|
Most of the coaches and therapists I work with have lived through something heavy.
But the key is they didn’t let that define them. They used those experiences to learn, train, and help others through the same struggles. That’s where their passion to serve others comes from. The problem is turning that passion into profit. They know how to help people, but they don’t know how to package it in a way that allows them to grow their business without sending 30 DMs per day. It’s because they haven’t built their offer from their lived experience. That’s why the first thing we do is lock in your origin story and core belief inside The Embodied Solopreneur. From that foundation we build your offer into something people can understand and buy with the 3 following components: 1) Your Promise. 2) Your Process. 3) Your Pricing. But it all starts with the truth you’ve lived. The doors are open this week. Hit reply if you want the full details. Until next time, |
Embodied Business Frameworks Delivered Direct to Your Inbox.
For the last few years, my business has been tied to LinkedIn. Every piece of content, every conversation and every client was all organic. And it worked... It built the business from the ground up. But a creeping feeling started to set in... When your entire business depends on a single platform and a single type of content, you’re not an owner. You’re a tenant building your house on someone else’s land and you’re always at the mercy of... The algorithm The silly trends The platform’s...
I love seeing this happen: Another community client just upgraded to 1:1 with me. That’s £4,000 this month from people who were already part of my world. No new leads required. Unlike most coaching business owners, I see revenue in two distinct ways: 1) New Client Flow Revenue from fresh leads coming into the business. 2) In-House Revenue Money generated from people who already know, like, and trust me enough to have paid me before. Honestly, the second category is where the magic is. But it...
In 480 BC, Athens stood on the edge of destruction. The Persian Empire had already burned their lands once and was marching again with an army so vast it seemed impossible to resist. The Athenians argued among themselves. Some wanted to repair and reinforce the city walls, others wanted to fight on land. The urge for something quick and tangible was overwhelming. One man, Themistocles, saw further. He convinced the city to use its silver reserves not for walls or weapons, but to build a fleet...