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711. Coaching Call with Kellsie Moore of Be Marvelous You

Being on camera is the easiest way to connect to your audience online, but conveying your own inner confidence in yourself and your message can be a little harder. Kellsie Moore wants you to look your best and show up as your truest self on camera, no matter what. She’s wondering how she can take her business as an on-camera coach to the next level, and whether or not event speaking should play a role in that growth.

 

Kellsie Asks:

  • At what point, and how, do I switch to mostly or only paid speaking gigs?

 

Guest Bio:

Kellsie Moore is a top video performance coach helping high-achieving entrepreneurs to become their best selves in life and on camera! Her unique, insightful expertise is rooted in her work both as a professional actress and personal development professional working in the corrections industry. As a digital CEO, she empowers personal brands to optimize their on-camera presence with authenticity, excellence, confidence, and charisma to better connect and convert online.

710. Stop Setting Yourself Up to Fail

Nobody has higher expectations for you than the person in the mirror. That self-applied pressure is heavy. We need to look at our lives and ask, where am I robbing myself of joy due to false expectations I’ve placed on myself? Don’t beat yourself up for moving at the pace you need to in order to survive.

709. Q&A: Finding Clarity

Welcome back to Questionably Awesome! Today, Evans and I answer your questions about playing small and finding balance.

Cornelia Baum asks: Tips on finding the balance (or I like to say, finding harmony) as you’re ‘bootstrapping.’ I’m at a point in my business where the old way isn’t bringing in enough cash flow… partially because of COVID and partially because of my own burnout. I’m so lit up about the direction I’m going and what I’m creating… but constantly caught up in the band aids (side jobs) I’ve created to pay the bills, rather than focusing on my business and this new direction.

Chrissy Kunkel asks: I have been playing small in my interior design business and recently raised my rate. Where I’m struggling is with comparison. I’m seeing counterparts who have far less experience doing amazing things and really cool projects. I feel like my jobs suck in comparison, and I can’t seem to break away from looking and staying in my own lane. How do you stay the course and not feel like you suck all the time? How can you channel this energy to grow instead of setting you back and making you feel inferior and loser-ish?