Chai with Masha

Ep 04: From Unworthiness To Action: The Simple Steps to Building A Heart-Led Business

Masha Season 1 Episode 4

Today we unpack how worthiness shapes every step of building a heart-led business and why action becomes the fastest form of healing for women building heart-led businesses. Claire Sellers—coach to hundreds of female founders and a veteran of two seven-figure scale-ups—joins us to unpack the worthiness wound that hides inside posts, prices, and sales calls, and to share a humane, repeatable way to create momentum without burning out.

We cover:

👉🏻 the worthiness wound and how it blocks offers, pricing and sales
👉🏻 embracing action as the antidote to fear and the healing spiral
👉🏻 how to "mom-proof" and "baby-proof" your business
👉🏻 how you job can be the investor in your dream
👉🏻 focusing on clients, cash flow and testimonials over vanity tasks
👉🏻 why accountability and coaching compress time to results
👉🏻 the magically simple cadence to a thriving business

Follow Claire’s on Instagram at @clairesellers & find her on claireseller.comDM “Dream” to Claire on Instagram for a free call about The Dream Accelerator.


SPEAKER_00:

Awesome. Well, hello, hello, and welcome. I am so thrilled to have Claire Sellers here today. Claire is a visionary leader coach for female founders and entrepreneurs, helping them establish their heart and soul-led businesses. She has been part of scaling and growing two seven-figure startups, and since then has helped over 300 women build and scale their business. So I'm so excited to have you here today with us.

SPEAKER_01:

Yay! I'm so excited to be here. Thank you for having me.

SPEAKER_00:

And I met Claire through my journey as an entrepreneur, and she's helped me in establishing my own business. So I've had personal experience and I am just such a huge fan, and that's why it's such an honor and privilege to have you here on Chai with Masha. Oh, thank you. Well, let's dive right in. So, do you think that anyone can be an entrepreneur? Ooh.

SPEAKER_01:

That's a great hard question. You know, it's a hard question because I want to say, yes, I think everyone can be an entrepreneur. Um and I don't think everyone has the commitment and the drive to be an entrepreneur, to do what it takes to be an entrepreneur. I think everyone has the potential, but I think actually it's a fairly small population who will actually do the work and make it happen.

SPEAKER_00:

And so what do you see as the most common pitfalls where that block people from this path?

SPEAKER_01:

You know, I'll my work is with women, so I'll speak specifically to women. I think it's a different set with men. So I'm just everything I say is specific to women, but you know, honestly, I think it comes down to women not believing that they're worthy. So I see that playing out in on a on a high level. I'm not worthy of having my own business. And then once they start the business, we start seeing it pop up in content. I'm not worthy of having people read what I write and feel it's important. I'm not worthy of engagement on my content. Then we see it coming up in designing an offer. Like, why would anyone want to join this offer? They could join, you know, Gabby Bernstein or who, you know, whoever else, this coach or that coach, why would they want me? And then once they get past that, we start seeing it pop up in sales. Someone DMs you, and then you're like, you don't answer, you sabotage it, or maybe you do answer and you're kind of like, oh, well, good luck, hope it all works out. And and you just left a sale on the table, or you're on a sales call and you you chicken out, so you cut your price in half because you don't believe you're worthy of someone paying, investing in you and what you have to offer. So honestly, like I think if we if we boil it down, I think the root cause of 99% of the problems that women face in entrepreneurship is a lack of worthiness.

SPEAKER_00:

That's a deep one. So, what have you found is the solution to that?

