Get ready for a super insightful episode this week. My special guest, Pam Hamilton, joined me for a chat about all things podcasting. Pam, a mindset and visibility expert, shares her recent journey of creating her own podcast, “Becoming Seen,” and offers some awesome advice for navigating the world of podcast launching.
Soak up Pam’s wisdom on facing your fears, embracing your authentic self, and having the courage to make a pivot when you recognize it’s needed. It’s going to be a fun and enlightening conversation, so grab your favorite drink and get ready to be inspired!
Don’t Miss Inside This Episode:
- Embracing change. Pam highlights the importance of pivoting in her early podcasting journey and how she realized she needed to make a fix in the name of her show to be discoverable.
- The challenges with getting started with your podcast and how to find support. And how it all boils down to taking one step and then another.
- Discover some of the best tried-and-true software to make podcast production easier and less time-consuming.
- You can’t fix something without taking action and getting feedback about what needs fixing.
Links and products mentioned in today’s episode:
Get your copy of Pam’s free Visibility Journal
Books mentioned in this episode:
Feel the Fear and Do It Anyway by Susan Jeffers
The Big Leap by Gay Hendricks
Atomic Habits by James Clear
Software mentioned in this episode:
Audacity: Free, open-source audio editing software.
Descript: Editing audio is as easy as highlighting text. Monthly fee. Can be paused if need be.
Castmagic: The key to quickly and beautifully creating show notes and social media assets for your podcast. Monthly fee.
Other podcasts mentioned in this episode:
Pam’s Podcast: Becoming Seen
Karen Robinson’s Podcast: Heal Thrive Dream Podcast
About Pam Hamilton
Pam Hamilton is a mindset and visibility expert who’s serious about helping women business owners over 50 get past the mindset hurdles that keep them invisible and playing small so they can live full out in their purpose and create a life they love.
Pam’s Website
Connect With Pam on Social
Pam’s free Facebook group: Building Visibility
Pam’s Facebook page: The Coaching Lawyer
Instagram: @coachinglawyer
About Your Host
Melissa Brown, MD – Coach, Author, Speaker, Teacher, and Podcast Host.
After leaving medical practice in 2009, Melissa discovered the online world and never looked back! After coach certification, she began a healthy lifestyle coaching practice online and quickly fell in love with blogging, writing, and content marketing.
Melissa believes that coaches have the power to change the world. Unfortunately, too many coaches get discouraged by the amount of content they need to create for marketing their business, which can lead to feeling overwhelmed and giving up on their dreams. There’s such a ripple effect when a dream dies, so Melissa is on a mission to help coaches and solopreneurs overcome the overwhelm when it comes to content creation so they keep those dreams alive.
Your content can impact massive amounts of people and positively change the world. You’ve got content in there inside you; let’s get it out into the world.
Check out these social media sites:
She’s Got Content Facebook group:
Get your FREE Never Run Out of Content Ideas Tool Kit/Workbook
Thanks for listening!
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Transcript
Hello there, content creators. You're listening to the She's Got
Speaker:Content podcast, where it's all about creating content for
Speaker:your coaching business. I'm your host, Doctor Melissa
Speaker:Brown, and I'm here every week to help you get your content
Speaker:out of your head, out of your heart, and out there into the world
Speaker:where that information and your services can impact the
Speaker:most people. Get ready to take notes today, and
Speaker:then Take action, content creators. Let's dive in with
Speaker:today's episode because you've got content to get out
Speaker:there. Welcome back, content creators. I
Speaker:am here today with my guest, Pam Hamilton. She
Speaker:is a mindset and visibility expert, And she's very
Speaker:serious about helping women business owners over 50 get past
Speaker:the mindset hurdles that keep them invisible and playing small
Speaker:so they can live full out in their purpose and create a life they
Speaker:love. Pam recently started her own
Speaker:podcast, and I thought it would be such fun And so
Speaker:informative to have her on the show and talk about her experience starting
Speaker:her new podcast. So let's welcome Pam. Thank
Speaker:you. Hi, Melissa. How you doing? I'm happy to be here.
