How I'm Building an Online Business While Working Full Time
Most people assume you need more time to start an online business. The reality is different. What matters is how you structure the time you already have — and what you choose to prioritise within it.
One of the biggest misconceptions about starting an online business is that you need large amounts of free time.
You don’t.
What you actually need is:
- clear priorities
- a repeatable system
- and the ability to use your best hours properly
Because time isn’t the real constraint.
unstructured time is.
The Reality: Building This Around a Full-Time Job
This isn’t being built with unlimited flexibility.
It’s being built alongside:
- a full-time job (often 10+ hour days)
- training commitments
- day-to-day life responsibilities
Which means the available time is limited.
And more importantly:
it’s fragmented and energy-dependent
That changes how you approach everything.
The Constraint: Less Than 2 Hours Per Day
Realistically, this comes down to:
around 1–2 hours per day of focused work
Not 5 hours.
Not weekends-only bursts.
Just consistent, repeatable blocks of time.
And that constraint forces a different approach:
You can’t do everything — so you have to choose what actually matters.
Why Mornings Are the Leverage Point (Energy > Time)
Not all hours are equal.
The same person can produce:
- high-quality work in the morning
- and low-quality, distracted work in the evening
So instead of asking:
“How much time do I have?”
The better question is:
When am I most capable of doing meaningful work?
For me, that’s early morning.
Before distractions.
Before work.
Before the day starts taking over.
The System: Consistency Over Intensity
This is where a concept from Atomic Habits by James Clear becomes relevant.
Most people rely on motivation.
But motivation is inconsistent.
Systems are not.
You don’t rise to the level of your goals. You fall to the level of your systems.
The system here is simple:
- same time each day
- same type of work
- no decision-making required
That removes friction.
And makes consistency possible.
The important takeaway here is that results may not be immediate, but with the right systems they will be inevitable.
What Actually Gets Done in Those 2 Hours
This is where most people get it wrong.
They spend their limited time:
- researching endlessly
- watching tutorials
- planning instead of building
That doesn’t move anything forward.
The focus instead is on:
- creating content
- building assets
- publishing consistently
Specifically:
work that compounds over time
(Covered further in how to build an SEO site and traffic strategy)
What Gets Ignored (Deliberately)
This structure only works because of what’s not included.
That means deliberately ignoring:
- trying to grow every platform
- building multiple projects
- optimising too early
- consuming more than creating
Not forever.
Just long enough to create something real.
The Trade-Offs (This Isn’t Free)
This approach has clear trade-offs:
- progress is slower than full-time effort
- results take longer to appear
- it requires consistency without immediate reward
But the alternative is worse:
doing nothing because the “perfect” time never appears
What This Actually Builds Over Time
2 hours per day doesn’t feel like much.
But applied consistently:
- content accumulates
- assets grow
- traffic begins to appear
And most importantly:
momentum builds
That’s what changes everything.
Closing Thought
You don’t need more time to start an online business.
You need:
- a clear system
- a realistic constraint
- and the discipline to follow it consistently
Everything else builds from there.