The Conscious Collaboration

Hey Conscious Collaborators! In Episode 122, Lisa and Emily dive deep into the ever-evolving world of technology and social media. Are you curious about how AI is changing customer service? Do you struggle to balance personal and business content on your social media? This episode is packed with insights and personal stories that you won't want to miss!

Lisa and Emily kick off with some light-hearted banter about their AI companion, sharing mixed feelings about its role in our lives. Emily vents her frustrations with AI customer service bots, sparking a broader discussion on the resistance to new technologies among entrepreneurs.

We then shift gears to social media strategies. Emily reveals her secret sauce for using her personal Instagram to boost her business engagement, while Lisa shares her journey from social media skeptic to savvy business owner. They discuss authenticity, the pitfalls of "comparisonitis," and the generational differences in social media use.

The conversation also touches on the dangers of oversharing, especially regarding children, and the importance of educating the younger generation about online personas. Practical tips on leveraging social media trends, maintaining an email list, and building collaborative networks are sprinkled throughout. Tune in for a blend of humor, practical advice, and heartfelt stories. 

Tune in to learn how to join our Conscious Collaboration Collective on Facebook, where you can share your wins and find support within our community.

Talk to you in 5!
Emily and Lisa


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Emily
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Lisa
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www.cloud9fengshui.com

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What is The Conscious Collaboration?

The Conscious Collaboration Podcast brings together entrepreneurs, changemakers, and thought leaders. We aim to highlight the people who embody the idea of aligned mind, body, and business. Each week, we share, discuss, and learn from the various experiences and ideas of our guest experts. Through our discovery, we find a path to aligned mind, body, and business.

Intro:

The conscious collaboration brings together entrepreneurs, change makers, and thought leaders. We aim to highlight the people that embody the idea of aligned mind, body, and business. Each week, we share, discuss, and learn from the various experiences and ideas of our guest experts. Through our discovery, we find a path to an aligned mind, body, and business.

Lisa:

What up, guys? I'm Lisa.

Emily:

And I'm Emily. And together, we are the most conscious collaboration podcast.

Lisa:

Just the 2 of us today. Collaboration.

Emily:

The 2 of us and our AI companion.

Lisa:

Yes. I know.

Emily:

Lest we forget. We're we're experimenting a little bit.

Lisa:

If it gets out of line, let me know and I'll disable it. It sounds like I'm killing it.

Emily:

Don't threaten me with a guitar.

Lisa:

So getting all techy as entrepreneurs.

Emily:

Yeah. No. I'm still quite, quite resistant to the the AI stuff in a lot of ways. I, I was I saw a meme recently that was people talking about their old person trait. Oh, yeah.

Emily:

And my old person trait is I hate, like, AI customer service

Lisa:

Mhmm.

Emily:

Bots. Like, my my issue is 100% of the time not solvable by 1 of the AI bots, and it just increases the amount of time that it takes to get to someone who can help me, and I don't like it.

Lisa:

And it increases the the rate of your anger before you talk to an actual person, which is unfortunate for that poor person.

Emily:

Right. And they always give it a goofy name, like, you know?

Lisa:

Like Jane. Jane. Do do you have a question for Jane?

Emily:

Jane is my middle name. I'm not gonna hate on that. Jane with a y.

Lisa:

I'm not yeah. Ain't ain't My mom wanted me to have

Emily:

a loop in in in every part of my signature, so she's gonna

Lisa:

be y. Pretty. Yeah. I like the name Jane, but I wonder why all the Janes now are associated with AI as a result.

Emily:

Are they?

Lisa:

Is that a is

Emily:

that a common AI name?

Lisa:

Jane? Yeah. There is like a Plain Jane. There's a lot of Janes in the AI, you know, auto, I don't know. I kinda like them, but, the AI bots that come on and can Jane help you with this kind of thing.

Lisa:

And they even give her, like, a friendly looking picture. It looks like a real person, and she usually has glasses on because that means you're smarter.

Emily:

Okay. Right. Glasses do make you smarter. Fact. Science.

Lisa:

Science. 100% of the time.

