All posts by Emmeline Chang

Can you meet your income goals for 2015?

As we head into 2015, you probably have an income goal in mind for the new year. But do you know what it will take to truly make that happen?

The best way to ensure success is to know exactly what it will take—and plan for it. Then, instead of taking random actions and hoping that they work out (and going into panic, self-blame, or despair when they don’t), you can take the step-by-step actions you need to reach your goals.

Here’s the overall process for doing that:

  1. Look at prices for each of your programs, packages, and services. At those rates, how many of each will you need to sell to meet your income goal in 2015? How many clients will you need to enroll?
  2. How many hours will you need to deliver the services for each of those programs, packages, or clients?</li>If these numbers are overwhelming (you’ve discovered you need to enroll 600 clients this year just to make your modest income goal!), it’s time to get higher-paying clients or streamline the way you deliver services (or both!).
  3. How many people do you need to reach to enroll your target number of clients, or sell your target number of programs?

If you’re more established in your business (with a steady income stream), you’ll then use marketing to reach your goals.

  • What marketing will help you most effectively reach those people?
    • Choose several major marketing events throughout the year, and put those in your calendar.
    • What regular marketing efforts will you put in place to support those larger marketing events?
    • What kind of planning and lead time will each of these things take?
    • Who do you need to reach out to or partner with for each one?
  • What systems or processes do you need to set up? (web pages, email campaigns, shopping carts or ticketing services, payment processors, welcome packages and contracts, etc.)
  • What support do you need?

If you’re less established, you’ll focus first on reaching out to potential clients one on one or through referrals.

Either way, you want to make sure you are correctly positioned—and can talk about the solutions you offer—so that clients see the value of working with you.

By taking these steps and making these plans, you’ll put yourself in place to actually reach—or even surpass—your 2015 income goals.

Are you perfect, or are you in action?

My inner critic is strong. In the past, I would agonize over getting something perfect—a line in a story, a piece of copy for my website, the approach to a project. Often I procrastinated because my standards were so high, and the pressure to perform so overwhelming, that I just froze. What this meant, of course, was that everything moved slowly. Progress on my stories, the growth of my business—all of it was slow. Of course, I blamed and criticized myself harshly for this, which then made it even harder to work effectively (after all, how easy is it to get things done when two-thirds of your emotional energy is spent attacking yourself and simultaneously trying to defend yourself from that attack?).

What I’ve learned over the years is that when we demand perfection from ourselves, we make it incredibly hard to perform. And when we live with the belief that self-criticism is a virtue, we can paralyze ourselves. Of course, high standards are good. Crucial, in fact. But, when we pay more attention to self-criticism and self-doubt than to taking the next right action, we strangle ourselves with our standards. Not only that: we kill joy, fun, and pleasure.

This dynamic can take many forms. Here are some signs that your inner critic and inner “doubter” are getting in your way:

  • You regularly put off taking action because you don’t yet feel ready to “do it right.”
  • You tend to see everything that could go wrong with a project—rather than looking at the possibilities.
  • You frequently change your mind—you worry a lot about whether you’re making the right choice.
  • When you’re about to make a decision, you often doubt yourself and pull back.
  • When you finish something, you don’t celebrate much. Instead, you’re looking at what went wrong, what could have been better, and what you’ll do next.

You might ask, “but what if I fail?” After all, failure is what we’re trying to avoid, right? Actually, no. When you’re trying new things in a business, it’s often more useful to “fail fast.” Rather than hanging back to avoid failure, act fast so you can find out quickly whether something works. (Of course, you want to test things on a smaller scale so that any mistakes are less time-consuming or expensive.) Then, based on what you learn, you can adjust your approach. “Failing fast” lets you move faster, learn faster, and succeed sooner.

Here’s what I want you to get: If you are someone whose inner critic or inner doubter are holding you back, it’s crucial that you transform this dynamic. Imperfect action truly does trump perfect inaction.

And if you’re stuck? Action is the way out. Any little action will get your momentum going—and then you can build up the energy to take on the bigger actions.

Want some exercises to get you past doubt and into action?
Click here to get the exercises.

FREE teleclass: How to Sign High-Paying Clients in 5 Simple Steps

Are you a creative or transformational entrepreneur who is

  • Tired of long hours, unstable income, or sacrificing your personal life?
  • Constantly working to find new clients?
  • Wondering whether it’s truly possible for you to get paid well doing what you love?

The fact is, you can have a passion-based business that pays you well and supports the life you truly want—including time for pleasure and play. You can have ideal, high-paying clients who value your work.

 On this call, we’ll talk about

  • The biggest mistakes most solopreneurs make (costing them tens of thousands of dollars)
  • Three limiting beliefs that sabotage your ability to sign ideal, high-paying clients
  • How to use your unique brilliance to create incredible value for clients—and get paid accordingly
  • My simple, five-step system for signing high-paying clients
  • The strategic steps that can end the constant hustle—and bring joy and fun back into your business

DETAILS: Friday, Sept. 19, 12 noon-1:30 p.m. ET

Register now to save your space! 

