The Healthy, Happy, and mostly Sane Entrepreneur

Making Your Own Rules for Social Media with Stacey Watts

January 12, 2021 Ellen Leonard Episode 53
The Healthy, Happy, and mostly Sane Entrepreneur
Making Your Own Rules for Social Media with Stacey Watts
Show Notes Transcript

053  It's all up to you.  You own your business. You run your business. Solopreneur. CEO. Entrepreneur.  Whatever you want to call it, it's ALL YOU!!  Until you finally get to hire help, LOL.  And for many of us social media is a HUGE part of your business -  it takes up a bunch of your time and energy - and it can be exhausting and stressful.  Today's guest, Stacey Watts has tips for how to strategically handle your social media so that you don't lose your mind. 

Stacey helps online businesses master content creation- coaching clients to plan, publish, connect & grow on social media.  She loves helping business owners share their unique personalities and their best stories on social media in a clear, fun and purposeful way.  PURPOSEFUL is probably the word I would use to describe how Stacey thinks about social media - she is incredibly intentional with her approach. Which helps her clients to be able to be strategic - not only helping their businesses, but also helping them to avoid burnout and overwhelm.  

In this episode you will learn:

  1. How to set boundaries with social media and your phone
  2. How to find tools that work for you and your business
  3. 4 tips to decrease burnout on social media

More info <<HERE>> 

Connect with Stacey:

Instagram and Website

Ellen Leonard:

If you are your business, it's really all up to you when you run your own business, solopreneurs, CEO, entrepreneur, whatever you call it, it's usually all on you until you finally get to hire help, and then it's still kind of all on you. And for many of us, social media is a huge part of our business. And it takes up a bunch of your time and energy, and it can be exhausting and stressful. And in today's episode, you are going to get some tips on how to strategically handle your social media so you don't lose your mind so you can manage your time and energy a little bit more effectively. Let's do this. Hello, and welcome to the healthy, happy and mostly sane entrepreneurial podcast. I'm your host national board certified health and wellness coach and I are Vedic practitioner, and mostly sane entrepreneur Ellen Leonard. Each week, I share my obsession with helping you build a healthy life that works for you, your family, and your business. Because I don't think you have to sacrifice your own health and well being to be successful. So please stay tuned. For today's episode full of ideas to make staying healthy just a little bit easier. Don't forget to hit subscribe, so you don't miss out on future episodes. Before we get started today, I wanted to be sure that I was sharing with you something that I have created just for you. And that is 90 minute one on one intensive coaching sessions, where we get to check just one thing off your list because you are your business. You don't have time to screw around and burn yourself out. You are busy taking care of everybody else your business your family. And sometimes your own health and wellness can be one of the first things to get booted off of your to do list. But you can't pour from an empty cup. So maybe you know you should be healthier, but you just don't know where to begin. Maybe you just have no idea what's for dinner tonight or never seem to have enough time to work out or you're just totally stressed. Whatever it is, we can pick one topic stress management, healthy eating exercise, self care, sleep, I Aveda. And we can work on that for 90 minutes and get it handled, get it checked off your list. Because you know you need to stay healthy, happy and sane to show up as your best self. And I can help you do just that. So check out the link in the show notes. If you're interested. I'd love to get started with you today. Today's guest Stacy watts is going to share tips to strategically handle your social medias, you don't lose your mind and become burned out. Stacy helps online businesses master content creation from planning to publishing to content to growing on social media, she does it all. She loves helping business owners share their unique personalities and their best stories on social media in a clear, fun and purposeful way. And purposeful is probably the word I would use to describe how Stacey thinks about social media. She is incredibly intentional with her approach. And I valued that so much in our conversation today. And I think you will as well because she helps her clients and through what you learn in today's episodes, you be more strategic in not only how you think about social media, like how it kind of you think about it in your head, but also how you then take action and what exactly you're going to do to help you avoid burnout and overwhelm. So in today's episode, you're going to learn number one, how does that boundaries with social media and your phone? That's really possible, or so Stacy tells us. Number two, how to find tools that work for you and your business. And number three, four tips to decrease burnout on social media. So let's get started. So Stacey, thank you so much for being here today. I really appreciate you taking the time.