Emily:

Yes. 60% of the time, it works every time.

Lisa:

Yes. Talking about resistance.

Emily:

Yes. Good segue into our topic today. We've been, having, some more organic, conversations recently around social media and all the different dynamics around using social media in particular for, business. One of them that I find interesting is that, it it's far although I have separate accounts, in Instagram specifically, that's kind of where I focus the most of my energy, Instagram and and Facebook to a little bit lesser degree. But so I have separate Instagram pages for my personal, for the studio, and for Iron Yogi Fitness.

Emily:

We also have one for for, this podcast. But I noticed that by far, I get the most interaction and the most quality interaction on my personal page. So I use my personal page, which still set up as a business page to kinda help accelerate the business pages, which is one interesting dynamic of things. So then there's there's always this kind of balance between a blend of of, you know, sharing personal stuff and sharing business stuff. And where is that line, and does there need to be a line?

Emily:

Because a lot of it, you know, thankfully, I have a business that is very entangled in my personal lifestyle. Right? So it all kinda goes together, but, that's definitely a a consideration there. And you use right. Your your personal I mean, you've kinda got your your personal and your business are kinda the same the same account now.

Emily:

Right?

Lisa:

Well, no. I still have my business, accounts on all the different things, including LinkedIn. But my personal does get the more, quote, unquote, followers. So I have the public facing stuff, that I put on my personal pages. Not everything is public, but the things that are gets more engagement from me as a person.

Lisa:

And while you were think while you were talking, I was thinking.

Emily:

Mhmm.

Lisa:

It's, as we were talking about it, the generation that our daughter's growing up in, it's, you know, they they see everybody as an influencer. And I think our generation, the, you know, gen x, Xennials, and millennials, I think a lot of us fall into an unintentional, you know, in that regard, I don't think we want to necessarily like, we still have that resistance in mixing our personal lives with our public lives. So we're very much unintentional influencers in that way. That's what I feel when I'm talking to people in any of my business consults. There seems to be a lot of that hesitation and mistrust, and we're always constantly filtering how much does the public need to know, about my children, where I live, so on and so forth.

Lisa:

For sure. It's prob I've seen on TikTok and Instagram well, on TikTok by way of Instagram, but there's people that can look up your photos that you share that are that you think are very, untrackable, and they can find out where exactly that photo is and find out where you are. Just find

Emily:

Well, I don't yeah. I I don't post anything on the Internet believing that it's untrackable. I I

Lisa:

I don't

Emily:

know all the ins and outs out of it, but I I know I know better than than to believe that, you know. So it it's like, you know, I do kinda pause to think because I share I share Olivia, my daughter, you know, pretty pretty frequently. And she, you know, to be fair, is she loves the camera. Well, okay. Not all the time.

Emily:

And and, of course, when she doesn't want to, be on camera, of course, I I honor that type of thing. But, but, yeah, it's it's definitely, it gives me more pause when we're talking about our kids and our daughters in particular, just because of now I think it's human nature to have, you know, before we had social media, it was what, like, Tiger Beat and, like, Cosmo Magazine, 17 Magazine, whatever. You know, we we have this tendency towards admiring people, admiring celebrities, all to varying degrees, of course. You know, I wasn't necessarily, like, at concerts, like, screaming and fainting or anything like that,

Lisa:

but there was

Emily:

definitely people that when I was growing up, I I admired in different ways. So that's definitely understandable, but just the looking at social media as a tool, right, it can be used for really good and helpful and positively influential things, but it's it's way too easy, especially if we're letting our kids kinda, you know, spend an inordinate amount of time on it to get into the comparisonitis game, and then especially, when you're talking about little girls and just all the all the dynamics there. You know, we're we're working against a lot in terms of making sure that our daughters know, to separate what they're seeing on social media from real life, from their value. You know what I mean? That that likes and subscribes and follows do not in any way correspond with your value as a person.

