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Owned by Gareth

The Wildlife Lens

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A global community for wildlife lovers to share encounters, learn animal behaviour, and deepen their connection to the natural world.

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3 contributions to Secret Weapon
Quick poll: How do you handle scope creep?
Pick one: A) Push back politely every time B) Absorb it to keep the peace C) Charge a change fee D) Re-scope the whole project Drop a letter in the comments — curious where most of you actually land vs. where you wish you landed.
1 like • 3d
@Artworqq Kevin Suber Totally agree that growth requires adaptation. But adaptation works best when the foundation is fixed. When the entry point is architected properly, you can evolve the offer without reinventing the doorway.
0 likes • 3d
@Artworqq Kevin Suber Skool changes, yes — but the principles of good architecture don’t. Tools evolve; foundations don’t.
Lesson 10: The "Boring Stack" Wins Every Time
Every year a new tool promises to change everything. Notion AI. Monday. ClickUp. Linear. Whatever's next. After 8+ years freelancing, my stack keeps getting smaller, not bigger: Google Sheets, Gmail, Stripe, Loom, Calendly. That's it. Boring tools you fully understand beat shiny tools you half-use. What's one tool you ditched this year and didn't miss?
1 like • 3d
I am all into anything new... but again, I use the tools that are proven to give me a good result, no experimentation for important tasks.
The feast-or-famine cycle is a systems problem, not a sales problem
If you've been freelancing for more than six months, you know the pattern. You land a big project. You go heads-down for weeks. You deliver. You look up. Your pipeline is empty. Panic sets in. You scramble for new work. Eventually something lands. Repeat. Most people think the fix is "get better at sales." It's not. The fix is a system that keeps your pipeline warm even when you're buried in project work. Here's what I do — it takes about 30 minutes a week total: I post one piece of content online every week. It doesn't have to be long or brilliant. A short insight, a quick tip, a lesson learned. The goal is just to stay visible so people remember you exist. I reach out to two past clients or contacts every week. A quick email — not a sales pitch. Just checking in, sharing something useful, asking how things are going. Relationships are your pipeline. I keep a simple spreadsheet of every lead, where they came from, and their status. When I'm busy I still update it. When I'm quiet I work through it. The trick is that these three things are NON-NEGOTIABLE. Even in your busiest week. Thirty minutes. That's it. The freelancers who break the feast-or-famine cycle aren't the best salespeople. They're the ones who built a system and stuck to it. Has anyone here cracked this? Or are you still stuck in the cycle? Let's compare notes.
1 like • 27d
I think Luke Michael brings up an important subject that too many entrepreneurs ignore: Feast‑or‑famine isn’t a sales problem — it’s a systems problem. Most people blame their marketing, their offer, or “a slow month,” but the real issue is deeper: - no predictable workflow - no repeatable process - no structure for consistency - no system that turns effort into momentum When you rely on adrenaline, luck, or last‑minute pushes, you burn out. When you rely on systems, you build stability. This is exactly why I created my group and I joined Secret Weapon — to help small business owners escape the cycle and build something calm, repeatable, and sustainable. Because when your systems work, you can finally breathe.
1-3 of 3
Gareth Parkes
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15points to level up
@garethparkes
I help long‑term builders replace chaos with clarity and hype with systems for sustainable growth, freeing time for wildlife photography and travel.

Active 24m ago
Joined Dec 23, 2025
INFP
Eastbourne