Speaker:Yeah. I am so happy. We had a little conversation
Speaker:via email last year, and I said, oh, I would really love to have you
Speaker:on the show after you've had a few episodes under your belt. And You
Speaker:reached out to me after the 1st of the year here, so I'm so glad
Speaker:we were able to get this scheduled. So first of all, Pam, tell
Speaker:us about your business, what you do. I know I read intro.
Speaker:But tell us a little bit more about you and who you serve
Speaker:and what kind of work you're doing out there and putting out in the world.
Speaker:Sure. So I do mindset and visibility work. I
Speaker:coach. I speak. I'm an author. I've written
Speaker:One book that's a solo book, The Ten Principles of Visibility,
Speaker:and I've coauthored a couple of different books.
Speaker:And I'm very, very, very intentional about
Speaker:helping all the women that are struggling with visibility. I'm
Speaker:all about helping them find the courage to be Because that's
Speaker:the problem that I see people having. They are
Speaker:afraid to put themselves out there. And so many people talk about
Speaker:marketing and they wanna help them, but you can't
Speaker:do the marketing if there's this fear holding you
Speaker:back. Right. You need to get the courage to be seen in order
Speaker:to implement the strategies and techniques of marketing or
Speaker:anything else that you're gonna do. So it's like you helped them
Speaker:take off that invisibility cloak. Absolutely.
Speaker:Absolutely. Yeah. Because so often, they just don't
Speaker:Trust in themselves to be able to say the things that they need to say
Speaker:or do. They don't trust that their
Speaker:message needs to be heard. So it's just helping
Speaker:them step into their own skin comfortably.
Speaker:Well, there's such a need for this. So I'm so glad that you're out there
Speaker:doing it. And for those of you who have just met
Speaker:Pam, Pam is a recovering lawyer,
Speaker:Recovering attorney. So like me, she had a
Speaker:different career and now is online sharing some of
Speaker:her experience and genius in a different way. Yes.
Speaker:Absolutely. I was just actually talking about that
Speaker:how In:Speaker:was taking care of my clients' legal needs Mhmm. And yet I was
Speaker:dreaming of coaching them. And I was coaching some of them
Speaker:for free, but I was dreaming of doing that full time. And now I
Speaker:am, and I'm really, really happy Would help That is so
Speaker:cool. I'm so glad that you've made that pivot.
Speaker:Tell us a little bit about your podcast. What's the name of it,
Speaker:and what's the mission, the goal for your podcast?
Speaker:Just go ahead and tell us Whatever you think we would like to know about
Speaker:your podcast. Great. So my podcast is called Becoming
Speaker:Seen, And it's about the art and science of
Speaker:creating authentic visibility. We don't want people to just be
Speaker:out there Trying to be out there for no reason or being out there
Speaker:inauthentically. We want them to be themselves and be
Speaker:comfortable in their own skin. And the podcast is about
Speaker:helping people uncover the things that get in
Speaker:the way to doing that and actually be able to
Speaker:live as your authentic self, to own your strengths and
Speaker:your differences as being An integral
Speaker:part of who you are and just embracing that and knowing that the
Speaker:people that resonate with you will be attracted
Speaker:to who you actually are. And you started this
Speaker:podcast in:Speaker:Yes. Okay. So you've got about 3, 4 months
Speaker:behind you? It may maybe 2 or 3. Not
Speaker:I don't think 4, but 2 or 3 months. I started it
Speaker:In late:Speaker:I needed to pivot just a little. Alright.
Speaker:Tell us about that. I know there was a different name that you started out
Speaker:with, and there was kind of quickly there was a pivot to a
Speaker:different name. So I love that you just went ahead and made
Speaker:that change, and I think that also is so empowering to other people who
Speaker:think, I can't start a podcast because I'm gonna get it wrong.
Speaker:And what if I make a mistake or I don't
Speaker:like the name that I choose? So many different things hold people back from
Speaker:getting started. For me, it was the Stupid music.
Speaker:Intro music that helped me back resolve. Your
Speaker:intro music, though. I loved it. Thank you. But it's it's like
Speaker:That's such an unimportant part of a
Speaker:podcast. Some people don't even have it. Yeah. So tell
Speaker:us about Getting started in your pivot.
