Your first £60k in business
Hitting £5k a month is the moment it all stops feeling like a hobby. It is the point where most digital agency owners finally breathe out and think, "this is working". You stop questioning whether you can call yourself an entrepreneur and you start acting like one. It is a serious milestone, and if you are building a service business based on recurring revenue, it is the first real sign that you have traction.
The good news is that £5k a month is not some mythical target. It is simple maths. A handful of recurring clients paying you between £250 and £1,500 a month. Five clients at £1,000 each. Ten clients at £500 each. Even twenty clients at £250 each if you are on the lower end of the pricing scale. The mix does not matter. What matters is that you reach that level where the monthly revenue covers your costs, covers your life, and gives you breathing space.
This is where the shift happens. You stop waking up worrying about whether you have enough work coming in. You stop second-guessing your value. Instead, you start thinking about systems, pricing, processes, team, scale. These are the thoughts of an entrepreneur, not a side gigger.
I've seen some people within the Blam Digital Partnership hit £5k a month fast. They drop into the market with confidence, momentum, and a network, and within a few months they are already there. Others take longer. They make mistakes, tweak their offer, adjust their message, learn how to speak to business owners properly, and build belief along the way. Both journeys are valid. Both still end at the same point, a sustainable £5k a month.
What makes this number important is not the money itself. It is the consistency. A run of monthly paying clients shows you are solving real problems and doing it well enough that people pay you again and again. That is the core of any successful digital agency. Predictability. Renewal. Retainers. Once you lock those in, you have a proper business model, not a series of random jobs.
At £5k a month you finally feel in control. You can reinvest. You can outsource the work you should not be doing. You can improve your fulfilment. You can spend more time selling. You can upgrade your tools. You can raise your fees without blinking. All because you are now building from a place of strength, not scarcity.
The beauty is that from here, the path to £10k a month feels achievable. You have proof that everything you are doing works. You know how to sell. You know who you want as clients. You know what problems you solve. You know how to deliver. You are no longer guessing. You are scaling.
If you are not yet at this point, make it your first serious target. Get your recurring revenue up. Build trust with a small group of clients and deliver at a level that gives them zero reason to leave. Do the simple things well, talk to more people, make more offers, follow up relentlessly, and give every client a great experience.
Your first £60k year is the bridge between wanting to be an entrepreneur and actually being one. Once you cross it, everything changes. You stop playing small. You stop apologising for your ambition. You stop wondering if this is ever going to work.
Because you now have proof that it already is.
To your success,
Grant










