Sept. 25, 2022

Ask The Experts: What Mistakes Can New Coaches Avoid?-Ep.112

Ask The Experts: What Mistakes Can New Coaches Avoid?-Ep.112

Join me and nine experts as we collectively discuss the mistakes we’ve made in business and the advice we would to new coaches and entrepreneurs so you don’t have to learn the same lesson the hard way.

This group of experts each comes with a wealth of experience and a history of success in business, and I know you will find their insight and experience valuable.

 

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My Guests:

Lorraine Ellen Scott: is a Reiki Master Teacher, intuitive healer and inspirational mentor who helps introverted entrepreneurs, coaches, and healers step into their power to thrive in business. With over twenty years of experience with vibrational energy healing, Lorraine developed her signature C.A.L.M. process that helps people live life on their terms for growth and sustainable success.

 

Website: www.simplehealingarts.com

Social: https://www.facebook.com/empathsandintroverts

 

Marie Mack: Marie is a business systems and customer journey expert and business mentor for talented coaches and consultants with a passion for growing and scaling their businesses!

 

Website: https://firstcuptoclose.com/

Social: https://www.linkedin.com/in/marie-mack/

 

Siobhan Gass As a clinical social worker and US Air Force Veteran, Siobhan teaches women who served in the military and other badass leaders the proven action steps for crafting a story that establishes credibility and builds a profitable legacy brand that attracts your next favorite client.

 

Website

Social: https://www.linkedin.com/in/siobhandeann/

 

Stephanie Moram: Green Living Expert, the CEO and Founder of Good Girl Gone Green, and host of the podcast Green Junkie, where she simplifies green living so you can waste less, have more, and save money.

Website: https://www.goodgirlgonegreen.com/

Social: https://www.linkedin.com/in/stephaniemoram/

  

Diana Lidstone: After almost four decades in business and working globally with coaches, consultants, and other service-based experts, Diana has gathered rock-solid wisdom and advice that has helped thousands of entrepreneurs and professionals accelerate growth and profit. Her work embodies #worklessearnmore!

Website: https://dianalidstone.com/

Social: https://www.facebook.com/TheEntrepreneursGPS

 

Jeff Klein: Guides people to the right words for each situation. As a Speaker, Speaker Mentor, Trainer, and Author, he has received rave reviews for speaking over 800 times, to trade associations, sales organizations, national conventions, and business groups, impacting tens of thousands of business professionals.

Website: https://speakercoop.com/

Social: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeffkleinspeaker/

 

Jen Ingram: a Confidence Catalyst and Business Mentor saving hustling female solopreneurs from the chains of corporate America.

Website: www.herlifeunchained.com

Social: https://www.facebook.com/jenelleingram/

 

Jannette Anderson

Website: https://www.bodacity.ca/

Social: https://www.facebook.com/groups/BodacitysActionHeroes/

 

Sally Reid: is a Quantum Alignment Coach who helps people heal emotionally and physically when other methods of healing have failed them.

Website: Https:/www.sallyreid.com

Social: https://www.facebook.com/groups/blissfullifeacademy/

Transcript
Candy Motzek:

Hey welcome to she coaches, coaches, I'm your host, Candy Motzek. And I'm going to help you find the clarity, confidence and courage to become the coach that you were meant to be. If you're a new coach, or if you've always wanted to be a life coach, then this is the place for you. We're going to talk all about mindset and strategies and how to, because step by step only works when you have the clarity, courage and confidence to take action. Let's get started. Hi, there, and welcome to this episode of she coaches coaches, I'm pleased to see you here, I have got a special roundtable episode for you. I've gathered together a group of experts, each of them with a wealth of experience. And I asked them this one question. The question sounds like this. We've all made mistakes in business, what advice would you give to a new coach, so they don't have to go and learn the same lessons, and maybe even avoid it? I asked them this question, because nine people, nine sets of experiences, loads of mistakes between all of us. And gosh, my hope is that I can help you avoid some of the mistakes, to make your road a little bit easier. So that you can start, become a coach, get fully booked, find your paying clients, and do the work that you are meant to be doing and have the impact on the world that you're meant to have. We had a really great conversation. They're interesting people, there's going to be all kinds of different approaches. And I would love to hear what you think about it. Send me a DM on Insta at Candy Motzec, tell me what your favorite part is, and what you learned. And in the meantime, pop your earbuds in and enjoy. Question number four. So we've all made mistakes in business, what could you share with another new coach and other new entrepreneur coming up to help them along their way to help them on their path?