Speaker:So, yeah, so I got held back for a long time too because I had
Speaker:to figure out music. I had to figure out intro. I had to figure
Speaker:out how I was gonna edit it. All of these different things that I
Speaker:thought, oh, you gotta have this in a podcast. But I knew I wanted to
Speaker:call it I See You Because I wanted people
Speaker:to know that I see them, that if they're invisible and they're struggling
Speaker:with being seen, if they're whispering like they're not supposed to be
Speaker:heard, I see them because I was them, and I
Speaker:I knew that's what I wanted to name my podcast.
Speaker:But What I had forgotten was that there was a
Speaker:movie that came out called Avatar. Mhmm. And
Speaker:one of the key lines in that movie was, I see you. Like, I really
Speaker:see you. And so there were dozens of
Speaker:podcast named I See You Uh-huh.
Speaker:Which I hadn't realized because the first thing I did
Speaker:was I went and got the domain name ICU for
Speaker:my podcast and the ICU podcast. I
Speaker:got both of those domain names. That's amazing that you were able to
Speaker:grab that. Yeah. I was able to grab both domain names, not
Speaker:understanding that in the podcast world,
Speaker:people don't always use the domain name for their
Speaker:podcast name because they're on these different hosting platforms.
Speaker:Mhmm. And those platforms,
Speaker:their the name of their podcast is on those platforms, and those
Speaker:platforms just let them have a subdomain name, so they
Speaker:don't go get the domain name. So knowing that you have
Speaker:the domain name Doesn't mean a whole lot, and I did not
Speaker:know that. And so I launched my podcast, but it was
Speaker:hard for people to find. And it was
Speaker:under a name that, like I said, dozens of podcast
Speaker:owners had it, and Several of them have been in there
Speaker:way longer than me and then established a marketplace. There was a guy on
Speaker:NPR that had one. There was this play. I didn't feel
Speaker:like I could ever really get my I
Speaker:was gonna be able to really get mine out there, Make make a a
Speaker:difference. And only because I wanted the people that
Speaker:need to hear the message to be able to hear the message, to be able
Speaker:to find it, and And they weren't going to be able to because of all
Speaker:the noise surrounding it. And one of the
Speaker:things I've learned is that Just because you made
Speaker:a mistake and just because you've been doing it a long time,
Speaker:doesn't mean you have to keep doing it. You can change.
Speaker:Oh, that's a mic drop right there.
Speaker:Yeah. That is so important to To
Speaker:to realize to understand that listen. We can always make a pivot.
Speaker:Mhmm. It's not like you're getting a tattoo. Exactly.
Speaker:Yeah. You can make a change. Yeah. And there are people
Speaker:that get tattoos that change them up. Yeah? That's all painful,
Speaker:but I would look like yeah. No. Neither would I.
Speaker:But but each his own. Exactly.
Speaker:Yeah. It's about changing it up. It's about making it
Speaker:work because you're here to serve the people that
Speaker:you're trying to work with. You wanna serve them. You wanna make sure that they're
Speaker:getting what they need out of it, and they can't if you're not
Speaker:willing To make the shifts and things to help them be able to do
Speaker:that. So yeah. Right. There's another
Speaker:aspect that We should probably talk about,
Speaker:and that is podcasting is
Speaker:audio for the most part. There are people who have YouTube
Speaker:podcast. But it's mostly audio. And when you
Speaker:say the ICU podcast, The
Speaker:former medical brain for me thinks ICU
Speaker:intensive care unit. Oh, yeah. And there were a whole bunch of those too.
Speaker:Yes. ICU and ICU. Yes.
Speaker:All all versions of ICU. Many, many, many versions.
Speaker:And sometimes with my podcast, if I don't say
Speaker:it slowly, she's got content transcript
Speaker:Translators, I don't know what you call them, the AI that does the transcript, the
Speaker:software. Mhmm. Sometimes it comes out like cheese, c h e
Speaker:e s e. Cheese got Content. So
Speaker:one has to be careful about how the audio
Speaker:sounds Exactly. And if you choose words that are also letters, that
Speaker:could also be translated to something different, and people may have a harder
Speaker:time finding Your podcast. And my Transcribe
Speaker:AI regularly called it ICU,
Speaker:not I see The letters? Yes. The let It
Speaker:was very interesting. There's so many things you learn about doing a podcast when
Speaker:you're trying to do a podcast. And so you think, okay. I gotta
Speaker:find this music, and You wanna get royalty free music, and where do you
Speaker:get that? And do you go through that for whatever? Then you gotta figure out
Speaker:how you're gonna edit this podcast. Are you gonna hire somebody? Are you gonna do
Speaker:it yourself? How are you gonna do it? Was that gonna cost you?