SPEAKER_01:

So, you know, you've worked with me for a year now, so you know I am I'm a deeply spiritual person. Um, you know, you'll you'll read if you read about me, you know, I've done a lot of work in the Akashic Records, I'm a kundalini teacher, like I've done all the shadow work, the inner child work, you name it, just like so many of your listeners and you. And in my work, the thing I focus on is action because I really believe that your fears will always be your fears until you prove them wrong. And we can't ceremony, mindset work, journal, inner child meditate, you know, rage practice. We can't get ourselves out of the story until we actually write the new story. And so, you know, one of the things I'm so focused on in my work with women is I don't let women go into the healing spiral. Most of the women that come to me have already done a lot of healing. They've been in therapy, they've worked with, you know, 15 different coaches. Like they know how to catch themselves in the pattern, they know when they're being triggered, they know how to move through it where they they stop when it's time to actually take action. And so this is why, like, you know, in my in my programs, women will say, Oh my God, like I just got this really mean comment. I'm gonna take a week-long break on social media. And I'm like, no, we're not taking a break. Go post. You know, you just the number one way to heal that unworthiness is of course all the thing, all the healing modalities I just mentioned. But first and foremost, I honestly think it's just proving it wrong. It's just proving it wrong over and over and over again until those fears just don't stand a chance of existing anymore.

SPEAKER_00:

I love that. Yeah, and as you pointed out, I think in this word, well, in the world, people either get caught way too far on the action where there's no inner work and no alignment and it's just push, push, push, and that's what leads to burnout, and that's where a lot of us come to this, or the other way where people get onto this healing, healing spiral where it's like, well, let me just meditate for 20 years and never face my fears. And I think finding that balance in between where you're doing the inner work and taking action is so rare and so powerful and magical because then not only are you getting the results you want, you're actually there and present to enjoy them.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, I mean, and it's a good point to bring up. I shouldn't say like you don't need any of the inner work, you do, but I find most of the women who come to me, like that's already their baseline. You know, like a lot of most of the women I I come to, they they kind of already have their basic spiritual practices, they have their, you know, emotional support toolkit in place. And what I find is they're either too far into that and they've just gotten stuck in the healing loop, or like you said, some, and I would say this is 25%, are on the other end where maybe they've come from like a very masculine corporate world and they're so in their head and they're so disconnected from their hearts. And that actually is kind of a different set of um opportunities for growth, we'll say, because that woman actually needs to go more into the feminine, into the healing, into the heart opening. Because I I think it's really hard to build a business when it's built from your head.

SPEAKER_00:

100%. Yeah. So tell us, take us back to now. I mean, you're just taking off, you have all these clients, you have this business you love, but take us back to the beginning when you knew that the corporate path wasn't fulfilling anymore and that you wanted to start something new. I think so many people get half of the half of the potential entrepreneurs fall off in that stage, where it's before you even get started, because all the thoughts come in. Who am I to do this? How will I leave my job? How am I gonna make this work? And then you go into the first few years where you don't you don't have any much but your vision. And so take us back to how did you coach yourself through first just taking the leap and then persevering through the first again, like zero to five years when the results might not be where you want them to be?

