My guest today has me buzzing with anticipation. I had the absolute pleasure of chatting with Aura McKay - the visionary behind Business of Creativity, an award-winning photographer, and a dynamic business coach. Aura brings a unique blend of passion and expertise to the table.
In this episode, she takes us on a journey, sharing anecdotes from her unconventional upbringing in the 60s and the impactful lessons from her creative parents - her remarkable story seamlessly weaves together creativity, relationships, and business brilliance. Listen as we explore the struggles creatives face, challenge myths about the starving artist, and discover practical tools like the elusive "magic unicorn spreadsheet."
I’m thrilled we got to explore Aura McKay's world, and I bet you were as hooked on her wisdom as I was - it’s all happening right here on this episode.
In this episode, you’ll learn:
You can reach Aura at: aura@auramckay.com
Website: https://businessofcreativity.ca/
YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/businessofcreativity.ca
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/auramckay/
Podcast: https://www.businessofcreativity.ca/podcast
A little about me:
I began my career as a teacher, was a corporate trainer for many years, and then found my niche training & supporting business owners, entrepreneurs & sales professionals to network at a world-class level. My passion is working with motivated people, who are coachable and who want to build their businesses through relationship marketing and networking (online & offline). I help my clients create retention strategies, grow through referrals, and create loyal customers by staying connected.
In appreciation for being here, I have a couple of items for you.
A LinkedIn Checklist for setting up your fully optimized Profile:
An opportunity to test drive the Follow Up system I recommend by taking the
10 Card Challenge – you won’t regret it.
Connect with me:
https://www.linkedin.com/in/janiceporter/
https://www.facebook.com/janiceporter1
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Go Hello everyone, and welcome to
relationships rule, a podcast where I interview amazing
people. And we talk about relationships and the power of
relationships. And also, I love to find out lots about my guests
and their take on what they do. My guest today is aura McKay.
And aura actually lives in the same area that I do in
Vancouver, Canada, which is very unusual that I have someone
local here. So welcome to the show. Aura. Thank you. You're
welcome. All right, is the founder of Business of
creativity and award winning professional photographer and an
inspiring business coach. And in the little bit that I've gotten
to know her, I can see how inspiring she is just the way
you talk, the way you approach things, you have such energy
about you that I can see how that would be inspiring. So I'm
going to stop there because one question that I think I asked
you this when we first met, but it intrigues me. And I want to
ask again, because I forgotten the answer is how you got your
name, or I said was I asked you, I think was it? Is it your real
name? Or was it like a Numerology thing, something
because it's unusual, and it is unusual.
And I learned, I got my name from my parents. It was,
I'm a product of the 60s generation. So I was born in
1970. Those of you doing the math? Yes, I am almost 54. So
it's happening. But it was at a time when my mom and dad whose
names are Sue and Bob, which, you know what I mean? Like,
they're completely different, they really wanted to lean into
empowering me with the idea that I could be anything and that
there were no limits, and that I didn't have to live within the
constraints of normal society, even like that there was a lot
of freedom to be had. And that actually shaped my life
considerably moving forward in terms of how how the kind of
burdens I carry, and also the kind of opportunities that I get
to see. And an interesting thing about my name, though, Janice is
that when I was about six years old, I was so frustrated because
I was trying to make relationships, I was trying to
make new friends in school. And I was trying to figure out,
like, you know, where's my place in school, and I was often the
new kid and I had a weird name. And my parents were hippies. So
I didn't have the right thing in my my lunchbox, and I didn't
have the right clothes. And all of these sort of outside
accoutrements are what allow us to belong to belong in a group
or belong in, in a place or to connect and make relationships
with other people. And so I changed my name. And I actually
called myself Kathy, love it nine years.
