You wake up early.
Before most people are even out of bed, you're already thinking about unfinished jobs.
A suit jacket that must be delivered by Friday.
A wedding outfit somebody has been calling about since yesterday.
A client asking for adjustments even though you've already spent extra hours making everything perfect.
You work.
You work hard.
You work almost every day.
And somehow...
At the end of the month, the money doesn't match the effort.
You look around your workshop and wonder how it happened.
The machines are running. The clients are coming. The orders are there.
Yet the bank account tells a completely different story.
"Where exactly is all the money going?"
You've asked yourself that question more times than you can count.
Sometimes while ironing. Sometimes while cutting fabric. Sometimes late at night when everyone else has gone home.
You remember the excitement you felt years ago when you first started.
You thought being busy would automatically make you profitable.
You thought more clients would solve everything.
You thought more referrals would finally bring financial peace.
Instead, the opposite happened.
You became busier.
But not richer.
You started accepting almost every job that came your way.
You feared turning people away. You feared increasing your prices.
You feared hearing those words every tailor hates hearing...
"Another tailor is charging less."
And so you compromised.
You adjusted. You discounted. You negotiated.
You smiled. You accepted.
Then quietly worried later.
Because deep down, you knew the numbers weren't making sense.
You knew you were undercharging. But you didn't know how to stop.
You tried increasing prices before.
Two clients disappeared. Maybe three.
Suddenly panic set in.
"What if everyone leaves?"
"What if business dries up?"
"What if I push too hard?"
So you dropped your prices again.
Back to safety. Back to survival. Back to the same cycle.
And now another year has passed.
You're older. More skilled. Better than you've ever been.
Yet somehow still fighting the same battle.
Working harder than people who earn more than you.
Watching less-skilled competitors charge amounts you don't have the confidence to charge.
Knowing something is wrong. But not knowing exactly how to fix it.
If any of this sounds familiar...
If you've ever looked at a full order book and still felt anxious about money...
If you've ever delivered quality work while secretly wondering whether the job was even worth taking...
If you've ever felt trapped by your own prices...
Then what you're about to read may be one of the most important things you've encountered this year.
Drop everything you are doing now and listen to every word I'm about to say.
Because I'm about to share with you a simple system that changed everything for me.
What's interesting is that most business breakthroughs don't arrive with fanfare.
They don't show up on giant billboards.
They don't arrive through flashy motivational speeches.
Instead, they move quietly. From one person to another. From one generation to the next.
Hidden inside conversations most people never get to hear.
And that's exactly how this one reached me.
A method quietly passed between successful business owners who understood something the rest of us completely missed.
A method that had been helping fashion entrepreneurs protect their profits long before social media experts started giving business advice online.
Hi, my name is Tunde Adeyemi.
And the first thing you should know about me is that I'm NOT a business guru.
I'm not some celebrity entrepreneur. I'm not a motivational speaker. I'm not a financial consultant.
I'm simply a tailor from Lagos who spent years working incredibly hard while getting nowhere financially.
For a very long time, I thought hard work alone would solve my problems.
I was wrong.
Very wrong.
Here is my story. And I want you to read every word of it.
I started my tailoring business in 2016.
At the time, I was full of optimism.
I wasn't rich. I didn't have fancy equipment. I didn't have influential connections.
But I believed one thing with absolute certainty.
If I became skilled enough and worked hard enough, success would eventually come.
And for a while, it looked like I was right.
Clients started arriving. Referrals increased. People complimented my work.
Every completed suit boosted my confidence. I felt like I was building something meaningful.
Then came 2018.
That year changed everything.
Not because my business collapsed.
Ironically, it was because my business looked successful.
By May of 2018, I had enough suit orders booked to keep me busy until December.
Think about that for a moment. An order book filled months in advance.
Most people would call that a dream situation.
Most people would assume I was making serious money.
Even family members thought I was thriving.
Friends congratulated me. People saw activity. They saw clients. They saw work. They assumed profit.
But they couldn't see what was happening behind the scenes.
And honestly... neither could I.
The deposits from those jobs had already been spent.
The fabrics still needed purchasing. The linings still needed buying.
The overhead expenses kept arriving every month.
Rent. Fuel. Transportation. Repairs. Unexpected costs. Everywhere I turned, money was leaving.
Yet somehow there was never enough left over.
One afternoon I sat down with my notebook.
I started writing numbers.
And for the first time, I forced myself to look honestly at my situation.
What I saw terrified me.
Because despite being busy...
I was dangerously close to running out of cash.
The only way I could keep completing existing jobs was by taking deposits from new jobs.