Stacey Watts:

Thank you so much for having me. I really enjoy podcasts. And I also enjoy podcasts that teach us something.

Ellen Leonard:

Yes, I love learning too. I think that that's a commonality along among a lot of entrepreneurs, right is our love of learning and wanting to know more and do more.

Stacey Watts:

Yeah, and especially know what's going on for other businesses and how they're handling certain aspects of business like the pandemic right now in social media and dealing with, you know, the fact that there's a lot of heavy content out there.

Ellen Leonard:

Yeah, there is so much going on right now, but I want to make sure that we we Cover how you got started all this I love hearing entrepreneurs origin stories. So like, how did you get going? Why did you want to become an entrepreneur?

Stacey Watts:

Well, I fell into it by accident, which is sort of like Spider Man getting accidently bitten by the spider, it's exactly like that. It became my superpower. I was in corporate real estate, working for a really great company, but my commute was two hours one way. Oh, and I had a two year old and a four and a half year old. And the two year old had no clue who mommy was. did not want mommy in the middle night did not want mommy you know. So mom guilt kicks in really hard. And you're like, you know, four hours on the road and eight and a half hours at the office. I'm drained, I'm done. I loved my job. I loved the people I worked with. But that was just too much. So I said goodbye when he was two and a half in 2012. And decided to finish my degree which I had been working on since 2006. But it's a degree in media and communications. And I was able to do it at my leisure, I could take a course at a time I could take a break in between it was really a different way to do University. Most people that when you go to university go to a physical class, I did all my classes online. So I was already well versed in how working on an online forum can work like so we communicated all of my classmates and I communicated on a forum with the professors, we had real professors, it was like as if we were in a class, but it was all typed into a sort of a q&a format. Very similar to how we do Instagram.

Ellen Leonard:

There are relations there,

Stacey Watts:

right, really similar. So it wasn't like it was a huge stretch for me to jump into social media. But it was an odd stretch, because I was asked by a local gym, to take over their Facebook and their Instagram, they wanted to tell the stories of their members, not your typical weight loss stories. But they also want really wanted to tell the stories of like the dad who came into the gym started getting a little bit fitter, so that he could keep up with his kids, or the divorcee who took a Zumba class to get her confidence back. That's the stories they wanted to tell. And I tell you, that's what I fell in love with social media, I realized that it wasn't just to keep up with your great aunt or your grandmother to keep up with what you were doing, which was what most of us at the time were using it for. But it was a really great forum to communicate between people on a much larger scale than just family and friends, we could really go global. And I've actually discovered that more and more, especially this year, hands down, we can't travel, we really can't go anywhere. But it doesn't mean that we can't learn about other cultures and other people. There's certainly a lot that we can do on social media, within reason. And within a healthy space.

Ellen Leonard:

Yeah, I hear that. And it sounds like you are just so much more passionate about what you're doing now. And the flexibility that it offers you and your family to be able to actually see one another now.

Stacey Watts:

Oh, yeah. And so one of the first things I did when I started my business, it's going to actually be four years ago in February. Thank you. When I started it, I was like most people got on to Facebook and Instagram. And I was doing social media management at the time. I'm now a social media coach, and I'll explain how that transition happen. But I started a social media management. And like most people, I was attached to my phone super hooked to the phone. If a notification came across, I was on it immediately because my clients depended on that. And it was so important. And I hit a brick wall and I became very burnt out I had 14 clients, I was working for 14 different businesses on three different platforms. Not all the businesses were on those platforms, but nothing at all. Yes, you can do a lot with scheduling. But it teaches you a lot. And that's why I actually became a social media coach because I realized that a lot of my clients were like, well, how did you do that? What did you do this how did and I became very passionate about it and explaining more about how was being done, rather than just doing it. And so that's why I went towards social media coaching because I had I had a, what shall we say an epiphany and realize that it was either hit the burnout hit the wall, say I was done and I was at one year in a business finished, see ya go back to corporate and go back to driving, and commuting and stuff. Or I could pivot and start teaching people because that's where I was really starting to go, I was really comfortable with explaining what was going on behind the scenes and how they could do the same thing. And then I also discovered, and this is something I knew all along, that when somebody else does your stuff for you, it's not your voice. It's somebody else's voice. So if somebody came into your house, and moved all your dishes, to where they think they should be, we'd be okay with it for a little bit. But eventually, we'd start to start migrating it towards either adjusting it to fit our needs, or we'd move it back to where it became where it was, because that was more comfortable. So that's what a social media coach basically helps you do is take what you're already doing, and expand it. So that you can actually do what they do. But in your own way and your own voice. So that was the big transition. And it has made a huge difference on a lot of things I set boundaries. So no more 24 seven attached to my phone. One or the other. This is a huge tip, I want to give anybody using social media for their business. There are timers on every app, every app in your menu has an activity timer. And you can actually set it to tell you when you have been on Instagram for 20 minutes, you've been on Facebook for 20 minutes, tick tock is actually got the best timer, because it is a timer that actually has a passcode attached to it. So if you want to give a child access to tech talk, I mean, there's some teens that yes, they have tech talk, but you want to curb the amount of time they're spending on it, you can actually put a passcode, a parental passcode. And they have to come to you put the code in for me to go back on. They can't use the app at all, it stops until the next day. So you can control it.

Ellen Leonard:

Yeah, I love that so much. And that's such a great tip about setting boundaries and how we we do have more control over some of these things than we we might think that we do. And so I'm so curious, when you're, you know, you clearly really have set up some some clear boundaries, you're doing what you love. How else do you prioritize your health, happiness and sanity while running your business? What are some other things that you do to make sure that that happens,

Stacey Watts:

I make sure I schedule certain things in one of the problems I've had, particularly during this pandemic, is remembering to eat. I mean, we're moms we get very busy we get going. And reminding ourselves to eat isn't always the easiest thing. So what I've done is instead of trying to, you know, make myself a huge breakfast, I'll make stuff ahead of time. So like egg bites, you can go on Pinterest, there's tons of the Starbucks recipes, the copycat recipes for the egg bites. And so you just you know, you make time and put it in your calendar, that is the biggest thing that was a huge shift for me, is actually starting to use a calendar to time block. And to batch my work like you you I mean, you would understand this, when you go and do your podcast, you interview someone. So that's a piece of the block, then you go to another stretch of stuff that you're going to do for that podcast and you start going in and editing it, you'll do that in one block, you'll do another block of transcript and editing that none of us, we just don't realize we do it. It's all something that we do. But we actually batch work together like you're not going to go and wash one dish and then go back you and then come back and watch another dish. Nobody does that. Nobody does that. We all prioritize and we all batch and time block stuff. But because it becomes so intrinsic with certain things in business, it actually becomes detrimental because we forget to do these things like we're so we're trying to overthink some of these things. So it's just easy to literally grab a sheet of paper and write down You know, today I'm interviewing with Elon on the healthy, mostly sane, happy, mostly sane podcast. And that's part of my time block. So you know, I have a time block for that. And then I have time blocks for writing content coming up with content ideas, for doing photos, or video, I do them in blocks, it's just so much easier.

