Going Solo: Strategies for Independent Business Owners
There’s something absolutely terrifying about trying to start a business on your own.
The loneliness creeps in, and the self-doubt roars like a hungry lion.
You might even think, "Do I need a business partner to be taken seriously?"
Trust me, I’ve been there.
In fact, I tried working with multiple business partners when I started.
I thought I needed someone to boost my credibility and shield me from rejection.
But then, something unexpected happened. I discovered a few key things that completely shifted my perspective on going solo in business. And, let me tell you, it freed me up to soar beyond my wildest dreams.
In this episode, I share why you don’t actually need a business partner to succeed.
Companies and people mentioned in this episode:
- LBee Health (Lauren Howard) - https://www.linkedin.com/in/elletwo
- Kelsey Lettko - https://www.instagram.com/kelseylettko/
Mentioned in this episode:
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Here's why you do not need a business partner to give you more
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credibility to start.
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Hi, I'm Katie McManus, business strategist and money mindset
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coach.
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And welcome to the weeniecast.
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You might not know this about me, but when I first started my business,
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I tried to do it with a partner.
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And when that didn't work, I tried it with another partner.
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And when that didn't work, I tried it with another partner.
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When I first started, I was so insecure.
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I was so worried that I wasn't going to be good enough on my own
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for people to want to sign up with me.
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I also had never really done anything alone.
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I'd always worked in a 9 to 5 with a team, and while, yeah, like,
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I had my work to do, I was always surrounded by other humans.
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And if you can't tell, I'm a bit of an extrovert.
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So the isolation of working by myself was really, really hard.
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And I think a lot of coaches go through this because you go to
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coach training, right?
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And you go through these incredible classes where you go through
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a transformation and then you help other people go through their
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transformation.
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And throughout that whole experience, you bond on this deeper
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level.
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And then you go to the next class and you do it again, and then
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you go to the next class and you do it again, and then you go
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through a certification process with a bunch of other people,
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and again, you have this incredible community that you can
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tap into at any moment, and they're there to grow you, and they're
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there to help inspire you.
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But a lot of coaches who go through that process then step out
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into the real world with their training and their certification,
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and they decide that they want to start a business, and like me,
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they start feeling really insecure and really lonely.
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One partnership in particular that I want to share about is the
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partnership I tried to do with my friend Kelsey Letko.
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Kelsey is actually an incredible coach and hypnotherapist.
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Can't recommend her enough.
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If you're interested in hypnotherapy to help you move past
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any major blocks, I want you to go to weeniecast.com forward/kelsey.
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But before she was a hypnotherapist, she and I were both
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just trained and certified coactive coaches.
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And we were both kind of in the same position.
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We wanted to have that creative partner that we could bounce
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ideas off of, create programs with, and have someone to kind of
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boost our own credibility.
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And so we started a business together that you've never heard
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of because it didn't go anywhere.
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So one of the things that I loved about working with Kelsey is
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like, we would sit down and we'd have these incredible brainstorming
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sessions.
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In these brainstorming sessions, we would come up with incredible
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programs and trainings and ideas for how we could guide our
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clients, our group clients, through this whole process.
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I think we both convinced ourselves that in order to be successful,
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we would need to have a partner who kind of boosted our credibility.
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And I can say for certain for myself that I was terrified of doing
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it on my own.
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I was so scared of doing it wrong, of not getting clients or
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talking to people and having them say, you're not qualified enough.
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I don't want to work with you.
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You're not worth it.
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And to me, partnering with someone as brilliant as Kelsey felt
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like a shield against all of that potential rejection, against
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all that failure that I was sure was coming my way if I tried
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to do it on my own.
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What I discovered instead was the exact opposite.
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Partnering with Kelsey didn't work.
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Not because either one of us was not qualified enough, but because
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we are our own brands, we attract different people.
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I see this time and time again with folks who are doing some kind
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of service based business, be it consulting, coaching, even copywriting,
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they'll partner up with someone who does the same kind of
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work, they'll think that it adds to their credibility, and then
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they'll go out and they'll try to sell.
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And oftentimes it doesn't work.
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Because when you're out promoting something and you're using
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your voice and you're talking to your audience, your audience cares
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about you, they care about your perspective, they want to be
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in relationship with you.
