Money as means or money as ends?
Discover how authors can balance creative integrity and financial success by understanding the difference between using money as a means versus an end.
Make money from your writing without losing yourself
It’s not selfish to want your writing to pay you. It’s not greedy to want your career to be profitable.
You’re allowed to want that. And you’re allowed to get there without becoming someone else.
There is a way to build a creative business that feels right to you. A way to make money while staying aligned with your voice, your values, and your vision.
How to Thrive as a Writer in a Capitalist Dystopia walks you through how to do exactly that. With clarity. With honesty. With experience.
This isn’t about chasing every trend. It’s about building a writing life that supports you and serves your readers.
You can do this. And this book will help.
Hi,
This article is an excerpt from our bigger framework article. I’ve been getting a lot of questions about this specific concept, so I wanted to shed some light on it specifically.
Most advice about "growth" comes from people who see money as the ultimate goal. They are usually agnostic about what they sell or how they sell it. To them, the process, whether it is crafting a book, building a platform, or designing a marketing plan, is just a means to an end. Their focus is on the outcome: the accumulation of wealth.
For many creators, this mindset grates against their souls. Writers tend to care deeply about the process and the work itself. Writing is not just a job; it is a craft, a calling, and often a form of self-expression. For most authors, money is not the ultimate goal. Instead, it is a tool, a necessary means to create more books, connect with readers, and sustain a writing career. Once the basics are covered—keeping the lights on, buying time to write—money often fades into the background.
This difference in priorities creates a disconnect. Advice aimed at maximizing revenue can feel out of sync with what authors truly value. When money is the end goal, the strategies you use are very different than when writing and creating are the end goals. This misalignment leads to authors and growth experts talking past each other, unable to connect because they are speaking entirely different languages.
Money as means
For authors, money serves as a way to sustain their writing lives and foster creativity. It enables them to invest in their craft, expand their audience, and build a sustainable career without constant financial stress. Writers who see money as a means prioritize creative integrity and long-term growth over short-term gains.
This approach often involves reinvesting earnings into areas like editing, cover design, marketing, or learning opportunities. For example, an author might use royalties to pay for a professional editor or a marketing campaign that helps their book reach a wider audience. The goal is not to accumulate wealth for its own sake but to create a virtuous cycle where financial stability supports better work and better work leads to greater impact.
Seeing money as a means allows authors to focus on their craft and their readers. It aligns their financial decisions with their creative values, ensuring that their work remains authentic while still reaching those it is meant to serve. This perspective often leads to careers that are deeply fulfilling, even if they do not yield massive financial rewards.
Most importantly, when money is the means, you aren’t spending a lot of time focusing on how to make more, unless it aligns with the work you are already doing.
Focus on growth through craft: Authors reinvest earnings to improve their skills and their books, prioritizing quality over quick wins.
Create stability for creativity: Money is used to remove financial stress, allowing authors to focus on what matters most—their writing.
Money as ends
For most entrepreneurs, money is not a tool but the ultimate goal. This mindset shifts the focus from the process of writing to the financial outcomes it can deliver. Authors who take this approach often prioritize market trends, scalability, and profitability over personal or artistic considerations.
This perspective can lead to strategies that emphasize quantity over quality. An author might focus on publishing quickly in high-demand genres, even if the work feels formulaic or disconnected from their true interests. While this approach can result in financial success, it often leaves little room for creative satisfaction or personal fulfillment.
When money is treated as the end goal, decisions are driven by external metrics like sales rankings or revenue targets. The creative process becomes secondary, valued primarily for its ability to generate income. This can create a disconnect between the author and their work, as well as between the author and their audience.
These types of entrepreneurs don’t care about what they are selling (with some exceptions) just that they are making money doing it.
Prioritize market trends: Decisions are driven by what is profitable rather than what is personally meaningful.
Measure success by financial metrics: The focus shifts to sales and revenue, often at the expense of creative satisfaction.
The divide between seeing money as a means versus an end reflects deeper differences in priorities and values. For authors, aligning financial strategies with creative goals is essential to sustaining both their craft and their careers. By focusing on money as a means, authors can create a virtuous cycle where financial stability enables better work, which in turn reaches and resonates with a broader audience.
Growth doesn’t have to mean compromising artistic integrity. It can be a pathway to amplify your voice, build meaningful connections with readers, and create a lasting impact. Whether you lean toward productivity, monetization, or audience engagement, the key is to define what success looks like for you and use actionable KPIs to track progress without losing sight of your values. When approached with clarity and intentionality, growth becomes not just a financial metric but a reflection of the legacy you wish to leave as an author.
What do you think?
How do you currently view the role of money in your writing career? Primarily as a means to sustain your craft or as an end goal to achieve financial success? How does this perspective shape your decisions?
What strategies or KPIs can you implement to better align your financial goals with your creative values while maintaining sustainability in your career?
How can authors effectively communicate their priorities and values to growth advisors or collaborators to ensure alignment without compromising their artistic integrity?
Let us know in the comments.
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"The goal is not to accumulate wealth for its own sake but to create a virtuous cycle where financial stability supports better work and better work leads to greater impact."
Exactly.
I definitely see money as means, but it's led to me being a little too precious with the work, I think. May also be a little perfectionism hidden in there, but I find myself always trying to find the purest essence of what I'm creating rather than creating it... because it means so much. As I type that, I see it's an avoidance tactic. I love the idea of creating KPI's for tracking growth....