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, great question. So I'm gonna take you back even further to like the beginning. Um, because the truth is, I did always want to be an entrepreneur. You know, I'm a I always say I'm a third-generation entrepreneur. Um, my mom founded a software company in the early or in the late 80s, early 90s. And so I watched her my whole life building a huge company from the ground up. Um, my dad was also an entrepreneur, so it was kind of all I knew. Um and I think there was, I just always had the knowing of like, I just want to be the boss, you know, like, and and it was the thing that I was attracted to the most in watching my parents, who, you know, they both had like brick and mortar businesses. They didn't obviously have online businesses, but what I saw was the deep care that they had for the work that they were doing and their employees. Like, you know, their employees were like family, they were like our family, you know. Um, and I also saw the freedom. So I saw that, you know, my parents could take us on two week, two-week long vacations, or you know, they never missed a play or a sport thing or whatever. Like they had that freedom, not to say that they weren't, you know, burning the midnight oil because they were, but from a very young age, I watched the process of entrepreneurship. I never saw my parents in like a traditional work setting. So from a very young age, like I saw that. Um, the other thing I always like to mention is that my I guess my kind of primary um, I don't want to call it a hobby because I studied it, but you know, I was an actress and I was very involved in theater. Um, and so that plus the entrepreneurship, I didn't know it at the time, but those two things really set the stage, no pun intended, for where where I am now. So, you know, I I had this love of theater and of, you know, being this presence on stage. And then I was watching my parents build their businesses. There was something like very attractive to me about that. And my first business was actually in high school, and I started a jewelry company where I was making semifine jewelry and then I would host these parties at my house. And, you know, we would have four or five-figure parties when I was 16 years old selling jewelry because then I started hiring my friends and having them make jewelry for me, and we would throw these parties at my house, and I didn't realize it, but that would become the foundation of my launch method, which I'm sure we'll talk about. And so all these pieces were kind of taking shape. And I grew up in Atlanta, Georgia, and I moved to New York City to study theater, and something in the back of my mind always knew that I didn't want to be an actress, but it was kind of like I didn't know what else to do because that was the only thing I felt like I was good at, which I feel like a lot of people can relate to. Like, you know, they they go to school for teaching because like they were, you know, a camp counselor and they loved that. It's just it was kind of like the obvious thing to do. Um, but what was interesting is that once I got to New York City and I was in a theater program with some of the best, you know, actors and performers in the country, I realized I didn't want it bad enough. I I didn't want to have to fight for it. And so very quickly I knew that theater wasn't what I wanted to do. Um, but I stayed the course. I picked up a business minor, which I don't really remember what I learned there, but I'm sure it was helpful. At least it looked good on paper. And so I graduated during the recession. And again, it was the the type of thing where it was like a job kind of fell in my lap, and it ended up being a blessing as these things always are. And I ended up being on the founding team of a global network of schools, and I was the first person hired, and I that was my MBA. Like I learned how to run businesses in that job over the course of 10 years, everything from operations to finance to customer service to sales to scaling. Um, like you name it, I learned how to do it, and that was really my MBA. Um, and I think it was probably better than you know, a Harvard MBA, to be honest. And so once I I was in this job, and I think a lot of people can relate to this, I just felt like this wasn't it, you know, like I just knew that my life would look like becoming a CFO, CEO, COO, something C-suite. And I was very much on track for that, probably, you know, before 35. And like that was it, you know, my salary was capped, I'd be working 40 to 60 hours a week, and okay. And I just was like, this isn't what I want. And so I knew that I needed a radical awakening. And so I actually signed up for a coaching program, the Coactive Coaching School Um CTI, which some of you may know. I am such a huge fan of it and have had so many clients go through the process. But in my first module of that program, um, I volunteered to be a guest or a test practice client for one of the master coaches. And he did this exercise with me. His name was Graham. I'll never forget the moment. And I don't know what happened, but I had this vision of okay, I'm gonna, I saw four corners of the earth, four different gardens, and it was like something clicked in me where it was