Marketing Powerups

Tiffany Da Silva, Founder of Flowjo.co, shares her 3 tactics for beating imposter syndrome. Download the free powerups cheatsheet https://marketingpowerups.com/037

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🎉 About Tiffany Da Silva

Tiffany DaSilva is the founder of Flowjo.co, an eCommerce site dedicated to helping everyday people live their best life. She has spent the past 15 years in all facets of digital marketing working for startups like Geosign, Achievers & Shopify, as well as, a growth marketing consultant for over 80 companies from startup to enterprise. She’s an instructor for McMaster University and has been featured in Mashable, Search Engine Journal, SE Roundtable, Hubspot & More.

⏰ Timestamps
[00:00:00] How Marketers Can Tackle Imposter Syndrome with Tiffany Da Silva
[00:00:54] Addressing Imposter Syndrome in Marketers
[00:06:00] Handling Imposter Syndrome and Setting Clear Boundaries at Work
[00:12:41] In conversation with Tiffany Da Silva: Assessing When It's Time to Leave Your Job
[00:15:19]  42 Agency - My Number One Recommended Growth Agency
[00:16:04]  Produce High-Quality, On-Brand Content and Copy with Copy.ai
[00:16:47] Imagining the Future and Creating the Ideal Situation in Business
[00:17:20] The Importance of Solid Relationships in Business
[00:21:11] Finding Your Shine Crew: A discussion with Tiffany Da Silva
[00:24:20] Tiffany Da Silva on the Importance of Visualization in Achieving Goals and Legacy
[00:32:16] Discussion with Tiffany Da Silva about the Role of Positive Reinforcement and Growth
[00:35:28] Tiffany Da Silva on Career Power Ups and Embracing Learning in Marketing
[00:41:56] Tiffany Da Silva on Asking for Help in Marketing Career

✨ Useful links

What is Marketing Powerups?

Marketing Powerups is a show for marketers looking to boost their marketing and career to the next level. Ramli John interviews world-class marketers to uncover the secrets, strategies, and frameworks behind their wins. In each episode, guests reveal three things: (1) a marketing power-up, (2) a real-world example of that in action, and (3) a power-up that’s helped them take their career to the next level. Marketing Powerups will help marketers step up their game, level up their careers, and become the best they can be.

58% of tech workers experience imposter Syndrome, according to

a recent stat. But in marketing, it's probably closer to 90%.

I know this because, like many of you out there, I battle this pervasive

feeling too. This is where Tiffany Da Silva steps in. She's the founder of

Flowjo and a highly regarded growth consultant.

Tiffany is no stranger to the struggles. She's identified six

actionable strategies to help marketers wrestle down that

nagging imposter Syndrome. In this marketing powerups episode, you learn

first, why you need to snap out of autopilot mode to

conquer Imposter Syndrome. Second, how to deal with managers who exacerbate

self doubt. Third, the importance of building a support crew to

battle imposter Syndrome. And number four, a power up that's helped accelerate Tiffany's

career. Before we start, I've created a free power sheet sheet to apply Tiffany's

six tips to marketers to combat Imposter Syndrome. You can head over

to marketingpowerups.com or find the link in the show notes and

description. Are you ready? Let's go.

Marketing power ups ready?

Go.

Here's your host, Ramli John.

Super excited to talk to you about Imposter Syndrome for

marketers particularly. I know you did a presentation,

you've done this presentation many times. I'm going to link to it in the episode

and show notes. But you talk about how 58% of

tech workers feel that imposter Syndrome.

And I have a hunch that's probably higher for marketers, maybe just

because of the work that we do, the creative work. It's sometimes hard to measure.

I'm curious, why do you think that is specifically for maybe

why marketers are hit so hard in terms of this Imposter

syndrome? Is it a comparison thing? Is it the hard measurability of marketing

or is it to something else? There's so many different things.

Our world is always changing and always disrupting

itself. I mean, we're in the middle of the AI revolution

right now, so people are like, what's all the job? What's happening?

So we're always kind of set off balance. So that's one area and

also our career path, kind of it seems like there's

only one path, and it's like to keep moving up. So sometimes

we move up when technically we don't want to or when we

don't feel comfortable to, but we feel like that has to be the next step.