I get it, I get it. Because I was a school
teacher in my first life. And I taught elementary school. And
names were really relevant to how a kid was in school. And so
I've always felt curious about names and and remember, kids
that had struggled with certain things and they usually had
unusual names and your name to me is beautiful. And, and it's
very, of course, spiritual, and all of that good stuff. And yes,
I, I was gonna say Your parents must have been hippies and, and
I get it. And it's just, I don't know, I mean, it does shape you
for sure. And I remember my daughter, my second daughter had
a little girl in her grade one class who changed her name to
from Jessica to not Kathy but something really simple like,
and then now is back to her. Her true name as well. But yeah,
it's so important what you name children because it's, it does.
Well,
like even thinking about being adults, and being
entrepreneurs and running our own business, you can, like even
a business name can help you feel more trusting or give you
insight into who you might be working with. And so names in
terms of building relationships can be really integral to that
part of that building block and, and also like how we feel about
it can really make a difference. So now
do you think Well, I'm sure We're your
parents, creatives as well?
Yeah. So my mom is still very creative. She is 81
and she is an actor and She is in some of the things that you
see on Netflix and local, like family law and things like that.
And so she, her name is Su Spurlin. Okay, so she is still a
creative and growing up, she was a mental soprano opera singer. I
mean, she didn't, she worked as a secretary, but she did all of
this creative stuff. My dad is absolutely still creative. He
and his wife live on Saltspring Island, he is a woodturner and
an artist and he works with his hands, and she is a painter, and
so very much creativity and you know, growing up with that as an
as a, as a kind of a grounding or as like this is the this is
how we live is we live with the possibility and anything is
possible, it actually created what I call the burden of
extraordinary.
Yes, okay. Yes,
I was told you can do anything, you can be
anything, you're so talented, you're so creative, you're so
smart, you're so intelligent, you could do anything like
you're an extraordinary human being go go. And I was like, Oh,
that means that anything I choose to do, I have to be
extraordinary. Or I have to choose something in life, that's
going to be extraordinary. So I think that there's a lot of sort
of external pressure and expectation that we kind of
carry with us throughout our lives and can really impact how
we move forward in terms of when we are meeting people, or we're
trying to move into a new marketplace or create new
relationships. So let's, that
makes me think to sort of switch to the other
side, in a sense, so you and bear with me for a second. So
you have been a photographer for professional photographer for 20
years, you may have been that route. Now you coach creatives,
photographers, designers, artists, I'm guessing musician
so much artists not so much. So thank you for that
distinction. I like to work with visual creative freelancers,
people who are using their creative talents in service of
others not so much as to create artwork that's a self expression
and then finding a market for it but creating using our creative
talents and skills in service to others. So Visual creative
freelancers. Yeah.
So visual, creative freelancers, like
photographers,
videographers, graphic designers, illustrators,
those are popping up.
Okay, because what I was going to say, and I'm
just curious to get your take on this because your upbringing
made you see or allowed you to see the possibilities and no top
on that possibility for the creative. Profession
professions. Yeah, but we I remember hearing all the time
that there was everyone in that was a starving artist. Yeah.
This is why I have a job like this is part of my
business exists, Janice is that partly to dispel that mindset
that creative people are starving artists and you'll
never make money. And if you follow your heart or follow your
passion, you know, you'll live a happy life, but you'll live a
poor life. Or the other one that I grew up with was, oh, just do
what you love. The money will follow. Oh, just you build it,
they will come Yes. Both of those are not really very
supportive worldviews if you are a multi passionate, creative
person who's looking to bring your voice to the marketplace
and contribute your ideas and creativity and innovation. So
that's really one reason why I built a business of creativity
was because I wanted to challenge that mindset. I wanted
to challenge that belief system. And I wanted to challenge that
reality in the marketplace because it was based on mostly
creative people not being given the training or the skills they
need to be successful. It wasn't that it's not that creative.
People are incapable. It's just that
they don't have the background. They don't have
the training and traditional
business models. So one of the things that you kind
of left out of the biography there is before I became a
photographer, I was an accountant.