Ellen Leonard:

Yeah, and I love that I also use time blocks. So for example, my calendar, I have blocked out every meal. So breakfast, lunch, and dinner are blocked out so that I actually have time to not only sit down and eat because without food, it is a disaster, but also to cook because eating healthy is such an important part of our life in my house that if I don't make time to do it, it's simply not going to happen. And so I also include things like sleep, my pre sleep routine is in there, so that I am not screwing around on my phone, or like answering one last email, like all those things, are time blocked into my life very purposefully, because, you know, then you can prioritize what you value most and make sure that it gets done. And it also helps make sure that all the business stuff gets done too, because I do it for that obviously, as well.

Stacey Watts:

Oh, yeah, like the invoicing and the the admin stuff like cuz as solo entrepreneurs, as a solo entrepreneur, I don't just take care of my own social media, I'd take care of my own amid, which I'm not very good at. But there's tools, that's the other big one, is make sure that you find tools that work for you, just because some guru says, use this. Right? When I first started out, I was handed someone said, Oh, you can schedule on social media now. And you can use this this one scheduling app, I'm not going to name them because some people might love them. And some people might love them like I do. But there's this one that was out there. And oh, my goodness, I took one look at it, the dashboard was like extensive, extensive, and it was just too much. Like, if I have to go and learn this entire app, just to be able to schedule what I'm already doing. Anyway, that's just one step that I don't need. Now, there is better scheduling apps out there. In fact, Facebook has their own, it's the one I recommend, which is Creator Studio, it's by far the easiest free, which a business phrase a big word. So that's what I do is I make sure that even if there's these awesome new tools and shiny tools that have come out, unless they are quick and easy to learn, there's no point in trying them.

Ellen Leonard:

Yeah, I totally agree. I mean, and I use this with all the health and wellness stuff that I do with my clients. If it doesn't work for you. There's no point in doing it. Even if someone says it's the best thing ever. I encountered a lot with meditation, like people will be like, well, this person over here meditates. So I want to try it. And then they hate meditation, or it's not the right kind or whatever. I mean, I'm all about meditation, but it has to work for you. All these things that we put into our lives, they absolutely have to work for us, first and foremost. Otherwise, it's just time and energy lost.

Stacey Watts:

Well, exactly like I think the biggest aha moment I had for health wise was yoga, which I'm not a big fan of yoga, I find certain yoga positions are absolutely impossible when you're 510 and over 200 pounds. Like, it just doesn't work. But restorative Yoga is fantastic. What drives me and has always driven me a little nuts is when they're like, clear your brain of all thoughts. And I'm sitting there going, this is the best time this is when my brain like, comes out with the best stuff. Like I feel like I need a pad of paper beside me. And I actually had a yogi say that's okay. It's so bizarre when someone in that expertise says no, no, no, it's okay. Just remember to priests.

Ellen Leonard:

Is such I love that story so much. I'm a yoga instructor as well. I actually teach other yoga instructors to be yoga instructors. And I am all about that I got to the point where I would have such I had to bring a whole notepad because I would have such amazing ideas during my yoga practice. And I would just be like you would see me like drop to the floor and write down something like a nutjob and then I get right back into it. And I'm so glad that one of the benefits of the pandemic is now I now I do it at home, which means that there's less people looking at me like I got a complete nut job because I'm like No, I promise I'm okay. Like instructors would be like, are you okay? And I'm like, can't just had a great idea. But okay, I'm just

Stacey Watts:

kidding. I actually took a yoga class, which was a belly breathing class. And she was great. She talked through the whole thing, like I've never. And she asked us questions. And she like, she actually wanted to engage with us. And I mean, that's very rare in a yoga class, a lot of yoga classes you go into are very Zen and quiet, and the whole works. And I think that was actually the best class I've ever taken because it fit me. So I think that's the really the big takeaway, and you hit the nail on the head, if it doesn't work for you, just because it works for your best friend or works for Stacey, or works for Ellen, does not mean it's going to work for you. And that's okay. I think that's what this pandemic has taught us. And I think one

