Content

why your content gets likes but no clients (do this instead)

June 05, 202626 min read

The Death of Generic Content: Why Teaching More Isn’t Getting You More Clients

Content is dying.

Well… let me clarify.

Generic content is dying.

And honestly?

It should.

Because right now, information is commoditized.

There are a bajillion “how-to” posts floating around the internet.

People can literally open up their favorite flavor of AI and find almost any answer they want in seconds. Maybe minutes if they’re really going deep.

And as creators?

Dude, we can create almost any piece of information we want within minutes at this point.

Want a post on how to lose weight?

AI can write it.

Want a list of three tips to get more clients?

AI can write it.

Want five mindset hacks for success?

AI can write it.

That is not the hard part anymore.

The problem is, most coaches are still creating content like information is scarce.

They’re still posting like people are sitting around waiting for another “3 tips to lose weight” post.

They’re still teaching like their audience has never heard:

  • Eat more protein

  • Drink more water

  • Get more steps

  • Stop eating so much processed food

  • Be consistent

  • Believe in yourself

  • Post more content

  • DM more people

  • Wake up earlier

Come on.

That stuff is freaking long gone.

And if that’s all you’re doing to try to get clients right now, you’re probably having a pretty hard time.

Not because you’re not smart.

Not because you don’t care.

Not because you don’t have a good offer.

But because you’re communicating in a way that informs people…

…but it doesn’t influence them.

And there’s a massive difference.

Generic Content Creates Awareness. Specific Communication Creates Demand.

You’ve probably seen content like this a thousand times:

“3 tips to lose weight.”

“How to get more clients.”

“5 mindset hacks for success.”

“The number one mistake you’re making with your content.”

“Morning routine for productivity.”

“Stop doing this today.”

And listen, I’m not saying those topics can never work.

But on their own?

They’re a dime a dozen.

They’re generic.

They’re interchangeable.

They’re the kind of content somebody could see from you, then see the exact same idea from 17 other people before lunch.

And this is where a lot of coaches get stuck.

They think the goal is to just get more awareness.

More reach.

More views.

More likes.

More comments.

More followers.

And yes, you can post generic content and get views.

You can post a simple reel with broad advice and get thousands of views.

Sometimes hundreds of thousands.

Maybe even millions.

I’ve seen it happen.

In fact, I’ve worked with a lot of “influencers” and coaches who have built big audiences because they focused on very generic, broad, easy-to-consume content.

And almost all of them are broke.

They have viral posts.

They have big fluffy audiences.

They have people watching their stuff.

But they’re not getting the right people reaching out.

They’re not getting quality leads.

They’re not getting people who are actually pre-sold and ready to buy.

Why?

Because their content is generic.

It turns heads.

But not the right heads.

It creates attention.

But not demand.

And in business, attention without demand is just noise.

The General Doctor vs. The Heart Surgeon

Let’s say you’re a weight loss coach.

And maybe you want to help a specific type of person.

Maybe it’s working executive moms who want to lose weight, have more energy, and finally feel like themselves again without spending two hours a day in the gym.

But your content sounds like this:

“3 tips to lose weight.”

“Eat more protein.”

“Drink more water.”

“Move your body.”

“Get more sleep.”

That might technically be true.

But it positions you like a general doctor.

And there’s nothing wrong with a general doctor.

But if you compare a general doctor to a heart surgeon, which one is more in demand?

Which one gets paid more?

Which one do people seek out when they have a very specific, urgent problem?

The heart surgeon.

Why?

Because the heart surgeon is specific.

The heart surgeon solves a very particular problem.

The heart surgeon is not trying to be everything to everyone.

And this is where most coaches mess up.

They’re trying to sound relevant to everybody, so they end up sounding important to nobody.

They stay broad because they’re afraid of excluding people.

But the specificity is what creates demand.

The more clearly you can communicate the exact problem your dream client is experiencing, the more they feel like:

“Oh my gosh… this person gets me.”

And when somebody feels like you get them, they automatically begin to trust that you can help them.

That is the game.

The Megaphone vs. The Dog Whistle

One of my favorite analogies for this is the megaphone versus the dog whistle.

Imagine you’re standing in Times Square on New Year’s Eve.

Everybody’s packed in.

Everybody’s yelling.

Everybody’s screaming.

People are holding signs.

Music is playing.

There are lights everywhere.

And you pull out a megaphone and start yelling.