Oh, that's right. And I had that in my notes here
actually. Yeah,
so that allowed me to get really clear about what
are some traditional business models how to how to traditional
businesses go about setting out plans and revenue goals and
finding clients and marketing and doing all of those businessy
things. And then I looked at myself as a as a freelancer and
went That's not gonna work. Yeah, that's not gonna work,
like no wonder people fail. So how can I support myself and
also support others in finding ways to do business and be
successful in this gig economy as a creative? So
you are, you're the anomaly really, though, to
have the left brain, right brain thing to, you know, good at the
numbers and so on. So when you're working with the
creatives that you're coaching, and they're yawning, when you're
talking about numbers, or they're like pulling their hair
out, because they're so right brained, that they can't handle
it at all. I'm guessing you don't do it for them, but you
probably encourage them to have, you know, to have other people
do that for them, but then they can't afford it. So how do they
deal with it? Well,
that's a really good point you're making Janice is
that most of my clients are solopreneurs. So they're not in
a position of creating team or going into leadership or wanting
to even create an agency or expand into an enterprise model.
They really like the solopreneur business model. And so then how
do they take care of all those things that do make them pull
their hair out, or like yawn and fall asleep instantly. And that
is the challenge, because there are things that we need to know
about business that are about business, like we keep score
with numbers, money is how we keep. So we have to know the
numbers and be able to keep score. So part of how I support
them is I have created a magic unicorn spreadsheet that has
color codes, and you only have to fill in the yellow things.
And then you look at the blue one and the pink one and the
green line. And that helps you figure out your minimum price
for profitability, it helps you figure out what your monthly
income needs to be, it helps you figure out what your sales goals
are. And I do it in a way that has a lot of repetition. Because
there are some people that learn this way. And some people that
learn this way. And a lot of my clients have neuro divergence in
their in their makeup. And so I need to as the instructor and
the coach and the supporter, or rather, I choose to I actually
love finding multiple different ways of have helping people
access the information, they need to be successful in
business in a way that actually works for them and for their
brain. So that's the challenge for me is how do I stay relevant
to everybody? That's really,
really, that's the mind of a teacher, to my
mind, that is the mind of a teacher, because we know as
teachers that, you know, children learn in different ways
adults learn in different ways as well, they, and you need to
find the way that's going to work for them. So that's a bonus
again, in what you're doing. And so being an I love that, I
identify and love the idea of the color coding, because when
it comes to the numbers and all of that I can only do what I've
been taught to do to keep my business on track. Otherwise, I
get a headache. And it's not that I'm a completely right
brain person. But I don't know, I just have a lecture from my
husband about numbers. So yeah.
So you're feeling the pain, right? And, and that's
it like a lot of the work as you said, it starts with that
mindset of, oh, I'm a creative, I'm never going to be
successful. And it goes and we look, you know, oh, what other
kind of beliefs do you have about who you are in the world?
Well, I'm never going to be good at numbers, they're always going
to give me a headache. And it's like, you say you're right
back. But yeah,
my, one of my main rather than leaning into the
weaknesses, or the perceived weaknesses, or the perceived
lack, I like to lean into what are you awesome at already? What
in your business is already working for you? Where are your
clients already coming from? How can you get more of those,
rather than, Oh, you should be on Instagram, you should be on
LinkedIn, you should be using like I don't like to should on
anybody, you know. So it's really interesting. There was a
book called the Clifton Strengths Finder that I used
when I was working in corporate. Because I did work in corporate
I was an accountant and working in corporate work and marketing
did all of that kind of stuff before I became a freelancer.
And the Clifton Strengths Finder is really interesting because it
really does lean into what are your strengths and how can you
use your strengths to tackle some of the challenges? So how
can you use your brilliant brain when it comes to relationships
and building relationships and understanding human beings? How
could that possibly work for you when it comes to numbers? Yeah.
Like, how could that line be drawn? And exploring that and
getting curious about? How can we make it work for the
individual?