Speaker:On and on and like that. And then you go through all of that
Speaker:rigmarole, and then it's like, Now I gotta put it on hosting
Speaker:companies. You gotta pick up one of those. Right. And then
Speaker:there's a decision to be made. Which one? Am I gonna make a wrong
Speaker:decision? And can you move it if you pick 1 and you don't like them
Speaker:or you decide you wanna move over? So all of these
Speaker:decisions, but, Honestly, what I have found and your experience
Speaker:may be different, but what I have found is any of these things can
Speaker:be changed. Yes. Exactly.
Speaker:Pivoting is okay. If that's what you need to do or want
Speaker:to do, that's okay. And that's what I learned. And I think
Speaker:Because I'm leading people that
Speaker:have been afraid and let themselves play small
Speaker:For so many different reasons, it's really important for me
Speaker:to walk the talk, to always lead
Speaker:by example, to step out, to say, Okay. I made a mistake here.
Speaker:I'm making a pivot. Pivot and iterations grow you.
Speaker:Mhmm. Right? Mistakes or feedback that shows
Speaker:you you gotta do it some kind of different way. And so
Speaker:I'm constantly making myself
Speaker:Deal with whatever because sometimes you're afraid. Right? Sometimes
Speaker:I'm afraid when I'm doing stuff, and I have to say, okay, but I'm gonna
Speaker:do it anyway. And that's why I always talk about courage because
Speaker:courage has nothing to do with the absence of fear.
Speaker:Courage is about feeling the fear and doing it anyway.
Speaker:So I'm constantly By the way, I loved that book. Feel the
Speaker:Fear and Do It Anyway. That's Susan Jeffers. Is that the author's
Speaker:name? Yeah. And so fear and do it anyway.
Speaker:So right. You're really truly walking
Speaker:the talk Yes. Going through those things that are
Speaker:scary for many people, and they're scary for you, but you're doing them anyway.
Speaker:Exactly. Exactly. So And I didn't know there was a book. I'm gonna have Check
Speaker:out the book. Yeah. I think it's Susan Jeffers. Feel the fear and
Speaker:do it anyway. Yeah. And I think there's a workbook I might have to check
Speaker:it out. I feel that because I'm always saying find the
Speaker:courage. And so and be courageous. Do your day
Speaker:courageously. Now I'm gonna have to read her book.
Speaker:Alright. Inspiration there. Right? Yeah. Yeah. Going
Speaker:back to the beginning, when you first had the idea About doing a
Speaker:podcast to the time you actually produced your 1st episode
Speaker:with that first name, the ICU podcast. How
Speaker:long was it when you finally drew the line in the sand and said, I
Speaker:wanna have a podcast, but before you actually published your first one?
Speaker:I would say it was probably at least
Speaker:4 or 5 months, and it may have even been 6 months. I
Speaker:really Thought about it for a long time. I knew the
Speaker:name. I knew the name. I knew why I wanted to have the
Speaker:name, but it took me a while of really thinking, Where's
Speaker:this podcast gonna go? How am I gonna help people? What am
Speaker:I gonna be saying in it? Am I gonna have guests? How am I
Speaker:gonna have guests? Oh my god. That's a whole another level of things. Can I
Speaker:just say what I wanna say? Can I have a podcast that's just me?
