How to Build a Business as a Yoga Teacher Without Losing Yourself

How to build a business as a yoga teacher is one of the most common questions I hear and one of the most misunderstood. After more than 25 years teaching yoga and mentoring conscious entrepreneurs, I've noticed a pattern: the teachers who struggle most aren't struggling because they lack skill. They're struggling because they've convinced themselves that the most essential things about them are exactly the things that will make building a real business impossible.

This post is about that pattern. And about what happens when you stop trying to work around who you are.

The Fear Nobody Talks About

It's not stage fright. It's not the fear of failing.

It's the quiet conviction that your depth, your sensitivity, the way you feel everything in the room before anyone says a word—are liabilities. That building something sustainable will require you to become someone you're not sure you can be.

I want to tell you about Anna.

Anna is a Yoga Nidra teacher. Students had been coming back to her for years. She was, by all measures, the real thing. But as expert as her craft was, she felt her business side was total novice. What's more, she was convinced the two things were incompatible.

So she talked herself out of reaching out to me. More than once.

When she finally did, I asked what she was most afraid of bringing into the work.

She was quiet for a moment.

Then: I'm worried I'm too much. Too emotional. Too sensitive. Too nonlinear. Too spiritual for the business stuff and not strategic enough for any of it to land. I'm too woo!

She wasn't describing her flaws. She was describing herself.

What "Too Woo" Really Means

When a yoga teacher says I'm too woo, they usually mean: I don't fit the mold I think I need to fit.

Anna had spent years trying to sand those parts down. To show up more streamlined. More certain. More like what she imagined a successful teacher should look like.

But it didn't work. The very things she was trying to manage, to tuck away, were the same reason her students kept coming back. Her depth. Her emotional attunement. Her willingness to stay in the hard, quiet places rather than rush toward resolution.

Those things weren't the obstacles to her business. They were her business.

This is what I see again and again with yoga teachers who are trying to figure out how to build a sustainable business: they're working against themselves when the whole path forward is through themselves.

Your Uniqueness Is Not the Obstacle—It Is the Business

There's a version of business advice that tells you to find your niche, define your avatar, and systematize your offers. That's not wrong. But if it comes before the more fundamental question—who are you, actually, and what are you here to offer?—it produces something hollow.

The teachers I've worked with who build real, sustainable businesses aren't the ones who figured out the best marketing funnel. They're the ones who stopped translating themselves into a language they thought the market would understand and started building from exactly who they already were.

Anna did that. By the time we finished working together, she had a Yoga Nidra program that was entirely, unmistakably hers, built for the specific people only she could reach, in the specific way only she could reach them.

She told me later that the most important thing she got back wasn't her teaching. It was herself.

What Building From Who You Are Actually Looks Like

It starts with an honest inventory—not of your offerings, but of your nature.

What do people consistently feel in your presence? What do they come back for, even when they can't quite name it? What do you do almost effortlessly that others seem to find difficult?

Those answers are not separate from your business strategy. They are your business strategy.

From there, you build outward: offers that reflect your actual gifts, language that sounds like you rather than a coaching template, a structure that honors how you work best.

This isn't soft advice. It's the most practical thing I know. A business built on someone else's template is fragile. A business built on who you actually are is hard to replicate and hard to walk away from.

You Don't Have to Figure This Out Alone

One more thing Anna said that has stayed with me: doing this work inside a room—even a virtual one—with other gifted, thoughtful people doing the same hard work of learning to build from who they actually are changes something.

You see yourself reflected. You stop thinking you're the only one. You find momentum.

If you're a yoga teacher, a Yoga Nidra instructor, or a conscious entrepreneur trying to figure out how to build a business that's actually yours, that's exactly the work I do in the Business Accelerator—a small-cohort group program where we begin not with your marketing plan, but with the question I asked Anna.

If that's speaking to something in you, you're welcome to learn more and reserve your spot.

FAQ — Building a Business as a Yoga Teacher

How do I build a business as a yoga teacher without compromising my values?
Start by getting clear on what your values actually are, not in the abstract, but in practice. What do you naturally bring to your students that no template can replicate? Build your offers, pricing, and messaging from that place. A business grounded in your actual values is more durable than one built on someone else's model.