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If you then do a little bait and switch and say, hey, here's my
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partner who is going to be taking over half of this work or
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all of this work.
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Now, thankfully for Kelsey and me and our friendship, because she's
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still a dear, dear friend of mine to this day, we came to this
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realization that we were leaning on each other to protect
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ourselves from potential rejection.
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And because we wanted to have partnership, we wanted to have a
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creative partner to be able to build something.
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And we made a very conscious decision to end that project together,
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but to continue to be friends.
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And I'm so glad we did.
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In the work that I do with my clients, it is rare that I come across
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a business where it makes sense for them to have a partner,
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because my clients are all providing me service.
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They are the mastermind of this business.
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They are the brand of this business, and typically the lifeblood
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of the business that they want to create is relationships.
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Now, one of the things that you can do if you partner with someone
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and you start a business together is you design a brand that
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is separate from both of you.
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Right?
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So there are absolutely businesses where this makes complete
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sense, like restaurants.
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It'd be really weird to name a restaurant after yourself.
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If I were to name a restaurant Katie McManus, like that wouldn't
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tell you anything about the restaurant.
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For one, like people might have some really weird expectations
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about what that restaurant's going to be serving.
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And I won't go into further detail.
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And I mean, if you're just scrolling through Yelp like it's
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not going to be the thing that catches your eye, it's just going
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to be a name.
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It doesn't make sense.
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And especially if I'm in a partnership, say I partner up with
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a chef and they're the brains behind the whole thing, it completely
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erases them from the front facing brand.
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So it makes sense for a business like a restaurant to pick
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a name for the restaurant.
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If you're developing a product, it makes sense for you to
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develop a brand for the product.
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If you're developing a business that is a service that doesn't
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have a personality attached to it, like landscaping or plumbing
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or poured concrete floors, and you have a business partner, it makes
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sense for the business to have its own, own personality, its own
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brand.
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But when the brand is you, when your personality and your relationships
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are going to be the thing that brings in clients and builds that
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loyalty, people do not tend to build relationships with an amorphous
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brand.
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Not in the same way that you need them to build a relationship
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with you to become your client.
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One of the thing that most coaches and consultants are guilty
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of, and I say this because I did this myself, is we're guilty
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of trying to come up with a clever coaching business name.
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And they range vastly from the I don't know what the that means
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kinds of names.
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Like one that I chose which was Soul Style Coaching.
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Who knows what that means?
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I'm not even sure.
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It just sounded good at some point.
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I knew what it meant, but I've forgotten at this point to another,
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another business name that I came up with which was Take Charge
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Coaching.
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Cool.
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A little more descriptive, but also really generic.
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How many North Star coaching companies are there out there?
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How many executive planning strategy companies are there?
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How many pro consulting services are there?
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When you're offering a consulting or coaching service, it
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really doesn't make sense for you to separate your work from you.
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No one's going to remember the name of your business.
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They are going to remember your name, however.
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And when they think, oh, that person I met at the cocktail party
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who helps businesses like mine and what was their name again?
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They're far more likely to get your name right when they try to
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remember it.
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They're never going to remember your business's name.
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And I know there are some of you listening to this and thinking,
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oh my God, well, what if I make the business name really unique
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and really memorable?
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They're still not going to remember.
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So while, yes, I am making a massive case for why you should be
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starting this business alone, I'm not saying you need to do it
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all alone.
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There are ways to have camaraderie and support and community
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in building the business that doesn't require you to give away
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50% ownership of your company, that doesn't require you to anonymize
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your unique to you brand that people are actually wanting to be
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in business with.
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One of the reasons I have so many community calls in all of my
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programs, and I'm talking like from Monday, Sprint calls where we
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get you prioritized for the work.
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Friday Q and A calls where all of my clients get to come and ask
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any questions that they have sales labs where we really go through
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their sales process and get them better at selling and coworking
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is because building a business is really lonely.
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And one of the most powerful resources you're always going to
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have if you do it right is have business besties, you know,
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so like Kelsey, she and I did not work out as business partners,
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but business besties were incredible for each other.
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Anytime one of us needs to ask a question, we can call each other.
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Anytime we're freaking the fuck out about something, we get
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to call each other and panic on the phone and get talked off the
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ledge.