Emily:

Me and you were talking about, you know I don't think influencer is altogether a bad thing, although we've kinda you know, we take the bad end of that spectrum, and it kinda gives a bad taste to the word altogether. But me and you were talking about, you know, some of the some of the people that we'll see our daughters watching on YouTube. And I just tried to make it evident, you know, not to make her feel bad for watching certain things because she'll watch other things that I think are pretty good quality. But, you know, when I'm seeing these these influencer kids that she's watching and all they do is just spend a bunch of money to do stupid pranks or challenges or whatever dump shit thing, you know, that they're they're doing on the Internet now. I I just try to have the conversation, like, okay.

Emily:

Well, what do you, you know, what do you think the value of this is? Like, do you think that they're helping anybody? Do you think that they're showing any kind of talent here? And just kinda try to keep the conversation open as far as, like, what the real value of things on the Internet are.

Lisa:

Yeah. Yeah. Exactly. I mean, I I the first thing I think of is, in that vein is is a whole lot of unboxing. Like, look at all this free stuff I got from someone just for being on the Internet or just because I'm cute or just because I'm pretty.

Lisa:

So it's a lot of that, you know, popularity through vanity type of display. And I think as business owners or at least to me, before I was a business owner, I was very minimally on social media. I was very private. I was very, anti sharing pictures of my children before they could speak and and give consent and that type of thing. Like, I was very controlling, maybe too much controlling at the time of, what I put out in social media.

Lisa:

And when I became a business owner, I realized, oh, shoot. I actually really have to if I don't put myself out there, no one's going to find me, especially since my brand is so, niche and and, you know, there needs to be information about me out there. So I took a big leap and it was really, you know, for me being a very private person, it had to be very much out there, in terms of putting bios and stories and speaking engagements, and it was a big hurdle. And I think that's a common struggle for business owners. Yeah.

Lisa:

It's not it's not natural for a lot of us to do those social media stories. You know, I see a lot of, coaches, social media coaches, and I've had quite a few marketing coaches, social media coaches. And, I'm just not one of those people that feels comfortable doing, like, dances or pointing at words in the sky or you know, that's just not my style. I'm not saying that because it works, and I'll watch them. But it just not doesn't feel like me, so I'm just not gonna

Emily:

change. Well and, I mean, I think that's the more important, element that you just hit on right there is is it authentic to you? I don't think I don't think that being on a trend in on a trend is in any way more important than than being authentic because you can you can tell. And, you know, I'm not interested in people doing dances just just to do it. Like, if you've made some genuinely funny content, I value that, Right?

Emily:

Or genuinely educational content. But on the and you know what? If you if you feel authentic and you can find a way to to work that in to do the dances, cool. Like, no no hate to you whatsoever, but I think that and I I definitely have been in that place, in the earlier years of, like, feeling, like, resistant to posting on on social media in particular about my business because, like, you don't wanna be annoying, and you're kinda like, oh, who cares, you know, about what I'm doing, this and that. But I've definitely grown to evolve over the years to really look at, you know, the algorithm and the trends and things.

Emily:

Not as I mean, I really take whatever the trends are with a grain of salt. I think any anything that you are presented as far as, like, okay. This is what's working on social media right now is really just an opportunity to leverage that in your own way to move your business forward. And that means that like, I've never done a dance. I've never pointed at things and, you know, whatever, that whole thing.

Emily:

What I have taken advantage of for sure is, a more vanity aspect of things, but I I try to be cognizant of the proportion of that kind of stuff to, you know, educational content. And most of the time, I'm utilizing this vanity stuff to get the attention in the first place. Because what I am a big believer of now is that, you you know, you do what you gotta do within reason to get the eyeballs on you. Okay? Like, I was we were talking about the other day.

Emily:

I noticed a market, like, probably over half double, whatever Mhmm. Difference when in my stories specifically and it must be just because, you know, on Facebook, you can see the thumbnails of the stories.

Lisa:

Yeah.

Emily:

If I post any type of, just, you know, it doesn't have to be anything overtly sexual or whatever, but just any type of, like, mirror selfie, little flex in the mirror, definitely like a bikini shot or whatever. If I put something like that first, I will get exponentially more eyes on whatever comes after that. So and and same thing with, like, text, right, or hooks, titles. I I some of my one of my favorite podcasts. Right?