Speaker:Well, I could just talk because I can do that, I think. So it was
Speaker:all of these different things. You have to figure out how you're gonna do
Speaker:it, The format is gonna be, how long it's gonna be. No one wants to
Speaker:hear just me talk for half an hour. I'll do 10 minutes. I
Speaker:can talk for 10 minutes and make it interesting and share real
Speaker:information. So it was all of these things to figure
Speaker:out, and the technical
Speaker:hurdles and the Platform things were the biggest hurdles
Speaker:for me. Like I said, figuring out the music, figuring out
Speaker:how to Use the editing software to
Speaker:add identifying part because there's all these parts to it,
Speaker:the identifying part and then the music part that says where I
Speaker:am and then me talking and then the outro
Speaker:part. That was the hardest part. But Yeah. What I'm
Speaker:finding now is I have a little checklist. Mhmm. And I
Speaker:just put the pieces in, and I
Speaker:just talk, and so it's not as hard
Speaker:because I can just talk. And when I'm talking, if I make a mistake,
Speaker:I clap my hands so I could find it Mhmm. Fix it, but I can
Speaker:just talk. And so that made it a lot easier
Speaker:than going through a bunch of extra hurdles that I wasn't expecting
Speaker:I didn't know how to deal with. I finally got it to something that was
Speaker:manageable for me. Right. You said something
Speaker:before about, Basically, unless you're taking action, you
Speaker:don't really know you don't have any feedback, so you don't know
Speaker:what's working and you don't know what to fix. Right.
Speaker:Exactly. So taking that action, just jumping in there and doing it.
Speaker:And I think if the listeners Take
Speaker:away the fact that listen. If you wanna do something, just
Speaker:basically jump in there and do it. Exactly. What we're talking about
Speaker:podcasting today, I guess there probably are some things. I wouldn't want you to do
Speaker:brain surgery if you don't know how to do it, but but Well no.
Speaker:You you don't wanna do brain surgery if you don't know how to do it,
Speaker:but jumping in there could mean going and see
Speaker:if that's what you really wanna do. Taking a tour,
Speaker:becoming familiar with some hospitals, doing interviews with some doctors,
Speaker:and finding out what that feels like and what that looks like and whether or
Speaker:not that's something you really can stomach because you're operating on a person's brain and
Speaker:there's blood and stuff coming up. There's things. You know what I mean? There are
Speaker:steps that come first. Right. And those things that wanna do, you
Speaker:jump in. You jump in where you can, how you can.
Speaker:Mhmm. Then you can grow and decide whether or not that's really
Speaker:what you wanna do. Right. Yes. Take
Speaker:action. And the action may be You need to do
Speaker:some research, find out if that's something that you actually do wanna
Speaker:do. Exactly. Did you get support
Speaker:to start? Did you take a course? Did you have somebody hold your hand
Speaker:and help you? How did that work for you? So
Speaker:I went to different people that said stuff
Speaker:about podcasting, but I didn't really
Speaker:get a lot of useful
Speaker:information because people were mostly trying to sell something.
Speaker:Mhmm. And then at some point, you had a summit about
Speaker:podcasting. And Bundle. Last Yeah. Summit.
Speaker:Yeah. Mhmm. And I signed up for that bundle when
Speaker:I downloaded some of the different things. And some of those
Speaker:things were really useful in saying,
Speaker:There's just these steps. Right. Right? There's just
Speaker:steps. And if I stop making it really complicated and thinking
Speaker:of the whole picture, I can figure out each step.
Speaker:And it's just 1 step in front of the other Exactly.
Speaker:After the other. Yeah. So I wouldn't say that it was a
Speaker:specific course, but when I looked at each of those people in the
Speaker:bundle that spoke to me, It became more and
Speaker:more clear to me that it was just taking some steps. And
Speaker:all I had to do was understand what the steps were, and then I could
Speaker:do that. I didn't have to beat myself up. Right.
Speaker:Again, it's just actions one after the other. Just keep
Speaker:moving. Exactly. Have there been some big
Speaker:surprises for you since you've started?
Speaker:Well, definitely, the biggest surprise was that It didn't
Speaker:matter that I have the domain name.
Speaker:Yeah. That was probably the biggest surprise that that just
Speaker:didn't matter. I still bought the domain name for the
Speaker:podcast I have. So my podcast
Speaker:becoming seen, I have that domain name. I
Speaker:found out that it that's not really how people do things. That was one of
Speaker:the biggest surprises. Mhmm. And the second
Speaker:Biggest surprise for me was that I was able
Speaker:to learn how to use my editing software pretty quickly.
Speaker:I thought that was gonna be a big hurdle. You use
Speaker:Audacity? Yeah. I use Audacity. Yeah.
