labels from each card at that point.
⚠ Placeholder — replace with a real buyer testimonial
A.C.
Ada Chukwu
🇳🇬 Lagos, Nigeria  ·  [X] days after purchase
★★★★★

[REPLACE WITH REAL TESTIMONIAL. Example: "I have been running my catering business for 4 years and never understood why the money always disappeared. After Week 2 of this guide I set up my baseline budget and for the first time I was not panicking in a slow month. Okey, this changed how I see my business money."]

⚠ Placeholder — replace with a real buyer testimonial
T.O.
Tunde Olawale
🇳🇬 Abuja, Nigeria  ·  [X] days after purchase
★★★★★

[REPLACE WITH REAL TESTIMONIAL. Example: "I am a freelance photographer. Every month I am either swimming or drowning. The Savings Architecture section in Week 4 was the thing that changed everything for me. For the first time I have three separate allocations and money goes where it is supposed to go automatically."]

⚠ Placeholder — replace with a real buyer testimonial
N.E.
Ngozi Eze
🇳🇬 Port Harcourt, Nigeria  ·  [X] days after purchase
★★★★★

[REPLACE WITH REAL TESTIMONIAL.]

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K.A.
Kelechi Amadi
🇳🇬 Enugu, Nigeria  ·  [X] days after purchase
★★★★★

[REPLACE WITH REAL TESTIMONIAL.]

⚠ Placeholder — replace with a real buyer testimonial
F.B.
Funmi Bello
🇳🇬 Ibadan, Nigeria  ·  [X] days after purchase
★★★★★

[REPLACE WITH REAL TESTIMONIAL.]

Here Is What This Guide Actually Took to Build

Before I show you the price, I want you to understand the value of what you are getting and what went into building it.

  • Months of personal research, trial, and refinement of the method across my own business
  • Professional copyediting and layout design to produce a clean, readable guide
  • Building, testing, and revising each of the five practical tools included
  • Structuring and road-testing the method across multiple self-employed business types before publishing
  • Platform fees, hosting, and setup costs to make this available to you securely and instantly

The total cost to develop and produce this guide came to over ₦[ENTER YOUR ACTUAL COST FIGURE].

📌 Okey — enter your real figure here to make this section honest and credible.

I am not going to charge you anywhere near that.
Not ₦20,000.
Not ₦12,000.
Not even ₦9,999.

A fair price for a method that changes how you manage your business money — and can save you many times the cost in financial mistakes alone — would be ₦9,999.
₦9,999 ₦4,999 Introductory launch price — see the time-limit note below.

⚡ This launch price is available for the first [X] buyers only — or until [INSERT DATE], whichever comes first. After that, the price returns to ₦9,999 permanently.

📌 Okey — set a real launch window before you go live. Replace [X] with the actual copy count and [INSERT DATE] with your actual date. Honour whatever you state here.

Click Here to Get The Irregular Income Method Now — ₦4,999

Secure payment · Instant PDF download · Works on any phone, tablet, or laptop

Wait — There's More

If you are among the first [X] buyers, you also receive these two free bonuses.

(Available at the launch price only.)

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BONUS 1
IMAGE
Free Bonus 1

The Lean Month Survival Playbook

A quick-reference guide for when income drops unexpectedly. Exactly what to prioritise, what to defer, and how to navigate a difficult month without derailing the system you built in the main guide. The kind of clear-headed framework you want in front of you before the lean month arrives, not during it. (Value: ₦2,000)

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BONUS 2
IMAGE
Free Bonus 2

The 90-Day Money Journal

A printable weekly tracker designed specifically to document your first 90 days with the method. Tracks income received, allocations made, savings progress, and monthly review notes — so you can see your progress accumulating clearly as the weeks pass. Seeing it on paper makes it real in a way a mental note never does. (Value: ₦1,500)

📦
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Main Guide (₦9,999) + Lean Month Playbook (₦2,000) + 90-Day Journal (₦1,500)

Total Value: ₦13,499

Your price today: ₦4,999

Click Here to Get The Irregular Income Method + All Bonuses — ₦4,999

Three items · One instant download · 30-day money-back guarantee

Why Act Now

This Introductory Price Has a Real End Date

I am opening this guide at ₦4,999 as a genuine thank-you to the first people who trust the work and engage early. When the launch window closes — either when [X] people have purchased, or when [DATE] arrives — the price moves permanently to ₦9,999.

