He Made $500K Alone — But Couldn't Grow Past It (Here's Why) | Nathan Ohler, CEO of Nuooly
Download MP3He's talented. He's booked. He's making real money. But he can't grow — because the business IS him.
In this episode of Wall Street To Y'all Street, we sit down with a solo professional who hit the ceiling that almost every solopreneur eventually slams into: you're making great income, but you can't scale because every dollar depends on your time, your hands, your brain. The freedom you built becomes the cage you're trapped in.
This isn't about hustling harder. It's about the structural problem that keeps consultants, freelancers, and solo operators permanently stuck at the same income — and what it actually takes to break through it.
Whether you're a solopreneur wondering why growth feels impossible, a freelancer thinking about building a team, or a solo professional who secretly knows they've built a job instead of a business — this episode will hit home.
🔑 In this episode:
• The invisible ceiling solo professionals hit (and why more hustle won't fix it)
• Why "freedom" and "scale" feel like opposites for solopreneurs
• The specific moment this founder knew he had to change everything
• What it actually takes to go from self-employed to business owner
• The mindset shift that separates solopreneurs who scale from those who stay stuck
Find Nathan on LinkedIn at https://www.linkedin.com/in/nathan-ohler/ or his company Nuooly at https://www.nuooly.com/
🎙️ABOUT THE HOST: Joseph J. Raetzer, MBA, JD is Corporate, Mergers & Acquisitions (M&A) and Securities Lawyer (capital raising). He started his career over 20 years ago on Wall Street and he has done over $100+ billion in transactions. He is also a serial entrepreneur with a successful 7-figure exit in under 3 years, and founder of his corporate M&A and securities law firm Raetzer PLLC.
His podcast Wall Street to Y’all Street features real lessons from founders, operators, and executives who have built, scaled, lost, and rebuilt businesses. This is not legal advice - always consult with your attorney. Joseph J. Raetzer, MBA, JD is licensed in New York and Texas. 🎙️CONNECT WITH JOE ON LINKEDIN AT https://www.linkedin.com/in/raetzer/
Timestamps
00:00 Intro
02:35 Where did Nathan’s entrepreneurial mindset come from?
04:10 Why some problems are better solved outside big institutions
05:40 Why most independent professionals do NOT actually need more work
08:10 How do you transition from big firm leverage to independence?
11:00 What do independent professionals misunderstand about scale?
13:10 What skills do elite professionals still need to learn after leaving big firms?
15:20 Why are more professionals breaking away and going independent now?
16:45 Is big law actually going away?
19:20 Why trust used to be a barrier for solo professionals
20:00 Is skipping the apprenticeship model a mistake?
20:40 How AI could disrupt the training path for future partners
23:00 Do founders romanticize independence?
23:30 Why many professionals overestimate the risk of finding clients
24:00 What do independent professionals underestimate the most?
25:00 What are the hidden business functions professionals suddenly inherit?
25:30 Does independence limit income and scalability?
27:00 How do you turn a solo practice into something sellable?
28:00 What hiring mistake do many independents make?
28:20 How can you add leverage without taking huge fixed-cost risk?
29:10 Why peer groups help founders avoid unnecessary mistakes
32:20 What actually creates sellable value in a small professional business?
33:10 Why so many small firms never sell
35:20 Who is Nuooly actually built for?
37:00 How do the mastermind groups work?
40:00 How does Nathan think about scaling the company?
40:30 Why monetization came later than it should have
41:00 Why usage metrics gave false positives and false negatives
42:00 What does the business model look like today?
42:30 How does Nathan think about lifetime value vs customer acquisition cost?
43:20 Why founders should not rely on only one acquisition funnel
44:10 What broke in their early go-to-market strategy?
44:40 Why LinkedIn became the better channel
45:30 Why in-person events may become a stronger growth engine
46:20 How did Nathan rethink sales as problem-solving instead of persuasion?
47:10 What makes someone the right fit to join immediately?
48:00 Why asking about a person’s to-do list works better than asking about their problems
49:00 What is the most common issue professionals need help solving right now?
50:00 Why immediate demand matters more than future interest
51:00 What were the hardest hurdles in building Newly?
51:30 Why building the first critical mass was so difficult
52:20 What would Nathan do differently if he started over?
52:40 Why should they have monetized the mastermind groups earlier?
54:00 What finally triggered the decision to monetize?
55:10 How did Nathan discover the original pricing was too low?
56:00 Why lower pricing can actually hurt perceived value
57:00 How can someone join Newly?
In this episode of Wall Street To Y'all Street, we sit down with a solo professional who hit the ceiling that almost every solopreneur eventually slams into: you're making great income, but you can't scale because every dollar depends on your time, your hands, your brain. The freedom you built becomes the cage you're trapped in.
