Gift biz unwrapped episode 165.
Speaker:Let's not try and worry about making a bigger slice of
Speaker:the pie.
Speaker:Let's just make the pie bigger.
Speaker:And then everybody gets more Attention.
Speaker:Gifters bakers,
Speaker:crafters, and makers pursuing your dream can be fun.
Speaker:Whether you have an established business or looking to start one.
Speaker:Now you are in the right place.
Speaker:This is gift to biz unwrapped,
Speaker:helping you turn your skill into a flourishing business.
Speaker:Join us for an episode,
Speaker:packed full of invaluable guidance,
Speaker:resources, and the support you need to grow.
Speaker:Your gift biz here is your host gift biz gal Sue
Speaker:moon Heights.
Speaker:Today, I am thrilled to Introduce you to Gwen Bordner.
Speaker:When is a speaker trainer and consultant focused on the craft
Speaker:enthusiast niche,
Speaker:her passion is working with small business owners,
Speaker:helping them reach their individual success goals.
Speaker:She calls it the light bulb moment.
Speaker:That moment,
Speaker:when everything clicks into place,
Speaker:that moment,
Speaker:when an obstacle is overcome that moment,
Speaker:when a goal is met or a long sought after answer
Speaker:is realized,
Speaker:Gwen has taught craft and business classes throughout the country for
Speaker:over 15 years.
Speaker:She is the author of entree to entre lock and instructor
Speaker:for Craftsy and the past interim executive director of the national
Speaker:needle arts association,
Speaker:being a passionate believer in abundance.
Speaker:Gwen knows that when we work together to improve our industry,
Speaker:our individual businesses improve as well.
Speaker:I know we are going to get so much out of
Speaker:this conversation Quinn.
Speaker:Thank you.
Speaker:I really appreciate your being here today.
Speaker:I am so pleased to be here.
Speaker:Thank you so much for inviting me to be on the
Speaker:show. I really appreciate it.
Speaker:Well, you are the perfect person to be talking about some
Speaker:of this because you're combining business with the craft enthusiast.
Speaker:So like I said,
Speaker:I'm super excited.
Speaker:I think we're going to get so,
Speaker:so much out of it,
Speaker:but before we start,
Speaker:I like to do something a little bit less traditional.
Speaker:And have you describe yourself in the way of a motivational
Speaker:candle? So if you were to create a candle that would
Speaker:describe you perfectly,
Speaker:what color and what would be a quote that would be
Speaker:on your candle?
Speaker:I have to confess the color I had a problem with.
Speaker:I was thinking about it and I thought,
Speaker:Oh, what color,
Speaker:what color?
Speaker:Because my two favorite colors are purple and green.
Speaker:And so maybe it would be purple and green swirled,
Speaker:but it may just be purple because I do think of
Speaker:purple as kind of a deep,
Speaker:passionate kind of color.
Speaker:And on it,
Speaker:it would say a high tide raises all boats because that
Speaker:is a real basic foundation of my philosophy.
Speaker:I'm a big,
Speaker:big believer in do what will help other people become strong
Speaker:and it will help your business and your own personal world
Speaker:becomes strong as well.
Speaker:My general business philosophy is a philosophy of abundance and it's
Speaker:not a of competition.
Speaker:Let's not try and worry about making a bigger slice of
Speaker:the pie.
Speaker:Let's just make the pie bigger.
Speaker:And then everybody gets more Right.
Speaker:And naturally,
Speaker:when you have that kind of a mindset,
Speaker:you end up growing almost as a sideline because you're helping
Speaker:others. And so you're attracting more people because you're making them
Speaker:successful and it just continues to build upon itself.
Speaker:Exactly. And it's so much easier quite honestly,
Speaker:for everyone to work together,
Speaker:to bake the pie bigger than to try and steal someone
Speaker:else's part of their pie really.
Speaker:And in the end,
Speaker:it's just so much more beneficial for everyone involved,
Speaker:Agreed, and the feeling and the Carmen,
Speaker:all of that is way better Too.
Speaker:Very much.
Speaker:So, hi.
Speaker:Well, Tell us a little bit about your backstory.
Speaker:How did you get to where you are today?
Speaker:Well, my way,
Speaker:Way, way back story was while I was in college,
Speaker:I reconnected with knitting and I had learned in it when
Speaker:I was very little,
Speaker:but I really hadn't done it very much.
Speaker:And I reconnected in college.
Speaker:And for a short period of time,
Speaker:worked at a yarn shop and deepen the back of my
Speaker:mind. I thought,
Speaker:Hmm, someday I maybe should do some yarn business,
Speaker:but I was in college to get a degree in computer
Speaker:science. And I knew that my dad would lose his poor
Speaker:mind if I stopped doing computer science after paying for an
Speaker:expensive degree.
Speaker:Right. And did knitting of all things.
Speaker:So I went ahead and went through what I would call
Speaker:kind of a traditional career.
Speaker:I did some programming,
Speaker:which led to computer business consulting.
Speaker:I worked for Ernst and young,
Speaker:which is one of the biggest accounting firms in the world,
Speaker:in their small business department doing consulting for them.
Speaker:I became a project manager.
Speaker:Ultimately I ran the it department for a phone company and
Speaker:during the.com
Speaker:downturn, which was back in early 2000,
Speaker:our IPO was supposed to happen two days after the crash.
Speaker:Oh, no.
Speaker:Right, exactly.
Speaker:So that totally changed what was happening with the business and
Speaker:for lots and lots of reasons that were some good,
Speaker:some not so good,
Speaker:but for lots of reasons,
Speaker:it made sense for me to lay myself off as we
Speaker:had to lay off a whole lot of our workforce because
Speaker:of the funding issue that went along with that.
Speaker:And so I had a year of severance as part of
Speaker:that. And that gave me time to kind of think about
Speaker:what I wanted to do.
Speaker:And I told my husband,
Speaker:I said,
Speaker:okay, I am going to go to all of the knitting
Speaker:shows that I want to go to during this time.
Speaker:And he's like,
Speaker:great, have a great time.
Speaker:See ya.
Speaker:The money's still coming in.
Speaker:So it's all right.
Speaker:Exactly. Yeah.
Speaker:He was totally supportive.
Speaker:And part way through that time,
Speaker:I realized,
Speaker:I think this is the time I want to start my
Speaker:knitting business.
Speaker:And so in late 2000,
Speaker:I started what at the time was called knit ability.
Speaker:I've since gone through a couple other business names,
Speaker:but the business wasn't an ability.
Speaker:And I had a business plan that didn't actually come to
Speaker:fruition. It went through several transitions.
Speaker:And I think that's an important thing to note is people
Speaker:get worried about finding the perfect business to start in and
Speaker:we can be when we're entrepreneurs.