And so you get there and you kind of look around and go like,

I don't think I have the skills for this, which is okay,

but you were really good at your individual contributor

job, right? So I think there's pieces of

all these different things that we're kind of always thrust in the uncomfortable in

our worlds. And sometimes those

leaps that we take are bigger than others. And when we take those really big

leaps, we're kind of set a little. Bit off course for a bit interesting.

It's a little bit of you meant you were talking about.

Sometimes it's hard. To when I was young,

way back then, I was like, I thought that

the career progression is like coordinator,

manager, director, or VP and then CMO.

And it's not like, that what path we thought

it was not reality.

Sometimes it's like vertical or like lateral moves

or something else is what I'm hearing. With one reason why

marketers feel this imposter syndrome. Because you feel like

you should be doing something in a different path. And there's

people on Twitter and social media talking about these 50

different paths. I mean, you're like, oh, but I've been working

really hard for this one. Shouldn't I been doing this the whole time?

Am I on the wrong path? And I feel like we're constantly

kind of being shown this other side or other world,

and we think we're not on it, but it

just causes this kind of lack of confidence, so to

speak. Even if you have the skills, which is kind of what imposter syndrome is.

Kind of imposter syndrome is all about having the skills,

having the experience, but just lacking the confidence in

that. Yeah, I feel like the other piece sometimes

wrecks confidence is people

outside of marketing have an idea of what marketing should

do. Especially founders or people you're working

with. They look at other companies. It's so public out there. Oh,

it's like, look at what HubSpot is doing. Should we be doing that?

Or look at what Gong is doing with the social media. Should we be

doing that? And sometimes it's like people give

their unsolicited advice to marketers

and without that thick

skin, sometimes that takes away confidence. Would you

say? You kind of float with the wind. You'll kind of do all these different

things and not really trust your gut when there was a

certain system that maybe you've done this whole time. But now you're in this new

spot, you're closer to the executive team,

and now you're kind of feeling all this pressure

that you maybe never felt before. And they're telling you again,

they're sending you an article being like, let's do this thing.

And it's like, especially like, AI,

let's make blogs. How come we're not doing that?

Why are we automating stuff? And it's like, well, we don't know, blah, blah,

blah. And they're like, no, this company is doing it. It has to be great.

And so unless you have a very

specific way of doing things and you're very assertive

in a lot of ways, then it's really hard sometimes to push those

away. And I did not have that when I worked in house. I'll say that

as a consultant. I do. Because really, when they say that, I'm like,

you know how much work that is? Absolutely not.

I've learned how to be that person. But in house,

I wish I had that skill, but I definitely didn't.

Maybe if I went back, I would. Be a little bit more like,

nah, that's so good. It kind

of ties to one of the you have this presentation around strategies

to overcome Imposter Syndrome. I feel

like one of the strategies you shared is around unmasking your villain.

And I feel like this is part of it. And you

shared a story like there's somebody in your life that

introduced takes away confidence from you. But sometimes,

especially with your boss being there, you can't really replace your boss

unless you look for another job, which makes sense.

I'm curious, what would you suggest

to people where they are in that situation where

they need to make that tough conversation with their boss or

the CEO, that they're

one of the biggest reason why there's Imposter Syndrome in this situation?

Well, I think there's

three kind of things I look at when I look at kind of unmasking your

villain. And one of them is really assessing what's

going on in your brain. So what kind of negative self talk is happening?

Sometimes we're not aware. I call it like getting off of autopilot. Sometimes we have

no idea this stuff that we're saying until I

used to put a timer on myself and every time I hear a beep,

I would go like, what was I thinking about in the last 10 seconds?

And I realized, gosh, I have been saying

terrible things to myself. So becoming self aware

and actually kind of standing like I love. Michael Singer is

the author of Untethered Soul. And he says when a negative self

talk comes in to just lean away from it, which is

such a simple kind of nice thing to think about, like, it's kind of coming

in and just like, lean back, lean back, let it float away.

And that has to happen first because

when you're telling yourself that you're not good enough and this person's better or

whatever, you are not in control of your thoughts. So that's

that. The other thing is we find these people that we

call our villains. So when you

know who your villain is I always say when you're going on social media and

someone could be a lovely person, but you stop and you hate them. And you

don't know why. Because they're living like their perfect life, but they're, like they become

this weird villain whom is just living, like this alternate

universe that you wish you were living. And it's not like they're bad.