New deposits funded old commitments. Old commitments created new pressure. The cycle never ended.
I eventually gave it a name.
The Circle of Stagnation.
And the worst part?
I wasn't lazy. I wasn't incompetent. I wasn't struggling because of poor workmanship.
I was struggling because I had no pricing system.
Just guesses.
And when your business is built on guesses...
Eventually reality catches up.
That reality showed up one evening while I was sitting alone in the workshop after everyone had gone home.
The noise was gone. The sewing machines were silent. The pressing table was empty.
And for the first time in a long time, there were no distractions.
Just me. And the numbers.
I remember staring at my notebook.
Then staring at the wall. Then staring at the notebook again.
I couldn't make the math work.
No matter how many times I recalculated. No matter how many excuses I made.
The truth remained the same.
I was working like a successful businessman while earning like a struggling apprentice.
That realization hurt. A lot.
Because it challenged everything I believed.
For years I had convinced myself that effort was the problem.
Work harder. Take more jobs. Stay later. Sleep less. Accept more clients. Say yes more often.
But none of those things fixed the real issue.
In fact, they made it worse.
Every additional underpriced job simply multiplied the problem.
I didn't know it then. But I was scaling inefficiency. I was growing activity. Not profit.
And activity without profit eventually becomes exhaustion.
I began noticing changes in myself.
I was becoming irritable. Short-tempered. Restless.
Clients would call and instead of feeling grateful, I felt pressure.
Every new enquiry felt like another responsibility. Another deadline. Another problem to solve.
That wasn't how business was supposed to feel.
I knew something had to change. But I had no idea what.
So I started looking for answers.
Unfortunately... I looked in all the wrong places.
First, I copied what other tailors were charging.
That seemed logical. If another tailor charged ₦50,000, I charged something similar.
The problem? I didn't know their costs. I didn't know their overhead.
I didn't know their experience level or their business model. I was blindly copying numbers that meant absolutely nothing.
That failed.
Then I tried increasing prices aggressively.
One week. Two clients disappeared. I panicked. Immediately lowered prices again.
That failed too.
After that I attended a general business seminar.
The speaker talked about vision boards. Mindset. Goals. Positive thinking.
All useful things. But nobody explained how to calculate the correct price for a bespoke suit in Lagos.
Nobody explained overhead allocation. Nobody explained unpredictable production timelines.
So I left inspired... but unchanged.
Another failure.
Then I asked a friend who was considered "business savvy."
His advice? "Just charge more confidently."
I still laugh whenever I remember that.
Because confidence doesn't create a pricing system. Confidence without structure is just guesswork with better posture.
That failed too.
Next, I tried calculating overhead expenses.
That lasted three days. The numbers became confusing.
Some months were busy. Some months weren't. Job quantities changed constantly.
I eventually abandoned the exercise altogether. Another dead end.
Then came YouTube. Instagram. Business podcasts.
American business advice. European business advice. Advice for product sellers. Advice for agencies.
Everybody had an opinion.
But none of it matched the reality of a bespoke tailoring business in Lagos.
Nothing fit. Nothing worked.
And slowly... I started losing hope.
Not dramatically. Not overnight.
Just little by little. The way a leak empties a bucket. One drop at a time.
Then something happened.
Something completely unexpected.
A colleague invited me to a small business dinner.
Nothing fancy. No giant conference hall. No television cameras. No influencers taking selfies.
Just a small private gathering of fashion entrepreneurs.
Maybe twenty people. Possibly fewer. The kind of room where serious conversations happen.
One of the speakers that evening was a man named Biodun Williams.
I had heard whispers about him before. Not publicly. Not online. Quietly.
The way respected people are discussed when they're not in the room.
People spoke about him differently. Carefully. Almost reverently. Like someone whose advice carried weight.
During his presentation, he displayed a set of numbers on a projector screen.
Real Lagos fashion business numbers. Not theory. Not motivation. Numbers.
The room became uncomfortable.
I noticed people shifting in their seats. Avoiding eye contact. Looking down.
Because many of us recognized ourselves in those figures.
I certainly did.
After the seminar ended, dinner was served.
People gathered in small groups. Conversations started. Networking began.
And before I could talk myself out of it...
I walked toward Biodun.
I asked him one simple question.
"Sir... why do some tailors stay busy for years and still never seem to move forward financially?"
He looked at me quietly. Didn't answer immediately. Didn't rush. Didn't perform.
Then he pulled out a chair, looked directly at me, and said something I'll never forget.
"Sit down. This conversation will take a while."
What followed changed my business forever.
Three hours. Three hours that saved me years.