Speaker:And so my business transformed several times over probably the first
Speaker:three to four,
Speaker:maybe five years.
Speaker:And ultimately what I landed on that made me really happy
Speaker:was being a knitting instructor.
Speaker:And so for the last,
Speaker:probably 10 years,
Speaker:when people would say,
Speaker:what do you do?
Speaker:I would say I'm a professional knitting instructor,
Speaker:which either gets very strange looks or lots of interesting conversations,
Speaker:sometimes both.
Speaker:I'm sure.
Speaker:Let me stop you here because I think this would be
Speaker:interesting for our listeners to hear too,
Speaker:the transitions that you were making were based on What they
Speaker:were based on finding what was working for me,
Speaker:the aspects that I really enjoyed and just experimenting a little
Speaker:bit, trying something out and saying,
Speaker:huh, that doesn't seem to be working.
Speaker:Or, Oh,
Speaker:I like that.
Speaker:My real transition was I had started out selling product.
Speaker:I was designing patterns and selling kits for those patterns.
Speaker:So I was primarily selling product,
Speaker:but over time as a vendor at a couple of these
Speaker:big events that also have lots of classes,
Speaker:the event organizer said,
Speaker:well, we hear you teach classes.
Speaker:And it's like,
Speaker:Oh yeah,
Speaker:I teach classes.
Speaker:And they said,
Speaker:well, why haven't you applied?
Speaker:And it's like,
Speaker:because nobody knows my name.
Speaker:I'm a,
Speaker:nobody I'm not famous.
Speaker:And they said that doesn't necessarily matter.
Speaker:Why don't you apply?
Speaker:And so I did.
Speaker:What I really discovered later was the reason I was asked
Speaker:to apply was I was easy to work with.
Speaker:And they knew if I was easy to work with as
Speaker:a vendor,
Speaker:I'd be easy to work with as an instructor.
Speaker:And once I was,
Speaker:I'll say,
Speaker:quote, unquote,
Speaker:allowed to instruct and really was invited to instruct,
Speaker:I really realized that that's what I loved doing.
Speaker:It made me so happy and the other was okay,
Speaker:but it just felt more like a slog.
Speaker:So it was situational in some ways.
Speaker:And then also when you started doing it,
Speaker:you saw that,
Speaker:that was really what lit you up the teaching end.
Speaker:Exactly. Okay.
Speaker:And so in part of it was being open,
Speaker:being open to other possibilities,
Speaker:such a good point and saying,
Speaker:Hey, we'll give this a try because it might not have
Speaker:worked. It totally could have not worked for me.
Speaker:And that would have been okay too.
Speaker:Right. That's still a learning experience,
Speaker:but this whole point,
Speaker:I love that you brought it up in terms of,
Speaker:you're not necessarily going to land the best thing for you
Speaker:right out of the gate.
Speaker:It might've been a situation where you weren't seeing a lot
Speaker:of response to your products,
Speaker:but you were seeing,
Speaker:or your creations,
Speaker:I should say because you're knitting,
Speaker:but there was so much going on on the teaching side
Speaker:could be either or,
Speaker:or it could be a combination of what the market response
Speaker:is to you.
Speaker:And then also what you like to do for your Exactly.
Speaker:And what really happened for me is I realized when I
Speaker:focused on instruction,
Speaker:I was so much more engaged that it actually reflected everything
Speaker:into my business accordingly.
Speaker:And so my business became more successful almost immediately because I
Speaker:was so much more engaged.
Speaker:I hadn't realized it until it happened,
Speaker:but there was a very direct correlation,
Speaker:but I wouldn't have seen it if I hadn't taken the
Speaker:chance. Right.
Speaker:That's a really interesting point as well.
Speaker:Okay. So I didn't mean to sideswipe your story.
Speaker:No, that's okay.
Speaker:I just wanted to get a little bit more detail there.
Speaker:So carry on.
Speaker:So I've been a professional netting instructor and was just sharing
Speaker:that I've just come back from teaching at an knitting event.
Speaker:I still do that,
Speaker:but about three years ago,
Speaker:I started getting a little restless for lack of a better
Speaker:word and realized I wanted to do different things than what
Speaker:I had.
Speaker:And so I decided I would combine my historical experience in
Speaker:the professional business world with my current experience in the crafting
Speaker:industry. And so that was when I actually started
as a consulting business for the craft enthusiast niche.
Speaker:And so I still do teach,
Speaker:but my primary focus during the non-teaching events kind of time
Speaker:is consulting with businesses that are in any of the crafting
Speaker:niches, because what I've realized over time and working with a
Speaker:lot of folks is that quite honestly,
Speaker:we're more the same than we are different.
Speaker:The fundamental business issues that a paper crafter has as compared
Speaker:to a yarn person,
Speaker:as opposed to a fabric person are really the same.
Speaker:The fine details are a little bit different,
Speaker:but the broader ideas and concepts and issues that we're dealing
Speaker:with are really all the same.
Speaker:Would you say that in the crafting making industry overall,
Speaker:the challenges are different though from other types of industries?
Speaker:Yes. And that's one of the reasons that I pick this
Speaker:industry is because I've spent so much time in it.
Speaker:I really understand where it's the same and where it's different.
Speaker:And one of the biggest places that it's different is that
Speaker:people believe that it's significantly different and it's not significantly different.
Speaker:It's only somewhat different that being able to talk in the
Speaker:language to the CEO or to the owner of the crafting
Speaker:business, in a language that they really understand and know that
Speaker:I've been there makes a huge difference in their ability to
Speaker:accept the advice and actually process the advice and make it
Speaker:happen. Sure.
Speaker:Because you can relate because you've had a business in the
Speaker:industry already,
Speaker:too. Exactly.
Speaker:Yeah. So it brings your credibility way up.
Speaker:Exactly. I love the fact that you combined your corporate expertise
Speaker:then with your crafting.
Speaker:And I would suggest to all of our listeners here too,
Speaker:to think through,
Speaker:maybe you're currently in a nine to five job,
Speaker:but what skills do you have there that you might be
Speaker:able to take elsewhere as you progress or as you start
Speaker:building something on the side that might turn into a full-time
Speaker:business around your hobby or your craft,
Speaker:this is a perfect example that Gwen's talking about and it
Speaker:makes her different,
Speaker:right? Because she has those two pieces of now that she
Speaker:can merge together to support the industry.
Speaker:So something to think about for everybody,
Speaker:what other types of challenges do you encounter often within our
Speaker:industry? The biggest challenge that I see is,
Speaker:and this is going to sound kind of negative and I
Speaker:don't mean it to be,
Speaker:but the biggest challenge is most people get into their crafting
Speaker:industry in the craft enthusiast niche,
Speaker:because they're really passionate about the craft,
Speaker:but they don't always bring good business experience.