Emily:

Mind Mind Pump is a fantastic example. They will use what you could kinda consider to be click baity titles. Right? But once you get in and you start listening to the content, you it's it's solid gold. So I think, you you know, I have no ethical issues, anymore, we'll say, with with using these kinda tactics, I guess, to, just leverage the attention in the first place and then and then provide the the real content from there.

Emily:

Yeah. Because if you if you rely solely on the vanity stuff, right, if that's your core content, then you've boxed yourself into having to look like that forever, You know?

Lisa:

I mean, I I days are your best days. I I don't have a lot of, selfies or images of me because, maybe maybe a little bit here and there, like profile updates and that type of thing. But, you know, rather I have spaces or, you know, I I really just I love a lot of our, our content in the conscious collaboration. Like, I I use that multiple times because it's just so much, similar to my other brands. But, I find that the things that I have seen go viral for me have nothing to do with, thank God, a profile photo of me or anything of that nature.

Lisa:

It's because, like, the audio, what just I happen to pick an audio that bumped up on trend. And it wasn't even like my best it wasn't even like a best demonstration, like, of quality. It was a lot of times, it's what the system what the AI system tells me. Hey. You should use this as a story or a reel or, hey.

Lisa:

You should run this as an ad. I'm like, okay. And, like, I'll just use that even if it's not my favorite thing because I'm like, I guess it favors this for whatever reason. And those

Emily:

are the things suggesting it. Mhmm.

Lisa:

Yeah. If it suggests it and if it's putting a music track to it or something, I'm like, cool. But that doesn't necessarily make sense to me. But, 9 times out of 10, that's the thing that, you know, performs better. But, I think the most meaningful DMs I get from people or the most business directed DMs I get from people are, for me, and I'm not in a, you know, I'm not I'm not a yogi.

Lisa:

I don't do a lot of stuff with my yoga practice or strength training or or anything of that nature, but a lot of what people connect to me with is the words, and they can see themselves in my content. So Mhmm. They feel directly spoken to, and they can recognize themselves as like, oh, you really see me where I'm at, and I wanna talk to you about it. So my DMs are actually very, good and engaging. It's not like it's not up in the 700 all the time of people that are commenting or liking or or whatever.

Lisa:

But it's it's, highly you know, it's my people. But it's just

Emily:

Well, that's the thing too. Quality over quantity, in terms of, being a business owner. You know? Yeah. It's it's a numbers game to a certain degree.

Emily:

Of course, the more the more eyes you can have on you, the better chance you you've got to, you know, bring people deeper into your content, but it's also the more quality eyes. Yeah. You know, it is not superior to have a 100000 followers, right, who only a half a percent, actually, you know, engage with your stuff or may may actually engage with your business at

Lisa:

some point versus to have, like

Emily:

you right. Versus to have a couple 1,000 followers of whom or even a 1,000 followers or, you know, whatever it is, of whom a great percentage of them are engaged to your content. So, numbers game to a degree, but I bet you find too with a lot of these, like, you know I know it's a little different on YouTube, but with a lot of these, like, super high following influencers, they they really haven't figured out how to successfully monetize it in a meaningful way. So it's just, you you know, like, you gotta figure out how to leverage the the thirst trap if you're gonna use the thirst trap. And you're right.

Emily:

Like, it's you know, the businesses that I'm in are more visual in nature, I think, at least, like, human body in terms of that. So that's kind of an advantage, for me the way I see it. But, but, yeah, it's it's figuring out how to use what is there instead of, you know because you can easily just go the other way with that resistance and be like, I hate it. It's it's too vain. I'm I'm not I'm not a narcissist.

Emily:

I'm not doing it. You know? And then and, of course, it's still possible to run a very successful business without utilizing social media. But if you are gonna you know, for the vast majority of us, I think it it can be a really helpful tool. And so, you know, if you if you are gonna use it, then you might as well you know, you say learn I I wanna say learn how to play the game, but that that that's you can still be authentic with it.