You might get a couple heads to turn.

Maybe.

But probably not the right heads.

And even if people do turn around, they’re distracted. They’re overwhelmed. They’re hearing a thousand other things at the same time.

That’s what generic content is.

It’s a megaphone.

It’s you yelling into a noisy marketplace trying to get anybody to pay attention.

Now imagine you have a dog whistle.

You blow the dog whistle.

Who turns?

Dogs.

Not everybody.

Not random people.

Not the crowd.

The exact people, or in this case, the exact creatures, tuned to that frequency.

That’s what specific communication does.

It acts like a dog whistle.

It cuts through the noise because it’s not meant for everyone.

It’s meant for the right ones.

And that is exactly what your content should be doing.

Because if you’re out there yelling generic, commoditized information into the void, you might get a few heads to turn.

But a lot of them are going to be the wrong people.

You’ll end up with low-quality leads.

You’ll get random people asking random questions.

You’ll have DMs full of people who aren’t actually serious.

And finding your ideal clients will feel like finding a needle in a haystack.

But when your communication gets specific…

When your message sounds like it was pulled directly from your dream client’s brain…

That’s when the right people turn their heads.

That’s when they reach out.

That’s when they say:

“Dude, this is exactly what I’m going through.”

That is the shift.

Information Informs. Influence Changes Behavior.

Generic content can create awareness.

It can get people to like something.

It can make people nod their head.

It can give someone a quick tip.

But most of the time, they just keep scrolling.

Why?

Because it informs them, but it does not influence them.

There’s nothing inherently changing their beliefs.

There’s nothing shifting their perspective.

There’s nothing making them see their problem differently.

There’s nothing creating that internal moment where they go:

“Wait… maybe I’ve been thinking about this the wrong way.”

And that’s the difference between teaching and influencing.

Teaching gives information.

Influence creates transformation.

Teaching says:

“Here are three things to do.”

Influence says:

“Here’s why what you’ve been doing hasn’t worked, here’s the belief that’s keeping you stuck, and here’s the new way to see this.”

That is what gets people to move.

Because people don’t buy simply because they got more information.

They buy because they believe something new.

They believe their problem is solvable.

They believe you understand them.

They believe your solution is different.

They believe now is the time.

They believe they can actually get the result.

And your content has to help them get there.

The Specificity Gap

There is a gap in most people’s content.

I call it the specificity gap.

It’s the gap between how you describe the problem…

…and how your dream client actually experiences the problem.

And when that gap is wide, your content sounds generic.

It sounds like everyone else.

It feels true, but not personal.

For example:

“3 tips to lose weight.”

That is true for everyone.

But it’s felt by no one.

Now compare that to:

“Here’s why you regain every pound the week your life gets stressful, and what to do instead.”

That hits differently.

Why?

Because now you’re not just talking about weight loss.

You’re talking about a specific moment.

A specific pattern.

A specific frustration.

A specific emotional experience.

You’re naming something your person has probably lived through.

They’ve had the Monday where they were motivated.

They ate clean.

They got their workouts in.

They felt like they were finally getting back on track.

Then life got stressful.

Work got busy.

The kids had stuff going on.

They slept like crap.

And by Thursday night, they’re standing in the pantry eating random snacks, thinking:

“Why do I keep doing this?”

That’s the difference.

Generic content says:

“Be more consistent.”

Specific communication says:

“Here’s why you fall off the second life gets stressful, even when you started the week motivated.”

One creates a nod.

The other creates recognition.

And recognition is powerful.

Because when someone feels recognized, they feel seen.

And when they feel seen, they start to trust you.

Describe the Problem Better Than They Can

There’s a famous marketing idea that says:

If you can articulate your ideal client’s problem better than they can, they will automatically assume you have the solution.

And I believe this is one of the most important principles in marketing.

Because people are not walking around looking for more information.

They’re walking around with symptoms.

They’re walking around with frustrations.

They’re walking around with complaints.

They’re walking around with private thoughts they don’t always say out loud.

They’re thinking:

“Why can’t I stay consistent?”

“Why do I keep getting leads who can’t afford me?”

“Why does my content get likes but no clients?”

“Why do I feel like I’m working harder than everybody else and still not growing?”

“Why does it feel like I have to be someone I’m not just to sell?”

“Why does this work for other people but not for me?”

If your content can name those things precisely, they will stop.

They will pay attention.

They will feel like:

“How does this person know me?”