Speaker:And I thought that was gonna be really, really hard, and it turned out
Speaker:to be really simple. That was a pleasant surprise.
Speaker:Actually, that intimidated me in the beginning to Audacity. I think I
Speaker:started with Audacity, and I quickly jumped to Descript.
Speaker:Descript to me is just so easy to use, and I think you've had a
Speaker:different experience with that Yeah. Particular software. Yeah. Because I thought
Speaker:Descript was gonna be the answer, Mhmm. It just
Speaker:I really could not figure that out. I was just lost in
Speaker:the sauce with that. And probably because I was overcomplicating it, but I was really
Speaker:lost. But Audacity,
Speaker:once I stopped and really looked at it, it made sense so you could break
Speaker:it down and figure it out. So I started using that, and
Speaker:it's made life a lot easier. One of the biggest things that scared
Speaker:me and Made it hard for me to figure out how to do
Speaker:it was that you had to have show notes
Speaker:Mhmm. And This part and that part and all
Speaker:these other things that are attached to your podcast, and I didn't know how I
Speaker:was gonna make all of that happen. But It
Speaker:got easier because I, got a
Speaker:lifetime deal on this one software that made my life so much
Speaker:easier. It helped me Make show notes. Oh, let me
Speaker:guess. Cast Magic? Yes. Oh, I love
Speaker:Cast Magic. Yes. Cast Magic is like a game changer.
Speaker:I love Cast Magic. Yes. That was
Speaker:like, this is what's gonna happen. I can do a show now.
Speaker:And they just keep making it better and better. You can put
Speaker:in your own prompts for each episode, and then
Speaker:every time it comes up with The key objectives
Speaker:from the audio or Instagram
Speaker:posts Yes. Suggestions for reels.
Speaker:This is like magic. It is magic. It has magic. Yes. Exactly.
Speaker:It's beautiful. So I was very, very pleased with that, and I
Speaker:was like, oh my god. This is the thing. Now I can really do this.
Speaker:Yeah. That's definitely a game changer. Yeah. I started out
Speaker:Just listening to the episodes and writing down my notes,
Speaker:and once I moved over to using Cast Magic,
Speaker:Total total game changer. It's just so much quicker now. Yeah.
Speaker:Absolutely. Absolutely. And that was the big thing. It's like, wait.
Speaker:I wanna deliver this weekly, and I gotta not only come up with
Speaker:a topic, talk about it, record it, edit it, then I
Speaker:gotta listen to it and write show notes, And then I gotta do
Speaker:some content to promote. This is a bit much. Maybe I should do it
Speaker:once a month. No. That's not often enough. We do not wanna do that.
Speaker:So Cast Magic. That made the difference for
Speaker:me. Definitely. And just so
Speaker:our listeners know, you Do a solo
Speaker:podcast? Yes. Right now, you're not actually interviewing
Speaker:guests. It's just you. And when you said 10 minute
Speaker:Episodes, I thought, oh, well, that's great. You can have more episodes
Speaker:by cutting them into smaller little bite sized chunks,
Speaker:which is great. You can just keep talking repeatedly
Speaker:for another episode. Well, actually,
Speaker:what I do is I do a 10 minute episode, And and I'd stop,
Speaker:and I edit it, and I get it ready, and I set it up to
Speaker:publish. I'm trying to get to the point if I Stop
Speaker:overbooking myself to just take a weekend and do
Speaker:several episodes. Mhmm. Because I look back at Oprah When she did
Speaker:her show daily on The Oprah Show, she used to do
Speaker:several episodes at a time. They would literally record
Speaker:Multiple episodes of her show, each sitting. So they put
Speaker:in long workdays, but they got really good
Speaker:shows, and they just scheduled the guests out at different times for the
Speaker:shows. And it made it easier to do
Speaker:a quality show without having to worried
Speaker:that something might happen the next day or whatever because you had to be live
Speaker:every day. So they always had several shows backed up.
Speaker:I didn't realize that she actually batched them up like that. She did.
Speaker:Yeah. Yeah. That is cool to know. Yes. I'm Going to get to
Speaker:the point where I can batch up my episodes like that too.
Speaker:But right now, that's a vision in my head.