It's not that you're bad. It's just you need to not

look at that. You need to mute that because it's affecting your

mental health. And sometimes bosses are

that and that becomes a little bit more difficult to have that conversation.

So my third thing is to just set expectation,

really figure out what

are my boundaries when it comes to this boss. And one thing that people don't

really realize, I think in a work situation,

that person doesn't know you. That person doesn't know how you work,

how you tick. And they're sometimes almost expected to know everything on

day one. But it's your job to kind of let someone know

how you work and what is considered a boundary, because they're just going to

work off whatever script they've been running this whole time. And they have certain

expectations that they're setting and they're trying to set their boundaries. But unless you

are out there saying, you know what,

this is how I work, this is how I like to be autonomous,

this is the system I've always had in place. Tell me which

one you have and maybe we can start learning together on how the

two mix. I like to have an expectations report

card where it's like if I'm talking to a client, we know what

is considered an ABCD and F. So when I

go into a meeting, I know that if I'm getting this amount of leads,

I am at a C, and we all know where I'm at a C,

and that's fine. C's could be average. I mean,

companies have done worse and lived for long lives,

but knowing that I have a C, we can get in there, all that

stress is gone. It's like, I know I have A-C-I know I get it.

But this is what I want to do to improve. And so that's

I think really important to really be able to

set expectations. If you need to use a report curve like that, then do it.

Yeah. I love how you're talking about this as being proactive

in terms of setting that expectation. I think especially

people who are early. When I was early in my career, I expected a

manager to help me. That's what

good managers do. But there's also that proactive

side that we as marketers can take.

You talked about clients. You're setting expectation to your clients, but this can

also apply to managers where you're setting expectation to your VP or

your CEO, whoever you're reporting to. And that report card

is genius. We love that Angie shot Muller. It's not

me. It was her telling me to do it. And I'm giving her full props

here. I imagine it's like a

rubik's. You know, when we were in high school,

we're both based out of Toronto, so like the Ontario public school system,

they would have this rubrics where know

based on these qualities. And then if you meet this,

you get an A or you do B. So you're

actually trying to align your

grading so it's not a surprise at the end of the quarter

where do. It with your friends. And during

COVID I think a lot of people got to kind of almost do a reset

and see, who are my close friends, who are those people that I want to

keep in my life? But as we kind of open up a little bit more

now, we don't know necessarily what is considered

to be who are our ride or dies, who are the people that maybe

come to us for things, but they're never there for us like, really creating

a rapport card for them. So you know how to prioritize your friends and your

time. Because sometimes I think about my

ride or dies and the idea that I'm not there for them when they might

need me is like, crushing. But sometimes certain other friends

will kind of take up space when they don't necessarily

deserve it. And so it's very pragmatic and logical way

of kind of thinking about things, I realize. But sometimes I

find if you want to get the most out of life, you got to have

certain structures in place that help you do it. I love

the Ride and die. Ride or die. That's such a cool it's such a good

we're going to talk about the Shine crew in a bit, but before we do

one of the challenges, especially there's

a lot of things moving in tech. There's been layoffs.

I'm also seeing a lot more marketers jumping full board on terms

of their creatoradvisoryconsulting.

Do you have any advice for marketers who are in

a situation where maybe it's time to move on? Do you have any flags

or kind of signals that maybe the situation you're in,

your boss is the villain and it's time

to escape that situation? Something at

the road. Yeah. I mentor a lot of people, and sometimes

they're in a situation where you're like, you got to go. And I know from

the second I meet them, like, man, they got to leave that job. When I

don't want to be the person that says, like, you got to leave that job.

It's unhealthy. I want them to kind of start thinking about

what the future looks like in the perfect job.

What does that look like? Even? Let's say this one becomes perfect.

What does that actually mean? And some people may say they care about

the fact that I want a personal life or I want to take time out

with my kids, like I'm allowed to go to appointments, or they

invest in my learning more, all these different things.

And then hopefully when you start creating this dream space,

you're looking going like, oh, I'm not in this

will never become that. I'm in a nightmare.

Exactly. But also you have the basis,

and I think this is really important to know when you're looking for jobs,

what is really important to you and how you're going to

sell yourself to a new company, keeping in mind the

things that you never want to do again. And it's like you're never kind of

going back and saying, like, oh, my old company did this, it was terrible.

