Learn One, Teach One
I get sooo excited when I learn new things. I was the same way when I was a wedding coordinator full-time. Every week I would search for the newest and cool
est in wedding world and just plotz every time I found something I'd never heard of. And, just like how I wanted my clients to have the best wedding they possibly could, I want YOU to have the best business you can, too. It all comes down to how you experience it, and your clients experience it, too.
No drag, in any of your processes. It shouldn't take four steps and three programs to get booked and paid. You can have a website that you're proud of, that's all about your ideal clients and how you can serve them. All of this is possible, and I love helping you get there.
Another similarity to my wedding planning days is that I get a lot of flack for giving away a bunch of information for free. But I feel that 1. You need to know what's possible, and 2. That I'm here to help you get it done.
The IGTV sessions I shoot have been great, because as I put them together, I'm learning even more than I already knew. Like, that dividing your services into multiple pages helps your SEO ranking. The series I did on setting up your CRM has helped me put together a process to get it done for you in only three days, (ask me how!!) The gmail tips and tricks revealed even more gmail tips and tricks. Etc. Like, "oh, wow, did you know you can do this, too?" By this time next week I'll have nailed down how to manage group programs though Honeybook and I will tell you alll about it. When I learn, I love to throw out knowledge. Learn one, teach one. How do you do the same with your clients?
This Week's Four
Speaking of learning, I'm a
Constant Contact partner, and they were running a series of classes this month to introduce their new products. During last week's webinar, they pointed out a solution to lost gmail subscribers, which I go over in the video below. The same trick can be used in mailchimp, flodesk, activecampaign, etc. But pay attention to how to get ahead of the problem in the first place.