This is not manufactured urgency. I am telling you plainly: if you come back to this page after the window closes, the price will be different. If the window is still open, the price you see is still available.

Launch price: ₦4,999  ·  Regular price: ₦9,999  ·  Closes: [INSERT DATE OR COPY COUNT]

📌 Okey — set and honour your actual launch window. Honest urgency is more effective long-term than urgency that is never real.

Secure Your Copy at the Launch Price — ₦4,999

This price is only valid during the launch window

30-DAY
MONEY
BACK

Still Unsure? Here Is My Commitment to You

I understand that purchasing something online requires trust — especially from someone you have just met through a blog post.

So here is what I am prepared to offer: download the guide. Go through all five weeks. Use the tools. Do the work in your own business. If after 30 days you genuinely feel that the method has not helped you understand and manage your money better — email me directly, and I will refund every naira. No interrogation. No complicated process.

The financial risk is mine. The result is yours.

Get the Guide — Completely Risk Free

More Voices from the Self-Employed Community

This section grows with real buyer feedback as it arrives. Replace these placeholders with genuine responses.

📌 Note for Okey: This second testimonials section works best when you have 5+ genuine reviews. At launch, you can either leave these placeholders visible (they are clearly marked as placeholders so there is no deception), or you can remove this entire second section and add it back once you have enough real testimonials to fill it. Real feedback will always be more persuasive than any placeholder.
⚠ Placeholder — replace with a real buyer testimonial
E.O.
Emeka Okonkwo
🇳🇬 Lagos, Nigeria  ·  [X] days after purchase
★★★★★

[REPLACE WITH REAL TESTIMONIAL. Suggestion: ask early buyers what specific tool or week made the biggest difference for them. Specific results convert better than general praise.]

⚠ Placeholder — replace with a real buyer testimonial
S.N.
Seun Nwosu
🇳🇬 Lekki, Lagos  ·  [X] days after purchase
★★★★★

[REPLACE WITH REAL TESTIMONIAL.]

⚠ Placeholder — replace with a real buyer testimonial
D.O.
David Osei
🇬🇧 London, UK (Nigerian diaspora)  ·  [X] days after purchase
★★★★★

[REPLACE WITH REAL TESTIMONIAL. A diaspora perspective works well here — someone running a business abroad or earning in a mixed-currency context. The irregular income challenge is the same wherever you are.]

⚠ Placeholder — replace with a real buyer testimonial
A.I.
Aisha Ibrahim
🇳🇬 Kano, Nigeria  ·  [X] days after purchase
★★★★★

[REPLACE WITH REAL TESTIMONIAL.]

⚠ Placeholder — replace with a real buyer testimonial
C.U.
Chisom Uche
🇳🇬 Onitsha, Anambra  ·  [X] days after purchase
★★★★★

[REPLACE WITH REAL TESTIMONIAL.]

You Have Two Options From Here

Option 1 — Take Action

Get The Irregular Income Method today. Go through the five weeks. Build your baseline. Set up the protection layer. Run the Savings Architecture. Begin the monthly reset habit. And finally — finally — watch the money you are already earning start to stay, accumulate, and build into something real and lasting. Without needing a bigger contract. Without needing to earn more first.

Option 2 — Continue as Before

Close this page. Go back to the familiar cycle — good months followed by lean months, money that never quite stays, budgets that break down because they were built for someone else's income. Keep waiting for the month when things will finally settle. Maybe they will. But you have already seen how that story tends to go.

The method is already built. The only question is whether you use it.

Yes — I Want The Irregular Income Method + All Bonuses for ₦4,999

Launch price · 30-day money-back guarantee · Instant PDF download · All three items included