Emily:

Learn how to play the game in your way. Learn how to use what I mean, it's just being resourceful is really all that is. It's being resourceful, being innovative, using what is there, using what we know about human behavior to leverage this tool, you know, to get some some additional eyes on your content. And then put out really good content, you know, besides whatever whatever you're using to get people's attention.

Lisa:

Mhmm.

Emily:

Balance that out with with some really good and helpful and educational content and and connecting with the people who bother to engage with you. And, you know, you're really looking at a different environment. Yeah.

Lisa:

I mean, it's in it's in small business circles, and I don't know who coined it. And we've said it before, but people do business with people they know, like, and trust. And if they're not if there's no real resource for them to get into depth and know if they know you or never on any level at all, it's, you know, it's to your benefit to start thinking about ways if you're not comfortable with, getting out there on social media. How else do you reach people so they can get to know you and like you and trust you? For me, it's really important that I put just enough information out there so people know who I am, especially if they're letting me into intimate parts of their lives.

Lisa:

And

Emily:

Exactly.

Lisa:

They have to get a sense of my energy. Are they gonna let me in their home or, you know, in person or virtually to know them on a deeper energetic level? It's it's a big leap if I'm just a surface level, you know, content page without, the videos behind it and me talking and Yep. And knowing those client stories. And I think, you know, back to that point, the client stories are really great to put out there in some way.

Lisa:

And social media lets you do that. I mean, Google, Google pages, Google My Business and Yelp and that type of stuff is really good. But, you know, more importantly, not just my energy, but also can they relate to my other clientele? And is that, you know, is that someone they would be, you know, the like minded people stick together type of thing. But, yeah, it's it's interesting.

Lisa:

I think it's shifting. Like you said, it's good to have that awareness because trends will shift. And, you know, even I know you have a big resistance to AI, but the more we resist something, maybe the more we should, to AI, but the more we resist something, maybe the more we should try to understand it or play around with it, Emily. Maybe. Just suggesting.

Lisa:

Because I had I had a big resistance to a lot of these things. I'm like, but I wanna figure it out because I know a lot of people, at least in my in the design industry are have a big awareness of AI. Like, first, everyone feared it, and then they were like, AI can't get you know, they put a chair in a fireplace. So they don't AI doesn't understand environments the way humans do, but it's become a great place to springboard ideas or to develop ideas or to have, you know, aspirational images to show people. It's not necessarily gonna complete a project for anybody or replace any of the designers in that realm.

Lisa:

But, my fear has gone because I took the time and it to take the courses and to to learn with people like, okay. Like, I got enough of a handle on it that I can use it as a tool, just like the resistance to the social media where I was, like, super private. Like, I just you know, as it's it's a hard hurdle as a business owner, especially when you start as a solopreneur. If you're just someone that doesn't like to have any focus on them. Like, I just never like I didn't like to stand up in front of a room and do, speeches and talking, you know, before becoming a business owner.

Lisa:

And now I'm like, that's just what I do. You know, I'm used

Emily:

to walking into Yeah.

Lisa:

Walk into a room and and talk for a long time. And, you know, so I understand the resistance of the other business owners that I that I meet, and they're like, I just doesn't feel like me. I don't wanna put it out there. But to your point, there is a version. It you don't have to follow what other people are doing.

Lisa:

No. But, you know, play around and find out what it is that that gets your enough of you and your business out there so that people can build that trust or to have that curiosity, and then continue that conversation.

Emily:

Imperfect action is something that, in, with NCI who who I've, been involved with this year, hammers over and over and over again, and it echoes what I've seen, you know, like Gary v saying for years. Like, who cares? Just put out content. Even your followers are only gonna see, like, a very small percentage of what you're putting out anyway. So especially if there's something, you know, that you're really trying to get across, like, repetition is necessary.

Emily:

You're gonna need to feel almost annoying, but you're not it's not like the the other perspective is not the same. Right. You know? So just put content out there, and you just never know. Imperfect action.

Emily:

Mhmm. And if it doesn't work, who cares?