And that’s what you want.

Not in a manipulative way.

In a deeply human way.

Because your dream client wants to feel understood.

They want to know that you actually get the nuance of their situation.

Not the surface-level version.

The real version.

The version they complain about to their spouse.

The version they think about in the car.

The version that frustrates them at night when they’re wondering why they still haven’t solved this.

That’s where your content needs to go.

My Weight Loss Example

Back when I was selling weight loss, around 2016 to 2020-ish, I wasn’t just trying to help anyone lose weight.

I was speaking to business owners and higher-performing people who wanted to lose the last 20 to 25 pounds of stubborn belly fat.

That distinction mattered.

Because if I just said:

“Want to lose weight?”

I could attract a bigger crowd.

Pun intended.

But I wasn’t trying to attract everybody.

I was trying to attract the person who had already tried a bunch of things.

The person who was successful in other areas of life but couldn’t figure out why their body wasn’t changing.

The person who felt like:

“Maybe it’s too late for me.”

“Maybe my genetics are just bad.”

“Maybe I’m too busy.”

“Maybe I missed my window.”

So I would speak to that.

I would talk about the frustration of doing well in business but still not feeling confident taking your shirt off.

I would talk about thinking your genetics are the reason you can’t lose that last layer of belly fat.

I would talk about the feeling of being disciplined in your career but inconsistent with your health.

And when I did that, people would say:

“Ah, he’s speaking my language.”

That’s what you want.

You don’t want your content to sound like a textbook.

You want it to sound like your dream client’s internal dialogue.

Because when you can speak their language, they feel like you understand their world.

And when they feel like you understand their world, they’re much more likely to believe you can guide them out of it.

Specificity Triggers Recognition

Specificity does a few things that generic content can’t.

The first thing it does is trigger recognition.

When you name someone’s specific pain, they feel seen.

And this is where your content starts to become magnetic.

Because anyone can list tips.

Anyone can say:

“Eat better.”

“Workout more.”

“Post consistently.”

“Improve your mindset.”

“Get more leads.”

But only someone who really understands the problem can describe it precisely.

Precision equals proof.

When your content is precise, it proves you understand.

It proves you’ve been there.

It proves you’ve helped people through it.

It proves you’re not just repeating the same surface-level advice everyone else is saying.

And if you’ve gone through what your avatar has gone through, even better.

Tell those stories.

If you have case studies, share them.

If you have client moments, bring them into your content.

Because stories give people a multi-sensory experience.

They can see it.

They can feel it.

They can imagine themselves in it.

And that bridges the gap between:

“This is interesting…”

…and:

“This is for me.”

Specificity Pre-Sells the Buyer

The second thing specificity does is it pre-sells the buyer.

Because when you nail the problem for free, and you give them a new perspective, they start to assume your solution is different too.

But this is important.

You can’t just name the pain and then give the same generic advice.

You can’t say:

“Here’s why you regain every pound when life gets stressful…”

And then the solution is:

“Eat better and workout more.”

Come on.

They already know that.

That’s not insight.

That’s a reminder.

And reminders are not enough to create demand.

You need to give them a new insight.

A new perspective.

A new belief.

Something that changes the way they see the problem.

Because if someone has a bad behavior right now, they probably have a belief underneath it.

If you change the belief, you can change the behavior.

For example, in weight loss, if someone believes:

“My genetics are terrible, so I can never lose weight…”

They’re probably not going to invest $3,000 into an online fitness coach.

Why would they?

In their mind, the result isn’t possible anyway.

But if your content shifts that belief, everything changes.

Let’s say you tell a story about Mary.

Mary thought her genetics were broken.

She thought she was just the person who couldn’t lose weight.

But then you discovered it was actually a hormonal issue.

You helped her fix it through nutrition, workouts, and maybe a peptide protocol.

And she lost 35 pounds.

Now the person watching thinks:

“Well, crap… if Mary can do it, maybe I can too.”

That’s belief shifting.

And belief shifting is what creates pre-sold buyers.

Because people don’t just need to know what to do.

They need to believe it’s possible for them.

They need to believe your approach can work.

They need to believe the old way they’ve been trying is the reason they’re stuck.

And they need to believe that taking the next step with you makes sense.

That’s what your content should be doing.

Stop Just Teaching. Start Creating Epiphanies.

This is where a lot of coaches get it wrong.

They hear “specific content” and think:

“Okay, I’ll make a better hook.”