like, you need to go around the world. And so two nights later, I'm on Instagram and I see an ad pop up for remote year, which I don't know if you remember that, but it's a work remote program where you take your job and you travel around the world. I ended up going on a similar program, not remote year. I went on something called Wii Roam. And I convinced my job to let me work remotely. I was so valued there. They were like, go, we don't want to lose you. So I basically spent a year figuring out what the F I wanted to do with my life. And that to this day, and probably till the day I die, was the greatest gift I ever gave myself because I tried everything. I started a travel company, I was a production assistant on a food TV show. Um, I started an app. I had a blog, I was posting on Instagram, I was trying, I was leading women's circles, I was leading like more corporate workshops. Um, like I tried so many different things, and it just always came back to coaching. It's just like this undeniable like, this is what I want to do, and I can see the vision of this business, and I can see how to make it work, and I know it's gonna give me the lifestyle I want. And I think that's something that a lot of people miss when they're looking at entrepreneurship. And you really have to look at, you know, like what type of life do you want, and then build your business around that versus building a business that you think is gonna get you rich, and then realizing you've built a business around your life. So, you know, the path from that point forward, which I guess that was it was almost 10 years ago at this point. I don't want to say it was easy, but I do feel like I was in many ways guided and gifted in my journey. Um and it it's it's so amazing, you know, the work that we do in the Dream Accelerator, which is my program for women who are scaling to five and 10k months. Because I've been there. Like I know what it's like to be petrified of that first Instagram post where you're like, I'm starting a business, you know, and then you you you have it in drafts for a week and you're so petrified. I know what that's like, and I know what it's like when you have to, you know, get your first client and you have to tell them how much it the investment is and like how scary that is. Like, I know what it's like to show up on your first coaching call and like just be so scared that you're gonna mess everything up and the person's gonna think you're an idiot. Like, I know that, you know, I know what it's like to literally cold message hundreds and hundreds of people and not hear back. Like, I have lived it, and I think the two ways that I got through those first three years, which is when it felt like walking through mud, you know, like I say I was guided and gifted because my vision didn't waver that much. Like I just I felt very committed, and I I think the two things that allowed me to get to where I am now one is that I had an investor in my dream, and I talk about this a lot in all my programs because I just really believe in having some type of steady income that's outside of your business that's low lift, low effort, kind of mindless. Like it could be, you know, tutoring, it could be consulting. In my case, I was consulting for my old company and I was consulting for another company. Um the position I love my clients to be in when we're starting the build process is where you don't need your business to meet your basic needs. And I think that that is something that it doesn't, that doesn't have to be the case. Like I was privileged that I was able to create that, but I just think it helps from both a mental standpoint and also from a financial standpoint to not be in a place of I need this client. So that's the that was the first piece that I think helped me move through a lot of the oh my god, ups and downs, you know, like what am I doing? Ah um, and then the second piece is I don't think I've gone more than like maybe a month without a coach. You know, I mean, well over 200,000 invested at this point. Um, because I wouldn't, there's no way in hell I would be here if I hadn't had someone that I was paying to make sure I did what I said I was gonna do. And, you know, I for me it's less about like you see a lot of coaches, you know, like, come be in my energy. For me, it's less about that. And it's more about like, are you gonna hold my feet to the flame of what I'm telling you I want to do and make sure I do it? You know, and and you know, like I am very hands-on, and like I will hunt you down if you're like MIA. I'm like, hello, where are you? What's going on with your launch? Hello, hello, hello. That's why I'm like that with you girls, because that's what I needed. I needed someone that was like so in it with me. And I think, you know, especially now, like it's hard to find someone like that. And I've really built a business where I'm able to be super high touch and hands-on. Um, but yeah, you know, I don't want to say that the last 10 years have been easy, but I will say the first three were the hardest. And it went uphill from there. So, and again, I think it was not being in a state of like panic around needing my business to feed me, and then two, always having someone guiding me and holding me accountable.