So do you find that? I mean, I know everybody's
different people are unique and different, but are there like,
two or three specific things that often or most often come up
when you're when you're working with creatives then is one of
them numbers, for example, their lack of
them is absolutely numbers, for sure. There's five,
because you know, we're creative. So we have lots of
different things. Yeah. But one of them is about like, clarity,
and focus and direction. And like, I have all of these ideas
and all these things that I want to do, and all these things I
could do. And all these, like different marketing is so
overwhelming, as you know, yeah. Which is why it's so brilliant
that you have focused and simplified this is the this is
the tool that I'm going to use this is the tool that I know
works for me is relationships. So for them, the first thing is
getting helping them just get clarity and focus and direction.
And then the next one, interestingly enough, is self
management. It's time management, boundary management.
So it's things like overwhelm, and burnout, and impostor
syndrome and self doubt and confidence in running a
business. So those two kind of foundational things is where we
usually start, and then we get into numbers, we get into
pricing and numbers and understanding the numbers that
are important, and how to interact with numbers in a
different way and change your relationship with numbers. And
then we get specifically into clients and really understanding
looking at clients. I don't know if you've found this generous,
but one of the things that I find a lot with solopreneurs, or
people who are using their own skills as their service is that
they tend to look at their business only from their
perspective. And in order to be successful at relationships and
marketing, we have to really put ourselves in somebody else's
shoes. Yeah, we have. I
know, for me on LinkedIn, it's like creating the
profile. Optimum, in an optimum way. I'm trying to say a word
that I can't say optimally. optimally. optimally. Thank you.
You have to have a client facing if you're an entrepreneurs,
solopreneur or business owner, not the about you. And that's a
misnomer that a lot of people do on LinkedIn. So yeah, so you
have to see it from other people's perspective. For
sure. Yeah. So that's really the fourth thing
that we look at is really understanding your clients. And
then once we have all of that, then we can go into marketing
and sales. Yeah, we can go into marketing clarity, what is your
marketing message? What is your brand voice going to be like?
And then what is the sales model that's going to work best for
you to connect to your clients and get successful sales? Yeah,
earn more money, stress, less, grow with confidence, just do
it.
Exactly. But and I can see the passion you have
for what you do. So. So talking about that word, I couldn't say
I saw that you love big words. I do. Okay, so talk to me about
that. Are you a Scrabble player? Or do you do CrossFit
not? I have my love of big words. I, one of my core
values is communication. And one of my worldviews is that
circumstances or circumstances, and it is the stories we tell
ourselves about those circumstances, that creates our
experience of life. So if we say it's raining, and it's terrible,
and it's cold, and oh, that's awful. And that's a story that
we can tell ourselves about something that we have no
control over. And through our language, we can change the
story that we tell ourselves. And so we can start telling
ourselves like, oh, man, what a perfect day to stay inside and
what a great excuse to cuddle up in front of the fire. And, oh,
I'm so grateful for the heater in my house. And we can we can
change our focus through our language. So that's where my
love of language started. And then I started to learn really
cool words like anthropomorphic size and consilience and
reification. And, and I got excited about that. There's
words and language that we don't use on a regular basis that are
so rich and descriptive and wonderful. And it's actually now
my Achilles heel when it comes to marketing And because I want
to communicate using words and language that are important to
me, me facing. And what I need to do to be successful is use
words and language that my clients care about and resonate
with. So the hard lesson in communication is that it's not
about me, it's about the listener. Yes,
but I'm loving and talking business right now.
I'm just like, I love words. And I love the etymology of words.
But I don't know. Like, do you read the dictionary word? All
these words come from where do these words come
from? Conversations? No, come
on. No, no, no, no, because 100% words that you
just mentioned, never heard of them. So. So yeah. I'm talking
to the wrong people, obviously. Right. And
I think that that's, that's really the thing about
are you talking to the right people? In your relationships?