But then the actual content is still just teaching.

They say something like:

“Here’s why you regain every pound when life gets stressful.”

Then they go:

“Tip number one: meal prep.”

“Tip number two: drink more water.”

“Tip number three: workout four times a week.”

Dude.

Nobody cares.

Not because those things are wrong.

But because everybody has that information.

What they need is the insight underneath the information.

They need the epiphany.

They need the moment where they realize:

“Oh… I don’t fall off because I’m lazy. I fall off because I don’t have a stress protocol.”

Or:

“Oh… I don’t need more motivation. I need a plan for the version of me that shows up when life gets chaotic.”

Or:

“Oh… my problem isn’t that I don’t know what to eat. My problem is that I only have a plan for perfect weeks.”

That is influence.

So instead of just teaching, attach a story to the insight.

Paint the scene.

Talk about the moment your person finds themselves in.

Maybe it sounds like:

“You know when life gets stressful and you’re trying to stay on track, but suddenly you’re craving sugar, you want to crack open a beer, maybe pour a glass of wine, and you’re standing in the kitchen thinking, ‘Screw it, I’ll restart Monday’?”

Now they’re listening.

Because you’re not just giving information.

You’re describing their life.

Then you can give them the shift.

You can say:

“The problem isn’t that you’re undisciplined. The problem is you only built a plan for the calm version of you. You need a plan for the stressed version of you.”

That’s an insight.

That’s a belief shift.

That’s the kind of thing someone remembers the next time they’re actually in that situation.

And if your content changes what they do in real life, they will trust you more.

Steal Their Exact Words

So how do you actually manufacture this level of specificity?

First, steal their exact words.

Literally.

Pull language from:

  • Client calls

  • Sales calls

  • DMs

  • Comments

  • Voice notes

  • Application forms

  • Testimonials

  • Sales call reviews

Don’t just describe the problem.

Quote it.

Use the actual words your audience uses.

Because a lot of coaches butcher this.

They take a real problem and translate it into coach-speak.

They make it sound polished.

They make it sound professional.

They make it sound like something no actual human would say.

And then they wonder why the content doesn’t hit.

You have to use the language your people actually use.

I’ll give you a simple example.

My son had his tonsils removed a few weeks ago.

He had to eat cold stuff.

So I came up to him and said:

“Hey buddy, do you want some strawberry ice cream?”

And he was like:

“Gross, no.”

And I was like:

“Oh. Weird. Thought you would say yes.”

Then I said:

“Whoa, whoa, whoa… do you want chocolate ice cream?”

And he was like:

“Yes, yes, yes.”

Fundamentally, I offered him the same thing.

Ice cream.

Just a different flavor.

But the words changed the response.

That’s what happens in your marketing.

Sometimes your audience doesn’t want “fat loss.”

They want to feel toned.

Sometimes they don’t want “lead generation.”

They want more people raising their hand saying, “How do I work with you?”

Sometimes they don’t want “content strategy.”

They want to stop posting every day and still have people coming to them ready to buy.

The words matter.

So stop guessing.

Take your sales calls.

Take your client calls.

Screenshot your DMs.

Put them into Claude or whatever AI tool you use.

Ask it to pull out the exact phrases, complaints, fears, desires, and objections people are saying.

Then use those words in your marketing.

Not the cleaned-up expert version.

The real version.

That is how you make people say:

“Yep. That’s me.”

Name the Enemy

The second thing you want to do is name the enemy.

Every powerful message needs an enemy.

Not necessarily a person.

But an opposing force.

In weight loss, the enemy might be:

  • Crash diets

  • Starvation plans

  • Random workouts

  • Scale obsession

  • The “eat less, move more” oversimplification

In business, the enemy might be:

  • Cold DM grind

  • Generic content

  • AI slop

  • The 80-hour hustle

  • Posting every day with no strategy

  • Bro-marketing tactics

  • The “just do more volume” advice

When you name the enemy, your message lands harder.

Because now your audience knows what you stand against.

And when they stand against it too, they feel bonded to you.

You’re no longer the person up on the mountain preaching at them.

You’re beside them.

Throwing rocks at the same enemy.

There’s a persuasion concept that talks about this idea of throwing rocks at a common enemy.

And it’s powerful because it creates unity.

It creates movement.

It gives people a reason to say:

“Yes. That’s exactly what I’m tired of.”