Is it possible to be "too spiritual" to run a successful yoga business?
No. In my experience, the qualities teachers worry make them unbusinesslike—depth, sensitivity, nonlinear thinking—are often their greatest business assets. The challenge is learning to build a structure that honors those qualities rather than working around them.

What's the difference between a yoga teacher and a conscious entrepreneur?
A yoga teacher shares a practice. A conscious entrepreneur builds a business ecosystem around their gifts, offering multiple ways for people to work with them, at different depths and price points, in a way that's financially sustainable. Most yoga teachers have everything they need to become conscious entrepreneurs. They just need a framework and support.

How long does it take to build a sustainable yoga business?
It depends on where you're starting. With clear positioning, the right offers, and consistent visibility, most teachers I work with see meaningful traction within three to six months. The key is building from clarity rather than scrambling from scarcity.

Do I need a large social media following to build a yoga business?
No. A highly engaged small audience almost always outperforms a large disengaged one. Depth of connection matters more than reach, especially in the early stages of building.

What is the Business Accelerator for conscious entrepreneurs?
The Business Accelerator is a small-cohort group mentorship program for yoga teachers and conscious entrepreneurs who are ready to build a sustainable business rooted in who they actually are. We work together over several months through live sessions, hot seat coaching, and peer accountability. If you're interested, you can find details and reserve your spot here.

Why Most Business Programs Fail Conscious Entrepreneurs (And What Actually Works)

Conscious entrepreneur business program. Soul-aligned business. Business coaching for yoga teachers. These are phrases I hear constantly and they point to a real problem I've spent more than 25 years inside, first as a student of it, then as someone who built a six-figure business from it, and now as a mentor helping others navigate it.

business coaching for yoga teachers

Most programs that claim to serve conscious entrepreneurs like yoga teachers, healers, coaches, creators, pick a side. Either the practical side or the spiritual side. Neither one actually solves the problem.

This post is about the split. And about what I've found, after a lot of hard lessons, that actually bridges it.

The Day I Closed Two Yoga Studios

In 2014, I closed two yoga studios.

Prana Yoga. Prana Yoga Station Park.

I believed in those places. Blood, sweat, tears. Lots of tears. Poured myself into them, leveraged myself for them, taught some of the best classes of my life inside them. Found wonderful, beautiful students, many of whom are still practicing with me today. God bless you.

The studios didn't make it.

When they closed, I didn't just lose the businesses. I also lost the version of my story where I thought I had it all figured out.

I was broke. Genuinely, practically, broke-ass, bank-account broke. Debt I would spend years paying back. Lessons I did not enjoy learning.

But here is the thing I didn't fully understand until years later, sitting in the south of France with a cup of coffee and a view I had no business being able to afford:

That wasn't the only way I'd been broke.

The studios, even when they were full, even when the classes were beautiful and the students were showing up and something real was happening in those rooms — I had been running them on someone else's blueprint.

I came into those studios following someone else's dream. Following a model that made sense on a spreadsheet but cost something essential in practice.

There is the kind of broke that empties your bank account.

And there is the kind that empties you.

I have been both kinds. At the same time, actually. Which is its own special kind of exhausting.

The Split That's Quietly Grinding Down Conscious Entrepreneurs

I've told that story to a lot of people over the years. And almost every time, they nod. Not because they closed studios, but because they recognize the split.

yoga teacher business strategy

Yoga teachers, healers, coaches, creators. People doing genuinely meaningful work. Quietly ground down by the gap between what they came here to do and how they've been told to do it.

Most of the business courses and coaching programs out there pick a side.

The practical ones hand you the funnel and the revenue targets. These treat depth and soul as a distraction from the "real work" of making money.

The spiritual ones tell you to raise your vibration and trust the universe. A vision board is all you need and rent, apparently, will sort itself out.

So you end up managing a split that shouldn't exist. Your integrity on one side. Your income on the other. Some invisible line between them that you're not supposed to cross.

That line between soul and income is a lie.

I spent a lot of years finding that out.