SPEAKER_00:

I love that. There's so much I want to double-click on first. That's such an amazing story, and I love that. And I think the first that I uh heard was that for just going all the way back for being an actress, that you weren't hungry enough. And I think that's so, so, so important. Like that, that's the first litmus test of like, should I even do this? Because I think so many times we'll be like, oh, the money is good, oh, my parents want me to do this, or oh, it would look good on paper. But from my own experience, um, when when you don't, when you have that obsession and you have that hunger and that like I'll make it happen no matter what, things just happen and fall into place. But so many times, because of these, I should, I should, we or like fears of um what would happen if we actually pursue what we truly want, we go into these uh alternate paths that we'll get far, but not all the way, because you do need that, like I will do anything to succeed. So I think that's such an important point that you brought up.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, and you know, just to say on that, I think it's really important for people to ensure the integrity of what I call their come from. Like when you're creating your business, if your intention is to just make money so you don't have to work very much, like good luck. That is not enough. And it's not gonna be an overnight success, very rarely. You're looking at minimum, I would say, I mean, maybe six months, but I would say on average a year to a year and a half to really start seeing consistent revenue come in. If you're if you're just doing it because you think it looks easy to post on Instagram and bathing suits and you know, travel and like it's not gonna work, you know, and and I think for me, and I know for you, and you know, most of the women in the dream accelerator and in my mastermind are come from was our own journey. Like I through the power of coaching, I managed to take myself out of an environment and a field that was not in alignment. And I somehow rewired my mind and mobilized myself to start a business that created like more freedom than I could ever imagine. How could I keep that to myself? Like how like that, it would be like knowing the cure for cancer and not sharing it, you know, not to be dramatic, but it it felt that it felt that alive and just like important in my body and in my soul of like you've cracked the code on this, like you have to help other people. And the for me, like I said, like my business didn't generate consistent revenue, you know, until like the first after the first year, you know, like I wasn't in it for the money. Instagram influencers and all that stuff, that wasn't a thing, you know, in in 2017. Maybe it was, but certainly not to the degree it is now. Like it it wasn't cool to have a lot of Instagram followers, like it was just it just wasn't a thing. TikTok didn't exist, like reels didn't exist, like you you couldn't even do carousel posts back then. It was one picture. Like Instagram stories didn't exist, like we were in the dark ages over there, so like I think it's really important for people to get right with their come from, and that needs to be so strong and so in integrity with your values that it that alone is like more powerful than any fear. One of the things I always say is like your dream has to be bigger than your fear, and I think I see a lot of women struggle so much in business, and it breaks my heart because it's like they haven't really taken the time to go on their around the world journey where they actually figure out their purpose. And so they just are like, okay, like, you know, I love Instagram, so I'm just gonna like sell this. And they end up frustrated and their their fear is consistently bigger than their dream. So I think that the come from of your business and taking the time, whether it's a year or you know, three years, to get clear on that makes all the difference.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, and that was the second point that I was gonna double-click on is the the part where we were kind of throwing, let's say, throwing spaghetti at the wall. Yeah. The travel, the, the, the workshops, the circles. And I think so many people just see the end result of people at level, you know, 100, because I think it's just a societal thing where we want to be present ourselves as this polished, great virgin. And so that really robs people from seeing the journey. And so, like, for example, like if you want to start a YouTube channel, don't look at their newest video, go back and look at the first 10 or 50 or 100. And I think as a society, we're so obsessed with like the last little pinnacle, and we completely forget about all the truly like spaghetti at the wall, the mess, the showing up, the having two people in your workshop, the having no one sign up for an offer. And I think we're one, because we just don't have examples, and two, they're just like an overobsession with perfection and succeed succeeding on the first try. Most people uh miss this part. And I think that was for me one of the hardest, and still sometimes is is just the accepting the mess and the like confusion and just trying anything and then seeing what sticks and what really works.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah. I mean, I even sent you girls in the dream accelerator. We're doing the lazy girl content challenge this week in the dream accelerator because I'm trying to train as many women as possible to just think less, do more. Like that's one of the things I say all the time. Think less, do more. My content, like anyone who needs a confidence boost, please scroll back to the dark ages of my content and you will feel very good about where you're at. I mean, my pictures were a hot mess. My captions were just like some of them weren't bad. I I did a deep dive yesterday. I shared with you guys some of my old posts. But like I really started with just what I knew, you know, like I was doing Instagram lives as soon as that feature came out, which we didn't have in the beginning. I was doing Instagram lives like every week. I listened to like 10 seconds of one and I was like, oh my God, this is like so cringe. I don't know what I was talking about. I was like mumbling and rambling, and I you could tell I was like sweating, I was so nervous. Like you have to start somewhere. And I always remind my clients like every single person that you admire right now was where you were. And if you don't believe that, then it's gonna be an uphill battle. And again, it comes down to worthiness. Like, are you humility and worthiness? You know, like are you humble enough to say I'm new at this and I'm not perfect yet, but I'm so committed to being better that I'm gonna show up anyway.

SPEAKER_00:

I love that. Another another thin balance to play.

SPEAKER_01:

Yes, it it, you know, and and I also want to acknowledge, and I don't probably acknowledge this enough in The Dream Accelerator. I think now versus when I started, you know, in 2017, uh optics and like visuals and ego stuff, like, you know, how do you look? And filters didn't even exist when I started on Instagram. Can you imagine? Like, so it is a different era, you know, and and I want to have empathy because I know it's hard to show up in an online world where people are being so critical and judgmental and all the things. So it's it's a fine line, but I I really believe like think less, do more. And you just have to like another thing I say is done is better than perfect. Done is better than perfect. That was on the the wall. In Facebook's office when they first started. And I mean, look at Facebook Meta, whatever it's called.