Sally Reid:

I don't know if I should say this, but go for it. Most of those internet guru business people who you know, I coach coaches to coach a lot of them, the bigger they are, the less likely they are to coach you. That's all I can say. i i And and what's interesting is many of us who are sensitive or highly saleable. So be very clear about what outcomes you want before you go into a sales call, I have no, I'm gonna say I, I've spent a lot of money on people who couldn't help me. And they weren't clear. You know, their idea was, they can help anybody who has enough money to pay them. And so do your very level best to vet those people. Before you sign on the dotted line. I have found coaches a business these are business coaches, who really do help me and have really helped me. And of course, I won't name names here, because that's not what this is for. Right. But I will say is my biggest mistake is not trusting my own business acumen and my own heart. You know, all these people were coming to me I had a thriving business through referral. And it didn't occur to me, oh my goodness, people actually like you. Instead of going to the business coaching. You see what I mean? Yes, yes. So trust your own goodness. And if you are going to get a business coach, check them out thoroughly. Before you pay them the big money.

Candy Motzek:

And there's something else there too. It's it's check them out surly from, you know, like, a references standpoint, like really look, don't look at their online marketing. Don't look at that shiny packaging. Right. And but then also really see how your gut feels, you know, like, is it a real Yes. Or is it and kind of a shiny object? Yes, would be the way that I would describe it. Right?

Sally Reid:

It's true. There are I mean, I'm not going to say that there aren't great business coaches out there. But I can say that the bigger they are, the less likely they are to coach you. That's all I'm gonna say about that. You know that. The more famous they are, the more numbers they have running through the more sales people they have working for them.

Candy Motzek:

Yes, say no more. Say no more. So, trust your gut. Do your research. Right. And there's One more thing. What does that one thing? It almost feels like Don't rush into it. You know, like, at least I think you said it know what outcome you want. Right?

Sally Reid:

Yeah. Know your outcome. Yeah. And that's this. You know, that's why when I talk to people who want to work with me, I asked the first question I asked him, What are you looking for? Where do you want to go? Is if? And if they don't know, I help them? I coach them to find it. Right. Yeah. And that's the whole point of the coaches is like, if we can't help you, you know, like, how do you get to Maine? Well, I'm sorry, I, I can only tell you how to get to California, you know, then next,

Candy Motzek:

right? Or if you don't even know that you want to go to Maine, you just want to go somewhere else. It's a no win for anybody. Right? Like it's true.

Sally Reid:

You need to be aware of somebody saying, Well, you have to go to Maine because I said, you have to go to me.

Candy Motzek:

Because Maine is the best or something like that. Unfortunately, I've never been to Maine, it might be for all I know.

Sally Reid:

It was nice. I'm not gonna lie.

Candy Motzek:

This came up in another interview that I did. And it's around allowing yourself to make a decision to write. And I think that, like what you've just said about, you know, clients coming to you. Sometimes it is helping them to make their own decision, and not to rely on somebody else's opinion and not to rely on somebody else's guidance. Yeah, he,

Sally Reid:

yeah, yes. That's the combat is my whole purpose is to get you to trust you. My number one purpose. And when I first started out as a healing coach, most people I coached had autoimmune issues. And they were not physically I mean, even though they represented physicality, it was actually emotional discord that was creating that. And so therefore, it could be created cleared easily. And that's because they didn't know who they were in there.

Candy Motzek:

Definitely, question number four here, we've all made mistakes in our business, what advice? What advice would you give to a new entrepreneur, so that they don't have to make the same mistake as you did,

Stephanie Moram:

I think the first thing is just to be gentle on yourself, you are going to make mistakes. And I think that's No, you aren't going to make mistakes, you are going to fail. It's just, that's what's going to happen. And actually, a couple of days ago, this fits so perfectly, I was on the scroll hole on Instagram, and I was scrolling, this video popped up of this guy that I follow. And he said, as entrepreneurs or not as entrepreneurs, as when we grow up, we see success on one side, and we see failure on the other side, when and that's how we're raised, when in actuality, you are on one side failures in the middle and successes on the other side. And you need to drive through failures to get to your success. And it's not like in school, whether you fail the test, or you succeed on the test, like you literally have to fail to be successful. And I think when people get started as entrepreneurs, we're like, no, everything has to be perfect. The sales pitch has to be perfect. The graphics have to be perfect, I have to re record the same thing over and over again, when I truly believe Done is better than perfect. And the longer we wait to have the thing perfect, then we're prolonging the launch of our business or prolonging the launch of whatever product we want to share with the world. And if you listen to any entrepreneur, that you know, that is making like eight figures, seven figures or whatever figures, and they are super successful, they didn't start right there. They were at the other end of the spectrum, falling, getting rejections. Lots of people saying no, you can't get a yes until you get nose you know. So I just think my way my advice is to be okay with the failure be okay, that you're going to fall. It's the getting up and continuing that's going to get you to that success. I feel like people that haven't had any hardships, whether it's in their personal life, in their business, that when they see that success, and then they hit the hardship, then they're down on themselves. And they're like, Oh, well, it was it worked out before why isn't it working out now. So I really truly believe having those, those hard times and struggles makes you stronger. And I feel like as entrepreneurs, solopreneurs business owners, that it's inevitable, and like that guy said in that video, you got to bust through the failures to get to that success. And you are going to make a ton of mistakes. And you probably gonna make a lot of grammar mistakes as well on social media and in your emails. The grammar police comes out to get you just ignore them because they're everywhere and If that is part of being a business owner, right there, that's one mistake you're gonna for sure make is going to be lots of grammar and punctuation and spelling mistakes.

Candy Motzek:

And such, it's such a small thing in the scheme of the kind of impact that you're trying to create, right? Like, who cares if I've got a comma there or not? I'm trying to change the world here. Don't you know? You got to keep your perspective. Lorraine question number four, we've all made mistakes in business, what advice would you give to a new coach or a new entrepreneur? So they don't have to learn the same lesson the hard way that maybe you did?

Lorraine Ellen Scott:

That's a really good question. I would say, first of all, it's to have the right why. And it's not about making money, your why your mission is something that helps you stay in your lane. It's not easy. There's shiny objects, that there's things that people tell you, you should and shouldn't do. But if you're not passionate about what you do, or who you help, then it's really difficult to stay the course. So you need to have that specific why you're doing what you're doing. And that will always lead you to the right opportunities to help you make the right choices and attract you to the right, people.

Candy Motzek:

Jeff, you've been an entrepreneur for a while. That means you've made mistakes, I've made mistakes, we've all made mistakes. What advice would you give a new entrepreneur so that they can maybe bypass some of that learning curve?

Jeff Klein:

I love that question, Candy, because that's one of my primary premises. For what I offer as my services, learn from my mistakes. You know, mom and dad said, Learn from your mistakes. But how about learning from somebody else's mistakes, it's a lot less painful. I got the road rash. I got the scars, I cried the tears. You don't have to let me take 456 years off of your journey. Let me help you. So hire an expert. And what I learned through CEO space was, if it's not your, if it's not your bliss, you shouldn't be doing it. If it was I'd not forgotten the exact words. But yeah, if it's not your journey, if you know it doesn't, if you're not, if you don't like doing it, whether you're good at it or not. If you don't like doing it, outsource it. And that's part of the sign of building your business. You What's the first thing you're gonna outsource your bookkeeping, outsource your admin. I mean, even though you you may you know, I'm great at bookkeeping. I'm, I love math, but it's a stupid function for me to do when I can have somebody who, for a couple 100 bucks a month will do it for me.

Candy Motzek:

Right? Yeah, like what's the highest and best use of your time? Right? Yeah,

Jeff Klein:

yeah. You know, it's like, I quit working on my car when I started making more than more than one hour and one hour, then roll change costs.

Candy Motzek:

Make sense? Yeah. So hire an expert, hire a little bit earlier than you might to get the support that you need, so that your time is freed up to go and do the things that you need to do or that you want to do? Or that your zone of genius, right?

Jeff Klein:

Yep. And until when what if you're at when you're at the point, you're not when you can't do it yet, when you can't afford the other stuff? Don't do it during prime time. You know, I you're you know, you're you set yourself up to work a lot of extra hours, don't do admin stuff, when you could be making sales.

Candy Motzek:

What advice would you give to one of those new entrepreneurs so that they don't have to repeat the mistake that you may be made? They don't have to learn that painful lesson in the same way.