Why the Both/And Approach to Business Actually Works

After closing those studios, rebuilding from scratch, living and teaching in three countries, and eventually mentoring dozens of conscious entrepreneurs through their own versions of this split, I arrived at a framework I call the Windmill.

A windmill needs two things to work. Wind and a machine.

The wind is spirit — your sankalpa, the deep intention underneath your work, the thing that doesn't shift when the market does. Without it, the work becomes mechanical. You might make money, but something keeps feeling off.

The machine is the practical structure, clear positioning, sustainable systems, pricing that reflects the value you actually deliver, visibility that doesn't require you to become someone else. Without it, the wind just blows through. Nothing gets built.

Most business coaching for conscious entrepreneurs hands you one or the other.

What changes things is both.

This isn't a philosophy. It's a design. When your business is built from your sankalpa outward, when the spiritual thread and the practical structure are running in the same direction, the split dissolves. The work feels like one thing instead of two competing things you're trying to hold together.

What Soul-Aligned Business Strategy Looks Like in Practice

I want to be specific about this, because "soul-aligned business" can sound like a slogan.

In practice, it looks like a yoga teacher who finally understands her positioning clearly enough to attract the right students and charge what their training is actually worth.

It looks like a healer who has been undercharging for years building a pricing structure that reflects their actual expertise, without apologizing for it.

It looks like a coach who has been hiding behind a generic offering stepping into her specific mechanism of influence — the particular way they help people that nobody else replicates.

None of them needed more inspiration. They needed the wind and the machine working together.

That's the work.

The Business Accelerator for Conscious Entrepreneurs

This spring I'm opening the first cohort of my newest program: the Business Accelerator for Conscious Entrepreneurs.

Four months. Small group. Twelve people maximum.

We'll start with the deeply personal, the spiritual thread. We'll set your sankalpa, get crystal clear on your positioning, and explore the honest needs of your clients, what they actually need from you and why you're the right person to deliver it.

From there we build what actually needs to be built. Sustainable systems, products and pricing that reflect the value you deliver, and visibility that doesn't require you to perform.

This is the beta cohort. The investment is $997.

If this is landing for you, I'd love to have you in the room.

FAQ — Business Coaching for Conscious Entrepreneurs

What is a conscious entrepreneur?
A conscious entrepreneur is someone — a yoga teacher, healer, coach, or creator — whose business is inseparable from their values and spiritual practice. The challenge isn't finding purpose. It's building something practical and sustainable around it without losing what made the work worth doing.

Why do most business programs fail yoga teachers and healers?
Most programs either ignore the spiritual dimension entirely or focus on mindset without practical tools. Conscious entrepreneurs need both: a clear spiritual foundation and grounded, specific strategy. Programs that pick one side tend to leave people either financially struggling or quietly feeling like they've sold out.

What is sankalpa and how does it apply to business?
Sankalpa is a Sanskrit term for deep intention. Not a goal, but a thread of meaning that runs through everything you do. In a business context, it functions as a North Star. When your offers, pricing, and positioning are built from your sankalpa outward, the work feels coherent rather than fractured.

What is the Windmill Framework?
The Windmill Framework is the methodology at the center of the Business Accelerator. It combines wind — the spiritual thread, your sankalpa and deep intention — with the machine, the practical tools and tactics that turn that intention into a functioning, sustainable business. Both are required. Neither works without the other.

Who is the Business Accelerator for?
It's for yoga teachers, healers, coaches, and conscious entrepreneurs who are doing meaningful work and are ready to build the practical infrastructure to sustain it without splitting themselves in two to do it.

Is the Business Accelerator available outside Salt Lake City?
Yes. The program runs fully online and is open to conscious entrepreneurs worldwide.

Business Game Plan: Just Tell Me What To Do!

I spent three years living in the South of France with my family. So much of it was perfect.

Walk the kid to school. Hit the gym. Stop by the market on the way home. Sen would make lunch, and by one o'clock, the afternoon was wide open—a dip in the sea, a glass of rosé at our favorite café, the golden light doing what golden light does in Nice.

I was earning a living. I was present for my family. I was free.

But I wasn't building anything.

Work was organic, a little here, a little there. Some weeks were productive, some weren't.