SPEAKER_00:

I love that. Well, and the and the third point that really stood out to me was the investor in your dream. Because I think so many entrepreneurs have this like all or nothing energy. And even Liz Gilbert in her book, um, was it the magic? Oh, well, one of her books talks about how she um was working, I think, waiting tables way past the point when she was already making money as a writer, but she wanted to make sure that there was zero pressure on her writing and then the creative process to deliver monetarily before she quit her job. And I think there's this like again, just all or nothing attitude in the entrepreneurial world, like, oh, I'm either gonna work my job or start my business. And there's like so much pressure and unnecessary pressure uh that gets created instead of seeing it as like, I like how you're rebranded as an investor in your dream. Because I think it takes, especially in the big beginning, a lot. Like, yes, it takes more than you think, but at the same time, it takes a lot less than you think to actually get started and do at least the minimal viable product, which you can totally combine with either a full-time job or a part-time job, like you said, that doesn't take a lot from you. So I'd love to hear your thoughts on that, and then just go into maybe some like three to five misunderstandings or big, um, big like false beliefs that people in this industry have bought in with you know all the mass information and all the coaches and all the things online where or even things that have been a misunderstanding for a while. So yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

So I think, you know, with the investor in your dream, I honestly believe that if you're just starting, if you have let's call it this is if you're in ideally the dream accelerator. Like this is not if you're on your own. If you're in the dream accelerator or a comparable program where you have someone really like by your side telling you exactly what steps to take to go from baby business to consistent sales, if you can give an hour a day, that is enough. So, because a lot of my a lot of my clients in the Dream Accelerator, they have full-time jobs. Like I've had doctors, lawyers, you know, therapists, like you name it, like full-time corporate type jobs, as well as you know, all types of jobs. But I say if you can give me an hour a day, five days a week, and maybe two of those days have to be Saturday and Sunday because of your schedule, we can get this thing off the ground. So, you to your point, like I think another thing that people get on the wrong foot with is they like quit their job or they get rid of this type of work, and then they're like, I'm gonna go all in on my business, and then they're like, they don't know what to do. Or they're spending their time like setting up many chat when they have they don't even have a product, or they hire, you know, someone for you know multiple five figures to build this very fancy website when they don't even know what their brand is, or they start hiring someone to do ads when they don't even have clear offers, you know, it's just like a mess. So the the thing I would say is like do not try to do years one through three alone. You it will be very difficult to succeed. And two, don't put yourself in a position where you have zero time for your business. Like, you know, I I was talking to someone the other day who's in healthcare and you know, they're they're literally working 60 hours a week, like you know, 14, 15 hour shifts, like that that is gonna be very difficult to build your business, if I'm being honest, you know, like you just aren't gonna have the emotional or energetic capacity. So if you can try to get yourself out of that type of work and into uh ideally like 20 hour a week situation, that's the the ideal. And then if you can give me, you know, one to two hours a day, that's all we need. Then once you start getting clients, it goes up towards, you know, let's call it like two to three hours a day. But like you don't need when you're just starting your business, I can't imagine that you would what what the F would you be doing for 40 hours a week? I don't know. Like, I just don't know what you would be doing because in my world, we don't work more than 20 hours a week. So I don't think I would even know what to do. So I think that's another thing that people get wrong is they quit their job and then they go all in on their business, but they don't even know what they're doing. And then the things they are doing don't actually create results, where in the beginning your focus should be literally getting clients, getting experience, building testimonials, building results, building cash flow. That's all that matters.

