Recommended by Ryan
If you’re looking for a finance newsletter that doesn’t overpromise but truly delivers, Smart Money Talk is a perfect fit. Every issue distills financial principles into quick, actionable steps—helping you make smarter decisions about saving, investing, or managing everyday money matters. It’s clear, credible, and consistently helpful week after week
From Broke To Better is for anyone who wants small, doable moves that add up. It’s about getting to “better” step by step: fewer overdrafts, a workable debt plan, and a budget that fits real life
Alan P. Shaw’s Bulletin of the Retail Investors turns complex global market news into clear, actionable insights for everyday investors. With a PhD and years in corporate research, Alan connects the dots between economic shifts and smart investing—helping you plan with clarity and confidence.
Check out Become Better You — William shares short, practical lessons on self-improvement and growth. If you enjoy the psychology and mindset side of Financology, his reflections make a great complement. It’s about building habits and perspectives that help you live — and invest — better.
im excited to recommend Beyond the Bubble Bath, a candid and compelling Substack by Heather, the founder of Mom Bomb. Forget the Instagram-perfect version of self-care—this is about building a brand and life from the ground up, from a mom raising six kids (plus 3 cats!), with unvarnished honesty and fierce emotional intelligence. If you're craving real-life stories of survival, strategy, and showing up—without the burnout—this is your newsletter
Chris Parry’s Rewired is a thoughtful guide to upgrading your mindset and unlocking potential. He blends psychology, motivation, and practical reflection to help readers reframe challenges and think with clarity. Perfect for anyone seeking personal growth alongside their financial and mental wellbeing.
Investing Lawyer offers clear, practical writing on building steady dividend income. I like how grounded and calm the approach is. If you enjoy my focus on psychology and long term thinking, this is a great complementary voice to follow.
If you’re into the psychology side of behaviour change, you’ll probably enjoy Responsibility Vendor by Konstantin Kunakh. It’s a solid antidote to vibe based self help, more insight, more accountability, and plenty of ideas you can actually apply.
Why I’m recommending Simple Digest by Sumit Prasad Simple Digest blends insights on life, technology, and finance into a clean, thoughtful read. Sumit’s creative sensibility promises clarity without clutter—and that rare balance of ideas that make you pause, reflect, and take something meaningful. Perfect for readers who enjoy concise depth and beauty in every sentence.
I recommend Run, Climb, Fly by Thomas Lede. His writing brilliantly explores how technology shapes our lives, decisions, and opportunities. For Financology readers, it’s a perfect complement—linking the digital shifts of today with the financial and psychological themes we explore here.
Career Compass is a clear, practical guide for anyone navigating the job market. It offers actionable tips on resumes, LinkedIn, interviews, and career pivots—helping you cut through noise and focus on what works now. I recommend it because it gives readers confidence and tools to move forward in their careers.
Why I’m recommending Making Numbers Matter It turns raw figures into plain-English insights, helping non-finance professionals spot the numbers that really drive business success—no jargon, just actionable takeaways. It’s the perfect companion to Financology: where we explore the psychology behind money decisions, Making Numbers Matter shows you how to read the data that backs them up.
Krishna Nareddy’s A Simple Project turns the “Three Cs” — complicated, complex, confusing — into two-minute explainers on compounding, credit-and-debt, and intrinsic value. It’s the numbers-first companion to our behavioural lens here at Financology, showing the hard data behind the money mindsets we discuss.
Why I’m recommending Antifragile Wealth Because this substack essentially turns Nassim Taleb’s “antifragility” from a buzz-word into a practical playbook—showing how to arrange your savings, income streams and mindset so you gain from market shocks. If Financology explains the psychology of money, Antifragile Wealth shows you how to use that insight to build a portfolio that gets stronger under stress.

