Like, are you having the conversations that light you up
that give you new vocabulary, or new perspectives and new
possibilities? And, and really well, and then the other piece
about where I learn new words, is, I run a book club for
freelancers. So this is a free book club. anybody listening is
absolutely welcome to join this book club. We meet twice a
month, we usually take a full month to read one book, and
they're all business or communications books
fun. Okay, so I
make them and how this started is I had a short
shelf of shame. I had a shelf of books that I was like, oh, I
should read that. I should read that. And they were starting to
like, kind of weigh on me. Yes. And so I started this book club
as a way of doing the reading that I wanted to do, but doing
it in support and in relationship with my community.
And so now I get all of these new words. And then I share the
books with other people. And then we get to have
conversations where we get introduced to new language.
Yeah,
to talk about that offline. So I've had a
different challenge. Like, I find that I'm listening to
podcasts. I do. I admit, I do watch television. If it's not a
basketball game, though, or a tennis match, it's, you know,
something on Netflix, or I'm a movie buff, I love really
interesting films, not necessarily movies, but Maestro
that just came out. Some people loved it. And some people hated
it. Because it's an art film. It's not for everybody. But
anyway, so I love that kind of thing. But I have in the last
few years, the only books that I've been reading really are
books of people that are on my podcast, or books, business
books, and I can't get myself back to reading a novel. So I
bought this book six months ago, because I heard or I saw on CBS
Sunday Morning, the author was being interviewed. And it looks
really interesting. And she's done amazing with this book.
It's called Lessons in chemistry. Which in Yes, I've
heard of it. Yeah. So it sat on my bedside table. Every night, I
would pick up my iPad, or I'd pick up my Crossword Book, or my
People Magazine, and I would never open the book. Now the
show lessons in chemistry, it's been made into a limited series
on Apple TV, and I see it occasionally they're gonna go
nope, I'm not gonna watch it until I've read the book. Right.
So I finally started the Book Three nights ago. I'm going to
Chapter Three now. So I'm going to try and make it through this
book. But I lose attention span. That's the problem. I'm so busy
with thinking, I've got to write this newsletter, or I've got to
listen to this podcast, or I've got to check this person's book
out that I never get back to novels anymore. And I love
this is interesting, because the first books we read
were things like finding focus and an age of distraction, and
atomic habits. And now habit. And so those tools help me to do
the things that I want to do. Also a really interesting thing
about procrastination that I learned and that I see as
helpful for the people that I work with it really, I mean, for
myself, let's be honest, is the idea that procrastination is not
a problem. It's a symptom.
Okay, probably, you
find yourself procrastinating. It's a symptom
of something else happening. Because procrastination is
different from avoidance. avoidance is like I'm avoiding
doing the dishes. I don't want to do the dishes, and I'm just
gonna avoid it. Procrastination is like having your foot on the
gas for something you really want to do, but having your foot
on the brake at the same time. Have you know, I want to read
this book because I hear it's great, but I'm not reading it.
So what's that about? And usually procrastinate emotion is
coming from a place of fear. I'm afraid I'm not gonna like it.
I'm afraid I'll start it and get distracted. I'm afraid it's
going to be a waste of my time. I'm afraid whatever it like
there can be an it can be really subtle in terms of what it is
that that's causing us to stop it. So I think for me, like once
I realized that procrastination wasn't a problem, and it wasn't
a flaw, and it wasn't something wrong with me and I wasn't bad.
It was like a symptom. It was like a headache or like, oh,
there's a rock in my shoe, I need to look at it. It gave me
way different access to being able to get curious about my
behavior and what was behind the behavior. Okay, so
going on that theory? I certainly am. Now I've
opened that door of that challenge to read the book. If I
don't like the book, I won't continue it, because, but I'm
liking it. So far. I'm liking the way that she's writing it.