Ellen Leonard:

of the other things that a lot of especially women will will do to themselves is we will put up with a lot from instructors, exercise instructors, fitness instructors, even when whatever they're saying doesn't actually work for us, or we don't actually like them, we will stay with it. And I'm always so surprised by that. Because I'm, well, I mean, because I'm been doing yoga for over 20 years, and I teach it and I'm very opinionated about it, I will not put up with that in the yoga class, I will hightail it out of there. So fast, and I encourage my clients to do the same. Like if it is not your thing, like, if you're forcing yourself to go to a cycling class. You know, there's so many different instructors out there now for every modality of everything that you can find someone that really lifts you up and nourishes you and supports you that you will leave feeling energized and excited. I like to think of it as like these people that are on my team, right? Like, yes, you know, like my doctors on my team. I think my yoga instructors are on my team, you know, massage therapists, health coaches, our Vedic practice, like all these people are part of my team that actually keep Elon functioning.

Stacey Watts:

Exactly. And that's, that's just it like, the same thing goes with social media like very, we can align these two very close to each other. Because there's so many gurus out there, that it's ridiculous the things they will tell you, there's you know, there's the one guru who tells you, you need to be on every platform, I'm going to tell you right now, you do not need to be on every social media platform. There are 95 plus social media platforms in existence in the world. That is awful information to now No,

Ellen Leonard:

I just mistaken, like the big five or six, but I did didn't need to know that. But I love how emphatic you are. Because it's true, you feel like you need to do it all up

Stacey Watts:

pick pick one is your primary platform, if that's the one where you get the most conversions from the most conversations, the most engagement that you feel, where you're most passionate to be on that is your main platform, then if you have a secondary because most of us are on two or three platforms, some of us aren't five, then you use the supportive platform is your secondary. And then the best part is you can actually repurpose your content, don't hesitate to reuse your content, because only 5% of your audience has seen it anyway. That's, that's some of the big takeaways that I especially got in the last little bit that I love sharing with people.

Ellen Leonard:

Yes, say that last part, again about how little of my content people are seeing so that I can reuse it.

Stacey Watts:

I percent I hate to tell you, it's 5%. Yeah, yeah, it's not as big as so like 10,000 followers is. I mean, most people are like, Hey, I got 10,000 followers, it's pretty awesome. But if you really stopped and looked at how many people are actually reading of that content, and you did a percentage, it works out to be about 5%. So to put an example, I have over 1000 followers on my Instagram account, and on average, I get about 50 likes. So that's when I talked about, you know, actually receiving some form of engagement likes or engagement, comments or engagement saves shares, and profile visits and website clicks. Those are all part of an engagement because they actually required somebody to do something click and do something. I get 5% is average and it's actually documented. I think we've had HubSpot did a review and checked it it was at 5%. So the good part is you can actually take content that you've written previously, and share it again.

Ellen Leonard:

So it's possible that sometimes I copy my previous posts Just reword them a little bit. And then don't tell anybody Stacy,

Stacey Watts:

I did this week. In fact, I have probably we shared the same post about three times, and the post is about a digital detox. Exactly what we're talking about right now. So it's very fitting, and I'll probably we shared in January, just before this podcast goes live, because it's important stuff. You know?

Ellen Leonard:

Yeah. So, you know, you shared two really great tips, they, you don't need to be on every platform, and we're using your content, what are some other those are just so strong and so good, what are some other ways that we can kind of start to manage that burnout that can come with being on social, the overwhelm, and just the starting to dread it and not feel so good are some other ideas you have to help us?