SPEAKER_00:

I love that. And it's just funny to me how we're okay with hiring help, let's say in sports, like having a coach and sports is coming to the country. A personal trainer, yes, yeah, personal trainer, nutritionist, and it's and or even a tutor, and it's like completely normalized, and it's not like a quick fix. Oh, I'll hire them, fix this, and then not work with them anymore. It's a long-term commitment. And so to think that people don't have the same attitude for someone to help you with your mental health, your inner world, your business, your relationships is, I mean, I think we're catching up and it's it's changing, but it's just interesting how we compartmentalize and divide these two.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, and I think you know, you have to look at the cost of not having support. And this isn't me like trying to pitch myself to hire me, like you know, it's this isn't, I'm just simply saying, like, I see so many women who come to me after trying to do it on their own for like two, three years, and they're basically at their breaking point. And I they're like, if this doesn't work, I'm done. I would love you to come to me when you're like, I have an idea and I'm ready to go. And I'm like, okay, great, let's do it. You know, don't let yourself get to the point where you're like about to break and quit.

SPEAKER_00:

And I think there's so that is just such a light on the back to the beginning to the worthiness, because I think there's a huge part of us that wants to prove, like, oh, I can do this on my own, I can figure it out, I can prove that like I can do this instead of like that's why people, yeah, people who are like, I have an idea, let me just invest, inspire me, because I I definitely have that streak of like, oh my god, I'm gonna prove that I can do this, and it's just so much easier, so much, and then you're so many steps ahead, and you also don't have to suffer. And I think that's what brings like this ties it to my work where I think a lot of us are so addicted to suffering and making it hard and creating problems where there really doesn't need to be a problem. So I think it's so amazing that you do the work that you do and that you help women bring this idea into reality. So before we uh before we wrap this up, I'd love to hear how can people work with you? Where can they find you? Is there something in your world right now that's really relevant that people can join?

SPEAKER_01:

Yes. Um so I have, depending on when this airs, I have a challenge, my famous build your dream biz challenge. So if you've been like listening to this and you're like, oh, I'd really love to just like kickstart my business. Or if you already have a business, you're really wanting to just increase your sales and learn what are the actual actions that you should be taking right now in your business to see results, then the Build Your Dream Biz Challenge is absolutely an amazing step to get into my world. Um, it'll be taking place in mid-August. So we can hopefully put the link for that, or you can go to my Instagram, it's Claire Sellers, S-E-L-L-E-R-S, and it's linked in my bio, and you'll see it all over the place. So that is like an amazing place to start. And then if you know that you're like, I really want to build my business and start seeing five to 10K months, then the Dream Accelerator, I honestly believe, is the premier business building program on the market. It's so high touch. Masha will tell you it's very intimate. Like, I am all up in your business 24-7. So if you're interested in that, you can just DM me Dream and I will send you a link to book a free call with me and we can chat about it.

SPEAKER_00:

Amazing. I love that. Well, thank you so much. Is there any before we wrap this up? Is there anything else you just want to uh leave as parting words? Anything else you want to share?

SPEAKER_01:

You know, I there's two things. One, I just want to say to anyone listening, like if you feel a calling towards creating something that's bigger than you, you know, like if you feel that constant pull, it's almost like a body pull forward towards this purpose, this idea, this passion, this business idea, whatever it might be. I really believe it's for you. And it it is your sacred responsibility to do everything in your power to bring it into existence. So if you're feeling that call, please don't ignore it because it will just it won't go away. It won't go away, so you might as well start now. Um, so that's that's the first thing I want to say. And don't don't try to do it alone. Um, and then the second thing is I just want to thank you, Masha. You know, you've been such an incredible client. Um, the way that you lead and the way that you show up for yourself just with so much integrity and alignment is so inspiring for me and and the rest of the women in the Dream Accelerator. And I just really believe in you and your business and the work that you're doing and how you, you know, are so resilient and putting yourself out there in all the ways. And so I just thank you for the opportunity to be here. It's been such a joy. I love you to pieces, and I just am so excited to see you continue to soar.

SPEAKER_00:

Thank you so, so, so much. And directly back at you. Thank you so much for the work that you do. And it's really been incredible and one of the best programs that I've been in. So I totally a hundred percent recommend. And um, I can't wait to see how many more lives you impact and who comes your way from this uh this call as well. Yay! Thank you. Awesome. Well, here.