And I think, for me, if it was anything, why I procrastinate is
because I feel so short of time for all the amazing things that
are out there that is this the thing I should focus on? Yeah,
much better to focus on People Magazine. Yeah.
This is the thing though, Janet. No, I don't
remember that. The second thing that I really help people with
is sort of that self management time management mindset
management thing. One of the biggest access points to
understanding your relationship with time is to start looking at
your time not on a day to day basis, not in a 24 hour chunk.
But to look at it in terms of a week, you have 168 hours in a
week, and start to do start to do a breakdown. Okay, I want to
I usually I want to sleep eight hours, but it's usually six, or
how long am I in bed, and just start to look at it. And some of
my people who are the most overwhelmed and burnt out, are
trying to do 175 hours worth of stuff in 168. Some of my people
who are most afflicted by procrastination, find that they
only actually are filling 150 hours with intention. And that
there are all of these ghost hours that just seem to
disappear. And once they're aware of it, they can make more
intentional choices.
That's really a great lesson. So here you are
coaching me and thank you for that. I find that very
interesting. I might do
FYI, when I when I binge watch, because I totally
binge watch my schedule. I have I booked time for it, because I
know I'm gonna do it anyways. I binge watch Home Improvement
shows. Oh, I love those two. Yeah. And what I really like
about it when I'm watching them is it's not completely zoned
out, because what I watch about them is I pay attention to
there's the home rental person. And then there's the client. And
the questions that the home rental person asks the client is
like doing a creative brief. And it's it's really doing a needs
discovery. It's like a sales call. And then when I noticed
throughout the show is that keep coming back to Oh, you want this
outcome. So you know, yeah, we're going to fix all the
plumbing. And we're going to do all of this so that you can have
your spa bathroom. And finally so it really focuses on outcome
based conversations, outcome based cars, like promised
watching the twins. I've been watching all of them. I think
I'm on repeats for everybody.
That's the one they all have. So it's
it's really interesting to me to be even
just observing, where can I learn about how relationships
work in a service based industry? How can I pay
attention to what can I take away from what somebody else is
doing? I mean, one of the beautiful things I was going to
grab it off my my corkboard because it was usually over
here, but I moved it. After our first conversation, Janice, you
sent me a thank you card. And you personalized the Thank You
card. And you created something that I thought like it really
made an impact on me. I remembered it I have it saved
for me. And it's like that kind of when you can make that kind
of connection with someone and then have it have some longevity
is super powerful.
Thank you. Yes, I agree. I think especially if
it's something tactile. Yeah. Because it takes people from
their head to their heart. And that's the hope anyway. Okay, so
this has been delightful and did I know I was getting Get
coaching here. No, I did not. But I
did ask permission. I did not, but I hope it's okay.
I'm
open to it and I love it. So um, I know that you
what was I gonna say you have a podcast to your podcast you do
solo episodes Correct? Or do you do interviews as well? I'm not
sure.
I'm only doing solo episodes right now I'm looking
at. One of the things that I really love is evidence of
awesome and celebrating wins and progress and process and really
encouraging ourselves like even when we do something that feels
really minor, like, oh, I sent that email. Yeah, I know. Like,
I'm really all about that. So I'm looking at possibly in the
future, expanding my podcast to include opportunities to feature
some of my clients embrace them. At the moment, it's more of kind
of like edutainment, I pick specific topics. And I usually
give about eight to 10 minutes worth of Bite Size little
I saw that I listened to, to one or two and
yeah, very useful for your for your target audience for sure.
Okay, last question. No second last question. You may or may
not have seen on the sheet that I sent you. i And you know this
about me already, that I'm a curious person. So I always like
to get people's take on curiosity. So it's a two part
question. Do you believe that curiosity is innate? Or learned?
And part two is what are you most curious about these days?