No, it's like, you know what I would love if a company actually

really supported the fact that I'm a mother and

really supported my education, because I'm

curious. I really want to learn more. I want to be the best at what

I do, and I would love if a company would help me be that.

And so having those types of conversations right from the beginning

not only makes you look really like,

okay, this person knows what they want. And so they

definitely have a different sense of confidence, but also putting

them to task to be like, oh, I'm sorry, no, we don't offer money

for education. You're going to have to figure that out. Which in my day,

it totally was the case. It'd be like, you figure yourself out.

We're not going to give you any money. And they'd say it right off the

bat. And I'd be like, okay, well, he seems kind of cool, so I'll

stick with him. But now I feel like there's so many more options for

that. It's a way different space. So, yeah,

I just daydream, spend time.

Daydreaming, I think is important. Before I continue, I want to thank the sponsor for

this episode, 42 Agency. Now, when you're in scale up

growth mode and you have to hit your KPIs, the pressure is on to

deliver demos and sign ups. And it's a lot to handle. There's demand

gen, email sequences, rev ops and more.

And that's where 42 Agency, founded by my good friend Camille Rexton,

can help you. They're a strategic partner that's help B two B SaaS companies

like Profit, AWOL, Teamwork, Sprout, Social and Hubdoc to build

a predictable revenue engine. If you're looking for performance experts

and creatives to solve your marketing growth problems today and help you build

the foundations for the future, look no further. Visit 42

Agency.com to talk to a strategist right now to learn how

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description. Well, let's get back to this episode.

This is so good. You're just like imagining the future of what the ideal

situation looks like, and then if your situation is not

there, maybe creating a plan on how get there.

You kind of scope out. You're setting the expectation,

going back to what we just talked about as to what you're

looking for in the ideal situation you want to be in. I really love

that. I want to talk about that ride or die now.

So cool. I know you're part of this Shine Crew.

You mentioned it in the presentation.

Why is it so important to have those people?

I love how you put it in that presentation. You said people

who are willing to bury the bodies with you as well. You call

your Shine Crew who are willing pick up the call in the middle of night.

Hey, I need to I know it sounds dark, but bury the bodies with you?

I guess you found those people.

First of all, what is the Shine Crew and how did you find your Shine?

Yeah. So the shine crew started. I was starting to speak at events,

feeling just like I did not belong there.

And one day I was at a speaker's dinner and Joanna Webb from Copyhackers

was sitting next to me. And I was like obsessed. Biggest fan girl that ever

was. Purchased literally everything. She would,

you know, this was my moment to meet her and get to know her and

all the things. And she says hello in a lovely way. Hi, I'm Joanna.

What's your name? And then, because I don't do

small talk really well, I was like, do you ever feel like a fraud?

And she looked at me and was like, you know what? All the time.

And just hearing that from someone. And me and her kind of got into this

conversation about what it was like to be a woman in tech. Other people started

hearing like, Gia Laudy and

who was that? Andrew shot Mueller. All these people kind of joined us.

Talia and we realized in this

conversation that we didn't have people around us who

are really like our wingmen, so to

speak, at work. We weren't having these important conversations

about finances with anyone. We weren't telling people about.

We didn't have people around us who were in the same trajectory we were

with our careers. And so we made a pact that we would kind of keep

talking. And we knew what that meant at the time, it turned into a slack

group. But then as we were kind of walking out,

we were like, what are we going to call ourselves? And I just listened to

Call Your Girlfriend podcast, where they talked about this idea of the Shine theory.

And the idea is, if you don't shine, I don't shine. And I said,

why don't we be called like, the Shine Crew? I totally forgot that I was

the one that named them. It was Joanna that reminded me. Later, again,

imposter syndrome. Like, Joanna must have done it. She's lovely at this thing.

It was her. But, yeah, the Shine crew was invented.

And one thing that I will say that started

from one conversation, when I go to networking events, sometimes I

watch people and they're like, trying to meet everyone and they're handing out their cards

and this flurry of activity, right, that is null it.