Speaker:Well, I've had that vision in my head too to do the batching ahead of
Speaker:time. And for one reason or another, it hasn't yet
Speaker:happened. But Yeah. It's a little harder when you have guests you gotta
Speaker:schedule in too and all of that, so I don't have that
Speaker:issue. I know somebody. Actually, someone that we both
Speaker:know, Karen Robinson. With her podcast, I
Speaker:think she is booked out. She has recorded 6 months
Speaker:in advance. Wow. And then
Speaker:they're just sitting there to be edited, and she has a a team
Speaker:or a team member who does the editing for her. And that was, like,
Speaker:a year ago Where she told me that she was recording in
Speaker:September from the following May.
Speaker:Wow. So that's even more than 6 months. So
Speaker:That just kinda blew me away, and I like, gosh. I wanna be like that.
Speaker:I wanna be able to get that far in advance, but it hasn't
Speaker:happened yet, and I will put that qualifier on there. Hasn't happened
Speaker:yet. I just I love doing interviews. I love
Speaker:having guests on. And for me, it's A couple of
Speaker:different reasons. I don't have to think of the content every show.
Speaker:I do more of a hybrid, so sometimes I'll have a Solo
Speaker:cast episode. Yeah. I just love sharing
Speaker:wisdom from other people too. So Yeah. I think
Speaker:in some way, I may have A guest here or there, but it would
Speaker:be a special episode, and it's not gonna happen all the
Speaker:time. But there are people I think would
Speaker:really give value to my audience. And so I
Speaker:would probably promote that in advance that it's gonna be the special episode
Speaker:that they're gonna be on, Then have to go on and then promote it again.
Speaker:Most of the episodes, what I wanna share, I can share. And
Speaker:it's easier for me to manage it And make it all happen
Speaker:if I can just sit down whenever I can sit down and do it.
Speaker:Only have 1 person to schedule. There you go. There you go.
Speaker:Well, this has been great. Before I let you go, I have
Speaker:a few, what I call the fast on your feet questions.
Speaker:Mhmm. And I love, Like I just said, I
Speaker:love interviewing other people and sharing the wisdom. So,
Speaker:Pam, tell me, what's the best piece of business advice you've ever been given?
Speaker:I would say the best piece of business advice I've ever been
Speaker:given is be yourself
Speaker:And keep it simple. Yes.
Speaker:That's it. Be yourself and keep it simple. What more can one
Speaker:say. That's right. Be yourself and keep it
Speaker:simple. Yep. I love that. What would you
Speaker:say is a book that everybody should read? So
Speaker:there's 1 book that I know everybody always says. But the other
Speaker:book that I think everybody should read It's called The
Speaker:Big Leap Oh, yes. Hendrix. That
Speaker:book changed my life. That book is so
Speaker:powerful Because it really is about stepping into
Speaker:your own genius Mhmm. And recognizing that
Speaker:you have a genius and that you need to step into it. Yeah. So that's
Speaker:the book I would recommend to everybody. And then, of course, I would say
Speaker:Atomic Habits to help support you getting into that genius. Right. It
Speaker:is a two for there. Alright. Yeah.
Speaker:Atomic Habits is a great book as well. Yeah. I think The Big Leap,
Speaker:I probably read that one Either 2 times or 3 times,
Speaker:I I've gone through. And every time I read it, there's nuggets that you
Speaker:get because you're in a different place. Yep. So Every
Speaker:time. That's a good one. Yeah. I I think
Speaker:people should read that book at least once a year. It's a good book,
Speaker:and it really elevates Your game if
Speaker:you're open to it. That's a good
Speaker:idea to read it every year and maybe at the beginning of the year Mhmm.
Speaker:To kind of set the tone for that year, tell me your
Speaker:favorite quote. My favorite quote? Wow.
Speaker:My favorite quote is that and it's different
Speaker:than what you're gonna expect. But my favorite
Speaker:quote is that I'm a spiritual being
Speaker:having a human experience. Okay. Left field. Right?
Speaker:Yeah. No. No. I'm Processing. That one. That's great.