This isn't about hustling harder. It's about the structural problem that keeps consultants, freelancers, and solo operators permanently stuck at the same income — and what it actually takes to break through it.
Whether you're a solopreneur wondering why growth feels impossible, a freelancer thinking about building a team, or a solo professional who secretly knows they've built a job instead of a business — this episode will hit home.
🔑 In this episode:
• The invisible ceiling solo professionals hit (and why more hustle won't fix it)
• Why "freedom" and "scale" feel like opposites for solopreneurs
• The specific moment this founder knew he had to change everything
• What it actually takes to go from self-employed to business owner
• The mindset shift that separates solopreneurs who scale from those who stay stuck
Find Nathan on LinkedIn at https://www.linkedin.com/in/nathan-ohler/ or his company Nuooly at https://www.nuooly.com/
🎙️ABOUT THE HOST: Joseph J. Raetzer, MBA, JD is Corporate, Mergers & Acquisitions (M&A) and Securities Lawyer (capital raising). He started his career over 20 years ago on Wall Street and he has done over $100+ billion in transactions. He is also a serial entrepreneur with a successful 7-figure exit in under 3 years, and founder of his corporate M&A and securities law firm Raetzer PLLC.
His podcast Wall Street to Y’all Street features real lessons from founders, operators, and executives who have built, scaled, lost, and rebuilt businesses. This is not legal advice - always consult with your attorney. Joseph J. Raetzer, MBA, JD is licensed in New York and Texas. 🎙️CONNECT WITH JOE ON LINKEDIN AT https://www.linkedin.com/in/raetzer/
Timestamps
00:00 Intro
02:35 Where did Nathan’s entrepreneurial mindset come from?
04:10 Why some problems are better solved outside big institutions
05:40 Why most independent professionals do NOT actually need more work
08:10 How do you transition from big firm leverage to independence?
11:00 What do independent professionals misunderstand about scale?
13:10 What skills do elite professionals still need to learn after leaving big firms?
15:20 Why are more professionals breaking away and going independent now?
16:45 Is big law actually going away?
19:20 Why trust used to be a barrier for solo professionals
20:00 Is skipping the apprenticeship model a mistake?
20:40 How AI could disrupt the training path for future partners
23:00 Do founders romanticize independence?
23:30 Why many professionals overestimate the risk of finding clients
24:00 What do independent professionals underestimate the most?
25:00 What are the hidden business functions professionals suddenly inherit?
25:30 Does independence limit income and scalability?
27:00 How do you turn a solo practice into something sellable?
28:00 What hiring mistake do many independents make?
28:20 How can you add leverage without taking huge fixed-cost risk?
29:10 Why peer groups help founders avoid unnecessary mistakes
32:20 What actually creates sellable value in a small professional business?
33:10 Why so many small firms never sell
35:20 Who is Nuooly actually built for?
37:00 How do the mastermind groups work?
40:00 How does Nathan think about scaling the company?
40:30 Why monetization came later than it should have
41:00 Why usage metrics gave false positives and false negatives
42:00 What does the business model look like today?
42:30 How does Nathan think about lifetime value vs customer acquisition cost?
43:20 Why founders should not rely on only one acquisition funnel
44:10 What broke in their early go-to-market strategy?
44:40 Why LinkedIn became the better channel
45:30 Why in-person events may become a stronger growth engine
46:20 How did Nathan rethink sales as problem-solving instead of persuasion?
47:10 What makes someone the right fit to join immediately?
48:00 Why asking about a person’s to-do list works better than asking about their problems
49:00 What is the most common issue professionals need help solving right now?
50:00 Why immediate demand matters more than future interest
51:00 What were the hardest hurdles in building Newly?
51:30 Why building the first critical mass was so difficult
52:20 What would Nathan do differently if he started over?
52:40 Why should they have monetized the mastermind groups earlier?
54:00 What finally triggered the decision to monetize?
55:10 How did Nathan discover the original pricing was too low?
56:00 Why lower pricing can actually hurt perceived value
57:00 How can someone join Newly?
Creators and Guests
Host
Joseph J. Raetzer, MBA, JD
Joseph J. Raetzer, MBA, JD is Corporate, Mergers & Acquisitions (M&A) and Securities Lawyer (capital raising). He started his career over 20 years ago on Wall Street and he has done over $100+ billion in transactions. He is also a serial entrepreneur with a successful 7-figure exit in under 3 years, which he rolled into a national retail chain and lost it all due to the pandemic. He's had highs, lows, and rebuilt from scratch. He is founder of his corporate M&A and securities law firm Raetzer PLLC. His podcast Wall Street to Y’all Street features real business lessons from seasoned founders, operators and executives.This is not legal advice - always consult with your attorney. Joseph J. Raetzer, MBA, JD is licensed in New York and Texas.
