This is not a book about growth.
It’s a book about what happens
after growth works.
Most founders know how to create value.
They know how to build, ship, iterate, and learn. They know how to chase traction, prove usefulness, and delay monetisation until it feels justified.
What they don’t know—because almost no one teaches it—is how value capture quietly forms whether they design it or not.
And how, once it hardens, it reshapes power, legitimacy, fairness, and the ability to reinvent.
Capture What You Create is written for founders who have already learnt how to build—but find themselves uneasy about how they earn.
Not because they lack ambition.
But because something feels structurally unresolved.
This book is for you if:
You’ve delayed monetisation to “focus on value”—and now feel boxed in by expectations
Your product works, but changing how you earn feels risky or illegitimate
You sense that pricing, power, and fairness are becoming entangled—but lack language for it
You know reinvention will be required one day—and suspect that day is closer than it looks
This is not a pricing book.
It is not a monetisation playbook.
And it is not a collection of tactics you can apply without friction.
That is intentional.
What this book actually does
Instead of telling you what to charge, this book helps you see:
Why value creation, value capture, and value extraction are not the same thing
How early earning decisions quietly train users, markets, and organisations
Why monetisation is never neutral—even when it’s postponed
How legitimacy erodes long before revenue does
Why every value capture model has a half-life
What truly triggers reinvention—and why waiting for crisis is usually too late
The book moves from clarity → design → power → reinvention, treating value capture as a foundational design choice, not a financial afterthought.
Who this book is
not for
This book is not for:
First-time founders looking for step-by-step instructions
Readers who want frameworks to think on their behalf
Anyone expecting certainty, templates, or clean answers
Some chapters slow you down rather than speed you up.
Some end with diagnosis rather than action.
Some will feel uncomfortable—especially if success has already taken hold.
That discomfort is part of the design.
Why this book exists
Start-up culture gives founders language for growth, learning, and impact.
It gives them almost no language for legitimacy, responsibility, expiry, or redesigning how they earn once power accumulates.
This book exists to fill that gap.
Not to tell you what decision to make—but to help you recognise when a decision has already been made for you.
If you are ready to think seriously about:
How you earn
Who bears risk as you scale
What feels fair early—and what becomes contested later
And how to preserve the agency to reinvent before pressure forces it
Then this book is for you.
Capture what you create.
And be ready to redesign how you do it.