After The Book Podcast

When Charging Feels Wrong

17 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio When Charging Feels Wrong

Descripción

Episode: 22Title: When Charging Feels Wrong In this episode:A listener question from Rachel, an author who ran a successful free workshop and found herself stuck when it came time to charge for it. This episode explores the beliefs many authors carry about money, accessibility, generosity, and the sustainability of their work. The question Rachel teaches mindfulness for overwhelmed professionals. After running a free workshop based on her book, she received strong engagement and follow-up interest. But when she considered charging for future workshops, she felt conflicted. Would charging undermine her message? Would it exclude the people who need the work most? Would turning it into a business compromise the reason she wrote the book in the first place? Key ideas Pricing is often a belief issue before it's a business issue Many authors feel uncomfortable being compensated for work they love Sustainability is part of service Accessibility and compensation are not opposites Your book and your deeper work can serve different purposes Building a business around your message doesn't have to contradict your message The trap Many people carry an unspoken belief: If it comes naturally to me, it shouldn't cost anything. Or: If it's my gift, I should give it away. The problem is that this often leads people to undervalue the work that helps others most. The distinction Your book can remain the accessible entry point. Your deeper work can become the place where people receive: guidance support accountability implementation Those are different levels of engagement. And they can coexist. From the episode "Free isn't generous if it means you eventually have to stop." A different way to think about charging Charging isn't necessarily about maximizing revenue. Sometimes it's about creating: sustainability commitment engagement longevity Because if the work matters, finding a way to keep doing it matters too. Reflection Questions Where did you learn that your best work should be free? If you had to either charge or stop, which would you choose? What would it look like to build a business that reflects your message? How might accessibility and sustainability coexist in your work? What would change if you gave yourself permission to be compensated for your deepest expertise? Next Step If you'd like to continue thinking about how a book becomes a sustainable business, visit BookToBusinessBlueprint.com [http://BookToBusinessBlueprint.com]. Get full access to The Book-To-Business Blueprint at booktobusinessblueprint.com/subscribe [https://booktobusinessblueprint.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de After The Book Podcast!

Empezar

2 meses por 1 €

Después 4,99 € / mes · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts exclusivos
  • 20 horas de audiolibros / mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

22 episodios

Portada del episodio When Charging Feels Wrong

When Charging Feels Wrong

Episode: 22Title: When Charging Feels Wrong In this episode:A listener question from Rachel, an author who ran a successful free workshop and found herself stuck when it came time to charge for it. This episode explores the beliefs many authors carry about money, accessibility, generosity, and the sustainability of their work. The question Rachel teaches mindfulness for overwhelmed professionals. After running a free workshop based on her book, she received strong engagement and follow-up interest. But when she considered charging for future workshops, she felt conflicted. Would charging undermine her message? Would it exclude the people who need the work most? Would turning it into a business compromise the reason she wrote the book in the first place? Key ideas Pricing is often a belief issue before it's a business issue Many authors feel uncomfortable being compensated for work they love Sustainability is part of service Accessibility and compensation are not opposites Your book and your deeper work can serve different purposes Building a business around your message doesn't have to contradict your message The trap Many people carry an unspoken belief: If it comes naturally to me, it shouldn't cost anything. Or: If it's my gift, I should give it away. The problem is that this often leads people to undervalue the work that helps others most. The distinction Your book can remain the accessible entry point. Your deeper work can become the place where people receive: guidance support accountability implementation Those are different levels of engagement. And they can coexist. From the episode "Free isn't generous if it means you eventually have to stop." A different way to think about charging Charging isn't necessarily about maximizing revenue. Sometimes it's about creating: sustainability commitment engagement longevity Because if the work matters, finding a way to keep doing it matters too. Reflection Questions Where did you learn that your best work should be free? If you had to either charge or stop, which would you choose? What would it look like to build a business that reflects your message? How might accessibility and sustainability coexist in your work? What would change if you gave yourself permission to be compensated for your deepest expertise? Next Step If you'd like to continue thinking about how a book becomes a sustainable business, visit BookToBusinessBlueprint.com [http://BookToBusinessBlueprint.com]. Get full access to The Book-To-Business Blueprint at booktobusinessblueprint.com/subscribe [https://booktobusinessblueprint.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

Ayer17 min
Portada del episodio How to Know If It’s Working - Episode 21

How to Know If It’s Working - Episode 21

Episode: 21Title: How to Know If It's Working In this episode:After testing a coaching offer, workshop, resource, or small program, how do you know whether it actually worked? This episode explores what to measure, what to ignore, and how to recognize real traction before the numbers look impressive. Key ideas Most authors measure the wrong things after a test Sales, attention, and praise are incomplete signals Transformation is more important than applause Encouragement and evidence are not the same thing Silence is often ambiguous, not failure One test rarely tells the whole story Learning is part of the result The four questions to ask after every test Did it help someone? Did anything actually shift? Was there a meaningful result? Did anyone come back or refer someone else? Return and referral are powerful signals. What questions came back? Questions reveal both value and gaps. What did I learn? About the audience About the offer About the delivery About yourself Encouragement vs. Evidence One of the most important distinctions in this episode: Encouragement "That was great." "I loved it." "You're really good at this." Evidence "I tried this and here's what happened." "This changed how I think about my situation." "I shared this with someone else who needed it." Evidence points toward transformation. When silence isn't failure Sometimes a test gets little or no response. That doesn't automatically mean the idea failed. Silence may indicate: limited reach unclear messaging poor timing the wrong audience or simply an incomplete test One quiet result is often inconclusive—not definitive. From the episode "Stop measuring whether people liked it. Start measuring whether it helped." Reflection Questions What evidence do you have that your work helped someone? What questions came back that surprised you? If a recent test was quiet, what might that silence actually mean? What did you learn from the test that you didn't know before? Are you looking for encouragement or evidence? Next Episode We'll continue exploring the practical side of building a book-based business and how small tests become real direction over time. Get full access to The Book-To-Business Blueprint at booktobusinessblueprint.com/subscribe [https://booktobusinessblueprint.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