For me, in this conversation, the enemy is generic content.

The enemy is commoditized information.

The enemy is teaching at people without shifting beliefs.

Because I believe your message matters too much to be buried under the same recycled how-to content everyone else is posting.

That’s the enemy.

And the solution is more specific communication that actually creates demand.

So ask yourself:

What is the enemy in your market?

What are your people tired of?

What have they tried that failed them?

What advice are they sick of hearing?

What belief is keeping them stuck?

What industry norm are you rebelling against?

Name that.

Because when you name the enemy, your audience feels like you’re fighting with them, not selling at them.

Anchor to a Moment, Not Just a Number

The third thing you want to do is anchor your message to a moment.

Not just a number.

Don’t just say:

“Do you want to lose weight?”

“Do you want more leads?”

“Do you want to make more money?”

“Do you want to book more calls?”

Everybody says that.

Instead, attach it to a real scene.

A real moment.

A real day in their life.

For example, instead of:

“Do you want to lose weight?”

You could talk about:

“The Sunday night dread before another failed Monday.”

That hits harder.

Because now I can see it.

I can feel it.

I know the moment.

The person is sitting there Sunday night, maybe scrolling their phone, maybe feeling bloated from the weekend, telling themselves:

“Tomorrow I’m getting back on track.”

But deep down, they’re scared because they’ve said that 47 times before.

That is a moment.

And moments are more powerful than vague outcomes.

One of the things I like to do when I’m creating content is imagine I have a video camera recording my ideal client’s day-to-day life.

But this is a special video camera.

It has some Neuralink-type thing where I can pop it into their brain.

So I can see what they’re doing…

…and I can hear what they’re thinking.

Which, by the way, is probably the future.

But the reason I do this is because it forces me to get into their actual world.

Not the polished avatar worksheet version.

The real version.

What are they thinking when they wake up?

What are they worried about when they open their laptop?

What are they frustrated by when they look at their calendar?

What are they saying to themselves when another post gets likes but no DMs?

What are they feeling when they see someone else in their niche winning?

That is where the gold is.

Because if you’re a coach, you’re probably five steps ahead of your ideal client.

That’s why you can help them.

But because you’re ahead, you can forget what it felt like to be where they are.

You can forget the little moments.

The internal dialogue.

The emotional texture.

The frustration.

And when you forget that, your content starts sounding too polished and too removed.

You need to go back.

Put yourself in their shoes.

Anchor your message to a moment.

Make it feel like a movie scene.

Because when they can see themselves in the scene, your content becomes much more influential.

A Business Example

Here’s a simple business example.

I could say:

“Do you want to book more qualified sales calls?”

And sure, that sounds fine.

But everybody says that.

So your dream client hears it and thinks:

“Cool. Another person promising more leads.”

But what if I said:

“How would it feel to wake up every Monday morning and see your calendar already full of quality dream clients? No more random weeks where you have a few good calls, then the next week it’s pure crickets. No more wondering where the next client is coming from. Just a calendar loaded with the exact type of people you actually want to work with.”

That is more emotionally resonant.

That gives them a scene.

They can imagine waking up.

Opening their calendar.

Seeing the calls.

Feeling the relief.

Feeling the confidence.

Feeling like the business is finally working.

That is much more powerful than:

“I’ll help you get more leads.”

Because “more leads” is abstract.

A full calendar on Monday morning is specific.

That’s the difference.

Specificity Feels Like It Shrinks Your Audience

Now, here’s the catch.

Specificity feels like it shrinks your audience.

And this is where a lot of people freak out.

Especially bigger brands.

Bigger influencers.

People with large audiences.

They are terrified to get specific because they think:

“But what about everyone else?”

But that’s exactly why it works.

Remember the megaphone versus the dog whistle.

Generic content optimizes for reach.

And if your main goal is reach, likes, followers, vanity metrics, or healing some high school trauma because you want to feel like the cool kid on Instagram…

Then sure.

Optimize for broad content.

Go viral.

Get the dopamine hit.

But if you’re sitting there thinking:

“Dude, I actually want to change lives. I want to make good money. I want freedom. I want to build the business I became a business owner for…”

Then demand is the game.

And demand is created by exclusion.

The person who feels called out is the person who buys.

Reach was never the actual point.

Now, of course, there is a world where you can have both.

You can create specific content that reaches a lot of people.

But if you have to choose, depth beats empty reach every time.

