Shout out to Jen Vertanen for buying me coffee! ☕️ Thank you!Jen is a life coach for midlife women and loves helping people create a loving relationship with their #1 mentor - their future selves. Click here to take Jen’s future self quiz!--When I started my blog, I had no idea what I was doing. My goal was to provide tech tips and inspiration to women business owners so that they wouldn’t feel held back because of technology. That was 11 years ago this past Thursday.I didn’t set out to create a business. I don’t think I had even heard of the term “side hustle” at the time. But since then, I have made mistakes and learned so many things. I’ve offered services, been more of a teacher brand, and done training videos. I’ve tried to fit myself into a coaching model. But ultimately, I’ve realized that I need to identify and lean into my strengths: curation, being a cheerleader and helping folks take their next steps. I’ve also learned that I can create a business that works for me. I have taken some risks; I have spent more money than I want to admit on books and courses. Some of them were helpful, others not. But I consider all of that as tools and information that I can keep in mind as I move forward. In the past 11 years, I have:Been exposed to a whole new network of people, women and women entrepreneursHad some successful service offerings (tech sidekick) and not-so-successful ones (tech coaching)Changed careers. A few times. And now I’m rocking a hybrid career.Started this newsletter and have been publishing it for 5+ yearsRun many side hustle workshops and been on several podcasts.This journey has not been easy, but I would do it again. And I’m hoping that my shares can save you a step or two. Speaking of learnings, I’m playing with the idea of doing one of those “41 lessons learned in 41 years” posts next week for my birthday. We’ll see how my capacity feels. But in the meantime, here are a few that you might find helpful: Batching tasks is one of the best-kept productivity secrets in our business. So are timers. If you put good into the world, it’ll come back to you. It may not happen right away or in the way you expect, but please keep putting kindness and awesomeness into the world. What you say no to is just as important as what you say yes to. A favorite person (hi Saya!! 👋🏾) said, “Sometimes living a life of yes means saying no.” It’s essential to do the things that fill your soul with joy. Dancing is one of these things for me.Take steps out of your comfort zone. I’m not saying that you need to parachute out of a plane (because I will not be doing that. Also soo afraid of heights), but do something that stretches you a little bit. Even if the experience sucks, you will have learned something that can serve you in the future.Success may look different to you, and that’s OK. A couple of years ago, I was so busy with my day job that I barely had time for my business. I wanted to do something consistently for my audience to provide value. That’s how the idea for this newsletter was born. I feel successful as long as I get an issue out every week.On to the picks! P.S. If you’re a side hustler interested in being interviewed for a new series I’m hoping to start in the coming months, hit reply and let me know. Also, if you have feedback on the questions themselves, take a look and comment on this doc.
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Shout out to Jen Vertanen for buying me coffee! ☕️ Thank you!Jen is a life coach for midlife women and loves helping people create a loving relationship with their #1 mentor - their future selves. Click here to take Jen’s future self quiz!--When I started my blog, I had no idea what I was doing. My goal was to provide tech tips and inspiration to women business owners so that they wouldn’t feel held back because of technology. That was 11 years ago this past Thursday.I didn’t set out to create a business. I don’t think I had even heard of the term “side hustle” at the time. But since then, I have made mistakes and learned so many things. I’ve offered services, been more of a teacher brand, and done training videos. I’ve tried to fit myself into a coaching model. But ultimately, I’ve realized that I need to identify and lean into my strengths: curation, being a cheerleader and helping folks take their next steps. I’ve also learned that I can create a business that works for me. I have taken some risks; I have spent more money than I want to admit on books and courses. Some of them were helpful, others not. But I consider all of that as tools and information that I can keep in mind as I move forward. In the past 11 years, I have:Been exposed to a whole new network of people, women and women entrepreneursHad some successful service offerings (tech sidekick) and not-so-successful ones (tech coaching)Changed careers. A few times. And now I’m rocking a hybrid career.Started this newsletter and have been publishing it for 5+ yearsRun many side hustle workshops and been on several podcasts.This journey has not been easy, but I would do it again. And I’m hoping that my shares can save you a step or two. Speaking of learnings, I’m playing with the idea of doing one of those “41 lessons learned in 41 years” posts next week for my birthday. We’ll see how my capacity feels. But in the meantime, here are a few that you might find helpful: Batching tasks is one of the best-kept productivity secrets in our business. So are timers. If you put good into the world, it’ll come back to you. It may not happen right away or in the way you expect, but please keep putting kindness and awesomeness into the world. What you say no to is just as important as what you say yes to. A favorite person (hi Saya!! 👋🏾) said, “Sometimes living a life of yes means saying no.” It’s essential to do the things that fill your soul with joy. Dancing is one of these things for me.Take steps out of your comfort zone. I’m not saying that you need to parachute out of a plane (because I will not be doing that. Also soo afraid of heights), but do something that stretches you a little bit. Even if the experience sucks, you will have learned something that can serve you in the future.Success may look different to you, and that’s OK. A couple of years ago, I was so busy with my day job that I barely had time for my business. I wanted to do something consistently for my audience to provide value. That’s how the idea for this newsletter was born. I feel successful as long as I get an issue out every week.On to the picks! P.S. If you’re a side hustler interested in being interviewed for a new series I’m hoping to start in the coming months, hit reply and let me know. Also, if you have feedback on the questions themselves, take a look and comment on this doc.