Why ‘Eatertainment’ Brands Are Worth Billions
Before a restaurant sells any food, they need to buy it. That costs up to 35% on every dollar.
It’s called “Eatertainment,” the same model that turned TopGolf and Bowlero into billion-dollar companies.
Tipsy Putt is on a mission to dominate the mini golf slice of the Eatertainment space. Their mini golf, craft cocktails, and local eats have already drawn 5,000+ active members. And out of those three revenue streams, the highest-margin one (mini golf) requires no inventory whatsoever.
The result?
Five profitable California locations
22x revenue growth from 2020-24
75% more potential revenue per square foot
Now, they’re bringing this model to San Francisco, America's #3 foodie city. It’s going to address a Bay Area market of 7 million people. You can get up to 32% bonus shares in Tipsy Putt’s SF flagship location when you invest by April 29th at midnight PT.
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📌 Today’s Edition
Saving money in London starts to feel pointless after a while. You cut back, say no to things, and try to stay disciplined, but at the end of the month, your bank balance barely moves. After a few months, it gets frustrating. Not because you’re doing anything wrong, but because it feels like all that effort isn’t actually taking you anywhere.
⚠️ The mistake
The mistake is thinking that saving money alone will fix your situation. So people go all in. No coffees, no eating out, no spending unless it’s necessary. It sounds responsible, but in London, it doesn’t move your life forward. Saving £200 a month won’t change your situation. It just slows down how fast things get worse while everything around you keeps getting more expensive. You’re doing the right thing, but expecting it to do more than it can.
🧱 The trap
This is where people get stuck. You either try to be perfect with money and make your life miserable, or you give up and spend because it all feels pointless anyway. Most people bounce between those two. You tell yourself next month will be different, then something comes up, and you’re back where you started. It’s not a discipline problem. It’s that saving alone doesn’t create momentum. Your money stays flat, so it feels like your life does too.
✅ Solution
Saving still matters, but it’s just the base. If you want things actually to change, your money needs a chance to grow. That usually means investing, even if it’s small at the start. The shift isn’t instant, but it’s noticeable. You stop feeling like you’re just managing money and start seeing it build, even if it’s slow.
🔍 My setup
I keep it simple. I don’t try to be perfect with spending anymore because that just burns you out. Each month, I allocate money first. A portion goes into long term investments, I understand, then I work around what’s left. Same system every month. That’s what makes it feel like progress instead of just survival.
📊 Real example
Take someone earning £2000 a month in London. If they save £200 every month, after a year they have £2400. That’s solid discipline, but nothing about their situation really changes. Now take that same £200 and invest it every month. In the first year, it won’t look that different, but give it 3 to 5 years, and it starts to separate. You’re no longer just stacking what you put in. It starts growing on its own. That’s when it clicks. One approach keeps you maintaining your position, the other slowly moves you forward.
⛔ What not to do
Don’t rely on saving alone and expect it to fix everything. And don’t swing the other way and give up completely. Both feel different in the moment, but they lead to the same result. No real progress.
📬 Before you go
Saving money in London isn’t pointless. Relying on it as your only strategy is. Once you understand that, things start to feel different. You stop chasing perfection and start focusing on building something that actually grows, even if it’s slow at the start. That’s the shift most people never make.
If there is a topic you would like me to cover in a future edition, send it to [email protected]. I read every message, and many of the best ideas come directly from readers.
Thank you for reading
Wealth Rewired