Diane Lidstone:

I think one of the things is that we now speak for myself, you know, we get into a habit of doing something the same way over and over again. And we wonder why the does it not bring us different results. And it takes courage and boldness and whatever else vulnerability, but you need to hire a coach to hire a coach and you need to hire one that you resonate with. And you know, a lot of people say hire a coach who's been there done that before you and I will share my own experience that I have always had a coach. And for many years, I thought I could not help somebody who had a multimillion dollar business because I didn't have one. But guess what? They got there by fluke, literally. And when they did hire me, they went, Oh, my God, why didn't we hire you sooner, and they went on to, you know, double their profits. So, you know, staying stuck, thinking that you can't help someone because they are at a different level of you of a business than you I think, is certainly one mistake that I made. Another is not letting go of those things that weren't serving me well, and, and doubling down on those things that didn't. So having the courage to look at our business and say, Guess what, I'm doing these Facebook postings, I'm not getting nothing from it. So stop.

Candy Motzek:

It takes not just courage to do that. But also, you have to have a certain amount of discipline as well, to go, you know, what quarterly, we're going to sit down, we're going to do an overview, what's working, what's not what needs to change? What's our you know, what's going to be our approach for the next three months, six months a year. So that really speaks loudly. And then I want to just comment as well about your hiring a coach, but not necessarily someone that has exactly the same life experience that you do, or not exactly that same trajectory. So the piece that I see is that the good coaches, they ask good questions. They care about their clients. And they've got the guts to say, when the thing that needs to be said, Right?

Diane Lidstone:

Oh, yes. Right.

Candy Motzek:

And so, you know, like, there's always going to be somebody at that next level. Well, who's gonna coach those people? Yeah. And those people get in the room, and so many people are, yes, yes, yes. To them instead of like, Hello.

Diane Lidstone:

Did you forget why you started

Candy Motzek:

this business in the first place?

Diane Lidstone:

Like, a little bit of a cool fish write a whole episode on that? Exactly. I

Candy Motzek:

know. It's like, get about it. Yeah, so I like that. And also that, like, you know, because I do work with new coaches, the vast majority of them have been successful in their career. And now they're changing to be entrepreneurs. They forget that they've got a lifetime of experience doing whatever it was that they did. And don't forget about that. And then combine that with your coaching skills. So

Diane Lidstone:

yeah, and there's, you know, if your audience is those people that have come from the, the corporate, if I can say that to the entrepreneurial, there is a huge mindset shift that has to happen.

Candy Motzek:

Next question, Siobhan is this We've all made mistakes in business, like it's just the way business is, what advice would you give to a new entrepreneur, so they don't have to learn the same lesson that you did. For

Siobhan Gass:

my women veterans, specifically, I would say, Join professional network. So I spent ridiculous amounts of money on courses that I did use eventually, but not really starting off. And so the thing that actually helped me was getting out there networking with other people I felt comfortable with who had knowledge and could point me in the right direction. So for some people that's like, if you're a professional trade, like I'm a social worker, I can join a social working or therapist or mental health networking group, professional group, some there's there ones for like International Women in Business or local women in business or your chamber of commerce, but I would connect with a group of people and try to find those people who you connect with, and just share, discuss and kind of pick their brain a little bit in the settings on helping you focus.

Candy Motzek:

Yeah, yeah, that is so helpful. We can never do it all by ourselves. Right? But this is not this is not a game of the you know, Lone Wolf, this is the game of together we go so much further and faster, and have so much so much more joy doing it. Jannette question number four, we all make mistakes, that's part of business. What advice Ace, would you lend to new entrepreneurs, things that you've learned an approach that you've learned so that they don't have to learn it the hard way?

Jannette Anderson:

There's about 12 things that are running through my head, right? Right. Okay, so I'm gonna give you an answer on the internal and the outer, because I often, you know, want to support people with mastering the inner and outer game of business. The first thing is on that inner game kind of component. The problem with most people's businesses isn't the business, it's the four inches between their ears. It's the crap, frankly, that we tell ourselves, that takes us out of the game. And it's approval issues, it's the pushing to prove it's all of those inner challenges that we all have, no matter what age and stage you're at, they just are different variations and layers of it. But then I think that that gets in the way more of businesses than almost anything else. So what I would say is really look at deal with on Earth and get support for dealing with your issues, whatever they may be, knowing that you deserve to be supported in getting some freedom, some clarity and some freedom around those so that you can show up and serve. So deal with the inner noise, and challenges. And, and we need help to do that. It's next to impossible because our stuffs right here, we cannot see it, it's too close. We need someone who can pull that back and help us whether that's a therapist or coach or a support person, most of you got in this business, so that you could support others in being able to get their 30. So we need support doing that for ourselves. So that's the first piece is deal with your inner stuff. So that you can be a more whole person, you don't have to be perfect, you don't have to be through it all. You don't have to have everything resolved. Before you get going, you need to be further ahead. And you need to be consistently working on that. I'm 62, I have two coaches and a therapist that I work with, so that I can stay clean, and able to show up with loss of capacity for people. It is not a once and done kind of thing. So that's that's one thing I would say on the inner on the outer. Similarly, we have to learn how to be good business people and most coaches struggle. We all know the stats about how little money coaches make, and so forth. Because they don't learn the art and science of sales and marketing, and how to run a business. So for the love of God, learn that read the E Myth by Michael Gerber to start with, get a good support network. Take the courses that are the right courses at the right stage. And that's a big thing that I get on a soapbox about too many people are buying the wrong solution at the wrong stage of business are at so it's important to be not buying what the gurus at the top of the mountain are selling because that works at the top of the mountain, but not where you are coming up the mountain. And I have longer rants about that. But get the training to be a good business person, not just a good coach. Oh, and I would just say and yes, I just agree with all of that. Yeah, most coaches like you said, I want to help people, and they will, but they can't help anybody if they don't have a business, right? And coaching skills, that the tools of being a coach are very different than the tools of being an entrepreneur.

Candy Motzek:

So you really just shone a light on that. Worry, listen, I know we have all made mistakes in business, what advice would you give to a new entrepreneur, something that was a lesson that you learned so that maybe they don't have to learn that same lesson? Maybe they can learn from your experience? Yeah, this is

Marie Mack:

a good one. So I think my biggest thing, especially for new entrepreneurs, is to document your processes. One of my biggest things in my business is scaling through systems. And we do that because we help our clients document there are processes that can start and should start when you're brand new, even if it's you The biggest thing is time management. So you might do something, say once a month, say once a month you go and you pay your taxes or or you schedule your social media. If you document that process. In the beginning, you will greatly shorten your remit, like how you remember how to do those tasks just by documenting it. At the very least turn on your loom video, walk yourself through it just put in together a couple of steps to remind yourself what to do. The bigger picture is that eventually you're gonna pass this off to a team member and those documented paid spaces are already together for you to say here you go nice VA. Take this from me and allow me to go do something that I really enjoy doing in my business. So Have document from the beginning. And it will save you a whole lot of time and effort in the future.

Candy Motzek:

Cool, so helpful. And so I just want to pull something out here, I noticed that you were really clear about documenting. And you've given the listeners a way to do it that works for them, you know, so if you're not somebody that's going to write a process, and by the way, I have a process for PATA Palooza, like I know exactly how I'm going to help each guest and how I'm going to make it all flow. But if you're not a written process kind of person, if you look at that, and you kind of freak out, Murray's just giving you the perfect Yep, download the free loom app, on your computer, record yourself, talk through what you're doing. And that becomes your process. So processes don't have to be scary. Do it in a way that works for you. Super great tip. Thank you, Marie. Jen, we all make mistakes in business, like that's part of business, right? What advice would you give to a new entrepreneur, so they don't have to learn all the same lessons that you learned the hard way?

Jen Ingram:

Hmm. I would say the best advice is just to show up and own it. Own it all own the mistakes. I actually I done a couple reels, and I was getting ready to post a new one this week. I love showing my mistakes. They're funny. I mean, I posting my bloopers is some of my most fun posts, frankly. But even just business mistakes. The biggest mistake I think I made was just not fully showing up. And even just sharing what I was doing. I was kind of embarrassed. I was embarrassed of what people might say, oh, a coach. Well, what is that? You know that the negativity around it, you know? And then one day I just said, Hi, no, I know I'm doing the right thing. I know this is needed, because I remember I sought it out at one point in time and couldn't find it. So I know what I'm here to do. And I know that this matters. And I know my work is life changing. And I want more women to experience the amazing changes I've had. And I just started showing up and I was like, here I am.