Lisa:

Yeah. I think of it as, like, the content are just little impressions of energetic impressions of you all over the place from YouTube to podcast to to social media, to wherever, you know, books or or whatever, publications, articles, all these little impressions, they they might not be visible in the year that you do them. But say there's a time when you need to take a 2 week vacation. And I've had this happen before. Like, I'll be gone from work for, like, 10 days thinking, oh, well, just, you know, the business is gonna be very slow, during that time.

Lisa:

But for whatever reason, all those little micro impressions, the videos start popping off, and people, once they find something they like, will rabbit hole down it. Like, oh, I really like this.

Emily:

Yeah. I mean

Lisa:

And it does all work for me. Do it.

Emily:

Right? Like, when we're interested, especially in a service, you know, individual based, transaction, you know, if I'm researching somebody or a business, I pretty much go to ins it used to be you go to their website first. Now I go to Instagram first because it's the most bite sized and kind of easily visually organized place to, like, really learn what somebody's about. So even if you don't have and, you know, I'm not sitting there looking at how many likes is on each post unless I'm, you know, actively just trying to figure out, you know, what what their social media is, doing, but but that's not the important part. The important part is what is the content.

Lisa:

And the variety of the placement of content. If you have it all housed in one place, inevitably, that's gonna probably get hacked or stolen or could go away one day. So

Emily:

We definitely have to have, you know, our owned owned media outside of social media, you know, keeping those keeping those email lists intact and and all of those things. Because, yeah, you you kinda have to assume that that social media could could just, you know

Lisa:

Yeah. Everything yeah. Everything has been quite good and ends. At any point. Yeah.

Lisa:

Exactly. Yeah. Because I see that time and time again. I'm like, why is this a business I really know? But they it's like their page just started.

Lisa:

And then I realized, oh, they've been hacked. They lost all their content, and they didn't have a website. So now they're totally rebuilding. And I'm like, you know, I'm very old school, so I'll still keep my websites and everything. But that is that is the thing that happens that people rely on one place.

Lisa:

You know, I'll just keep my Instagram, Facebook operating. That's where I run all my ads and it gets robbed by somebody, and that's it. Like

Emily:

Yeah. Yeah. I mean, I think Yeah. I wouldn't lean into social any of the social media platforms as, like, the number one

Lisa:

Yeah.

Emily:

Pillar of the business.

Lisa:

I mean, going going old school and keeping some of that aspect of what we talk about with collaborations and, you know, the old school nature of that is the people that you collaborate with become your marketers and your refers. Even when you're not around, it's like, how do people talk about you when you're not even in the room kind of thing. So making sure that you have those people that match your values and ethics in your business and your circle. So there's talk about you constantly in the rooms at the right time. You can expect that if someone happens to meet someone that they can make that connection, it's easy.

Lisa:

And that's something that you don't have to pay for. You don't have to put a lot of effort into.

Emily:

Yeah. Word-of-mouth will always exist for sure and probably be one of the strongest, methods of of getting getting clients. I think I think the email list will always remain, pretty pretty valuable too because that is people who have opted in to your content and, you know, the most open, open to receive audience of of what you're saying. So I think that that's a really great place to to put your focus to.

Lisa:

Yeah. Yeah. I and I also I love, the Facebook group concept. Like, for the conscious collaboration, our collective, it's a great place where we've already filtered out, so that those who are in the group are aware of our content. They vibe with the same type of topics.

Lisa:

It's there's no warm up there. And it's a place where everybody can share and know, okay, people are gonna understand, me where I'm coming from and, you know, have those deeper conversations. So I think there's a lot of benefit in creating spaces, virtual spaces for communities, that don't require anything.

Emily:

Facebook groups are awesome, and all the functions that that they can do. And it's another place where, you know, these people have opted in to hearing what you have to say. It's still kinda at the, you know, at the mercy of whatever happens with with social media and could just, you know, disappear, in the blink of an eye for no reason. Yeah. So we always have to kinda keep that in mind, and just keep something owned.

Emily:

You know? Mhmm. I think that email I keep going back to the email list. Yeah. Keep something owned, that doesn't go away with with social media should should things ever happen.

