LIFT With Sarah
Sarah Layson sits down with Diamond Taylor for a conversation about courage, calling, and the weight of building something that truly matters. This episode reaches beyond business strategy and creative work. It speaks to the quiet moments where leaders are forced to choose between comfort and conviction. Diamond shares what it looked like to walk away from a stable six-figure corporate career and bet on a vision that didn’t yet have guarantees, applause, or certainty attached to it. At the heart of this conversation is the belief that leadership requires internal alignment before external success. Diamond reflects on the difference between surviving and building with intention. Her journey reveals that real leadership isn’t simply about producing great work. It’s about protecting the dignity of people, telling stories responsibly, and creating spaces where communities feel seen honestly and fully. In a world moving fast through content and noise, she challenges the idea that creative work should only chase attention. For Diamond, the work is only finished when it leaves people better than it found them. As the conversation unfolds, listeners will hear the raw realities behind entrepreneurship and self-leadership. Diamond opens up about using her retirement savings to launch Friends and Company and navigating the uncertainty that came with starting from the ground up. She shares why Memphis became central to her vision and why authentic storytelling carries real responsibility, especially in communities that are often misunderstood or oversimplified online. The conversation also explores the difficult seasons where belief has to exist before visible results, when consistency matters more than recognition, and when leaders have to learn how to keep moving while “nobody is clapping yet.” There’s a deep emotional honesty woven throughout this episode. Diamond speaks openly about the pressure creatives often carry to constantly produce while quietly fighting exhaustion, doubt, and fear behind the scenes. She reflects on the grounding habits that helped her stay anchored during uncertain seasons and the internal shifts required to lead herself before leading others. It’s not polished success talk. It’s a real conversation about discipline, stewardship, identity, and the cost of staying faithful to a vision before anyone else fully understands it. If you’ve ever questioned whether you’re building something meaningful enough to keep going, this conversation will meet you there. If you’ve ever felt caught between stability and purpose, between fear and faith, you’ll recognize yourself in Diamond’s story. This episode is a reminder that some of the most important work happens long before the world notices it. More than anything, this conversation points toward a future where storytelling becomes more human, leadership becomes more grounded, and creativity becomes a force for restoration instead of performance. A future where leaders build things that honor people well and leave communities stronger because they existed. To grow. To reflect. To lead with intention. Welcome to LIFT. Subscribe and follow: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/liftwithsarahlayson/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61583340696839 Website: sarahlayson.com And Apple Podcast https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/lift-with-sarah/id1886005274
10 episodios
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