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Ashley Sinclair and Natalie Peluso from Action Studio

Natalie Peluso and Sinclair from Action Studio

In this seventh episode of the Creative Solopreneur Podcast, I have the great pleasure of chatting with the extraordinary creative minds behind Action Studio, the 6-week intensive group coaching program designed to help entrepreneurs get real, get creative, and get paid {in the form of a brand new, super stellar information product that flows out of your brand archetype}.

Natalie Peluso from NataliePeluso.com and Ashley Sinclair {known as Sinclair} from Self Activator are our doyennes of brand archetyping and product creation.

Action Studio Enrollment is Now Open!

Enrollment is now open!

Listen in to what Natalie and Sinclair have to say about:

  • finding your brand archetype {free resources here} and how that fuels what product you’ll create
  • finding your right people based on your brand archetype story
  • why you might be overlooking your natural dominant archetype {I did!}
  • how your personality fits in with your brand archetype and what this has to do with “authenticity”
  • how to know if your audience is ready for you to launch a product {thanks to listener Stacelynn Caughlan for submitting this question via Facebook}

and you heard it here first…

  • the opportunity for one person to win a FULL scholarship to Action Studio!

Right click here and select Save Link As to download the podcast to your hard drive, or left click to play in-browser.

P.S. I’m in the Studio because I can feel it in my bones that this is the right thing for me and my business — right now. I hope you’ll decide to say yes to this new season in your entrepreneurial dream and join me inside. All of the links in this post are my affiliate link, which means that your entry into Action Studio helps support a fellow creative solopreneur. :)

Click here to get into the Studio.

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Abby Kerr Ink is nine months old.

In human baby months, that’s a really cute age. They’re on the move. Getting opinionated. Banging two toys together. Responding to their own name.

African American Baby with Big Blue Pacifier

As a 9 month old online business owner, you may be thinking, I want my pacifier!

But in online business months, nine months can be a really awkward age.

For online business owners, nine months or thereabouts is very often the age of frustration, overwhelm, self-consciousness, boredom, waning blog posting schedules, reassessing, realigning, renegotiating, and it can also be the age of Oh my God I now haaate my service pages with a passion. {I do.}

Can you identify?

I’ve been whispering in the backchannels lately — {mmm, backchannels — another word you may have heard by your 9th month of online business} — that Abby Kerr Ink is in a period of transition. That I’m honing and feeling my way toward that the work that’s equal parts pleasure and profit for me. That I’m looking to trim down and tone up everywhere that needs it. {Okay, not totally talking just about my business here.}

I’ve been thinking a lot about how my business and I have evolved since we launched in February 2010 {though the site didn’t go live ’til June}.

Here are 9 lessons I’ve learned in 9 months of online business:

No. 1 Doing business online is so much easier than brick and mortar business. Yet it’s continually challenging in gratifying ways. I would never go back to brick and mortar business after having realized the potentialities of online business — but that’s me and my personality. Some people would far prefer face-to-face contact with all their customers and a physical storefront to maintain instead of an online space. How about you?

No. 2 You have to choose your teachers. They don’t choose you. At first, it’ll feel like everyone with a blog or a program will have a very important and valuable story to tell you, or sell you. There are too many voices out there competing for your attention and you just can’t listen to them all, much less apply all of their actionable tips. I like to learn from people whose businesses I admire, especially when I see them as radically different from mine. In my earliest days, these were {and still are} Danielle LaPorte, Sarah Bray, and the folks at Copyblogger. Lately, it’s Dave Navarro, Laura Roeder, Sinclair, and Natalie Peluso. {By the way, have you seen what these last two are doing with Action Studio?} [affiliate link]

No. 3 Low-hanging fruit isn’t always the sweetest. The most obvious service you can offer people isn’t necessarily the one you’ll love performing. Low-hanging fruit is a great place to start, but know that one day, you’ll pick your last bushel and then close down that orchard.

No. 4 Your truest niche is really the Niche of You. {You’ve heard of the Brand of You? This is similar.} You don’t have to pick a niche. You are a niche. {Are you getting my free e-course on Creating a Truly Irresistible Niche? If not yet, sign up here.}

No. 5 When your message is strong and clear, your right people will self-identify and put themselves in front of you. If this isn’t happening to you yet after 9 months of online business, probably you have one or both of these problems: your message/brand proposition/USP isn’t strong and clear, or else you’re not working the right channels in the right way for your business.

No. 6 You don’t have to eat the whole elephant at once. Learning, including learning about doing business online, is incremental by nature. That’s how our brains take to it best. So work with your brain, okay?

No. 7 If you find yourself accidentally imitating someone else’s style or substance, you’ve got to stop it immediately. The sooner you suss out your imitation and cease it, the sooner you’ll write your way into your own voice.

No. 8 When in doubt, take action. Don’t do more research. Only action leads to evidence.

