Why I Opened a Business Bank Account Before Making a Single Dollar

I’m sitting on my couch, laptop open, Frida (my cat) draped across my legs like the diva she is, and I’m signing up for a Found business bank account. For a brand that has, at this exact moment, made zero dollars. Not a penny. Not a single brand deal cashed, not one digital product sold, not even a stray Venmo from a friend who wanted to support the vision.
And I did it anyway.
If you’d told me a year ago that I’d be opening a business bank account before I had any business income coming in, I probably would’ve laughed and said, “Girl, let’s wait until the money’s actually moving.” But I’ve learned something on this Girl Method journey that I wish someone had told me sooner: the way you treat your dream from day one is the way it’s going to grow.
So let’s talk about why I did it, and why — if you’re building something of your own — you might want to do it too.
It’s not about the money. It’s about the mindset.
Here’s the honest truth: opening a business bank account is, on a practical level, a tiny administrative thing. It took me less than 15 minutes. But on an energetic level? It was huge.
Because the moment I clicked “submit” on that application, something shifted. The Girl Method stopped being “this thing I’m working on” and became something with a real, separate identity. It had its own name. Its own account number. Its own little corner of the financial world that said: this is a business, and it’s going to behave like one.
And I’ll be real with you — that mindset shift mattered more than I expected. There’s a version of me that could’ve kept treating this like a passion project until “the money started coming in.” But I’ve been around long enough to know that the money doesn’t usually show up for the version of you that’s still hedging. It shows up for the version of you that has already decided.
So I decided.
Reason one: clean books from day one
If you’ve ever tried to untangle personal and business expenses at tax time, you already know the special kind of pain I’m trying to help you avoid. Sifting through a year of Target runs trying to figure out which Sharpies were for filming and which were for, like, labeling moving boxes? No thank you, sunshine.
By having a separate account from the very beginning, every single business expense — my domain, my editing software, the lighting kit I bought for filming, the props for that flat lay shoot — runs through one clean place. When I sit down to do my books (or hand them to someone smarter than me), it’s all already organized.
You’re not just saving future-you time. You’re saving her sanity.
Reason two: the tax piece is real, even pre-revenue
Here’s something nobody warned me about: you can have business expenses before you have business income. Camera gear, courses, subscriptions, props, even a portion of your home internet if you’re filming from your apartment — these add up. And depending on how your business is set up, a lot of them can become legitimate write-offs once the income does start flowing.
But you can only claim what you can prove. Having those expenses run through a dedicated business account from day one is the simplest, cleanest paper trail you can possibly create. I’m not a tax pro, and you should absolutely talk to one for your specific situation, but the principle is universal: future-you cannot deduct what past-you didn’t track.
Found specifically makes this even easier because it has built-in expense categorization and tax estimation, which means I’m not playing catch-up when April comes around.
Reason three: it changes how you show up
Real talk — when (not if, when) the brand deals start coming in, I want to invoice as a business. I want my income hitting an account that says “The Girl Method” on it. I want the Stripe payouts, the affiliate commissions, the digital product sales all flowing into one professional, organized place.
Imagine pitching a brand and they ask where to send payment, and you fumble around trying to figure out how to make it look polished. Versus sending over a clean invoice, with business banking info, that just feels legit. That’s not vanity. That’s positioning.
You don’t rise to the level of your dreams — you fall to the level of your infrastructure. So I’m building the infrastructure now, while it’s quiet, so I’m ready when it gets loud.
Reason four: I’m voting for the woman I’m becoming
This is the soft, sappy reason, but it might be the most important one.
Every choice we make is a vote for the version of ourselves we want to grow into. Opening that account was a vote for the woman who runs a profitable, organized, intentional business. It was a vote for the version of me who doesn’t wait for permission, doesn’t wait for “enough” proof, doesn’t wait until the world tells her she’s allowed to take herself seriously.
I took myself seriously first. The world catches up after.
Why Found, specifically
Quick note since I know someone’s going to ask: I went with Found because it’s genuinely built for women like us — solo founders, creators, freelancers, people building something from scratch. There’s no monthly fee, no minimum balance, and the app actually estimates your taxes for you in real time so you’re never blindsided. Invoicing is built in. Bookkeeping is built in. It’s like having a tiny CFO in your pocket without the salary.
Not sponsored, not an ad, just what worked for me at this stage. Pick the platform that fits your life — but pick something.
The takeaway, love
You do not need to wait until you’re “making real money” to set up the bones of a real business. You don’t need permission. You don’t need a launch date. You don’t even need a logo (although I have one, and she’s gorgeous).
You need a decision.
Decide that this thing you’re building is real. Then go do one small, boring, practical thing that proves it — to yourself, to the universe, to your future bank account.
Mine was opening that account.
Yours might be too.
Now go on, sunshine. Build the thing.
xx, Nai




