I have over a thousand Amazon Influencer videos right now. A thousand. And I genuinely could not tell you exactly when that happened because it didn’t feel like a big moment. It felt like doing a few videos, and then a few more, and then one day I looked up and there were a thousand of them sitting there generating income while I slept.
That’s compounding. It doesn’t announce itself. It just quietly accumulates until one day the evidence is undeniable.
The frustrating thing about compounding is that it looks like nothing is happening for a long time, especially when you start losing motivation. And then it looks like everything happened all at once. Both of those things are true, which makes it really hard to trust the process when you’re in the middle of it.
The Math That Needs to Be Talked About
Small actions add up whether you’re paying attention or not. That’s the thing people miss. You don’t have to be tracking every step or measuring every result for the accumulation to be real. It’s happening in the background the whole time. Even though I do love me a good tracker!
A few videos a week becomes hundreds of videos. A few blog posts a month becomes a real content library. A skill you learn a little at a time becomes something you actually know. One Pilates class at a time becomes a body that can do things it couldn’t do a year ago.
The math is not complicated. The patience is the hard part, and it’s easy to start feeling like you’re behind others.
And here’s the flip side of that math that I want you to sit with: inconsistency compounds too. Every time you stop and start over, you lose the accumulation. You go back to zero on the momentum. The gap you create when you disappear for a few weeks is not just time lost, it’s compound interest you’ll never collect on that period.
Use my daily habit tracker for a fun way to start staying consistent with whatever you are doing!
What Busy Work Costs You
I ran a food blog for a while and I spent a lot of that time doing things that felt productive without actually being productive. Admin work. Tweaking things. Researching instead of creating. Spiraling about why nothing was working while simultaneously not doing the things that would have made things work.
I would sit there genuinely confused about why the needle wasn’t moving, and the honest answer was that I wasn’t moving it. I was doing busy work to feel like I was doing something without doing the income-producing activities or the community-building or the consistent showing up on social channels that would have actually mattered.
I think about what that blog could have been if I had been consistent with even one social channel during that time. If I had shown up somewhere regularly and built a community around what I was doing. I think I missed a window, and that one stings.
The lesson I took from it: there is productive and there is productive-feeling, and they are not the same thing. You have to be ruthless about knowing which one you’re doing.
What Consistency Actually Looks Like Right Now
These days I try to keep my focus on things that move the needle or build toward something real. Blog posts. Amazon Influencer videos. Learning what’s happening in AI and automation and trying to keep up with it even when it moves fast. Stacking skills that compound on each other.
I still get pulled toward admin work because honestly I love it and my brain finds it satisfying. But I know now that love of admin is a trap if it crowds out the things that actually produce results. So I try to do the income-producing activities first and let the admin fill in the gaps.
Some days I do better at this than others. But the direction is right, and the direction matters more than the pace.

The Pilates Thing
I want to talk about Pilates for a second because I think it’s the clearest example of compounding I’ve experienced that has nothing to do with money or business.
I didn’t notice results for a long time. I showed up, I did the classes, I felt sore AF, and I looked at myself and thought okay I guess this is doing something but I can’t really tell. And then one day it was just obvious. Not just in how I looked but in what I could do. Things I couldn’t have imagined doing a year ago became things I did without thinking about it.
And then something else happened that I didn’t expect. The physical strength built into confidence. The confidence built into better mental health. The better mental health made everything else easier.
One small consistent action, over enough time, cascaded into things I never would have predicted when I started. That’s what compounding does when you let it run long enough.
The Danger of Starting Over
One of the most expensive things you can do is quit and start over. Not because starting over is shameful, sometimes it’s exactly right, but because every time you start over you lose the compound interest you had built up.
The person who has been showing up imperfectly for two years is almost always further along than the person who started fresh with perfect motivation six months ago. Imperfect consistency beats perfect intention every single time.
So if you’re in a slow season right now, if things feel like they’re not moving, the question to ask yourself is not whether to start over. It’s whether you can just keep going. Even slowly. Even imperfectly. Even on the days when it feels like nothing is happening.
Because something is happening. The math is running whether you can see it or not.
Today’s Action
Pick one thing you want to compound. Something small and specific that you could do consistently, not perfectly, just consistently. Now ask yourself what doing that thing three times a week for a year would actually add up to. Write that number down. That’s your garden. Go plant something in it today.

Frequently Asked Questions
How small is small enough to actually count?
Smaller than you think. One video. One paragraph. One rep. One entry. The size of the action matters a lot less than the consistency of it. A tiny action done regularly will outperform a big action done occasionally every single time because of how accumulation works over time.
What if I’ve been inconsistent for a long time? Is it too late to start compounding?
It’s never too late and you’re not starting from zero. You have skills, context, and experience that someone starting from scratch doesn’t have. The compound interest starts running the moment you start showing up consistently, regardless of what came before. Start now.
How do I know if what I’m doing is actually building toward something or just busy work?
Ask yourself this: if I do this same thing consistently for a year, will I have something to show for it? A body of work, a skill, a relationship, a revenue stream, a habit? If the answer is yes, it’s probably worth compounding. If the answer is just a cleaner inbox or a more organized desktop, it might be productive-feeling rather than actually productive.
I lose motivation when I don’t see results. How do I keep going?
This is the hardest part and I don’t want to pretend it’s easy. What helps me is zooming out. Instead of looking at this week’s results, I look at where I was six months ago. The gap between then and now is usually bigger than it felt while I was living it. The Pilates thing taught me that. I couldn’t see it happening and then one day I clearly could. Trust the math even when the mirror isn’t showing you the results yet.
You don’t need a big break. You need a small action and enough time.
The compound interest is already running on everything you’ve planted. Keep going.