No. 9 Have a life away from your business. You’ll quickly discern that most of your offline friends and family do not appreciate the full scope of what it is you’re trying to do. Sometimes, they’ll be downright skeptical or disapproving. This is okay; you don’t have to cut disapprovers out of your life. Even in 2010, much of the intelligent world still doesn’t realize it’s possible to make a full-time income from an online business in a relatively short period of time if you build your business right. So don’t judge ’em for not getting it. {They’ll see.} And if you have that rare offline friend-without-an-online business who actually gets how much this means to you and believes you’ll succeed and is willing to listen to all your stories and latest revelations, hold on to ’em.  {Thanks, Kelly!} Most importantly, let these offline friends pull you out of your online world regularly and engage you in some face-to-face interchange. It’s important.

In the comments, I’d love to hear an important lesson or two you learned within the first 9 months of your online business.

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Illana from Makeness on Abby Kerr's Creative Solopreneur Podcast

Illana Burk from Makeness.com and ZipandRuth.com

In this sixth episode of the Creative Solopreneur Podcast, I’m chatting with Illana Burk from Makeness. I first became aware of Illana via this in-post shout-out from Naomi Dunford. Part of Illana’s credo is that business is art, and art is business. She holds an MBA in Sustainable Enterprise and runs her own successful accessory design business, Zip & Ruth. After a career in international marketing and communications, Illana finally decided that putting her no-bull business acumen to use in helping other creative types make businesses that make sense — and cents {corny pun mine, not Illana’s}.

Here are some of the lovely people and things mentioned in our conversation:

Three blogs Illana mentioned that she always reads:

Listen in as Illana gives us the lowdown on:

the faulty assumption she made as an early blogger that led to the birth of Makeness; what being a “maker” really means; the irreverent voice she writes in versus the voice she speaks and consults in; how and why she’s built her crafting business on sustainability; her take on whether everybody has a creative business inside them, and the mistakes she sees creative types making when they first go into business.

If you’re a creative person — especially one with a handcrafted business — you need to listen to this interview.

Right click here and select Save Link As to download the podcast to your hard drive, or left click to play in-browser.

P.S. The Creative Solopreneur Podcast will soon be syndicated to iTunes and RSS so that you can subscribe if you like.

P.S.S. Illana will be available for a couple days after this post goes live to respond to comments and questions. Then, word has it she’s being whisked off on a vacation!

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Naomi Niles from IntuitiveDesigns.net and NaomiNiles.com

Naomi Niles from Intuitive Designs

In this fifth episode of the Creative Solopreneur Podcast, I’m chatting with the lovely Naomi Niles, one-half of the design prowess behind the custom website and illustration agency Intuitive Designs {the other half is Naomi’s husband, Koldo Barroso, who didn’t participate in this interview but was with us in spirit.} Intuitive Designs creates custom websites from the wireframe out — never using templates or themes — and their client base is made up of businesses and organizations who are already through the beginner phase of their journey. {Listen in and you’ll hear why.}

Here are two highly trafficked sites from Intuitive Designs’ portfolio, as mentioned in the podcast intro:

And here are two of Naomi’s latest creations, which can help creative solopreneurs with their own businesses:

  • Filtering & Attracting Your Right Clients and Projects — Naomi’s latest e-Guide for designers, which I found perfectly suited to my business as a copywriter and recommend to all creative service professionals {psst…it’s just $7!}. And yep, that’s my affiliate link up there.
  • Conversion Rate Optimization — Naomi’s latest service, which helps people turn more of their site visitors into buyers.

Listen in as Naomi reveals:

how long it takes for site visitors to form an impression of your website; when it’s the right time to invest in a custom website; the most crucial question she asks her clients to tap into their desired brand identity; the challenges of attracting your right clients and projects; how she structures her creative workday, and the secret to a good creative partnership.

Right click here and select Save Link As to download the podcast to your hard drive, or left click to play in-browser.

P.S. The Creative Solopreneur Podcast will soon be syndicated to iTunes and RSS so that you can subscribe if you like.

P.S.S. Naomi will be popping up here to respond to your comments and questions. Lucky us!

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Juicy content is all important -- but what really constitutes it?

Juicy content. Do you know it when you see it?

It’s one of the hottest buzz phrases around the blogosphere right now:

Juicy content.

I want to know: what does juicy content really mean to you? How do you know, viscerally, that a blog post or a video or an audio download or what have you is juicy?

And don’t give me “provides tremendous value” or other catchphrases like that.

I want to know stuff like this:

  • Content is juicy when I feel like I’m reading the blogger’s secret diary.
  • Content is juicy when I know the blogger could be charging top dollar for this advice.
  • Content is juicy when there’s nothing else of quality like it anywhere on the web.

Okay, your turn. The more nakedly honest and non-party line-ish, the better.

What makes content juicy?

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