Speaker:And often they can get fairly successful to a point just
Speaker:on that passion,
Speaker:just on that drive for whatever aspect they have within the
Speaker:craft industry,
Speaker:but to be successful long-term you really have to treat it
Speaker:like a business.
Speaker:Yeah. I was just going to say,
Speaker:I totally agree with you on that because the thing is
Speaker:with makers and crafters and all they know everything about production
Speaker:of their product,
Speaker:the equipment that you need to use and the techniques,
Speaker:and they've invested in classes,
Speaker:Gwen, to learn how to do everything.
Speaker:So they are professionals and experts at creating their product,
Speaker:the exact yarns to use,
Speaker:to create a certain result,
Speaker:et cetera.
Speaker:Exactly. But they don't need to kick themselves or beat themselves
Speaker:up for not knowing business they've never needed to before.
Speaker:It's just,
Speaker:when you make that flip from it being a hobby into
Speaker:monetizing into a business that this whole thing about having some
Speaker:business skills comes up Well,
Speaker:and the part that's even more surprising for most people is
Speaker:you can run your business with minimal business skills for often
Speaker:a year or two,
Speaker:because most of what you're focusing on is marketing and marketing
Speaker:is often a lot about the passion and the excitement of
Speaker:what your product is that you're selling.
Speaker:Whether the product you're selling is you or the product you're
Speaker:selling is your ideas,
Speaker:or you're actually selling a physical product.
Speaker:But once you want to try and scale that grow,
Speaker:that make that into an income.
Speaker:That's a really respectable,
Speaker:ongoing, steady income.
Speaker:That's when you really need business skills.
Speaker:And many times,
Speaker:like we said,
Speaker:people don't come in with business skills,
Speaker:but that's where someone like me can come in and help
Speaker:and help you figure out where are the places that you
Speaker:can learn,
Speaker:where the places that you hire others,
Speaker:what makes sense for you to still do versus what makes
Speaker:sense for you to outsource all of those pieces and parts
Speaker:of the equation.
Speaker:So when you,
Speaker:You start looking at a business,
Speaker:what do you do?
Speaker:What are your first steps?
Speaker:When you come in,
Speaker:let's say,
Speaker:I hired you.
Speaker:I'm a jewelry maker.
Speaker:Okay. And I've started my business.
Speaker:I've built it up to a certain point.
Speaker:It's just,
Speaker:it's not making me enough money where I could quit my
Speaker:full-time job.
Speaker:And I really would like it to,
Speaker:because I want to be home with the kids.
Speaker:So I want to work out of my house.
Speaker:There's whatever it is,
Speaker:whatever the scenario is,
Speaker:how would you work with somebody like this?
Speaker:So one of the first things that I talk about is
Speaker:what really are your goals and objectives?
Speaker:And people say,
Speaker:Oh, I want to make a lot of money.
Speaker:Okay. That's not actually a goal we need to down to
Speaker:specifics. And so the first thing I spend some time on
Speaker:is really looking at what are the specifics and are they
Speaker:realistic or are they not realistic?
Speaker:Well, I want to make a hundred thousand dollars.
Speaker:Well, how much have you made so far?
Speaker:I've made $10,000
Speaker:last year.
Speaker:Okay. Growing 10 times in a year is probably not realistic.
Speaker:Let's look at that.
Speaker:Let's see what we can achieve.
Speaker:So I'm kind of a Debbie downer for a lot of
Speaker:people in people really respect that because I don't just try
Speaker:to make it all fun.
Speaker:And it's going to be wonderful because that's really frustrating when
Speaker:it's not,
Speaker:but by the same token,
Speaker:then I'll look and say,
Speaker:okay, where are we have we had success?
Speaker:Where do we leverage that success?
Speaker:Where do we struggle?
Speaker:Where do we not struggle?
Speaker:So it ends up being an ongoing conversation,
Speaker:looking at where are your strengths?
Speaker:How do we leverage those?
Speaker:Where are your weaknesses?
Speaker:What do we need to do to supplement those or build
Speaker:up around those?
Speaker:And where are we trying to get to?
Speaker:Because not everybody wants a million dollar business.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:you kind of say you do,
Speaker:but there's a lot of sacrifices that also come with a
Speaker:million dollar business.
Speaker:No one necessarily wants to live that life.
Speaker:If they really understand what that means.
Speaker:Exactly. It looks great from the outside.
Speaker:Everybody would love a million dollars just coming in.
Speaker:But all the things that go around having a million dollar
Speaker:business is different.
Speaker:So true.
Speaker:I kind of equate that also to people who want to
Speaker:have a shop on main street,
Speaker:because it sounds so nice,
Speaker:like at a dinner party.
Speaker:Oh yeah.
Speaker:My shop's on central Avenue,
Speaker:whatever it is.
Speaker:But the reality is someone's got to be in that shop,
Speaker:call it 10 to six,
Speaker:six days a week.
Speaker:And then you have to have employees.
Speaker:If it's not going to be you there all the time,
Speaker:what happens if someone gets sick?
Speaker:Like the reality is so different than just the image that
Speaker:people have in their head about something such as a brick
Speaker:and mortar.
Speaker:Exactly. One of my favorites is when someone's comes up to
Speaker:me and says,
Speaker:I'd love to own a yarn shop.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:I get to knit all the time and it's like,
Speaker:if you want to never knit again,
Speaker:own a yarn shop.
Speaker:Yeah. Because you don't actually have time to do that.
Speaker:That completely changes your relationship with your hobby,
Speaker:which I think is a really important thing for people to
Speaker:realize you may still love what was your hobby,
Speaker:but it is no longer your hobby.
Speaker:You will have a different relationship with it.
Speaker:It doesn't mean you'll hate it,
Speaker:but it doesn't mean that it's going to be the same.
Speaker:It's going to have a different relationship.
Speaker:I love that quote,
Speaker:it's turned into a quote.
Speaker:Did you know that Gwen changes your relationship with your hobby
Speaker:and it couldn't be more true?
Speaker:Yeah, absolutely.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:you've gone through it as well,
Speaker:right? Oh yeah.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:So you go in and you define what the goals and
Speaker:objectives are,
Speaker:true goals and objectives for your customer.
Speaker:And then you figure out where they've been successful,
Speaker:where they've kind of not met what their expectations are,
Speaker:where their wishes are,
Speaker:all of that,
Speaker:then what happens.
Speaker:And so then we start making a plan and we look
Speaker:at what is the most critical next step.