Stacey Watts:

Um, one of the biggest tips I could ever give anybody is when you go on social media, particularly for business, go on with intention, you're not going on just a squirrel, you go on to to specifically engage with your audience. So one of the biggest tips and one that has worked for so many of my clients, is they will go on 20 minutes before they post, and they will interact with other people's profiles, but particularly works great on Instagram, on Facebook, you would go into groups and interact with the group and not necessarily integrate interacting in the terms of, hey, come follow me. You know, at Stacey on social or, or this is the new course I have coming up. No, that's not what I'm talking about. I'm talking about genuine conversation like you and I are having right now. conversation, read what they've read, read, written. So skim over it really quickly. And in saying, Hey, girl, that's really cool. Because you get a lot of those actually say something that, oh, that's really neat. I didn't know you did that I was also doing this when I was your age, or I was also in corporate, you know, you can relate to people. And that's really what true engagement is. So do that for about 20 minutes. And then make your post and stay on social media for the next 10 to 20. I do 40 minutes a day. But my business is social media. So it makes sense for me, set yourself a goal like 10 minutes before you post and 10 minutes after. So spend 20 and, and interact with the posts that come the comments that come on your post, respond to them. So people see that there's a genuine person behind it. And you can actually have a genuine conversation with someone and then it's not such a task, you're not coming back to it, you've done it. And so that's what I always tell people is like spend that time intentionally engaging. You're going on to intentionally either gain new clients or nurture the existing clients building those relationships. These are all parts of business that we've always done long before social media existed, we're just doing it in a different form. Now, that's all. So it's networking, in a large room.

Ellen Leonard:

Yeah. And I love that. I've noticed that when I am really enjoying the way that I'm engaging with people like it's an actual conversation, that it always feels better. Like I always feel better when I'm doing it. And I feel better on the platform itself. And I love the way you just described how to do it kind of takes the overwhelm out of it because I can time block that I get time block just an hour, and it'd be like, okay, 20 minutes to do my post and then set it for 20 minutes later, and then do my 20 minute engagement post and then 20 minutes interact after. And it's just done and it's checked off. And I'm not like in and out of the app or the the phone all all day long. It's a centered amount of time. And it just wow, I'm so excited about that tip. So thank you.

Stacey Watts:

Oh, and it's it. You know, especially right now we've had a shift in how many people are online. The pandemic has brought us all on to zoom and we're all on Facebook and we're all on Instagram and tik tok blew up, ticked up. That was a huge shift watching it actually if you were on Tick Tock as the pandemic started, you watched it going from teenagers dancing and doing silly things to 40 and 50 year olds telling their stories, it became a huge shift. So there's been a lot of content thrown at us. A lot of content about the pandemic, a lot of content And a lot of this is necessary content about the pandemic, and then about Black Lives Matter. And about the US election, these are all things that have been sort of thrown at us. And we're consuming a lot more than we're actually creating. So we're not putting out as much, because we're taking in so, so much. That's why setting those timers and setting that intention, it helps you also avoid the over stimulation and the over amount of content that we're taking in, then you actually have a balance, because you choose what content you bring in.

Ellen Leonard:

Yeah, that exhaustion from, from just the sheer amount of information that we're taking in and that you get to choose. You don't have to interact with everything all the time, you don't have to know it all. I know, in this house, we've taken to only engaging with certain things like news is for this time, and we're only on Facebook during this time like it. It's very purposeful and intentional, because it's just too much.

Stacey Watts:

Oh, yeah, 100%, one of the boundaries that I set. And but when I talk about boundaries, I'm not just talking about boundaries for your clients, I'm talking about boundaries for yourself. Because a lot of times we don't really set those boundaries for ourselves. One of the biggest boundaries, I decided, at the very beginning, was I was not going to be on my phone, or my computer or my iPad. And I have several ways that I can connect to my social media, when my kids were getting ready to go to school. So even when the pandemic started, and they were no longer physically going to school, I made sure that when they were on their zoom calls, that that time was available for me to be with them, that I wasn't on social media at the same time. One it, of course, was crashing, or internet, which I think most people had that problem with. But it also showed the boys and I have two boys 13 and 10. But it showed them that I was engaged with them. That social media and my phone were not a priority in those terms. And right, then they needed to know that they were important, because the world was sort of being turned upside down on them and the carpet being pulled out from under their feet. So you know, you make those shifts, but that was one of the big shifts is from now that they're back in school physically from 7am to 9am, I do not pick up my phone. Generally, today, I made an exception, because you and I are in two different time zones. But when I make those exceptions, I know it's awesome. When I make those exceptions, I also shift my time blocking and stuff like that. So the breaks that I normally take when the boys leave at eight to nine, which is normally my break time and I sort of like get myself into my day and little get a little bit of movement, some stretching. So for health and eat, I'm just shifting it by an hour. So you know, you still make those priorities and just adjust.

