Hi, I'm Kat

I help solopreneurs and founders build leverage around their real human capacity—the foundation of what I call Capacity-First Entrepreneurship.

Most business advice starts with growth or monetization. This one starts earlier—with you.

Whether you're building from scratch or recalibrating something that's started to feel heavier than it should, the logic is the same: your health, your time, and your relationships get protected first. Your business is built from what remains. Financial leverage gets layered within that, not on top of a depleted version of you.

It may start slower depending on the life stage you are in, but that's the only way it actually compounds. The outcome—a business that works with your life instead of against it—is what I call Lived Leverage.

My story

For 20 years I worked within corporate Germany and Silicon Valley—C-suite rooms, operations, high-performance systems. I know how to build things that perform and make the numbers make sense.

But after living inside 1,000+ executive calendars, I also saw something I couldn't unsee: how easy it is to build something impressive that slowly erodes the person running it. Revenue rises, responsibility grows, and the calendar takes on a damn life of its own. From the outside, it looks like success. From the inside, personal capacity quietly drains.

That was true for a lot of people around me. It was also true for me.

5 years ago—after burnout, a side of insulin resistance, and a quiet "what the hell am I doing?" moment—I started doing it differently. Not with a reinvention fantasy. I built a 6-figure fractional operations business working roughly 3 days a week by designing financial leverage around my actual capacity during that life stage instead of chasing more revenue dopamine and LinkedIn success badges. That one structural shift let me leave Germany, move to Portugal, stabilize my health, and build more from a regulated nervous system instead of a fried one.

The pattern I couldn’t unsee


The problem was never ambition or online entrepreneurship itself. It was the operating logic most businesses are built on—maximize output first, ask what that does to the person running it later.

Flip that order, and everything changes.

Capacity-First Living is the reservation layer. Your health, free time, and time for relationships are prioritized first—before the business makes any claim on them. Your life stage matters. So does your capacity floor—the minimum baseline you need to function without borrowing from your future self. I call personal capacity Leverage Layer 0, because nothing above it holds long-term if this layer breaks.

Capacity-First Entrepreneurship builds from what remains after that reservation. Your business is designed to fit inside your actual capacity—not exceed it, not gradually consume it. Income your body can sustain. Offers that don't eat up your evenings. A calendar that works like an asset. Work that grows without requiring more of you each time.

Together, they produce:

Lived Leverage → Enough Wealth

A business that compounds over time and fits inside your life. When financial wealth follows—and it does—you still have the personal capacity to enjoy it. That's when Lived Leverage begins to compound.

How I help others now

I still work as a fractional operations consultant. Alongside that, I let my pattern-to-livable-systems thinking run free on Substack. I take what's messy, heavy, or chaotic and turn it into something you can actually live inside. Everything I build is meant to help one-person business owners and founders achieve their ambitions without capacity theft—without sacrificing the life they're building freedom for.

The emerging shift in modern online entrepreneurship is this:

Capacity for life over chasing maximum wealth.

Real wealth isnt the revenue number. Its what your capacity is reserved for. If your business eats your health, relationships, free time, or nervous system, thats not success. Thats mispriced ambition with a bill that always comes due when life hits next.

Across my essays and frameworks, you’ll find more about:

  • Capacity-First Entrepreneurship
  • the Burn → Stabilize → Build loop
  • portfolio solopreneur businesses
  • turning lived experience into pillars & intellectual property
  • designing calm leverage instead of constant hustle
  • building sustainable online businesses with lean MOR tools
  • personal stories, lived experiences and uncomfortable truths

The rules of the room

  • Personal capacity is a business asset. Protect it like one. I call it "Leverage Layer 0" for a reason. 
  • Net income over ego revenue. Calm wealth beats loud money.
  • Structure over chaos. If its messy, its costing you.
  • Leverage without self-betrayal. Ambition is allowed. Self-abandonment isnt.
  • Life-stage honesty. Build what your current life can hold now. Stabilize, then expand.

The fun sprinkles (cause why the f*ck not)

I'm a multipotentialite and generalist who won't "pick one niche and shut up." Dry humor and occasional curse words are factory settings, not a bug. I show up with pillars so I can be all of me: operator brain, strategist, aspiring author, patterns-to-systems nerd, and regular flawed human. Not just the polished professional version, because the right people don't just need strategies. They need to see what this actually looks like in a real life.

The sprinkles: I am divorced and child-free by choice, with a side of WTF arthritis; one cat named Andromeda who crashes every video call; in love with Portuguese pastel de nata, and have a possibly unreasonable obsession with…sheep 🐑🐑🐑 

Calm. Collective. Unbothered. Just happy, fluffy wool.

The exact opposite of hustle culture and my favorite metaphor for building calm portfolio income streams you can fall asleep to. And for a calm, wealthy life while we’re at it.

Join me on Substack where I write about all of this in my publication Lived Leverage: the systems, the personal stories, the mistakes, the recalibrations, and the uncomfortable truths behind building a calm, profitable, capacity-first business. 

Swipe what helps you the most. Ignore what doesn't. No hard feelings, ever.

Glad you're here.

#1

Read Lived Leverage on Substack