Speaker:And because I've worked with so many businesses across so many
Speaker:industries, I'm able to look and say,
Speaker:you may think it's this,
Speaker:but quite honestly,
Speaker:it's that.
Speaker:And we're going to work on this particular aspect first and
Speaker:it varies for every business.
Speaker:So there's not necessarily an absolute answer that we're always going
Speaker:to do this one thing first,
Speaker:other than having the conversation of where are you,
Speaker:where are you today getting that kind of data and where
Speaker:do you want to go?
Speaker:Those are the only things that I can guarantee I do
Speaker:the first time.
Speaker:Once we've got that information,
Speaker:then making the decision together with my person that I'm working
Speaker:with with my entrepreneur.
Speaker:It looks very different with each different company that I work
Speaker:with. I have several people that technically from the outside look
Speaker:exactly the same,
Speaker:but what I'm doing with each of them is very,
Speaker:very different because of their personality,
Speaker:their strengths,
Speaker:the details within their business,
Speaker:all of those things Have clients throughout the whole country.
Speaker:I do.
Speaker:Would you say,
Speaker:I'm not setting you up.
Speaker:I'm just very curious,
Speaker:similar industry in different parts of the country because they live
Speaker:in a different place.
Speaker:Their audience might be different that their business needs to look
Speaker:different. In some cases like I work with people throughout the
Speaker:entire supply chain.
Speaker:So I actually work with manufacturers and distributors and wholesalers and
Speaker:retailers and designers and teachers.
Speaker:So all of those have different requirements.
Speaker:But for example,
Speaker:thinking of the retailer business,
Speaker:because that's a business,
Speaker:most of us can kind of imagine,
Speaker:even if it hasn't been our business,
Speaker:depending on where your shop is,
Speaker:like your example of being on main street,
Speaker:main street could be a great shop,
Speaker:but do you have enough traffic on main street?
Speaker:And is your traffic mostly local traffic or is your traffic
Speaker:mostly tourist traffic,
Speaker:right? Depending on what your main street happens to be.
Speaker:And so that changes the approach based on what kind of
Speaker:traffic you're having as just one example.
Speaker:And so even though they may be very,
Speaker:very similar businesses,
Speaker:just knowing who their customer is,
Speaker:whether they're mostly local or they're mostly transient because they're tourists
Speaker:completely changes the answer,
Speaker:too many questions.
Speaker:Got it.
Speaker:I think so often that people will see another person in
Speaker:their niche being successful,
Speaker:maybe because they've interacted with them in a Facebook group,
Speaker:or they've just been scoping out competitors,
Speaker:websites online and learning about people.
Speaker:And then they try to mimic exactly what that other person
Speaker:is doing and then are disappointed if they don't get the
Speaker:results that,
Speaker:that other person's getting.
Speaker:Absolutely. And the challenge with any of this.
Speaker:And we've gotten so deep into what I call compare itis,
Speaker:because it's so easy to compare ourselves because now we have
Speaker:Facebook and Twitter and Instagram and all of those things.
Speaker:First, the things that are going on social media,
Speaker:people have any inkling at all is just their very best.
Speaker:It's not,
Speaker:what's really happening.
Speaker:It's not a hundred percent of the story,
Speaker:but the other side is you don't know where they are
Speaker:in their story.
Speaker:Are they actually a fairly new business or are they in
Speaker:fact, the business that's been around for 10 or 12 or
Speaker:15 years.
Speaker:And even if they've only are a fairly new business,
Speaker:is this their first business,
Speaker:their second business,
Speaker:their fifth business,
Speaker:all of those play into the factor.
Speaker:And so many times we're comparing our first or second chapter
Speaker:in our business story to someone else's chapter 20.
Speaker:And that's not a really good comparison.
Speaker:And so we really need to focus on our own journey
Speaker:because our journey is going to be different.
Speaker:And if it's about us,
Speaker:we're going to be really much more successful than if we're
Speaker:trying to match someone else's journey,
Speaker:because there's no telling all of the backstory that goes with
Speaker:their journey,
Speaker:Right? Because I think as a listener who might be somewhere
Speaker:along the way,
Speaker:they're thinking,
Speaker:Oh, I just don't have what it takes then,
Speaker:because I'm not able to be doing what someone else is
Speaker:doing without the understanding that there's a lot more experience that
Speaker:that other person has,
Speaker:or the situation is totally different.
Speaker:So we get into these mind games with ourselves and then
Speaker:that's when people derail and just decide,
Speaker:they're not doing it anymore,
Speaker:which is so sad because dreams get crushed that way.
Speaker:Exactly. And the thing that you have,
Speaker:that's unique,
Speaker:maybe the thing that the industry needs and no one's going
Speaker:to match you.
Speaker:And that's the part that's really powerful.
Speaker:Right? And we miss that sometimes.
Speaker:And I'll use myself as an example.
Speaker:There's not very many people actually doing consulting in this niche,
Speaker:but that doesn't mean it doesn't need it.
Speaker:It doesn't mean that that's not going to work.
Speaker:And so that's one of those kinds of examples,
Speaker:but I have a special combination.
Speaker:And if I didn't use it well,
Speaker:that would be a loss.
Speaker:Completely agree with you there.
Speaker:I was scoping out your website in preparation for our conversation,
Speaker:just looking at some other things.
Speaker:And one of the things that you mentioned there is accountability.
Speaker:Yes. What are you seeing about accountability within our industry?
Speaker:So accountability is a huge thing because if you have not
Speaker:worked for yourself before you don't realize how accountable you are
Speaker:to other people,
Speaker:when you work for yourself,
Speaker:no one is making sure that you arrived at work on
Speaker:time. No one is making sure that you get certain things
Speaker:done. No one is checking up on you.
Speaker:And very few people are actually as self-driven and motivated as
Speaker:they think they are,
Speaker:because they've done well in other environments and other businesses and
Speaker:people say,
Speaker:Oh, you're so driven and you get so much done and
Speaker:you do all of these things.
Speaker:And it's because there is some other outside influence that's helping
Speaker:push you along.
Speaker:Now, that's not to say that you aren't self-driven and you
Speaker:aren't motivated.
Speaker:And you aren't all those things,
Speaker:but for even myself.
Speaker:So we're going to do a little true confession right now,
Speaker:even for myself.
Speaker:I know that it's a challenge.
Speaker:I need to have my own because although the world sees
Speaker:me as someone who's very motivated and very driven.
Speaker:I know that if I don't actually have to justify my
Speaker:week to somebody that it often isn't as productive as it
Speaker:could have been.
Speaker:And so that's one of the powers of accountability is it
Speaker:allows you to make sure that you are accountable to somebody
Speaker:outside of yourself,
Speaker:because we are really good at making excuses for ourselves.
Speaker:No matter who you are.
