How to use your story to attract coaching clients the real visibility
Speaker:strategy that is so underrated.
Speaker:There's a lot of pressure in the.
Speaker:Coaching space to be more visible, post more, share more, talk more.
Speaker:Yes, there is.
Speaker:Visibility is important, but that doesn't mean.
Speaker:You have to be everywhere.
Speaker:It's not effective if your people aren't everywhere too.
Speaker:You don't need a perfectly curated content.
Speaker:Calendar or a polished personal brand either.
Speaker:Definitely not a polished brand.
Speaker:Certainly work towards consistency in branding across the board, right?
Speaker:That helps for to you to stick.
Speaker:In people's minds more.
Speaker:Don't worry about it being polished.
Speaker:What you really need is this a story you're willing to tell.
Speaker:Because in a crowded market, the coaches who attract the most aligned clients
Speaker:aren't the loudest, they're the realest.
Speaker:Why storytelling is your most powerful client attraction tool when you're
Speaker:building a coaching business, you'll hear a lot about funnels, email
Speaker:marketing and strategies.
Speaker:I'm a big fan, right?
Speaker:You're going to hear me talk about these things all the time.
Speaker:But what actually draws people in, what makes them able to relate to you
Speaker:and trust you, is your truth.
Speaker:Your story is what creates connection.
Speaker:It's what makes a potential client pause and think, she gets me.
Speaker:She's been where I am.
Speaker:She's the one I want to learn from.
Speaker:That's not something you can fake and it's not something you can replicate
Speaker:with fancy marketing copy either.
Speaker:It comes from being willing to share your truth in a way that feels grounded,
Speaker:integrated and intentional.
Speaker:But don't worry, you don't need to over share to be real.
Speaker:Using your story to attract clients does not mean dumping your
Speaker:entire life story online.
Speaker:Actually, I don't recommend it.
Speaker:I mean, you could certainly put it in a book, but you don't have to
Speaker:fill your emails with it.
Speaker:Strategic storytelling means choosing moments that matter.
Speaker:And I want to repeat that.
Speaker:Like strategic storytelling means choosing moments that matter and moments
Speaker:that your audience can relate to.
Speaker:It means reflecting on your own turning points, beliefs and breakthroughs and
Speaker:sharing those pieces in a way that invites your audience to see themselves in it.
Speaker:Don't be afraid to show that you're flawed, because we all are.
Speaker:Here are a few good questions to guide you.
Speaker:Is this part of my story resolved or integrated?
Speaker:Yeah, like can I tell this part of my story?
Speaker:Is it resolved?
Speaker:Can Have I moved past it so now it's something I can reflect on and actually
Speaker:provide value to my audience through does this reflect a belief or a
Speaker:challenge my ideal client is facing?
Speaker:That I've already faced.
Speaker:Can I use this to inspire, clarify, or encourage someone else?
Speaker:If yes, then you've got a powerful story worth sharing.
Speaker:Where to use your story in your marketing if you want to attract coaching clients
Speaker:with authenticity, you don't have to become a content machine.
Speaker:Although admittedly I have been told that that's what I am, a content machine.
Speaker:And for those people who are in my inner circle, you know that I'm experimenting
Speaker:with that to find what I actually enjoy, what I love, and what
Speaker:I want to keep doing. Right?
Speaker:So it's okay to be a content machine if that's what you really enjoy doing.
Speaker:You have fun with it, but don't feel like you have to become that.
Speaker:You just have to be consistent in the way you share your story across
Speaker:your marketing ecosystem.
Speaker:One really good story can create a movement.
Speaker:Truly, I've seen it happen.
Speaker:Here are a few key places to start your email welcome sequence where trust is
Speaker:built fastest I have an email welcome sequence.
Speaker:I have it pretty much on hold at the moment because I'm I'm going to say I'm in
Speaker:the midst of and that's not true because I started it and then stopped.
Speaker:But I'm getting back to it.
Speaker:I have a plan in place to revise and kind of renew and refresh my
Speaker:welcome series and so I have.
Speaker:It on hold temporarily.
Speaker:But the original welcome series is very story based.
Speaker:Every email tells a story like the stalker at my door.
Speaker:They told my mother to not bother when I was born.
Speaker:You know, these like hooks that bring you in and are emotional.
Speaker:And I have had people and this has been because that welcome sequence
Speaker:has been in place for years.
Speaker:I have people still up until the time that I paused it, hit reply back to
Speaker:say they could relate to my story.
Speaker:They would share a story of their own and it was just super, super powerful.
Speaker:So I'm still keeping many elements of the story.
Speaker:I'm just refreshing and updating.
Speaker:But it's a powerful thing.
Speaker:Point being so email welcome sequence is a great place to put your story because for
Speaker:those people who are brand new to your community, it gives them a
Speaker:chance to get to know you.