I just didn't have a real business strategy. And without a strategy—or any kind of entrepreneurial roadmap—you default to comfort. Not laziness. Comfort. There's a difference, but the result is the same: you stay exactly where you are.

I remember saying to Seneca one day, "Man I wish I could find someone who could just look at my entire business—website, clients, products/services, messaging—and tell me what. To. Do."

I earned around $90,000 that year. Not bad.

But I knew—somewhere underneath the rosé and the sunshine—that I was leaving a lot on the table. Not just money. Direction. Momentum. The feeling that I was actually moving toward something instead of just floating through beautiful days.

Why Every Entrepreneur Needs a Clear Business Strategy

When I came back to the States, I decided that with this new chapter, I'd turn a page in my business as well.

So I built something. Deliberate. 

I sat down and built my own Blueprint.

I dumped everything in. My bio, my values, my finances, my offers—what was working, what wasn't, what I didn't want to do anymore, the things I refused to compromise on.

I interviewed 24 of my students and clients—took them to coffee and asked them what they actually saw in my work. Some said I was a great yoga teacher. Others said something deeper: "It's not what you do. It's who you are."

I processed all of it—testimonials, website traffic, products sold, revenue numbers, the whole picture—and what I developed was a living document that saw me more clearly than I'd seen myself in years.

It wasn't magic. It was organization.

All the pieces had been there the entire time. The experience, the skills, the relationships, the offerings. They just weren't organized into anything coherent.

My Business Blueprint gave me a map. A custom business roadmap.

The Hidden Cost of Not Having a Business Blueprint

This map showed me what I was undercharging for, what I was over-investing in, where I was hiding behind admin work instead of doing the things that actually move a business forward—writing, speaking, creating, connecting.

It even called out my pattern of getting projects 90% done and then chasing the next shiny thing.

Most entrepreneurs don’t lack talent.

They lack strategic structure.

And then the wild part: I followed the plan. I actually followed it. All skepticism aside, just followed it. And the direction turned into actual students served, actual lives impacted, actual dollars in my pocket.

Not overnight, but steadily and unmistakably.

Why Strategy Must Come Before a Website

Now, I do this for other people.

I offer a Business Blueprint. It's not a template. It's not pre-fab. It's your customized strategy to take you from where you are to where you want to be. 

It starts with a detailed questionnaire you fill out. Then I personally interview you. It's me—absorbing everything about you and your business and sitting with you, face-to-face for 90 minutes, reading between the lines of what you say and also what you don't say. Then I build building something for you that reflects back to you exactly who you actually are, not just what looks good on paper. It's a 50–60 page document custom-tailored to you. 

One of my clients came to me after paying someone else $5,000 to build her a website. But she didn't get a website. What she got was an empty template—barely populated, nothing personal, no strategy behind it. She was five grand poorer with nothing to show for it. I told her we needed to start with the Blueprint, because a website without a strategy is just a digital business card nobody asked for.

Her Blueprint was a revelation. It revealed who she actually was, how she was different from everyone else in her field, exactly what to charge, who to serve, and what to stop doing immediately. From there, everything else—the site, the pricing, the marketing, even her boundaries with her clients—had a foundation to stand on. In just one month of following the Blueprint, she's thriving more than she had in years.

That's what the Blueprint does. It's not coaching. It's not a pep talk. It's a mirror, one that shows you who you are. It's a map that shows you where you're going, and a plan that shows you how to get there.

Here's what I want you to know:

This Friday, February 28, is the last day the Business Blueprint will be available at $997. On March 1, it goes to $2,000—and it's staying there.

I'm not raising the price because of some marketing tactic. I'm raising it because the work is worth it, because every person I've done this for has told me it was worth many times what they paid, and because I spent too many years undercharging for things that genuinely change the trajectory of people's businesses and lives.

If you've been thinking about it, if you've been curious, if you need help, this is the week.

What the Business Blueprint Includes

Here's what you get:

  • Pre-work deep dive to understand your business before we ever get on a call

  • 90-minute intensive session focused on positioning, pricing, audience, offers, and strategy

  • Comprehensive written Blueprint, 50–60 pages, delivered within five business days—your roadmap for the next 12 months and beyond

  • Blueprint Review interview to walk through the plan together and discuss next steps

Let's talk.