Speaker:I know you're saying,
Speaker:Oh no,
Speaker:I would never.
Speaker:Yeah, no,
Speaker:we often do.
Speaker:And often we don't even see that we're doing it.
Speaker:And so just saying,
Speaker:these are the things that I'm going to get done this
Speaker:week. And then having to say to somebody,
Speaker:gosh, I only got three of these four really critical things
Speaker:done helps you be aware of,
Speaker:Oh, maybe I wasn't doing quite all that I could do.
Speaker:Maybe I got too distracted or it might be,
Speaker:yeah, I really had some true emergencies come up that I
Speaker:needed to deal with.
Speaker:My accountability partner just emailed me before you.
Speaker:And I got on this call and said,
Speaker:I'm going to have to go out of town for the
Speaker:week because we're going to have to put my grandmother in
Speaker:long-term care,
Speaker:probably an Alzheimer's facility.
Speaker:We need to look at this.
Speaker:It's becoming a big thing.
Speaker:Okay. That's a real emergency,
Speaker:but that's changing everything that's happening with her business because she
Speaker:is too and entrepreneur,
Speaker:but we often will let little things like,
Speaker:well, I really need to get the laundry done right now
Speaker:during your Workday.
Speaker:Did she really?
Speaker:Right? And you know,
Speaker:when most of those things come up is when you're going
Speaker:to start doing something that you're uncomfortable with,
Speaker:or you don't like doing,
Speaker:and that's exactly what you need to do to move forward.
Speaker:Exactly. It is very easy for us to come up with
Speaker:valuable procrastination is,
Speaker:Oh my gosh,
Speaker:I do that.
Speaker:You know what?
Speaker:I've started doing.
Speaker:One of the things that I,
Speaker:it's just not my favorite thing to do.
Speaker:I do weekly emails to our listeners about the podcast.
Speaker:And it comes at like the very end of all the
Speaker:other things.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:there's so many different steps for the podcast and I've now
Speaker:looked at the show so many times I've reviewed the final
Speaker:edit of the show,
Speaker:Instagram posts,
Speaker:like all this stuff.
Speaker:It's just that last little thing.
Speaker:And I'm so tired by the end.
Speaker:Wording is hard for me.
Speaker:It doesn't take long if I just sit down and do
Speaker:it, but that's a point almost every single time.
Speaker:I'm like,
Speaker:I think I need some popcorn or maybe go to the
Speaker:bathroom or I got to go see how my assistants do
Speaker:it, whatever it is.
Speaker:But I know that that's a weak point for myself.
Speaker:So I stopped myself and I'm like,
Speaker:Sue, you can do that.
Speaker:After this email is written exactly the emails only like the
Speaker:template email four or five sentences.
Speaker:It's just a reminder to just a trigger for people to
Speaker:understand and to decide if they need to watch this episode
Speaker:exactly right then.
Speaker:But it's just,
Speaker:I want fun words and good words and people to be
Speaker:interested in.
Speaker:It's always a challenge to me.
Speaker:Perfect example,
Speaker:because people often think that that's only when it's big things.
Speaker:It doesn't have to be a big thing.
Speaker:It can be a tiny thing.
Speaker:Like you said,
Speaker:this email is not this big giant three hour project.
Speaker:It's 10 minute project,
Speaker:but we can still do that.
Speaker:And if we do it enough,
Speaker:we realize that we've missed some things that we really should
Speaker:do. And for many of us being accountable to ourselves is
Speaker:not enough.
Speaker:So long as we're accountable to somebody else,
Speaker:we get it done.
Speaker:And it's probably one of the reasons you get your email
Speaker:done is you're accountable to your listeners.
Speaker:There you go.
Speaker:Well, yeah,
Speaker:cause I know it has to go out exactly.
Speaker:They're going to,
Speaker:to see it's missing.
Speaker:If it's not because people respond to me,
Speaker:et cetera,
Speaker:et cetera.
Speaker:Exactly. Gwen has such a wealth of information and we are
Speaker:going to hear more from her right after a word from
Speaker:our sponsor.
Speaker:This podcast is made possible.
Speaker:Thanks to the support at the ribbon print company,
Speaker:create custom ribbons right in your store or craft studio in
Speaker:seconds, visit the ribbon print company.com
Speaker:for more information.
Speaker:So where do we find accountability partners?
Speaker:How do you do that?
Speaker:So accountable,
Speaker:The partners are both easy and challenging at the same time.
Speaker:And accountability partner can easily be someone else in the industry
Speaker:that you've met,
Speaker:that you've made a relationship with.
Speaker:And to say,
Speaker:I want to be your accountability partner.
Speaker:This is something that I want to do.
Speaker:And that we're going to check in.
Speaker:And part of it is that you actually set a time
Speaker:every week to check in and to go over the list
Speaker:of things that you wanted to do the previous week.
Speaker:How did you do,
Speaker:what are the things you're going to do this upcoming week?
Speaker:And for the things that didn't go well to do some
Speaker:debriefing, to figure out what happened,
Speaker:what didn't go well.
Speaker:So you're also business growth,
Speaker:accountability, people too.
Speaker:Exactly. Now some folks don't necessarily do that,
Speaker:but I really feel like if you're going to invest the
Speaker:time, you might as well find someone that will do that
Speaker:with you.
Speaker:And so people say,
Speaker:Oh, so you have to find someone that has more experience.
Speaker:No, because you're going to do the same thing for them.
Speaker:And so finding someone that's at similar levels back to compare
Speaker:itis, right?
Speaker:We talked about that earlier.
Speaker:If you've got someone who's way more experienced than you,
Speaker:you always feel like you're inadequate and that's not healthy.
Speaker:Okay. So look for someone who's at a similar level,
Speaker:they don't have to be at the exact same level,
Speaker:but a similar level.
Speaker:And it doesn't necessarily have to be in your exact same
Speaker:business. My accountability partner does business consulting,
Speaker:but she does it for female online businesses who offer online
Speaker:courses and membership sites.
Speaker:So she has a different demographic than I have.
Speaker:And so that's okay.
Speaker:And she's doing a little bit different type of work than
Speaker:what I'm doing.
Speaker:That's okay too.
Speaker:But we're at a similar level of business experience and business
Speaker:understanding. And so sometimes I help her and sometimes she helps
Speaker:me and sometimes we just give the list and we call
Speaker:it good.
Speaker:It goes back and forth.
Speaker:But this is also the challenge because not everybody that you
Speaker:think is going to be a good accountability partner is going
Speaker:to be a good accountability partner because,
Speaker:Oh, I'm sorry I had something come up.
Speaker:Oh, I can't do it this time.
Speaker:That's not good.