I go to an event, even to this day, look in the

corners, look at the people that are like, maybe a little bit quieter, kind of

just setting the scene. I go up to them and I introduce myself and I

make sure I have long conversations with people. And you know what? Those people may

turn out to be friends. Maybe they turn nothing happens in that moment,

but the next time I see them, they may become a friend,

but my conversations start like that

and I make sure then to follow up with them later. And over

time, I have found that I have all these little groups of

friends, all from different areas, but as soon as we

get together, it's deep conversations and I make my time for

them and nothing else. And I

have little Shine crews everywhere that have been born,

whether it's grow class, which is where I'm an instructor, or we

have this slack group here in Toronto called DMM, like Digital Marketing Mastermind,

which is like 60 of us. And it's just like you create

this crew of people and you can make it yourself. It's no one else's

job, it's like you and it only takes one person at a time. That's so

good. I think that shine theory.

If you don't shine, I don't shine. We don't shine.

That's so good. You kind of gave a little

bit of some tips for people to find you shared

here's why it's important you have the support group. There's people

who will shine with you. You gave a little bit of a teaser of

how people can find their Shine crew, talk to

people and connect with them. Do you have any tips for people who are listening

in right now to find their own Shine crew,

so to speak? Yeah, I think it's all about

figuring out who your network find the things

that you love to do. I think I'll start there. Find the things that you

love to do. So I go to live music

now. There's a crew of people now that I kind of have met

in my journey of finding live music. I'll tell other people

and be like, I've been doing this thing and they're like, next time you go

to this kind of show, give me a call. And so now I have these

people from all everywhere just kind of joining me, and now I've become

friends with them who I maybe didn't know them really well before,

if it's work. I had one of my

mentees came to me and said, I just don't have any friends. So she just

moved to Toronto and she's been here for a while, kind of stuck in work.

And she's like I'm like, OK, then you're a designer. Find a designer group here

in Toronto, go to those types of events, meet one person, start there,

one person, let them know that you're new to that

will be enough for them to be join.

Joining.

When I go on stage and ask people to find their Shine crew.

I have been so surprised by the types of shine crews that were created.

There was one of like a group of dads who just kind of like

met each other at the talk but

wanted to talk about being dads and some of the challenges they have. So now

they have a Shine crew of dads. I met one where for me, all my

official Shine crew is all women. But I was talking to

Luke McCarthy and he's like, wait, I'm in a Shine crew?

Are you the reason I'm in a Shine crew?

And I'm like, oh she's my other Shine crew know here in

and so it's like watching that happen has been

just beautiful because it's almost like by creating

a name for it, you have permission to make

it. Like I just read this thing about making a Shine crew like

I want to do it. Do you want to? So it's like it gives people

permission to create it even like a knitting group of marketers

that give sweaters to homeless people. They knit sweaters for homeless.

Just wild. So yeah, it could be anything. It's just follow your

hobbies, follow what your job is and find people within

that space and one at a time. That's so good.

You mentioned follow your hobbies.

There's also the piece around finding people who you vibe

I don't know how to say that word where there

is that same energy to help each other out.

I want to help you generally help you as much as I

want to get help from each other. So that's super cool.

I want to shift the final tip. We've talked about

unmasking your villain. We talked about finding your shankru. One other

thing that I want to cover is around this idea of visualization.

You talked about actually in that presentation you showed

this video from Nike where visualize what

success looks like for you but your legacy.

And you mentioned also interestingly enough that this is one of the hardest

things for you. I'm curious, first of all,

why is visualization so important and why is it sometimes

so hard for people for marketers even

to visualize what their legacy

can look like? Yeah. So for me, one of

the most important things I ever did was think about what

my legacy is going to be. So really like looking

in the future, figuring out the life that I want coming back. We were

talking about this before coming back and saying like, okay, does it align with where

I am right now and how do I realign myself to get to that legacy?

And one of the most important aspects of that is

actually daydreaming and thinking about what

are the things that you actually want? And we don't do that as adults.

When I was a kid, I knew that I wanted to live in

a loft in the city. I wanted a brick wall and

I wanted to be in tech and all this stuff. And I got it.

I got it because I lived and breathed that dream

when I was a kid. But somehow over time,

we lost it. So when I was sitting in front of this woman who is

my coach, who I talk about in the Imposter Syndrome talk,

she had asked me to, if you're going to create this legacy,

I want you to live it, breathe it. I want you to embody

it. And I went, like, not like,

not really a visualization. I lost that skill.

And she goes, okay, well, what does it feel

like when what do you think it is going to feel like when you actually

hit this legacy? And I said, I feel inspired.

I feel motivated. I feel all these things.