No pressure. If it's right, it's right. If not, namaste.

If you decide to continue working with me afterward, your $997 investment rolls directly into any private mentorship program so the Blueprint acts as a solid foundation for everything else that comes next. 

I'll honor February pricing for anyone who books a discovery call before March 1st.

I so wish I'd had this years ago. I'd be much further along. But I'm glad I have it now—and I'd love to offer it to you.

Namaste, 

 

FAQ: Business Blueprint & Business Strategy

What is a Business Blueprint?
A Business Blueprint is a customized business strategy document that clarifies your positioning, pricing, target audience, offers, and long-term growth plan. It serves as a strategic roadmap for entrepreneurs.

Why is business strategy important before building a website?
Without a clear business strategy, a website lacks direction and conversion power. Strategy defines messaging, pricing, positioning, and audience before design ever begins.

Who is the Business Blueprint for?
It’s designed for entrepreneurs, service providers, creatives, and consultants who feel unclear, underpriced, or strategically stuck.

How long does it take to see results?
Clarity is immediate. Revenue growth follows execution of the plan.

How to Use AI as a Conscious Entrepreneur

What does conscious AI use actually look like for entrepreneurs? In a world obsessed with automation and artificial intelligence, the real question is how to use AI ethically without replacing human connection. As a conscious entrepreneur, I’ve been thinking deeply about the difference between complicated problems AI can solve and complex problems only humans can navigate.

This Valentine’s Day, I want to share a story about AI for entrepreneurs, love, and what happens when you let technology handle logistics so you can stay fully present for what matters most.

A Perfect Date Night (Planned With AI)

AI and human connection

I want to tell you about one of the best date nights I've ever planned.

For Christmas, I wanted to do something special for my wife, Seneca. Seneca’s a great gift giver and I wanted to give her something unforgettable—not something she'd unwrap and forget but an experience. Something that felt like us. Something that showed her I knew her and listened to her what she likes and wants.

And so, a few times in conversation, she’s dropped how she loves going to the symphony or the opera. Live music. BIG live music. The kind that fills a room and makes you forget your phone exists. She’s also a foody. Loves great food. She’s not into trendy food, but rather the kind of meal where you linger over every bite and make a phonecall to your Italian relatives because they understand really good food. She also loves moving the bod as part of our dates, a walk, a hike, a bike ride or something. And she appreciates conversation without a schedule pressing us forward.

This was my contribution—knowing her, knowing what would feel meaningful. It was 15 years of paying attention. No algorithm on earth could have told me that.

What AI Did — And What It Didn’t

But here's where AI came in.

I asked it to help me find what was happening in Salt Lake City near the holidays. Symphony or opera performances, specifically. I gave it our preferences for food to find a restaurant: Italian, walkable from the venue, highly rated, not a chain. I asked it to map out the logistics so we wouldn't spend the evening staring at our phones trying to figure out parking or driving directions.

In about ten minutes, I had the whole evening planned. A Rachmaninoff concert. A Tuscan restaurant we'd never tried that was a 10-minute walk from the concert hall. Everything mapped, timed, and ready.

I made the reservations, bought the tickets, and gave her that for Christmas. 

We went just last weekend and it was a perfect night. And sorry AI, but you deserve exactly zero credit for the magic of it.

Here's why I'm telling you this on Valentine's Day. 

Complicated vs. Complex Problems

A few months ago, I attended a multi-day AI summit where Dr. Arthur Brooks—the Harvard professor and Atlantic columnist—said something that fundamentally changed how I think about this technology.

He talked about the difference between complicated problems and complex problems.

AI for business strategy

Complicated problems are things like logistics, data analysis, research, math, scheduling, market comparisons. Deep research. They have solutions you can figure out with enough information. Your left brain handles these. AI is extraordinary at them. Ninja.

Complex problems are things like relationships, meaning, purpose, love, creative expression, conflict resolution, spiritual practice. They don't have neat solutions. They require wisdom, intuition, lived experience. Your right brain handles these. AI is terrible at them. The worst. 