Speaker:You want to be able to really commit to one another
Speaker:on an ongoing basis and rarely miss,
Speaker:because it really does make a difference to be consistent.
Speaker:Right? You have to prioritize that your accountability partner call is
Speaker:top of the list for whenever it's scheduled with random reasons.
Speaker:Why, of course it might not happen.
Speaker:Most cases looking to reschedule when those kinds of things happen.
Speaker:And so that becomes a big deal,
Speaker:but sometimes you can't find that.
Speaker:And if you can't,
Speaker:you can pay for that.
Speaker:That's the type of a service that people will pay for
Speaker:where they actually work with a business consultant and part of
Speaker:what they do is hold them accountable.
Speaker:So do you do that?
Speaker:Is that how you work as well?
Speaker:That's part of what I offer when I'm working with any
Speaker:of my clients,
Speaker:I actually send out a weekly accountability email.
Speaker:That's one of my pieces is they get an email that
Speaker:comes from me that says it usually has a little bit
Speaker:of another blurb in it.
Speaker:That basically it says,
Speaker:what did you do last week?
Speaker:What are you going to do this week?
Speaker:And that's it,
Speaker:that's all it's really designed for because I check it.
Speaker:I look at it.
Speaker:I don't respond to every single solitary time,
Speaker:but I do follow up.
Speaker:And if people have done well,
Speaker:I try to congratulate them.
Speaker:If they're struggling and I see them struggling consistently,
Speaker:then that becomes a topic that we discuss and it guides
Speaker:our conversation going forward.
Speaker:Yeah. I think accountability is a big deal.
Speaker:I'm pretty good at holding myself accountable and following through.
Speaker:But I have found having other people to be accountable to
Speaker:at this point,
Speaker:for me,
Speaker:it's a high level.
Speaker:Mastermind makes me do those things.
Speaker:I might've gotten to it,
Speaker:but I might not get to it as fast as I
Speaker:really should be.
Speaker:I think the other thing for our listeners is if you're
Speaker:working at home,
Speaker:it can be kind of lonely.
Speaker:So being able to have somebody in the same spot where
Speaker:you can talk,
Speaker:you don't just feel like you're on this deserted Island all
Speaker:by yourself,
Speaker:trying to build your business Exactly.
Speaker:With my accountability partner,
Speaker:the accountability piece of it doesn't take very long,
Speaker:but we usually end up chatting for often about an hour
Speaker:total because either we're dealing with issues or it's just kind
Speaker:of talking about business in general,
Speaker:because sometimes you just need to vent and get it out.
Speaker:Right. And that allows that to happen as well.
Speaker:And as you said,
Speaker:it can be very,
Speaker:very lonely and it helps get you remembering that there is
Speaker:a bigger world out there.
Speaker:So I'm thinking accountability partners,
Speaker:other ideas would be if you're in Facebook groups and have
Speaker:relationships with certain people,
Speaker:talk with them on the side about possibly being accountability partners,
Speaker:perhaps in your local networking events,
Speaker:whether it's a chamber or BNI or some other group,
Speaker:you might be able to find somebody there.
Speaker:And as Gwen is saying,
Speaker:you might not it on the first one.
Speaker:And if it's not working,
Speaker:that's all right.
Speaker:Try somebody else.
Speaker:Exactly. And don't be afraid to kind of do multiple things.
Speaker:I have a mastermind group,
Speaker:but we only meet once a month and that's not quite
Speaker:accountable enough for me.
Speaker:So they do hold me accountable,
Speaker:but it's not quite what I was looking for in the
Speaker:big scheme of things.
Speaker:I had another group of friends and there was actually a
Speaker:group like five or six of us that kind of do
Speaker:accountability together in a round Robin.
Speaker:So sort of mastermind,
Speaker:but more accountability.
Speaker:But my discovery was my business level was higher than their
Speaker:business level.
Speaker:And I felt like I was always giving really great advice,
Speaker:but I wasn't ever getting any back.
Speaker:And so that was okay.
Speaker:It doesn't mean that I'm not friends with them that I
Speaker:don't like them because I absolutely do.
Speaker:But it wasn't where a good investment of my time.
Speaker:My current accountability partner,
Speaker:I actually found as someone who took the same training that
Speaker:I was taking.
Speaker:And so we were fellow students together.
Speaker:That's how we found one another and we found the bond
Speaker:and it was great.
Speaker:So, and events like where you and I met Sue at
Speaker:creative nation trade show events,
Speaker:there's all sorts of places that you might find an accountability
Speaker:partner. So don't limit yourself too much into any one area
Speaker:because you never know where they might be So true.
Speaker:And I think just being open and just thinking through the
Speaker:idea and the option of having an accountability partner,
Speaker:because you know how you meet people and you just really
Speaker:click right away.
Speaker:Exactly. That's the type of relationship you want to be having
Speaker:even to start talking about getting into some type of an
Speaker:accountability situation.
Speaker:Exactly. And that's what happened with my accountability partner.
Speaker:We actually,
Speaker:haven't known each other very long,
Speaker:but it's made a huge difference.
Speaker:And it was that kind of a thing.
Speaker:I wasn't sure.
Speaker:I felt a little strange.
Speaker:I reached out to her in an email and she's like,
Speaker:Oh my gosh,
Speaker:I'm so excited that you reached out.
Speaker:So that's the other thing I would say is make the
Speaker:first move because a lot of times people are afraid to
Speaker:make the first move,
Speaker:but when I did it totally paid off,
Speaker:but I'm not sure she would have made the first move.
Speaker:What I love about this Gwen,
Speaker:everybody can do this.
Speaker:Absolutely. Every single person who's listening can find themselves an accountability
Speaker:partner. And I would say 95% of the time,
Speaker:your business is going to be impacted positively by doing so.
Speaker:So love,
Speaker:love this part of the conversation.
Speaker:I want to touch on another thing that is an area
Speaker:of expertise for you,
Speaker:and that is productivity.
Speaker:Any top line thoughts,
Speaker:ideas on how to be productive.
Speaker:Maybe you'd have some tools you want to share with us,
Speaker:or what do you seen are things that could help our
Speaker:listeners move on in productivity?
Speaker:There are so many tools out there.
Speaker:And one of the things that I focus on is don't
Speaker:keep taking more and more and more training to increase your
Speaker:productivity and not actually get productive.
Speaker:Because a lot of times the least productive thing we do
Speaker:is try to learn more.
Speaker:And if we aren't actually applying what we're learning,
Speaker:then it isn't actually valuable for us.
Speaker:It's just a waste of time.
Speaker:My own personal mentor.
Speaker:That's one of his things is learning in and of itself
Speaker:has zero value.
Speaker:Applying, learning has value.
Speaker:So true.