So in order to do that, I started looking on YouTube, and I

started trying to find videos that made me feel that whether

the inspiration, the motivation and this Nike ad is just like the embodiment

of that feeling for me, I've watched it, I swear,

over like a thousand times. I still get goosebumps. It's one of

those really well done pieces of content.

And when I started watching it,

I watched it every morning for like, months, I would make sure that I

matched that moment, that visualization that I had to that feeling.

And I would say, like, okay, maybe I can't get

there with my visualization. Maybe I can't feel that motivation yet.

But I'm going to kind of put the two together and

watch this video first, feel that feeling, then immediately start thinking

about what I want in the future. And somewhere down the line of

doing that, things started to happen.

I started to be able to create that legacy for myself slowly,

but because I was able to match these emotions

to it. And I think that's, like,

it becomes kind of easy. And one thing after

kind of sharing this, this man came up to me after, and he's like,

you know, I had to try to find my video also. And it took me

a really long time, but then my son took his first steps and watching

him struggle, watching him kind of like, struggle, fall,

struggle, fall. He did that a couple of times, and then he just started walking.

And I caught it on video. He's like, I watch that every morning.

And no matter what my day is going to be, I know there's going to

be ups and downs, but you know what? I'm going to do it. And his

legacy is going to be to create this beautiful world for his kid. And so

that matched it, and that's what he was able to do.

And I think if we can find those videos that we can watch over and

over again. There's a Folgers ad that I used to watch of a little kid

that used to be like, I love my house. I love this.

It's the cutest video you've ever seen in your life, but that would pet me

up in the morning and get me moving and be like and I would go

around my house being like this, I love that. But it was like,

so I can get that energy or excitement right, and so I can kind of

get to the goals that I had to for the day. So it's a great

visualization technique, and I think it's really important for people to

do that. Reminds me of this exercise that they did in high

school where we did a dream board, where we

would cut up pictures out of magazines, stick it on a

poster board, and this is my dream board. I feel like

sometimes, as adults, you mentioned it,

we've lost that ability to daydream of the possibilities

and guess we just kind of go with the flow,

essentially. And sometimes that you're saying is like,

having realizing what could be possible can open up more

doors than you think is. Yeah. And you hear these stories of these people that

say, like, my whole life changed after this moment.

All these bad things happened, and then everything changed because you probably sat

down and actually asked yourself for the first time in, like,

15 years, what do I actually want? And you were able to

visualize that future, and you started to create it. You started to realign

yourself to it. And it's not rocket science, but it's like sometimes

you're so in the shuffle, and you're kind of doing your day to day that

you forget. And so, yeah, definitely, I'd say spend some

time daydreaming wherever you can, even if it's a couple of minutes in the

morning. And if meditation is your thing,

then definitely do that. I meditate myself,

but I do always add when I'm calm, the little

kind of couple of minutes of the kind of things that I imagine

for myself ten years from now.

This exercise is also great, especially if at the

moment, you feel like an imposter or I'm feeling the imposter,

and then you zoom out a bit and realize this

is just one moment in time in the larger scheme

of things that you realize.

I think you mentioned this. Think this will pass, or something like that. Whatever you're

going through right. You shall pass. Yeah. And I think

also when I try to zoom out

like that, there's, like, a situation where my business was

a few years ago where things just was not going well.

I was losing a lot of money. I did not like the look of my

bank account. Everything was really scary. And then I got

out of it. I just got out of it. Things worked well, and then it

happened again in the beginning of this year, where it was like, I didn't know

what was going to happen, and I could have just stayed in that state and

just gave myself all the negative talk of like,

you deserve this, you're bad at your job, whatever. I could have gone down that

route. Instead, I remembered the last time that happened.

And I'm like, how did you even get out of that? And it's like,

I don't know. You just work. You just did your job. You kept doing it

well, and it just happened again. It was just like a weird slump and

it came back. And so I always try to remind myself

of times when, you know what? You didn't do it, but you

did this in the past, but you're good now. And it's that resiliency

that I think it's what kind of keeps us going.

But remembering all the moments where you had to be resilient

and you kind of got through it is really important because we're all going to

fail. No one's going to be perfect, but it's how you deal with it.

This reminds me of what you just said. Reminds me

of an advice I heard from Manuela Brassano,

the head of marketing at fellow app, where she

has a wins folder. She has this folder with a bunch of Wins

and storing that. Like,

hey, remember that time I was able to overcome

this business struggle? It's just a great helpful

tip that I've heard from other folks. I should create.