Lisa:

Mhmm. Yeah. I think it goes back to the concepts of, you know, sticking. If there's hesitance, if anyone feels hesitant in putting themselves out there or using any of these tools as a business owners, because it doesn't feel like them or they think it doesn't, it won't feel like them is to have an awareness of what other people are doing to, make sure that the content you're putting out there is something that you would do in a normal basis and have an awareness that things change, trends change, and we grow older and we change and the way that people like to receive information changes. So having that adaptability and, growth mindset to, you know, not get locked into any one thing, but think of it as your, your energetic imprints doing all the work for you when you're turned off or sleeping.

Lisa:

We aren't Yeah.

Emily:

No. I don't even think you have to spend time on learning trends. You know what I mean? Because they are so fleeting. I I mean, you know, get get a glimpse at it.

Emily:

Get a glimpse at what people are doing. But I think it's almost irrelevant in terms of okay. If you're really saying that x y z doesn't feel authentic so first of all, let's do a little self check. And is it really that I think this is not authentic, or am I resistant for some other reason? Am I embarrassed?

Emily:

Or

Lisa:

Mhmm.

Emily:

What you know, whatever it is. I I don't think anybody cares or or one of those kind of things.

Lisa:

Yeah.

Emily:

And if it really is the case of, okay, this way of doing it just doesn't feel authentic, then just do something else. Doesn't matter. Just put the content out there. Put yourself out there.

Lisa:

To your point, the imperfect action again, you know, is the best plan. But yeah. So I'd be interested to hear what everyone is facing out there, especially since this has been a hot topic with a lot of my clients lately, and I've heard, and we've discussed coaching through a lot of those challenges is what what are you experiencing in terms of hurdles and putting your energy out there, your business out there, services? And, you know, I hope that everyone feels comfortable sharing inside of the conscious collaboration collective. It's a closed and private Facebook group.

Emily:

It's a great place to practice if you are having some of this resistance.

Lisa:

Yeah. So what's first? Yeah. I can practice within there and juice introduce yourself, put out your

Emily:

Sure.

Lisa:

You know, put out what makes you different and unique. And, but I would love to have more of that conversation. If you're listening and this resonates with you, let us know. Thank you for listening to us, supporting us, subscribing and sharing our podcast.

Emily:

Mhmm. Subscribe so we can be huge influencers.

Lisa:

Oh. Just kidding. Subscribe. Come find us on social media.

Emily:

Oh, yeah. We'll we'll end it with this. Let's let's see if we could come up with ours. So I know I know me and you both, hate the these the most when people tack on to the they do this on YouTube. They'll say, subscribe if you love Jesus.

Lisa:

Yes. Thank

Emily:

you. Love your family. Yeah. I just sound like a horrible, like, bribe. Like, oh my god.

Lisa:

I was making lunch for the kids the other day, and I heard them listening to something. And it said, if you love your mom Yeah. Hit hit the like button right now. And it's counting down, and I'm like, what happens when it gets to 0? Am I just gonna She explodes.

Lisa:

Yeah. Implode. Oh my gosh, kids.

Emily:

So if you don't want mine and Lisa's heads to explode, subscribe on whatever podcast directory you're listening on.

Lisa:

Yes. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you

Emily:

for saving our lives.

Lisa:

Exactly. 1800. You can donate a dollar a day to to make sure we stay alive.

Emily:

Follow us for more great social

Lisa:

media tips. Influencers. Hashtag influencers. Alright, Emily. It's been fun as always.

Emily:

It's been real. Alright.

Lisa:

We'll talk to you in 5.

Emily:

Talk to you guys in

Lisa:

5. Bye. Bye.

Emily:

Thank you all so much for listening to our podcast. If you haven't yet, please be sure to subscribe, rate, review, and share with all your friends so they can join our circle of collaboration on this journey. You can find us on Instagram at conscious collaboration podcast on Spotify, iTunes, and Audible to name a few. Please join us next time for another deep dive into how you can live life in more alignment, mind, body, and business. Send us your questions and comments in our DMs or email us at conscious collaboration podcast atgmail.com.

Emily:

See you in 5 minutes.