Speaker:And we get stuck in that.
Speaker:And we kind of tease ourselves because you're taking a class
Speaker:or you're doing something that's really important for your business,
Speaker:right? And then you take all your notes or you come
Speaker:home from that conference.
Speaker:And then if you don't implement anything,
Speaker:even one or two things,
Speaker:you're still at the same spot you were before you left.
Speaker:And now you've invested all this time.
Speaker:Exactly. I feel so strongly about it.
Speaker:It's actually my newsletter format.
Speaker:What I call the weekly course of action.
Speaker:And the weekly course of action is one little productivity tip
Speaker:each week.
Speaker:And for some folks they'll pick one and they'll say this
Speaker:was fabulous.
Speaker:And the next one.
Speaker:Yeah, not so much,
Speaker:but that's okay.
Speaker:And I totally understand that and expect that not every productivity
Speaker:tip is going to work for every person and being aware
Speaker:that you don't have to make everything work for you is
Speaker:really the key.
Speaker:Anytime that you can improve your productivity.
Speaker:Even by just a few minutes,
Speaker:a day,
Speaker:that adds up over time,
Speaker:a few minutes,
Speaker:a day,
Speaker:added up over a week.
Speaker:All of a sudden becomes an hour and an hour over
Speaker:week. All of a sudden becomes many days.
Speaker:And so each of these things start adding up as we
Speaker:add them together,
Speaker:one after the other,
Speaker:we often think,
Speaker:Oh, it's not that big of a deal.
Speaker:Well, yeah,
Speaker:those five or 10 minutes really start making a difference.
Speaker:So the little things that we can do to be productive,
Speaker:my own personal favorite one is most people are spending way
Speaker:too much time in their email.
Speaker:Oh yes.
Speaker:And often it's because they don't manage their email.
Speaker:Well, it's an area that we think intuitively we know how
Speaker:to deal with,
Speaker:but there is no training for it.
Speaker:And we get so much more email than we ever did.
Speaker:Physical mail because of costs.
Speaker:And so many reasons why that's the case.
Speaker:And so most people don't actually handle their email well and
Speaker:because they're not handling it well,
Speaker:they're wasting a lot of time.
Speaker:If you have more than a screen,
Speaker:full of emails in your inbox,
Speaker:you're not handling your email.
Speaker:Well, So what to tip,
Speaker:how do we handle our email?
Speaker:So know that there's only three things to do with email
Speaker:thing. One is read it and delete it.
Speaker:And delete is not a folder.
Speaker:It's not a place that you're holding stuff.
Speaker:Oh boy.
Speaker:Okay. You're one of those,
Speaker:huh? Yes.
Speaker:Delete is not a folder for holding things.
Speaker:It means I'm done with it.
Speaker:And sometimes stuff that comes in,
Speaker:we just need to see it and we're done with it.
Speaker:Get rid of it.
Speaker:The second thing that we can do with email is we
Speaker:can respond to it.
Speaker:Now. Sometimes the response is going to take awhile.
Speaker:And in that case,
Speaker:that's not what I'm talking about.
Speaker:I'm talking about the quick response,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:right off the top,
Speaker:your head,
Speaker:you can type it up and send it off and now
Speaker:it's done.
Speaker:Okay. So those are the two fast things.
Speaker:The third thing which takes a little bit longer is file
Speaker:it, which means set up a set of folders underneath your
Speaker:inbox. That allows you to be able to find things quickly.
Speaker:Now, how do you file?
Speaker:It will vary greatly depending on who you are and what
Speaker:you're trying to do.
Speaker:There's quite a few factors in it,
Speaker:but the upper-level important piece is keep it alphabetical.
Speaker:Don't try to do anything super fancy with it.
Speaker:Alphabetical is a thing that all of us know,
Speaker:because we learned that.
Speaker:I don't even know when we learn that we learn that
Speaker:what first grade kindergarten.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:we learned that from way back when.
Speaker:And so it's a way that we think logically.
Speaker:And so if we want to keep it,
Speaker:file it because these days we almost have unlimited amount of
Speaker:storage. So don't feel like you have to delete it,
Speaker:but maybe I should keep it.
Speaker:No, just keep it,
Speaker:keep it,
Speaker:file it,
Speaker:file it in a place that you're going to find it.
Speaker:And if you've got something that's going to take longer,
Speaker:either set up a separate folder that says detailed response,
Speaker:for example,
Speaker:so that you actually put it in there and say,
Speaker:I need to respond to this,
Speaker:but it's detailed response.
Speaker:So it's going to take longer.
Speaker:Or that's part of your goal at the end of each
Speaker:day is to go through all of your detailed responses and
Speaker:get those done as well.
Speaker:And so if you're doing that,
Speaker:you can actually keep your inbox down really,
Speaker:really small.
Speaker:Like right now I have more than a full page of
Speaker:inbox because I was traveling for the last four days and
Speaker:I barely try to manage my email.
Speaker:I have an out of office email,
Speaker:but when we get off our call,
Speaker:that'll be one of the first things that I'm working on
Speaker:is I will get my email back down to less than
Speaker:a full score.
Speaker:There you go.
Speaker:Well, I get a reprieve here because that third point is
Speaker:exactly what I do.
Speaker:So I'm good.
Speaker:I'm good.
Speaker:And I think I right now only have like 35 emails
Speaker:sitting on my screen.
Speaker:And part of that is a testing of an email programs.
Speaker:Yay. I feel much better now about that.
Speaker:That's not bad,
Speaker:but there's so many people I talk to.
Speaker:If I say,
Speaker:how many emails do you have in your inbox?
Speaker:And it's in the thousands,
Speaker:it's crazy.
Speaker:You don't know what's in there and you're spending ridiculous amount
Speaker:of time trying to find things when you do you think,
Speaker:Oh no,
Speaker:I can find it in just a few minutes.
Speaker:I can find something in less than 30 seconds and it's
Speaker:stressful. Oh yeah,
Speaker:I have it.
Speaker:And all that up there.
Speaker:When you look at,
Speaker:for your email in your email box and seeing more being
Speaker:added on top and top by the hour is crazy.
Speaker:How often do you go into your email box during the
Speaker:day? I am one actually keeps it up and I will
Speaker:pop in many times during the day,
Speaker:but I also am pretty good at managing my email inbox.
Speaker:So it doesn't become overwhelming.
Speaker:I am an advocate of go in once in the morning,
Speaker:maybe once in the middle of the day.
Speaker:And once at the end of the day,
Speaker:like I said,
Speaker:it's not what I do,
Speaker:but it also has to do with my business because a
Speaker:lot of times my clients are trying to contact me to
Speaker:make adjustments,
Speaker:to appointments and things.
