Most corporate managers assume there are only two ways to build a business.
Option one: do it publicly. Post on LinkedIn. Use your real name. Attach your face to the brand. Hope your employer never cares.
Option two: don't do it at all.
That binary choice is wrong.
There is a third option: build a real business while employed without using your real name publicly. Not because you're doing something illegal. Because you are protecting optionality while the business is still small, fragile, and experimental.
Why anonymity matters more for corporate managers
If you are a managing director, VP, or senior operator, your risk profile is different from a 22-year-old indie hacker.
You probably have:
- a visible LinkedIn profile
- an employment agreement with vague outside-activity language
- internal politics you do not want to trigger
- a salary that is too valuable to gamble on a public experiment
That means your first job is not “go viral.”
Your first job is to create separation.
The goal is separation, not deception
Let's be precise.
You are not trying to impersonate someone or hide illegal activity. You are trying to separate your employer-facing identity from your experimental business identity.
That means:
- different email
- different brand name
- different public profile
- different devices and workflows where possible
- different audience and market from your employer
The cleaner the separation, the less surface area there is for unnecessary friction.
The minimum anonymity stack
You do not need a Hollywood spy setup. You need a boring, disciplined operating system.
1. Use a brand name, not your personal name
Your website, email address, and public-facing content should point to the brand.
Customers do not buy because your legal name appears in the footer. They buy because the message is clear and the product solves a problem.
2. Use a dedicated business email
Do not run your business from your work email or your personal inbox.
Use a separate address like:
- escape@yourdomain.com
- hello@yourdomain.com
- support@yourdomain.com
This alone removes a surprising amount of accidental leakage.
3. Use a public persona only if needed
A persona is useful when your market expects a voice, face, or founder point of view, but you do not want to expose your real identity yet.
That persona can be:
- a pen name
- a voice-only identity
- an avatar-backed founder brand
- a brand-first editorial voice with no founder photo at all
The point is consistency. If you use a persona, keep it stable.
4. Separate your markets
The safest side business is one that has zero overlap with your employer.
If you work in B2B fintech, do not build a side product for the exact same buyer, with the exact same positioning, using the exact same industry language. Pick a lane with clear distance.
5. Keep business operations off company resources
This should be obvious, but people still get lazy.
Do not use:
- your work laptop
- your company accounts
- company-paid software
- company time
The easiest way to protect yourself is to leave no ambiguity.
What anonymity does not solve
Anonymity is not a substitute for judgment.
It does not fix:
- a direct conflict of interest
- misuse of company property
- work performed during company hours
- a business that clearly competes with your employer
If your side project creates a real legal or contractual conflict, a fake founder photo will not save you.
The practical test
Ask these questions:
- If someone from work searched my real name, would this business be easy to connect to me?
- If this project became mildly successful, would I still be comfortable with the current level of visibility?
- Have I created enough separation that I can test safely before deciding whether to reveal more later?
If the answer to the first question is yes, your setup is too loose.
Why corporate managers overestimate the need for a public personal brand
Most people copy internet business models built for creators.
But your model is different.
You are not trying to become a lifestyle influencer. You are trying to build an asset.
An asset does not need your face. It needs:
- demand
- trust
- distribution
- retention
- a clean operating structure
For many corporate operators, public visibility is not an advantage. It is a tax.
A better sequence
The better sequence is:
- Build under a separate brand
- Validate demand quietly
- Create recurring revenue
- Decide later whether public founder visibility helps
You can always reveal yourself later.
You cannot un-reveal yourself.
The Invisible Exit view
Your employer does not need to know about every experiment in your life.
You do not need permission to test a small idea on a Saturday morning using your own tools, your own time, and your own market.
For corporate managers, anonymity is not paranoia.
It is strategic patience.
Build the business first. Decide about identity second.