Speaker:And you know, oftentimes people will even say when you use story very strategically
Speaker:and effectively and you're not afraid to be vulnerable and to share, people
Speaker:will feel like they know you.
Speaker:And that's so huge.
Speaker:It's so huge.
Speaker:You can share your story in social posts that introduce or reintroduce you in
Speaker:your about section of your website.
Speaker:You can launch in your Launch or sales email.
Speaker:So you can also use story in any of your emails.
Speaker:You can even use story on sales pages.
Speaker:You can use story when you speak in seminars or in online summits
Speaker:or part of a signature speech.
Speaker:If you're, if you're a speaker, you can use it in guest podcast interviews
Speaker:or other collaborations.
Speaker:And hey, your story doesn't have to be told all at once.
Speaker:You can reveal it in layers, one piece at a time, letting people
Speaker:get to know the real you.
Speaker:Behind the business.
Speaker:It's part of what I did in my welcome email series is I think there was about
Speaker:seven or eight emails that I told stories in each and every one.
Speaker:And so it pulled people through, waiting because I would always hint, you know, in
Speaker:one email at the end, I would hint to the next story that I was going to tell so
Speaker:that they're watching for that story to show up in their inbox.
Speaker:Storytelling and client readiness go hand in hand.
Speaker:One of the most overlooked parts of storytelling is how it helps
Speaker:qualify the right clients.
Speaker:When you share who you are, not just what you offer, you invite the people who
Speaker:resonate with your path to take their own next step.
Speaker:You also give potential clients a glimpse into what it feels like to work with you.
Speaker:They get to hear your voice, maybe if you have, you know, if they're listening to
Speaker:parts of your story in an audio format or video format, they get to feel
Speaker:your values and sense your energy.
Speaker:Yeah, it doesn't matter what the format is, what the medium is, they're
Speaker:going to sense your energy.
Speaker:And this is what filters in the right fit clients, the ones who
Speaker:are aligned and ready.
Speaker:I mean, I want you to think about this.
Speaker:If you, you know, this is something I encounter frequently is
Speaker:difficulty for coaches, difficulty in finding their voice because a lot of times
Speaker:they're coming from a more technical, professional background that required that
Speaker:they keep a certain professional voice with like the blinders on.
Speaker:Right. Or the, or boundaries.
Speaker:And they couldn't deviate from this certain voice.
Speaker:And so when it comes to their coaching business, then they go right into
Speaker:that professional writing mode. Right.
Speaker:Or speaking mode.
Speaker:And, you know, there's benefits to that.
Speaker:But in a coaching business, when you need to be able to connect and your, your
Speaker:audience needs to be able to relate to you, that's just not going to land.
Speaker:They can't relate to you.
Speaker:They can't connect.
Speaker:So when they, when you share your story again, whether that's in written format,
Speaker:video, audio, doesn't matter what it is, they're going to sense your energy and
Speaker:you'll, you're able to filter out the clients that are not a fit for you and
Speaker:filter in the clients that are a right fit for you.
Speaker:So it's another way of.
Speaker:Because I just today I had someone share with me their concerns about
Speaker:attracting the wrong clients.
Speaker:Like we were talking about certain pain points and they said, yes, that's true,
Speaker:but I don't want to attract this, you know, type of client, this specific kind.
Speaker:And this is, you know, this is one way because you're going to have filters in
Speaker:place in all of your marketing to help bring in the, the right fit client and
Speaker:filter out the client who is not a fit for you.
Speaker:And this is just another way, right?
Speaker:Another way to do that.
Speaker:You don't have to be louder, just truer.
Speaker:I love the idea of that.
Speaker:Just be truer, be transparent, be okay with being vulnerable.
Speaker:Be you.
Speaker:If you've been hiding behind polished messaging or overthinking what you should
Speaker:say, this is your invitation to shift that.
Speaker:The over polished message does not make an emotional connection.
Speaker:Yes, you can create an appeal for an aspirational identity and that can work in
Speaker:certain kinds of brands, but for most of us as coaches, it doesn't work.
Speaker:And you know, this is going off on a little bit of a tangent, but also I'll
Speaker:give you examples like a high level lifestyle.
Speaker:So coaches who represent a certain lifestyle, like a super, like a
Speaker:world traveler and super wealthy. Right.
Speaker:Super posh and luxury luxurious.
Speaker:You know, for that matter, someone who coaches around wealth management.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:There's a certain aspirational identity that comes with that brand and there
Speaker:better be some stories behind that. Right?
Speaker:But for most of us, aspirational identity will play a part, but it isn't
Speaker:going to be the leading factor.
Speaker:And in fact, so that polished message, it's not how polished the message is
Speaker:so much as how resonant is the message.
Speaker:How much does it connect with your audience?
Speaker:You don't need to be everywhere.
Speaker:You need to share who you really are, flaws and all.
Speaker:That's how you build a coaching business that lasts.
Speaker:That's how you turn truth into magnetism.