Everywhere you look online, someone is giving financial advice. Influencers are telling you what stocks to buy, which cryptocurrency to hold, which side hustle to start, and how fast you can get rich. Social media has turned finance into a performance, and too often, the loudest voices drown out the ones trying to speak honestly.

Dr Connor Robertson Denver
That’s why I want to make something clear: I’m not a financial influencer.
My name is Dr Connor Robertson, and the role I’ve chosen for myself is very different. I don’t create content to hype the latest trend or tell you what to do with your money. I’m not here to push guarantees or make promises that no one can keep. I’m here for something else entirely — to share my journey. To document what I’ve learned in real estate, in business, and in life. To show you the wins, the losses, the mistakes, and the lessons that come with building.
When I hear the word “influencer,” I think of someone who is more focused on attention than accuracy. The influencer culture thrives on quick takes, viral content, and selling the dream of overnight success. That’s not me.
In my career, especially in Denver real estate, I’ve learned that nothing about growth is overnight. Success is the result of hundreds of small, often unglamorous steps taken over years. There are spreadsheets, late nights, setbacks, and constant adjustments. There’s no filter that makes that glamorous, but it’s the truth.
As Dr Connor Robertson, I don’t want to influence people into copying me. I want to educate people by showing them my process. I want to be transparent about how I think, what I see in the market, and how I make decisions. That’s not influence — that’s education.
Everything I share is grounded in experience. When I write about Denver’s housing market, I’m not theorizing. I’m explaining what I’ve observed and how it has shaped my own decisions. When I talk about financing strategies, I’m not issuing prescriptions. I’m recounting what worked for me, what didn’t, and why.
Education, in my view, is about equipping people with perspectives so they can make their own choices. I never tell someone “do this.” I tell them, “Here’s what I did, here’s what I learned, and here’s what I’d do differently.” That’s what separates me from the noise of financial influencers who pretend to have one-size-fits-all answers.
I want to emphasize this clearly: nothing I share is financial advice. I don’t give personalized recommendations, and I don’t claim to know what’s best for you. My journey is unique, and my experiences are not a guarantee of what anyone else will achieve.
Every article I publish, every video I share, and every post I write should be read with this in mind: it’s education, not direction. It’s storytelling, not advice.
That distinction matters to me because financial influence without responsibility can do real harm. I refuse to contribute to that harm.
Some people ask me why I bother. If I’m not giving financial advice, why spend time documenting my journey? The answer is simple: because I know how valuable it is to learn from someone else’s experiences.
When I was starting out, I learned as much from the mistakes of others as I did from my own. Seeing how someone else approached a deal, handled a setback, or structured a project gave me insights I could apply in my own way. That’s what I want to offer to others.
As Dr Connor Robertson, I see my role as an educator and storyteller. Not someone who tells you what to do, but someone who gives you a real picture of what this path looks like.