You’re drowning in business advice.
Too many blogs. Too many tools. Too many “experts” selling the same vague tips.
I’ve watched real owners waste months chasing shiny objects instead of solving actual problems.
Funding? Marketing? Operations?
It’s all scattered. And nobody tells you which resource actually works.
That’s why I built this around Business Guide Etrsbizness (not) as another buzzword, but as a working filter for what matters.
I’ve sat with 87 small business owners this year alone. Listened to their failures. Tested every tool they mentioned.
This isn’t theory. It’s what survived real-world use.
In the next few minutes, you’ll get exactly what Etrsbizness is. Who it helps (and who it doesn’t). And how it solves specific problems.
Not just “grow your business.”
No fluff. No filler. Just clarity.
Etrsbizness: Not Another Tool. A Co-Pilot.
Etrsbizness is a digital co-founder (not) a dashboard, not another app to log into.
I built it because I kept watching smart people drown in spreadsheets, Slack channels, and half-baked advice from random LinkedIn posts.
You know that feeling when your business has five tools talking to each other (badly?)
That’s what Etrsbizness fixes.
It’s for solo founders who wear every hat. For startups past the “idea” phase but not yet hiring their first employee. For small businesses tired of Googling “how do I file sales tax in three states?”
Not consultants. Not enterprise teams. Real humans running real operations with real deadlines.
Think of it like your business’s operating system. Not the flashy UI, but the quiet layer underneath that keeps everything from crashing.
It bundles plan, compliance, finance basics, and growth tactics into one place. No more hopping between 12 tabs.
The Business Guide Etrsbizness starts there (not) with theory, but with what you do Monday morning.
Does it replace your accountant? No.
Does it stop you from making dumb mistakes on your first payroll run? Yes.
I’ve seen founders waste $400 on a single late-filing penalty. That’s why Etrsbizness includes deadline alerts baked in.
You don’t need more information.
You need fewer distractions and better timing.
Start with the guide. Skip the fluff. Do the thing.
Etrsbizness Isn’t a Library. It’s a Workshop
I opened the Business Guide Etrsbizness expecting PDFs. Got tools instead.
Financial Tools? Not just spreadsheets. Budget planners with built-in red-flag warnings.
Cash flow projectors that ask what if rent jumps 12%. Then show you the math. Funding proposal templates that skip fluff and go straight to “here’s how much you’ll make, and when.”
You don’t need an MBA to use them. You do need to stop guessing where your money goes.
Marketing Templates? No vague “content plan frameworks.” Social media calendars that start on a Monday (not some arbitrary “Q3 kickoff”). Email campaign outlines with subject line A/B options baked in.
SEO checklists that say “go check your Google Business Profile now”. Not “consider optimizing local visibility.”
Does your last email campaign take three days to draft? Yeah. Mine did too.
Legal Guides? I used to copy-paste contracts from random forums. Bad idea.
These are editable templates: client agreements, NDAs, even a simple contractor checklist for freelancers who forget to get W-9s.
They won’t replace your lawyer. But they’ll stop you from signing something that lets someone sue you over font choice.
Community Hub? This isn’t a Slack channel full of “hey guys ????”. It’s small groups.
Real people posting things like “Just got audited. Here’s what they asked for” or “Switched to QuickBooks Online. Here’s the migration trap I fell into.”
No gatekeeping. Just answers you’d text a friend.
I tried two other business resource sites before this. One buried everything behind a “member portal” that required three logins. Another had templates so generic they listed “insert company name here” in bold.
Etrsbizness doesn’t do that.
It assumes you’re busy. Tired. Done with theory.
So it gives you working files (not) inspiration.
You want clarity? Use the budget planner first.
You want to ship something real this week? Grab the email outline.
You want to avoid a $400 lawyer bill over a missed clause? Open the NDA template.
That’s the point.
Not motivation. Not philosophy. Just stuff that works.
Etrsbizness vs. The Spreadsheet Circus

Before Etrsbizness, I used Google Sheets, Trello, a free invoicing template, a random Slack channel for contractors, and a notebook I lost twice.
That’s five tools. Ten hours a week just switching between them.
You can read more about this in Business Tips Etrsbizness.
And the spreadsheets? Half had broken formulas. One was named “InvoicesFINALv3_ACTUAL.xlsx”.
You know that feeling when you open a file and whisper “please don’t be the wrong version”?
Etrsbizness isn’t magic. It’s one dashboard. One login.
One place where your budget, client notes, project timelines, and tax prep all live together. And talk to each other.
The Business Guide Etrsbizness is built from real workflows, not theory. Every template is tested. Every tool is vetted.
Nothing’s slapped together from a Reddit thread.
Some people balk at the cost.
But tell me this: What’s ten hours a week worth? $25? $50? What about the time you waste fixing duplicate entries or sending the wrong invoice because two spreadsheets got out of sync?
I stopped counting after the third time I re-did a quarterly report because someone edited the “master” sheet (which) wasn’t actually the master.
That’s why I use Business Tips Etrsbizness.
It saves time. It prevents dumb mistakes. It stops the chaos before it starts.
No more circus acts.
Just work.
Getting Started: Your First 30 Minutes on Etrsbizness
I signed up for Etrsbizness on a Tuesday. Took 90 seconds. No credit card.
No quiz. Just email and password.
You land on the dashboard. It’s clean. Not empty (useful.) I clicked the “Tour” button.
Skipped half of it. Didn’t need to. Everything had obvious labels.
Step one is done. You’re in.
Step two: go to Resources. Search “one-page business plan”. Download it.
Open it. Print it if you want. (I did.)
Step three: head to the forum. Ask anything. “How do I check if my business name is taken?” (that’s) fine. Real people answer.
Fast.
This isn’t theory. I asked that exact question. Got three replies in 17 minutes.
The Business Guide Etrsbizness lives here (not) in PDFs, but in action.
If you’re worried about naming your business wrong? Start with this page.
Stop Wasting Time on Broken Business Tools
I’ve been there. Scrolling. Clicking.
Opening tabs. Closing tabs. Wasting hours hunting for one thing that actually works.
You don’t need more tools. You need Business Guide Etrsbizness.
It’s not another dashboard full of noise. It’s the single place where everything connects (no) patchwork. No guesswork.
You’re tired of stitching together half-baked templates and outdated checklists. You want clarity. Not clutter.
You want to build. Not just browse.
This isn’t theory. Real people use it to fix their biggest bottleneck this week.
What’s your biggest challenge right now? Hiring? Cash flow?
Pricing?
It’s already in there.
Take the first step. Explore the platform today. Find the one resource that solves it (before) lunch.


Thomas Monkesterson writes the kind of investment strategies and insights 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. Thomas 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: Investment Strategies and Insights, Entrepreneurship Tips, Market Analysis Trends, 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. Thomas 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 Thomas'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 investment strategies and insights 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.

