Welcome to the ADHD-ish Blog
If you've ever Googled "why can't I just get my act together" at midnight, you're in the right place.
The ADHD-ish Blog is where business strategy meets brain science — written for entrepreneurs and small business owners who are tired of advice that wasn't designed for the way their minds actually work.
Whether you're officially diagnosed or just ADHD-adjacent, this is your no-fluff resource for building a business that works with your brain, not against it.
What You'll Find on the ADHD-ish Blog
Every blog is grounded in 20+ years of clinical experience and real-world business strategy — not toxic positivity and generic productivity hacks.
Browse the blog for episodes, frameworks, and straight-talk insights on focus, decision-making, pricing, boundaries, and everything else nobody warned you about when you started your business.
New to the ADHD-ish Blog? Start anywhere. That's kind of our thing.
ADHD Novelty Seeking: Use Pop-Up Offers for Growth & Fun
Pop-up offers aren't just mini-discounts—they're unique, time-limited packages that emerged from a classic ADHD novelty seeking impulse: the irresistible urge to act on a creative idea. This conversation with copywriter and ADHD entrepreneur Erin Ollila demonstrates why neurodiversity is good for business, showcasing how mini offers for small business marketing can serve both clients and entrepreneurs' brains. For ADHD business owners, pop-up offers provide immediate gratification and variety, combating the energy drain that accompanies longer-term projects while satisfying ADHD novelty seeking tendencies. These bite-sized service options deliver quick wins without requiring months of prep—perfect mini offers for small business marketing. By packaging skills already used in client work, you deliver strategic roadmaps that provide lasting results. This adventurous, iterative approach is a hallmark of ADHD entrepreneurship: embrace experimentation, don't personalize the bumps, and always be ready to pivot. Smart pop-up offers prove why neurodiversity is good for business by transforming neurodivergent traits into competitive advantages.