By Thabo M., Cape Town When Thabo first crossed 5,000 followers, it felt like a win. But behind the scenes, his business was messy. Invoices were scattered. Income tracking was manual. Payroll for part-time collaborators took hours. And tax season? Pure stress. Like many small creators and entrepreneurs in South Africa, he had an audience — but no system.
Scaling Without the Grind: A South African Influencer’s Sage-Powered Business System
By Thabo M., Cape Town When Thabo first crossed 5,000 followers, it felt like a win. But behind the scenes, his business was messy. Invoices were scattered. Income tracking was manual. Payroll for part-time collaborators took hours. And tax season? Pure stress. Like many small creators and entrepreneurs in South Africa, he had an audience — but no system.
The Sage System: How a South African Influencer Scaled Revenue Without Posting More
By Thabo M., Cape Town When Thabo first crossed 5,000 followers, it felt like a win. But behind the scenes, his business was messy. Invoices were scattered. Income tracking was manual. Payroll for part-time collaborators took hours. And tax season? Pure stress. Like many small creators and entrepreneurs in South Africa, he had an audience — but no system.
From Creator to Operator: How One South African Influencer Scaled Using Sage, Not More Posts
By Thabo M., Cape Town When Thabo first crossed 5,000 followers, it felt like a win. But behind the scenes, his business was messy. Invoices were scattered. Income tracking was manual. Payroll for part-time collaborators took hours. And tax season? Pure stress. Like many small creators and entrepreneurs in South Africa, he had an audience — but no system.
How a South African Influencer Built a Scalable Business with Sage — Without Creating More Content
By Thabo M., Cape Town When Thabo first crossed 5,000 followers, it felt like a win. But behind the scenes, his business was messy. Invoices were scattered. Income tracking was manual. Payroll for part-time collaborators took hours. And tax season? Pure stress. Like many small creators and entrepreneurs in South Africa, he had an audience — but no system.