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Right?
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Anytime we have a massive win and we just want to call someone
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who understands what a big deal it is, we get to call each other
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and brag and celebrate, you know, for the, for the members of
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my programs, that's what I want for them.
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I give them access to each other so that they can develop those
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relationships and get to know each other and support each other
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and see that they are not alone.
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So here are a few different types of partnerships that I think
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you should invest in.
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Rather than become business partners, become creativity partners.
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If, like Kelsey and myself, you love brainstorming with another
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person about programs and ideas that you have for your business,
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reach out to people that you feel like would be really great partners
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in this way and just ask them, will you be my creativity partner?
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And they won't know what that means because I just made it up.
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But you get to explain to them that you're starting this business
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and it's feeling really hard on your own.
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And you would really love to have someone that you trust, who
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you admire, who usually comes with really inspirational ideas,
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to bounce ideas off and to brainstorm with and to create programs
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with with their guidance, and that you would love to do that in
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exchange with them if they think that would be beneficial to
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them.
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Another type of partnership that's really fruitful for business
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owners is the kind of partnership that you pay for.
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So it could be working with a coach or a business strategist like
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myself, working with someone who knows the things that you don't
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even know to ask about and can set you up for success and train
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you on the stuff that you need to do in order to be massively successful.
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I will say that in my experience personally and with my
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clients, this is one of the best partnerships that you can invest
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your time, money and energy into.
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It's finding the right person to support you along the way.
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Because here's the thing about working with a business coach or
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a business strategist.
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They don't have any agenda except your success in mind.
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They're not worried about protecting your feelings like a creative
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partner might or a best friend or your family.
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They're also not stressed by the same things that you talk about
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as your spouse might be.
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One of the things that I work with a lot of my clients on is got
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to talk about money.
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When you're starting a business and you have to explain,
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explain things that are going on to your spouse, right?
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Because the life of a business owner is not always a life of consistent
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cash flow.
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And if you're a two income household and your spouse needs to
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be able to plan how to budget the money that they're bringing in
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along with the money you're bringing in.
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Those conversations can get really tense if you're not understanding
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their fear, their anxiety.
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And it's hard to have those conversations honestly if when you're
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on honestly sharing about the financial status of your business,
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you start getting activated in your shame receptors.
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A coach isn't going to be like that.
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The other thing about working with a strategist is they're not
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going to take any bullshit from you.
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One of the things that my clients know I will never let them
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get away with is making decisions from a place of fear.
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If I sense that they're being a weenie in any of the decisions
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that they're making in their business and their life, that's keeping
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them from going after their bigger dream, I'm going to call them
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on it.
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Your best friend, your family member, your spouse might not do
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the same.
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Actually, in most cases they probably won't because they probably
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have a value of safety and security like most people do.
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And when they hear you being risky or what they perceive as risky,
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you know, putting yourself out there, entering the financial unknown,
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putting yourself in a position of being rejected, all of their fears
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get activated too.
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And the tough thing about humans is that like when we care
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about someone, we want to protect them like we would protect
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ourselves.
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And so they actually may agree with you when you're making decisions
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from a fear based place that it's too risky, that it's too much,
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that the rejection might be too hard because they would want
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to stay small because they're too afraid to go out and do it themselves.
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Another type of partnership that you can invest in is an assistant.
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You know, say there are some skill sets that you just suck at,
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like admin and organizing your email and scheduling.
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Then an assistant would be a great partner for you to invest in.
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Or say you're not great at social media, you're not consistent,
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you don't think aesthetically, you don't have an idea for a message
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that you could put out there into the world and think, oh my God,
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this is the perfect Instagram graphic to go along with that.
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You know, it makes perfect sense for you to hire someone to
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help you with Instagram at that point or with whatever social
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media platform is going to be the best for you to get clients.
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These partnerships are amazing because for one, you retain control.
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For two, you do not confuse your brand because it stays focused
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on you.
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It never skews off onto anyone else.
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And of course you get access to expertise that you do not have,
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that you do not need to work on developing.
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Because I see you, I see you out there taking all the courses,
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getting certified in multiple types of coaching methods or consulting
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tools like the strengths finder, getting certified in all
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the different coaching methodologies, getting trained and
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all the tools that you can use as a consulting partner.