Mine's called Happy Thoughts, and it's a folder of my desktop.

So good. Happy Thoughts, you come up with the

greatest names. You should be called a naming

consultant. Like, shine through. My own company.

It's so funny because my own company, Slow Joe, like the

box, the couple's bucket list is just couple's bucket list.

It's just like that is what it is. Nothing more, nothing less.

It's very SEO focused. But like other stuff in my life,

I have these fun little names, but. Happy Thoughts

itself is very clear. Like when Negative Thoughts is coming

in, open up the Happy Thoughts folder and then really

bask yourself in that. That's so

good. I'm not looking for

specifics, but do you store images? Do you maybe even

like letters that you write to your future self? What is in your

Happy Thoughts folder? Like, what kind of stuff do you store in there? I'm going

to start doing letters to my future self. I like that idea. Thank you.

A lot of it actually comes from I'm an instructor at McMaster.

I teach SEO SEM there. And at the end of the year,

you get this feedback, right?

It can be rough, I'm not going to lie, but sometimes

you get these just love these people who just spend a really long time

sending you really nice things about how you've helped them. Or I'll get like a

year later, I'll get my students coming back and sending me something on LinkedIn about

how my big thing is when I teach a course,

it's not about getting the job. It's about what you're going to do on

day one. I feel really strong about

that's what a good course should help you with. And so hearing

that they knew exactly what to do and hit the ground running always gives me

that. And so that and images of my family. And actually

I have pictures all over my house of just like, happy moments.

And so I'm always reminded of things like I

literally 20, just going down my stairs of just moments

in time or even photos of places I've been

to around the world, but just like one little thing that will remind me of

that place. Those things just kind of give you a little

smile and it makes you feel just out of

the moment, which is what I expect. That's so good.

Thank you. I'm going to start doing that as well,

taking photos and testimonials and just

hit me in writing letters to your future self like, you can do it,

you can get over this. That's so good. Yeah. You know what, it's funny because

I recently read like a journal entry for

some reason. I picked up a book in the middle of like it was 2021

and I had written something to myself and then of course, just put in

a bookshelf, never looked at it again. And I reread it recently and

I was just like, wow, so much happened.

And you don't expect sometimes in a year or a year and a half how

much could happen and my confidence, how much it changed

and how I felt like an adult when I was reading or being like,

wow, you have matured in two

years. But it's nice sometimes to see that,

of being able to compare yourself to

your past, because then it gives you a lot more confidence in the future.

If I learned that many lessons in this year and a

half, imagine the lessons I'm going to learn in the next six months, a year,

two years. That's so good. Thank you so much for sharing that.

I want to share garris and talk about career power ups. Those are things

that help accelerate your career. That could be anything that we've chatted

about. But you've been in marketing for a while now. You worked at Shopify

Achievers. You talked about being a marketing instructor at Master University,

which is this big university here in Canada. Also at grow

class, you're the founder of Flow joe, I'm curious

what's a few things or maybe one thing that's helped

accelerate your career during this

past few times in your marketing.

Yeah, I think ever since I first started, I always followed

my passion for things. So if I wanted to learn something, I went

ahead and learned it and kind of dug deep. And if I wanted

to learn more and wanted to be paid for it, I find a job that

would help me with the premise that

I may not know this, but I will based on

me learning this other stuff in the past. I've done that.

That is really important. I found that I never

stop learning. And even I mean, I've been marketing for 20 years. I never

stop learning. If Ga Forest taught us anything, you cannot stop for a second

bubbling it that's really important. And people hearing

that you're that type of person is really important. Number two, always mentor.

Now, I'm not saying be a mentee. I'm saying always mentor.

From the time I was like 25, I was mentoring already. People in university

by 30, I was mentoring people that were like 25, 26.

Now I get to do all the way up 20, up to 40,

and even, sometimes even someone older who's restarting their career

and they don't know what to do, that being a mentor.

And I'm not saying it's official in official capacity. It could be you catching

up with someone every month, every couple of months,

or there's official programs out there. But doing that

as like, you're giving back will teach you so

much about what you've learned in the past. It will connect you

to new, interesting people. It will keep you understanding what the world is

like, kind of for people coming in. It helps

you be more empathetic and sympathetic

to kind of the struggles of people who are maybe

1015 years younger than you. And it also allows you to

be grateful for the situation you're in at the moment

and what you need to be doing differently. And so I think there's so much

that can be learned from that. And if you do have like, I have certain

people that they don't know that they're my mentor, but I just like, every once

in a while, I'm like, if this is for dinner, let me buy you dinner.