At one point I started explaining everything I'd tried.
The seminars. The confidence advice. The pricing experiments. The YouTube videos. The copying competitors. All of it.
He listened patiently.
Then shook his head. Not dismissively. Almost sympathetically. Like a doctor who had seen the same illness a thousand times.
Then he said:
"Tunde, your problem is not hard work. Your problem is not skill. Your problem is not clients. Your problem is that you are pricing your business from the outside in instead of the inside out."
I remember blinking.
Because I didn't fully understand what he meant.
He grabbed a sheet of paper. Started drawing. Started explaining.
Started connecting ideas I'd never seen connected before.
True costs. Time allocation. Overhead spread. Client transitions. Price defence. Profit protection.
Everything linked together. Everything practical. Everything specific to bespoke tailoring.
No theories. No motivational slogans. No vague business clichés.
Just a system. A real system.
He called it... The Tailor's Profit Formula.
I'll be honest. I didn't believe him at first.
Not because he wasn't convincing. Because the solution felt too simple.
I had spent years searching for something complicated. Something advanced. Something hidden.
Instead he handed me a framework. A straightforward framework.
I remember thinking: "Surely it can't be this simple."
But I decided to test it anyway. What did I have to lose?
The first few days were uneventful.
Nothing magical happened. No lightning bolt. No overnight transformation.
Just calculations. Numbers. Analysis. Work.
Then came Week One.
Two pending jobs. Two quotations. Both needed repricing. Both terrified me.
I was certain at least one client would reject the quote. Maybe both.
I sent the prices. Then waited.
Ten minutes. Thirty minutes. One hour. Three hours.
Then the first reply arrived.
"Okay. Let's proceed."
I stared at my phone. Confused.
The second reply arrived later.
"No problem. When can we take measurements?"
I read it twice. Then a third time.
Because neither client negotiated. Neither client argued. Neither client complained.
That was the moment something shifted.
Not in my bank account. In my mind.
The breakthrough wasn't financial. It was psychological.
For the first time, I realized many of my fears had been imaginary.
I had built entire business decisions around assumptions that weren't true.
And once those assumptions broke... everything else started changing too.
Week one. Two correct quotes. Both accepted. I had not even lost a single client.
By the end of that first month, my take-home income had increased by N47,000 — without a single additional job.
Same number of clients. Same amount of work. Different numbers, calculated correctly for the first time.
Month three, I used the Client Transition Script — the word-for-word language Biodun had given me for moving existing long-term clients to the new pricing.
My three longest-standing customers. The ones I was most afraid to have that conversation with.
All three stayed. One of them — a man who had been bringing his suits to me for four years — actually said:
"Tunde, honestly, I've been wondering why you were charging so little. You are better than what you've been charging."
My closest friend in the business, Kayode — who has his own tailoring shop in Ikeja — noticed the change before I even told him anything.
He called me one afternoon and said:
"Guy, wetin happen to you? You don change o. You no dey collect nonsense again. Business don dey show for your face."
And it was true. It was showing on my face because it was showing in my account.
I was not the only one who had been in that room at the dinner. Three other tailors I spoke with afterwards had the same experience after applying what Biodun shared.
Chidi, who runs a bespoke men's wear atelier in Lekki, said his first properly-priced month brought in N60,000 more than his previous best month — and he had fewer jobs.
Emeka, who does traditional wear in Festac, told me the Overhead Spread Formula alone saved him from the same trap I had been in for years.
And Tokunbo — a women's fashion designer in Surulere — said the Hold-Your-Price Framework was the first thing that had ever given her something to actually say when a client tried to negotiate her down. She stopped reducing her prices. Her client retention improved, not worsened.
The truth, once you see it, cannot be unseen.
The problem was never the work. It was always the numbers. And the numbers can be fixed — with the right system.
After that night with Biodun, I shared his method with people one by one — friends, people I met at trade events, tailors who called me because they had heard something had shifted in my business. Every conversation took hours. Every time, I had to start from scratch, explaining each step, making sure it landed correctly.
It became unsustainable. I could not sit down with every tailor in Lagos who needed this. And there were too many who needed it.
So I did what made the most sense. I sat down — with professional help — and I put everything inside one place. The full system. Every step. Every formula. Every script. Every checklist. Written plainly, in a format that any working Nigerian tailor or fashion designer can pick up and use immediately — without a business degree, without a coach, without a three-hour dinner.
I put everything — the True Cost Calculator, the Bespoke Time Bracket Method, the Overhead Spread Formula, the scripts for transitioning clients, the framework for holding your price when a client pushes back — inside one simple guide.
Introducing...
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