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I see you taking classes on how to do Google Analytics and ads.
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Like, yeah, those things are very useful to know, but you're never
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going to be an expert at them because it's not your primary focus.
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It makes so much more sense for you to bring in an assistant
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or A consultant who can help you do those parts with their own
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expertise.
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It'll save you time, money and a lot of frustration.
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Now, lastly, there are some cases where it does make sense to
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have a business partner, which I know I'm completely going back
00:16:45
on everything I just said.
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But it's only when you have complementary skill sets that the
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business has equal need of.
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One business that is a great example of this is LB Health by Lauren
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Howard and Dr.
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Jonathan Hines.
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I was actually lucky enough to go to their launch party this past
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summer.
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They've launched an online health practice that eventually,
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very soon will be active in all 50 states.
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Lauren has this amazing mind and experience in building the back
00:17:16
end of healthcare practices.
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She knows all of the regulations that they have to follow.
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She understands how they differ in each state.
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She knows how to manage the money.
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She knows how to attract clients and do all the marketing
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and create partnerships and do hiring and build a team and do all
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the things.
00:17:33
But she's not a doctor.
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That's important.
00:17:35
Apparently when you're starting a healthcare company, right,
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it's not just the business part you like, you need the people
00:17:41
who can provide the care and who have the licenses to be able
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to do that.
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So she's partnered with Jonathan Hines, who is a doctor who
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has passed the board.
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I think that's how you say it in all 50 states.
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States which if you know anything about medicine in the United
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States, you know that that is an incredible accomplishment.
00:18:03
In cases like this, it absolutely makes sense to have a
00:18:06
partner.
00:18:07
It absolutely makes sense to develop a brand that's separate from
00:18:11
you, that can still have a tie back to your story, to your personality
00:18:17
like LB Health does.
00:18:18
So for those of you who are just starting out, who think that
00:18:22
you are not credible enough all on your own and think that to
00:18:25
be able to be taken seriously, you need to partner with someone
00:18:29
else who will boost you up.
00:18:30
I call bull.
00:18:32
I think you're just being a massive weenie about this and that's
00:18:35
okay.
00:18:36
It happens to the best of us.
00:18:37
I've been there.
00:18:38
But if you want to be successful in this business, the
00:18:40
only way to do that is to stand on your own two feet, to have
00:18:45
the confidence of a mediocre white guy and dare to put yourself
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out there.
00:18:50
Yes, you going to get rejected.
00:18:52
Yes, you're going to fail.
00:18:54
Yes, there are going to be times where things do not work out,
00:18:57
but that happens for every business.
00:18:59
But I fully believe that you can be successful all on your own.
00:19:03
But remember to set yourself up so that you're not all alone.
00:19:07
And for those of you who are further on in your business, you've
00:19:10
established yourself as a brand, you've had lots of clients
00:19:15
who have incredible success stories and there's something bigger
00:19:18
that you want to partner on.
00:19:21
That's the stage that you can absolutely do this.
00:19:24
One of the rules that I set for my clients when they're first
00:19:26
starting out is I tell them no more certifications.
00:19:29
Because especially for coaches and consultants, there's so many
00:19:32
certifications that you can go for that you can add to your resume
00:19:36
and you think makes you look more impressive.
00:19:39
When really what ends up happening is you start getting confused
00:19:43
about all the things that you can do for clients.
00:19:45
And because you're in training mode all the time and learning all
00:19:49
these cool new things that you're fascinated by and you think
00:19:51
are super interesting, it all leaks into your marketing and your
00:19:55
clients out there who are so mired in their own problems and their
00:19:59
own frustration, reaching their own goals, they're not going
00:20:03
to know what you're talking about when you're talking about,
00:20:05
you know, some skill you just picked up in a three day seminar.
00:20:09
They're not going to find it interesting.
00:20:10
They're not going to understand that it's relevant to
00:20:12
them.
00:20:13
So the rule I set in place for my newer business owner clients is
00:20:17
no more certifications until you have worked with enough clients
00:20:21
that you see that there's a skill gap that you need to meet.
00:20:27
So one of the things that I did for myself, I put a referendum
00:20:31
on myself for training for this exact reason.