Speaker:And I don't want to miss that.
Speaker:Right. So when I would mimic all that,
Speaker:you've just said,
Speaker:I would mimic all that you just said for Facebook,
Speaker:because that's another place where people can just,
Speaker:when we're talking about the timing going in dedicating a certain
Speaker:amount of time and that's it and get out and get
Speaker:on with your business.
Speaker:Yeah. That's a huge one.
Speaker:Facebook only comes up.
Speaker:I only turn on Facebook once a day.
Speaker:There you go.
Speaker:And that's it.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:So what would you say to somebody who we've kind of
Speaker:piqued their interest here?
Speaker:That all right,
Speaker:I get it.
Speaker:My business is different from this other person I was looking
Speaker:at who totally intimidates me because they seem so successful,
Speaker:but maybe they were more like me when they were just
Speaker:getting started.
Speaker:So now I'm curious now maybe I want to get started.
Speaker:What advice would you have for that person?
Speaker:So the first thing that I always focus on for someone
Speaker:just starting out is what is your goal with the business?
Speaker:I'm very much about what are you actually trying to achieve?
Speaker:Some people are trying to achieve just a little extra income
Speaker:with their business.
Speaker:Other people are trying to replace a significant income with their
Speaker:business. And so the reality of those are very,
Speaker:very different sets of goals.
Speaker:It's not one is right and one is wrong,
Speaker:but knowing what you're actually trying to achieve.
Speaker:And then from that being very realistic about the two most
Speaker:important elements in any business,
Speaker:which is time and money,
Speaker:how much time can you invest and how much money can
Speaker:you invest?
Speaker:And just because you've got a lot of time,
Speaker:you may be creating a business that needs money.
Speaker:And so that's not going to be a great business.
Speaker:If you're trying to produce a brand new product that's never
Speaker:existed before.
Speaker:It's probably going to take a lot of money in less
Speaker:time because you've got to get prototypes and all sorts of
Speaker:things that go along with that,
Speaker:the initial run will have a minimum run quantity,
Speaker:which is going to have a dollar value associated with that.
Speaker:So understanding what your resources are in the big categories of
Speaker:time and money,
Speaker:and then make a plan based on that,
Speaker:or make a decision based on that.
Speaker:When I,
Speaker:my initial initial business,
Speaker:I really hadn't thought about that as much as I should
Speaker:have. I really had time didn't have as much money and
Speaker:my initial business plan,
Speaker:which never even came close to being in fruition required more
Speaker:money than time.
Speaker:And so if I really would've looked at that,
Speaker:I would have said,
Speaker:Oh yeah,
Speaker:that's not ever going to work.
Speaker:It didn't mean that I couldn't do a business,
Speaker:but I'd have to change what the big goal was.
Speaker:And that can be okay.
Speaker:So being clear about what are you trying to achieve and
Speaker:what resources can you bring to it?
Speaker:To me are the first two things that you want to
Speaker:start with.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:Perfect. Okay.
Speaker:You have shared with us so much valuable information here that
Speaker:now I want to turn it back to you,
Speaker:Gwen. I'd like to challenge you to dare to dream.
Speaker:So I want to present you with a virtual gift.
Speaker:It's a magical box containing unlimited possibilities for your future.
Speaker:So this is your dream or your goal of almost unreachable
Speaker:Heights that you would wish to obtain.
Speaker:Please accept this gift and open it in our presence.
Speaker:What is inside your box?
Speaker:The thing that I really want to be able to do
Speaker:is make significant impact across multiple,
Speaker:multiple, multiple businesses,
Speaker:hundreds, and thousands of businesses where people who thought they couldn't
Speaker:do it,
Speaker:do it,
Speaker:that they achieved success,
Speaker:whatever their definition of success is.
Speaker:And that in the process,
Speaker:they make their industry stronger back to the candle.
Speaker:At the beginning of the abundance that they're actually raising the
Speaker:tide and that they're bringing value to their whole industry.
Speaker:And by being able to use my skills to help them
Speaker:create their business as a business and not just a hobby
Speaker:and not just a passion,
Speaker:that would be my gift.
Speaker:Beautiful. All right.
Speaker:And you're well,
Speaker:on your way,
Speaker:I think with what we've been talking about here and what
Speaker:you've got established,
Speaker:you are working your way down that path,
Speaker:for sure.
Speaker:Thank you,
Speaker:Gwen. How can our listeners get in touch with you?
Speaker:And most specifically,
Speaker:I'm very intrigued about your newsletter with the weekly tips.
Speaker:My website is Gwen bordner.com.
Speaker:So very simple,
Speaker:but if you want to sign up for the weekly course
Speaker:of action,
Speaker:it's Gwen bordner.com/weekly-course,
Speaker:dash of dash action.
Speaker:And there's a signup page to put in your email.
Speaker:And once you do that,
Speaker:they come on Monday mornings and these days we're doing them
Speaker:in multiple formats.
Speaker:I actually have a short video.
Speaker:The email has a transcribed version of it,
Speaker:and it also has an audio link.
Speaker:So if you don't want to watch the video,
Speaker:but you want to listen,
Speaker:you can,
Speaker:if you just want to read it,
Speaker:you can do that Well.
Speaker:Perfect. So you look for that email and then you listen
Speaker:to the podcast and those could be your first two things
Speaker:that you do on Monday mornings.
Speaker:So how about that?
Speaker:Exactly wonderful and give busy listeners,
Speaker:the show notes page will have all of the links to
Speaker:all of Gwen's information,
Speaker:social media sites,
Speaker:website. I'll also include for the newsletter Gwen.
Speaker:So that's sitting in there for everybody as well.
Speaker:Perfect. Oh my gosh.
Speaker:I knew that this was going to be full of really,
Speaker:really valuable information.
Speaker:And you met the challenge,
Speaker:Glen. It was.
Speaker:Yay. Perfect.
Speaker:Absolutely. Perfect.
Speaker:Thank you so much for taking the time today and for
Speaker:sharing all your wisdom.
Speaker:Oh, Sue,
Speaker:thank you so much for having me on the show.
Speaker:I knew when we met at creative nation,
Speaker:that this would be a great podcast to be a part
Speaker:of, and I appreciate you inviting me.
Speaker:Oh, you are so welcome.
Speaker:Have a good day Too.
Speaker:This episode is all wrapped up,
Speaker:but fortunately,
Speaker:your gift biz journey continues.
Speaker:Are you eager to learn more?
Speaker:Our gift biz gal has a free download just for you.
Speaker:Head over to gift biz on wrapped.com/twelve
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Speaker:a profitable gift biz don't delay,
Speaker:head over to gift biz,
Speaker:unwrapped.com/twelve steps today.