And here's the line from Brooks I haven't stopped thinking about: "You don't want a simulation of love. You want actual love. Never solve a complex problem with a complicated machine."

Your brain totally knows the difference. A simulation created by the left brain doesn't register on the right brain. We all have natural bullshit detectors. You can't fool yourself into connection, meaning, or purpose through technology. You just can’t.

What This Means for Conscious Entrepreneurs

So what does this mean for us as conscious entrepreneurs?

What it means is knowing what to hand to AI—and what to keep for yourself. Pure and simple. 

Hand AI the complicated stuff: organizing your ideas, researching your market, analyzing your survey data, planning your content calendar, drafting outlines, building strategic roadmaps.

Keep the complex stuff: the relationships with your students, your creative vision, your teaching presence, your spiritual practice, the conversations that matter, the messy human work of showing up for the people you serve. This is the very difficult but very rewarding work that just can’t be delegated to a machine. 

When you delegate the complicated stuff, you don't just save time. You save time and get your life back for all the complex stuff of being human.

Brooks put it this way: buy time with AI, but spend it on the mysteries that make you human. Spend it on love. On worship—whatever that means for you. On nature. On beauty. On the relationships that feed your soul.

That's what happened on my date night. AI handled the research, the logistics, the complicated variables. Hell, it even analyzed hundreds of Google and Yelp reviews (in seconds). And because of that, I got to be fully present with my wife at a concert that put us in awe, over a meal we're still talking about.

That's conscious AI use. Not replacing the human stuff. Freeing yourself up for more of it.

AI Alchemy for Conscious Entrepreneurs

Sunday, February 15 | 11 AM–2 PM MT | Live Online

In three hours, you'll learn how to partner with AI for the complicated work—so you can get back to the complex, beautiful, irreplaceable work of being human.

We'll cover:

  • Brain Dump to Brilliance—Turn your scattered thinking into organized strategy

  • Delegation vs. Abdication—The critical distinction

  • The Shiva/Shakti Framework—Consciousness meets action

  • When to Use AI and When NOT To—The Brooks principle in practice

  • Live Demonstrations—Watch the method in real time

  • Ready-to-Use Prompts—Templates for YOUR specific business

Plus the full AI Alchemy manual.

Investment: $97—Live + Lifetime Replay $77—Replay Only

Last time at this price. Next workshop goes to $197.

AI is a brilliant complicated machine. You are an irreplaceable complex human.

Use the machine for what it's good at. Save yourself for what only you can do.

Happy Valentine's Day. Go be with someone you love tonight.

P.S.—Arthur Brooks also said something else that stuck with me: "Anything that substitutes for real human relationships makes you less happy. Anything that complements them makes you happier." That's the whole philosophy of conscious AI use in two sentences. Sunday, I'll show you how to put it into practice.

FAQs

What is the difference between complicated and complex problems?
Complicated problems involve logistics, research, scheduling, and data analysis. They can be solved with enough information. Complex problems involve relationships, meaning, purpose, creativity, and spiritual life. They require human wisdom and lived experience.

How should entrepreneurs use AI ethically?
Entrepreneurs should delegate complicated tasks like research, data analysis, and organization to AI while keeping human-centered work—relationships, creative expression, teaching presence—for themselves.

Can AI replace human connection?
No. AI can simulate communication, but it cannot replace real human relationships, intuition, or emotional presence.

What is conscious AI use?
Conscious AI use means partnering with AI to handle technical and analytical work while preserving human agency, creativity, and connection.

How can AI save time without reducing authenticity?
By handling logistics and research, AI frees up time so entrepreneurs can invest more energy in relationships, service, and meaningful work.

How I Generated $20,000 in Five Weeks Using AI—Without Losing My Voice

Over the last five weeks, something happened that I think matters — especially if you’ve been wondering whether AI is actually useful or if it’s just hype.

I generated $20,000 in revenue.
In five weeks.

Now, before you roll your eyes or assume this is one of those "I made six figures in my sleep" stories—it's not.

This is about AI for entrepreneurs. AI marketing strategy. Conscious AI use.

And it’s about focus.

Let me tell you what actually happened

I didn't use AI to write sales pages or create some automated funnel. I love the writing part and did that myself.