Hmm. So do I believe that curiosity is innate? Or
learned? My answer is yes, both. So I feel like all human beings
have some curiosity, especially when we're born, because that's
how we learn. We get curious about things and we learn. I
think that the practice of applying curiosity with
intention does take some training. And I think especially
for adults, playing with what if rather than having to know, I
think adults are really uncomfortable with uncertainty.
And I think curiosity lives in uncertainty and getting. So
getting comfortable with being uncertain. So you can be
practicing curiosity, that I think is the difficult thing for
my clients is that uncertainty feels like anxiety. And I don't
know, and it kind of stops them and they get really fixed in the
uncertainty and don't can't really access curiosity without
maybe help. And I think that that's the really key piece is
that as solopreneurs or when you're by yourself, it's hard to
ask those curiosity questions and get new answers. Also,
though, having a comfortable array, a strong
sense of curiosity helps you with what you talked about
earlier, right in, in finding out from your client, what they
really want, and also what they need, because sometimes those
are different, and being able to pull that out of them. So yeah,
fair enough. And
what do you think that there's a lot of blocks to
curiosity, like, Oh, I'm not here to get curious, I can't ask
questions about my client, because it's gonna make me look
stupid, or like, I don't know what I'm talking about. So I
think that there's, I think the practice of curiosity as an
adult, and the practice of curiosity, in sales and in
business, is something that isn't innate, that how to do it
in a way that you feel comfortable with that, that
comes across as professional and that gets you the kind of
information that you need to move forward is something that
needs to be trained. And that's definitely part of how I focus.
So yes, it may and entering and then then that the last question
you asked, which is what am I currently curious about?
long I'm gonna share what's really on my mind, and what's
what's really personal, it's not about my business right now. I
have external forces that are happening and things that are
out of my control. My family member, one of my family members
is quite ill and got quite ill quite suddenly and will likely
pass in the next three to four days. And so my curiosity is a
place where I can lean into as a safe place to swim right now is
to okay, I can be curious about what is this process going to
look like and where what kind of resources can I get to and who
can I turn to support and How do other people are in this. So I
think that what I'm curious about is less important than
having curiosity as a tool to lean into.
Wow, that's huge. Thank you for sharing that. I
appreciate that. Because that that's a big message there. All
right, let's take the last question as knowing how
passionate you are about your work, and I see that I can tell
that your clients are probably really loyal clients, and lean
on everything that you tell them, I can just feel the
connection, the relationship that you have with them is
important. What would be one piece of advice you could share
with my audience before we wrap up about this?
Okay. So I'm going to share my core message for
success, which no matter what industry you're in, or where
you're at, and whatever phase of life you're in, or whatever
you're doing is what are the three core beliefs that are
going to help you be successful. And the first core belief is
around hope and possibility that you have to believe that success
is possible. And I think that this is what we were speaking
around earlier about the core messages that are like, Oh,
starving artists. And if you're creative, you'll never word and
all of this, this stuff. So changing that mindset, and being
able to believe that it is possible. And then the second
piece is that it's possible for you. There's all this like, oh,
other people can do it, oh, other people have more better,
different, whatever it is, but I can't because I have lack and
insufficiency and whatever. So really believing that success is
possible that it's possible for you. And then the final one,
which is the one that speaks to your relationship with numbers,
is that success is worth it, that it's worth it, to look at
the numbers and do the number part and be uncomfortable and be
in a place that's not your zone of genius, and really getting
connected to why it's worth it. Wow,
those are amazing. I appreciate that. So
good. And I thank you for being here and for, for sharing all of
your I love having conversations with new people that I've only
met briefly because so much more comes out. And I want to hear so
much more from you next time I talk to you kind of thing. So
thank you again, or for being on the show. I have the information
of where people can reach you, your website, business of
creativity.ca We'll put all of that and you have a YouTube
channel. You're on LinkedIn and you have a podcast. We'll put
all that in the show notes. Right and thank you to my
audience for being here for being loyal to me and for
listening. Please let us know that you enjoyed the episode by
leaving a positive review. We appreciate that and remember to
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