 

 

A Taste of Tea: Clipper ships

Every couple weeks, I’ll be sharing a taste of my fiction. I’m working on a collection of stories about people from vastly different times and places whose lives are shaped by tea. Characters in these stories include the mistress of an Indian tea plantation under British colonial rule and her servant, a man whose career is destroyed by the Boston Tea Party, a sailor shanghai’ed onto a tea-carrying clipper ship, the owners of a gay and lesbian teahouse in mid-1990s Taipei, and more.

Think of this as a tasting menu—a little morsel of something savory, sweet, or spicy to give flavor to your day. 🙂 Enjoy!!

 

From a story about a man shanghai’ed onto a tea-carrying clipper ship…

It began badly for John Syme: a meager supper, a harsh squabble, an escape to the bar, a drunken sprawl on the nighttime waterfront. He woke with the queasy feeling of water lulling somewhere beneath him, an expanse of wooden surface that filled his bleary vision. White sails stretched above him like wings.

He jerked with recognition. He was on a ship. In a predicament.

 

Click here to get future tastes of fiction!

Connect to your unique brilliance (and get highly paid)

Why creative and transformational entrepreneurs struggle to make money

If you’re a creative or transformational entrepreneur (a writer, coach, designer, healer, or someone doing work based on your passions), it can sometimes seem impossible to make a great living.

The problem is, these fields are flooded with people pricing themselves incredibly low—or even giving their services away for free—just for the privilege of doing what they love.

So how do you get past this? One key: Connect to your unique brilliance.

When you work from your unique brilliance, you give clients something no one else can offer. This is what attracts your ideal clients—and allows you to charge the rates you deserve.

Now, you may be thinking: but I don’t have a unique brilliance! I assure you that you do. 🙂 Everyone does.

 

Your unique brilliance

Your unique brilliance is not manifested in awards or industry recognition. Your unique brilliance is more than your talents or the specific work you do. It’s a special quality and skill that you call on when you’re at your best. It’s the part that comes through when you’re in “that golden flow”—when you lose track of time because you’re channeling divine creativity and intuition. It’s the part you’re drawing from when work feels like play and you never want the feeling to end.

Your unique brilliance lives inside your zone of genius. To give you a better understanding of that idea, let’s contrast it with other “zones” of work.

  • Your zone of incompetence: These are the things you’re just not good at. (For me, this zone includes navigating to new places on my own—I have the worst sense of direction!)
     
    The best way to handle activities in this zone? Avoid doing them! Get support, delegate, or find a creative workaround. (I let my husband or my GPS handle navigation. :-))
  • Your zone of competence: You’re perfectly competent at these activities, but someone else could do them just as well. (My personal example: organizing office files.)
     
    Many entrepreneurs spend too much time in this zone. Delegating or automating these activities frees you to find more clients, do more of the work you love, and do your work better.
  • Your zone of excellence: This is the area where you excel. Most successful people have careers working in this zone. This zone can be seductive—you usually perform well, are highly paid, and reap a lot of social rewards (praise, promotions, professional recognition). But, this zone doesn’t feed your soul. You may wonder why you’re losing inspiration when you work in a field you love and excel at.
     
    My personal example: When I worked in advertising, I was successful—I wrote great copy, constantly came up with new ad concepts, strategized about launches, helped win new business pitches, and managed a team of writers. I made good money and got promoted quickly. But, I wasn’t working with my deepest passions, and I wasn’t fully using my unique brilliance. Eventually, I left advertising to focus entirely on my own writing and my coaching business—both of which put me in my zone of genius.
  • Your zone of genius: In this zone, you are using your unique brilliance. You do things you are uniquely suited to do—things that draw on your special gifts and strengths. (Other people may share your unique brilliance, but it won’t manifest in exactly the same way.)
     
    My unique brilliance is connecting to the deep authenticity of a moment—to energetically encourage that authenticity to unfold and find expression. With clients, that means I can quickly take them to the truest vision of what they want to birth. And, when I provide guidance about business strategy and practices, I can easily connect clients to the blocks that keep them from actually implementing those practices—and help them transform those blocks into authentic and powerful action.

 

Why it’s so important to work from your unique brilliance

Working (and living) from your unique brilliance makes your life better in every way. You stand out from others in your field, do better work, and feel more joy. Being in your zone of brilliance raises your energy. It gives you a passionate glow that inspires and attracts others. Because you’re working at a higher level and giving your clients much more value, you’ll be able to charge higher rates and sign better clients. Most importantly, you’ll move through each day with passion, purpose, and deep pleasure.

 

Exercise: How to connect to your unique brilliance

Click here to get the exercise.