AI marketing strategy

What I did was take a hard look at what I already had—and figure out how to use it in an organized way instead of a scattered one.

What I DID have:

  • 25 years of teaching experience

  • An audience that trusts me

  • Offerings that genuinely transform lives

  • Systems I've been using for years—my website, scheduler, emails.

What I DIDN'T have was a clear strategy for putting all of it together in a way that actually connected my skills with the people who wanted what I offer.

I had the wind.

But the windmill was missing a few essential components.

How I Partnered With AI (Without Replacing Myself)

So I partnered with AI—not to replace my thinking, but to organize it.

I sat down with my AI tools and said:

"Here's everything I've got. Here's my audience. Here's what I'm offering. I want to make a real impact with what I have. Help me build a strategic plan that actually moves the needle."

What came back was simple, direct, and remarkable. It gave me a marketing sequence built around:

  • MY voice

  • MY offers

  • MY existing systems.

Nothing new. Nothing I hadn't done before.

Just organized. Focused. Strategic.

The AI looked at my metrics, helped me sequence my outreach, suggested timing and follow-up cadences, and helped me track what was working so I could adjust in real time.

I still wrote every email. I still showed up for every call. I still delivered every session.

AI didn’t do the work for me but it helped me stop scattering my energy across 15 directions and focus it like a laser on the three things that would actually generate results.

Five weeks. $20,000.

But more importantly:

  • Real people served

  • Blueprints delivered

  • Mentorships started

  • Meditation Challenge launched

  • Retreat filling up

  • Lives actually impacted.

Delegation vs. Abdication

This is what I mean by conscious AI use. And this is what I'm so passionate about. I'm using AI to delegate tasks rather than abdicate my autonomy.

There’s a difference.

Delegation means you remain the thinker, the voice, the authority.
Abdication means you hand over your judgment and identity.

AI should amplify your clarity. Not replace it.

AI Alchemy for Conscious Entrepreneurs

This Sunday, I’m teaching exactly how I did this.

AI Alchemy for Conscious Entrepreneurs
Sunday, February 15
11 AM–2 PM MT
Live Online

In three hours, you'll learn:

  • Brain Dump to Brilliance—My signature method for turning scattered thinking into structured, authentic content

  • Delegation vs. Abdication—The critical distinction that determines whether AI amplifies your voice or replaces it

  • The Shiva/Shakti Framework—Integrating consciousness with action in your AI practice

  • Ethical AI for Conscious Entrepreneurs—Using this technology in alignment with your values

  • Live Demonstrations—Watch the process happen in real time

  • Ready-to-Use Prompts—Templates you can implement immediately

Plus the full AI Alchemy manual with examples, frameworks, and resources.

Investment:

  • $97—Live + Lifetime Replay

  • $77—Replay Only

This is the last time I'm offering this workshop at this price. Next time, it goes to $197.

You already have the goods. The experience. The wisdom. You know your audience.

Maybe what you need isn't more content or another certification. Maybe what you need is a better windmill.

Let's build one together.

P.S.—I'm not saying AI is magic. I'm saying it helped me do what I was already capable of doing—but faster, more focused, and without the scattered energy that was costing me thousands every month. If you've been sitting on gifts the world needs, this workshop might be the nudge that gets them out there.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is AI actually useful for entrepreneurs?
It can be — if used strategically. AI works best when organizing your ideas, sequencing marketing, and tracking results. It’s not a replacement for your voice or expertise.

Do I need to automate everything to make money with AI?
No. I didn’t automate. I wrote everything myself. AI supported the strategy behind it.

What is conscious AI use?
Using AI to delegate operational tasks while maintaining your authority, voice, and ethical alignment.

Can AI help increase revenue without changing my offers?
Yes. Often it’s about organizing and sequencing what you already have — not creating something new.

Business Blueprint For Conscious Entrepreneurs

She didn’t need more ideas. She didn’t need another marketing hack. She needed a clear Business Blueprint for conscious entrepreneurs like her—something that could show her exactly who she is, what she’s here to do, and how her work can actually support her life.

That’s what the Business Blueprint is designed to do.

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