And then I just like and again, it's not like I'm going to

pick your brain. I would never write someone and be like, Pick your brain?

No, I'll be like, I'd love to buy you dinner,

or I'd love to buy you a coffee, and I just want

to know about what your days are like. And people love

that. They love doing that. So I think being curious,

stick to learning, and that kind of will

help you figure out what you want to do. I used to have

a bucket list when I was a kid. One of the things was I wanted

to create a product. I didn't know what that product was. It turned into

flojo, turned into card games, but it was just this little piece of like

I didn't know what it was, but it was a thing on my list of

bucket list things to do. And then, because I am not

very creative, I came out with a product called the Bucket Clip

mom's Bucket List, couple Bucket list. But again, it was

based off this weird little lists and dreams that I had that

I just kept pecking away at and like a side hustle,

kind of just kind of dolly side hustle is a very slow side

hustle at that. But it was something I was passionate about and just kind

of kept working at and see what it would be like. And so keep doing

those things. And it doesn't have to be with work. I mean, it could

be. I picked up my piano again for the first time in 20 years

and started playing. And whenever it is, it's so

cool to kind of go back and do those things and go back to the

things you love to do as a kid. I'm sure there's an adult version of

it and it is so much fun when you kind of get into it.

That's so funny. You said adult version a few years

ago. The whole boom with coloring,

adult coloring. Books. This is

so good. And the whole idea about learning is so true.

Marketing, especially this past few years,

has I mean, the past few months, has really

accelerated AI and J Four

and what's going to happen with SEO? You really have to

have that culture as marketing. You have to have the culture

of always be learning and also always be

teaching. Because I've had friends so good that

they're seeing this AI thing and they're going, it doesn't matter. I'm not

going to deal with that right now. And for me,

this is a big deal. This is the difference between us having jobs and

not we just need to learn how to use it. It is a new thing.

And so what I would do is incorporate it, whether I was

talking to a friend and just like, look at this funny thing that I did,

because I knew that they were kind of hesitant because it was something so new.

And as adults, sometimes you do not want to jump in. But then I found

a way of reaching them, whether it was like, let me make a story for

your kid, or they're the hero, and let me show you how to

do that. Or show this person how they can talk to their

boss by writing a letter using chat GPT or a legal

document, like figuring out how to make a scary legal

email so someone could send the person that's living in their house like

a tenant, just like finding ways to inquire. And then they go,

oh, I love this thing. This thing is great. But always

be trying to teach some of the stuff because, you know as a marketer

what's coming. And if your gut is telling you, like, something big

is happening, bring all of your friends, bring all the

people that you've been working with with you.

And don't be the one that's like, I swear it's going to be a big

thing. Don't be that person. Show them all these cool little

examples of how you use it. Make them a picture on mid journey.

Kind of try to incorporate them. So, yeah, that's what

I would suggest. That's so good. The learning to

teaching is like a huge it's reaffirming what you know,

essentially, especially if it's new.

One final question before we wrap up. It's a

question that I love asking especially. It's more like looking back.

If you can send an advice to a younger version of you,

like a younger version of Tiffany who's maybe starting out in marketing,

what would be that piece of advice? Or pieces of advice

that you would give to your younger self? Once again, it could

be around career, it could be around imposter syndrome, it could be

around marketing advice or SEO,

whatever. It can't be any investing advice.

What would be that piece of advice you'd give your younger version of you?

Ask for help more. Wow. There were times

in my life where I kind of held it all in, that I didn't know

how to do something. And it held me back. It held me back. Maybe it

could have been only three months. Could have been only six months. But one question,

one sitting down being like, I don't understand how to do this.

Could have excelled my career. Although it wouldn't have got me where I am today.

Kind of plugging away, but it would definitely make things a

little bit easier at some point. I didn't think I was allowed to, which I

did. Thank you to Tiffany for being on the show. You can find out more

about her work@tiffanythesilva.com, her productflowjo

co, and following her on LinkedIn and Twitter. All of those links are in

the show notes and description. Once again, thank you Tiffany for being on the show.

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