Because a million views from the wrong people won’t build your business.

But a thousand true fans can.

The Thousand True Fans Concept

Back in the day, Kevin Kelly wrote an article called “1,000 True Fans.”

And I think it’s more relevant now than it was then.

The idea was originally for artists, musicians, creators, and people selling their art.

The basic premise was:

If you have 1,000 true fans, people who will buy anything you put out, you can make a full-time living doing what you love.

They’ll buy the book.

They’ll buy the shirt.

They’ll buy the album.

They’ll buy the ticket.

They’ll support the work.

And today, that idea is even more important.

Because everything is saturated.

Every market is noisy.

Everybody is posting.

Everybody has access to AI.

Everybody can create content.

So the goal is not to become famous to everybody.

The goal is to become deeply trusted by the right people.

For you, maybe it’s 1,000 true fans.

Maybe it’s 2,000.

Maybe it’s 500.

Maybe it’s 5,000.

But imagine this:

What if you had 1,000 true fans right now?

People who trusted your message.

People who resonated with your story.

People who saw you as the obvious choice.

People who would buy almost anything you put out because they believed in your work.

Could you capacitate that?

Probably not.

You’d probably have to create a subscription.

Or a book.

Or a group program.

Or some other scalable offer.

The point is, you don’t need everyone.

You need the right people, deeply connected to your message.

That is how you build a real tribe.

Not a fluffy audience.

Not a vanity metric machine.

A real tribe.

And when you build that, the business, the impact, the money, and the freedom become much more possible.

Stop Creating for Awareness. Start Creating Demand.

This is the bigger shift.

Stop creating content just for awareness.

Start creating content that creates demand.

Because generic content is interchangeable.

And now it’s infinite.

Which means it’s worth almost zero.

If all you’re doing is posting information people can get from AI in 10 seconds, you’re not building influence.

You’re adding to the noise.

The coaches who are going to win moving forward are the ones who can communicate with precision.

They can name the problem better than their audience can.

They can shift beliefs.

They can tell stories.

They can create epiphanies.

They can make people feel seen.

They can turn their message into demand.

And that starts by closing the specificity gap.

Describe the problem the way your dream client actually experiences it.

Use their words.

Name the enemy.

Anchor the message to a real moment.

Then don’t just teach at them.

Shift their perspective.

Give them a new way to see the problem.

Give them a belief that helps them move forward.

Because when your content changes what someone believes, it changes how they behave.

And when your content changes their behavior, trust goes way up.

Narrowing Isn’t the Cost. It’s the Mechanism.

This is the part most people need to understand.

Narrowing your message is not the cost.

It’s the mechanism.

Exclusion creates demand.

When your message is for everyone, nobody feels like it’s for them.

But when your message is specific, the right person feels called out.

They feel seen.

They feel understood.

They feel like you’re speaking directly to the thing they’ve been struggling with.

And that’s when they lean in.

That’s when they DM you.

That’s when they watch the full video.

That’s when they join the workshop.

That’s when they apply.

That’s when they buy.

Not because you shouted louder.

But because you spoke more clearly.

That’s the death of generic content.

And honestly, it’s good news.

Because the answer isn’t to post more.

The answer isn’t to become louder.

The answer isn’t to chase every trend.

The answer is to communicate with more precision, more depth, more conviction, and more humanity.

Your message matters too much to be watered down into generic tips.

Your people are out there.

But they are not waiting for another “3 tips” post.

They are waiting for someone to say the thing that makes them stop and think:

“That’s exactly what I’m going through.”

So get specific.

Speak their language.

Name the enemy.

Anchor it to the moment.

Shift their beliefs.

Create demand.

And remember:

Your message matters now more than it ever has before.

Don’t be afraid to speak it.

Be seen.

Be heard.

And be impactful.

Jason Meland

Who Is Jason Meland?

I am a value creator, mentor, and entrepreneur. I help online coaches master their messaging, attract dream clients, and build thriving high profit, high impact businesses.

When You’re Ready, Here’s How I Can Help You:

  1. Grab a copy for the 5 posts responsible for 7 figures in online fitness sales: https://www.indemandcoach.com/5-posts-ebook-2505 

  2. Join the waitlist to get an invite to join the Client Attraction Accelerator https://www.indemandcoach.com/in-demand-waitlist 

  3. Work with me personally 1:1 to build a high profit, high impact online coaching business. DM me "mentorship" here for details


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