4 de jun de 202617 min
Portada del episodio How to Test Something Small

How to Test Something Small

Episode: 20Title: How to Test Something Small In this episode:A practical look at how to test ideas before overbuilding them. This episode explores why authors often skip testing, how to create small real-world experiments, and what you can learn before investing months building something bigger. Key ideas:– Most authors build too much before they test anything– Testing is the bridge between thinking and building– Small tests reduce assumptions and accelerate learning– The goal is not perfection—it’s real feedback– Businesses built through testing are stronger than businesses built through guessing What testing actually means:– Offering something real– Delivering actual value– Keeping the format small and simple– Learning from the response before expanding Examples of small tests:– A 3-session coaching package– A one-time workshop– A small pilot group– A short PDF or single training What testing reveals:– What people actually struggle with– What language resonates– Where transformation happens– What’s missing from your framework– What kind of work fits your temperament From the episode:“Testing isn’t about putting out bad work. It’s about putting out small work.” Core principle:Test before you build. What happens if you don’t test:– You build on assumptions– You overinvest too early– You lose time fixing preventable problems– You confuse lack of fit with failure Reflection questions:– What is one thing you’ve been thinking about building that you could test this month?– What is the smallest version of it?– What could you strip away?– Who could you test it with?– What is stopping you from testing it this week? Next step:Continue the thinking—and take one step at a time—at BookToBusinessBlueprint.com [http://BookToBusinessBlueprint.com] Get full access to The Book-To-Business Blueprint at booktobusinessblueprint.com/subscribe [https://booktobusinessblueprint.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

28 de may de 202616 min
Portada del episodio What All the Author Questions Have in Common

What All the Author Questions Have in Common

Episode: 19Title: What All the Author Questions Have in Common In this episode:After six listener-question episodes, this episode steps back to explore the deeper patterns underneath them. Why authors get stuck, what they’re actually struggling with, and what building a business from a book really requires. The six author situations:– A book that didn’t create momentum– Overwhelm from too much advice– Not knowing what to offer– Building something that didn’t sell– Being stuck between multiple good options– Being fully booked but unsure how to grow The deeper patterns underneath them:– Stuck between clarity and action– Waiting for permission– Trying to skip the learning phase– Building in isolation– Wanting certainty before movement Key idea:Building a business from a book is not a planning problem.It’s a learning problem. From the episode:“You don’t figure it out and then act. You act, and that’s how you figure it out.” What actually works:– Take a small step– Pay attention to what happens– Learn from the response– Adjust based on reality What this means:– You don’t need perfect clarity– You don’t need to know the full path– You don’t need permission– You do need movement Reflection questions:– Where are you waiting for certainty before moving?– What are you trying to figure out mentally that can only be learned through action?– What small step could you test right now?– What assumptions are you making that haven’t been tested yet? What’s next:The next phase of the podcast explores the principles underneath the questions:– testing without overbuilding– knowing when to pivot– visibility without becoming a content machine– pricing your work– growing without fragmentation Next step:Continue the thinking (and take one small step at a time) at BookToBusinessBlueprint.com [http://BookToBusinessBlueprint.com] Get full access to The Book-To-Business Blueprint at booktobusinessblueprint.com/subscribe [https://booktobusinessblueprint.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

21 de may de 202616 min
Portada del episodio When You’re Fully Booked and Don’t Know How to Grow

When You’re Fully Booked and Don’t Know How to Grow

Episode: 18Title: When You’re Fully Booked and Don’t Know How to Grow In this episode:A response to a listener who has reached capacity with one-on-one clients and is unsure how to grow without burning out or losing the effectiveness of her work. This episode explores practical options for sustainable growth and how to think through the trade-offs. Key ideas:– Being fully booked is a form of success—not a problem to fix– Capacity creates a new constraint that requires a different kind of thinking– Growth at this stage is about sustainability, not expansion for its own sake– Every growth option involves a trade-off– Small adjustments reveal more than big changes The three paths:– Raise prices → fewer clients, more space, higher revenue per client– Waitlist → protect current model, limit capacity, delay access– Group model → help more people, reduce personalization, learn new skills What’s actually happening:– You’ve built something that works– You’re at the edge of your current capacity– Now you need to decide what to protect and what to change From the episode:“This is what success looks like—not the polished version, but the real one.” Core question:What are you optimizing for right now?– income– time– energy– impact Reframe:You’re not stuck because nothing is working.You’re at a decision point because something is. Practical starting point:– Start with the simplest change (raise prices)– Observe what happens– Let the response guide your next move– Avoid overbuilding too early Reflection questions:– What are you optimizing for right now?– What do you want your days to look like six months from now?– What are you willing to let go of?– What are you actually afraid will change? Next episode:A step back: what these listener questions have in common—and what they reveal about building something that lasts. Get full access to The Book-To-Business Blueprint at booktobusinessblueprint.com/subscribe [https://booktobusinessblueprint.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

14 de may de 202615 min