Speaker:Yeah. You're right. I wasn't expecting that. I don't know what I was
Speaker:expecting, but I wasn't expecting that. Thank
Speaker:you for that. Alright. And the last question I have in our fast on
Speaker:your feet is if you had 1 takeaway from our episode
Speaker:today, What one golden nugget would you want all the
Speaker:listeners to walk away with from our talk? I want
Speaker:them to know that finding the courage has nothing to do
Speaker:with the absence of fear, that they
Speaker:can own their strengths and differences And share their
Speaker:message regardless of the fear if they're willing to be
Speaker:courageous. Yes. Somebody's out there waiting to hear them.
Speaker:Somebody's out there waiting for the message that only they can deliver in
Speaker:the way they deliver. That's beautiful. Now
Speaker:I know a lot of our listeners are gonna wanna get in touch with you,
Speaker:and I think you've got something that you wanna share with our listeners. Can you
Speaker:tell us about that? So, yeah, I have a a free gift that I
Speaker:wanna give you guys. It's a visibility journal.
Speaker:And inside the journal, I share some prompts. I talk with you about
Speaker:why it is that you're getting stuck and how to get unstuck,
Speaker:and I give you some prompts to help you Go through that and go
Speaker:through the thoughts and the exercises that's keeping you stuck so that
Speaker:you can journal your way through some of it. We're gonna
Speaker:put the links in the show notes. Right. That'll be in the show notes.
Speaker:And Yeah. But but it's as easy as it sounds is building
Speaker:visibility .com, which is my site Mhmm. And it's
Speaker:free visibility journal. Okay.
Speaker:That will be in the show notes, so you can actually just click on it
Speaker:and go straight over there, and get that visibility journal, and start going
Speaker:through those prompts. And, Pam, where you mostly hang out
Speaker:on social media? Where can people connect with you? I have a lot of different
Speaker:social medias, but where I hang out most of the time is in my
Speaker:Facebook group, and I really invite you to join it. It's
Speaker:for women who feel invisible that are really
Speaker:struggling to be seen, and it's all about helping you fix that. It's on
Speaker:Facebook groups at Building Visibility.
Speaker:That's the whole name at Facebook groups at Building
Speaker:Visibility, and you'll find me there. I do a weekly
Speaker:livestream, And I have posts. I talk to people
Speaker:there, and my live streams are actually a
Speaker:training. And I started those out Short and simple too, but now they're
Speaker:actually trainings pretty much every week to help you
Speaker:move forward. I know you're very prolific over there. You're very
Speaker:active in that group. So Yeah. Yeah. That's a great place to connect with you.
Speaker:Yeah. Alright. I will make sure that I have all the social
Speaker:media Links and the freebie and your website,
Speaker:all of those things will be in the show notes, so people can find you
Speaker:very easily there. This has been great. Pam, thank you
Speaker:so much for sharing your wisdom and your
Speaker:experience with starting your podcast and with what you're doing in the world
Speaker:today. Thank you so much. Thank you. Thank you for having me. This has
Speaker:been a pleasure for real. So yes. Alright. And thank
Speaker:you listeners for tuning in again for another episode of the She's
Speaker:Got Content podcast, and we'll see you again next week.
Speaker:Thank you for tuning in to this episode of the She's Got Content
Speaker:podcast. I hope you got at least 1 nugget to take action on this
Speaker:week. If you got value from today's episode, I would be
Speaker:so grateful When you leave a 5 star rating wherever you listen to
Speaker:podcast, it only takes a second, and it really helps me get my message out
Speaker:to impact even more people so they can, in turn, keep the ripple
Speaker:going. If you're listening on Apple Podcasts and leave a review of
Speaker:the show, it would really make my day, and you just might receive a
Speaker:shout out on the show as my content creator of the week when I read
Speaker:out your review. And last but never least, If you want an
Speaker:endless supply of just right ideas for content you can write about
Speaker:for your blog post, your emails, your videos, podcast
Speaker:episodes, all the content and things, then you wanna head over to my
Speaker:website at cheesegotcontent.comforward/content,
Speaker:and pick up your free workbook. Never run out of content ideas.
Speaker:Look for that link in the show notes today along with the other links
Speaker:mentioned in today's episode. Until next time, content
Speaker:Creators, you've got an audience waiting to hear from you, and you've got content to
Speaker:share with them. Stop being the best kept secret and make a
Speaker:bigger impact when you've got Content out there in the
Speaker:world.