Ellen Leonard:

Yeah, I love that. And, you know, so much of what you've shared with us today is really so simple, but so incredibly powerful and valuable. So I'm just I'm really excited. I took so many notes to start using all this in my own life. How can people find you and get in touch with you?

Stacey Watts:

Well, I do have a website. It's WWE dot Stacey on social Comm. You can also find me on Instagram under same thing, Stacy on social, Facebook, I am also on Twitter. Just so you know when I tell you you don't need to be on every platform Don't. Don't follow what listen to what I do. But the reason I'm on multiple platforms is of course I need to keep up with how those platforms work. And I use them in much different forums and I would ever tell my clients to use them. So basically, if you want to find me the best place to find me 90% of the time is on Instagram. It's sort of it is my primary social media platform and the rest are all secondary. And that's where I repurpose a lot of my content to

Ellen Leonard:

feel like we just got Stacey with like all her tabs open and she's like, No, no, it's okay. It's totally fine.

Stacey Watts:

I balance this I really do. Actually, that is one of the things the biggest difference for me was when I realized that there is an absolute way to do this without it becoming so all consuming. And I actually wrote a course for it.

Ellen Leonard:

Yes, your courses coming up. Tell us just a little bit about that.

Stacey Watts:

So the course is called social and six. How to master your content creation? A lot of the people I speak to the first thing they'll say to me is how do you write so much content? There's always so much content. And one of the biggest things I mean, you and I just talked about is repurposing a lot of people just don't know how to repurpose, they think it's clicking the little button on Instagram, and cross posting between Instagram and Facebook. That's not how it works. repurposing is done a little bit differently. And it's really easy to do once you know how to do it. And you can do it in such a way, that one piece of content like a podcast or a blog, can become up to 15 pieces of content. Oh, I can I can make a blog like huge.

Ellen Leonard:

Okay, then it sounds like your course is gonna have a lot to offer and support people. So, you know, thank you so much for being on today. I look forward to learning more about your course I'm gonna be following you. Well, I already follow you on social, I don't

Unknown:

know are saying,

Ellen Leonard:

but they use so much for being on today. I really appreciate you taking your time and sharing all of your amazing expertise with us.

Stacey Watts:

Oh, you're welcome. I really appreciate it. I love talking about well, obviously, social media. But I also like talking about how as business owners and solar entrepreneurs that we can do this, without it being 24 seven, our businesses do not have to be 24. Seven, we can make them 9229259 to noon, whatever we want. Because we as CEOs, we are the rule makers. And same goes with social media, we make the rules.

Ellen Leonard:

Yeah, I love that. And now I think we have the title for the episode. So thank you for that.

Stacey Watts:

Awesome.

Ellen Leonard:

Thank you so much for listening today. I hope you enjoy learning from Stacey as much as I did. If you'd like to connect with her, be sure to check out the detailed show notes. And all of her info is there as well as a link to the one on 190 minute coaching intensives I mentioned at the beginning of the podcast where we can check one thing off your list. So if you want to stress less, you want to sleep better, exercise more, eat healthier, any of those things. That's rock that out so you can get back to doing what you love, which is working. So don't forget to hit subscribe so you don't miss out on future episodes full of actionable tips to help you do what you love without sacrificing your health or losing your mind. Thank you so much for listening this week. I wish you a healthy, happy and mostly sane week and I'll see you next time.