00:20:35
And one of the skills that I realized I needed to work more on
00:20:39
was, was all the money mindset stuff, because that was one of the
00:20:43
things that my clients struggled with the most.
00:20:45
And so at that point I invested in more training on how
00:20:48
to coach through money mindset problems and how to reset yourself
00:20:53
so that you can live in an abundant state.
00:20:55
But I only did that after a couple years.
00:20:58
Now, likewise, if you have massive dreams for this business
00:21:01
and you want to have an incredible impact and you want to
00:21:04
make a lot more money, once you have a solid brand, once people
00:21:08
know who you are and they're opted in and they've been your client
00:21:12
and you have a proven track record and you're firm in what you
00:21:16
bring to the table, you can then see like what other tables would
00:21:21
be useful to your audience.
00:21:23
Right.
00:21:24
One of the things that I'm super excited about is I'm doing
00:21:26
this partnership with two former clients, one of which is a
00:21:33
coach who helps people get booked On TV shows, on the news,
00:21:37
get featured in different publications.
00:21:40
She helps small business owners learn how to get themselves
00:21:44
in front of thousands, if not millions of new potential clients
00:21:49
by just knowing who to ask, how to make the ask, and having the
00:21:55
confidence to get up and get in front of that camera.
00:21:58
All incredible things that I don't know how to teach my clients
00:22:00
how to do.
00:22:01
I've never worked in pr, by the way.
00:22:03
She's also an Emmy Award winning news anchor who worked for
00:22:06
NBC New York.
00:22:08
She knows her.
00:22:10
She's been the journalist on the other side who's been pitched
00:22:13
a gazillion different stories.
00:22:14
She knows exactly what will make you a desirable person to book
00:22:21
on a new show.
00:22:22
Now, while my dad did want me to be the next Kate, Katie Couric,
00:22:25
I don't have anywhere near that kind of experience.
00:22:27
So I'm really excited to do this, this partnership with her so
00:22:31
that I can give my audience access to a service like hers.
00:22:35
The other partner that we have is an amazing brand strategist and
00:22:39
she's actually helping me go through and redo my entire brand
00:22:44
right now to have it be more aligned to me, but also have it be
00:22:47
far more recognizable.
00:22:49
Because I hate to call myself out, but if you go to my Instagram,
00:22:52
Katie the coach, right now, it's kind of all over the place because
00:22:57
I'm not an aesthetic thinker.
00:22:59
I don't have a thought and think, oh, cool.
00:23:01
Here's the perfect graphic I can make for this.
00:23:03
I am a writer.
00:23:04
I'm good at speaking to camera.
00:23:07
You ask me to do anything in Canva, it's going to look pretty
00:23:10
podunk.
00:23:11
If we're being honest, there's no problem with that.
00:23:14
If I wanted to keep my business at its current size, however,
00:23:18
I don't.
00:23:19
I want my business to do so much more.
00:23:23
What will be required to get there is for every single asset that
00:23:28
I have in my business to be immediately identifiable.
00:23:31
Like if someone's scrolling on social media without even seeing
00:23:35
my profile picture or my username, they should see the graphic
00:23:39
and know that it's from me.
00:23:41
And so again, I'm so excited to be able to bring her expertise
00:23:47
and her mind to, to my audience.
00:23:50
And of course, what I bring to the table is how do you actually
00:23:52
build a scalable business?
00:23:54
How do you create an offer that will make you twice the amount
00:23:58
of money that you have in the last year?
00:24:00
How do you go after clients who will pay even more money than
00:24:04
what you're charging right now?
00:24:06
How do you create that marketing strategy and the sales
00:24:11
funnel to make this happen.
00:24:14
Right.
00:24:14
Because you can get featured on the news and you can have an identifiable
00:24:17
brand, but if you don't have the right thing to sell to the people
00:24:19
who are landing on your page, it's not going to go anywhere.
00:24:23
If you're at a similar stage in your business where you're seeing
00:24:26
there are tables that you would like to bring in to offer to
00:24:30
your audience, that would be complimentary, then I say absolutely,
00:24:33
go for a partnership.
00:24:35
But until you're at that stage, you are absolutely good enough
00:24:39
to do it on your own.
00:24:41
But again, not all alone.
00:24:46
Like, really, it's my diffuser right now.