Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
What is this?
Less
More

Memberships

GC
Growthworks Community

23.8k members • Free

16 contributions to Growthworks Community
Fear of Visibility
A lot of entrepreneurs, especially spiritual or mystical entrepreneurs, are not stuck only because of lack of strategy but also The fear of visibility. But here’s the thing. Fear of visibility is rarely about being seen. It’s about fear of being ignored. Many brilliant spiritual entrepreneurs are sitting on gold. They have courses, messages, retreats, and mentorships that could change lives but they’re not consistently sharing them. Why? Because somewhere along the way, they got used to being overlooked. And now, the idea of being “visible” only reminds them of what happens when nobody engages. But this is where strategy actually comes in. Not self-blame. Not necessarily more mindset work. Strategy. Clear messaging. Data. Testing. Hooks. Offers. Either way… it’s a pattern. Not a prophecy. And it can be shifted with strategy, not just shadow work. What helped some of you finally show up with consistency?
3 likes • Aug 7
@Kimesha McDowell ah ha, that makes perfect sense. Thank you.
0 likes • 13d
@Yazmin Vargas very thoughtful and transformational response. Thank you. That makes a lot of sense as I struggled, and still sometimes do, on both levels. Internally with acceptance of new role and impact in this world as well as systematically with wanting everything done perfectly before launch.
My MVP A-ha Moment
I just had one of those “wait… why didn’t I see this sooner?” moments. For so long, I’ve been obsessed with solving the big problem for people. The kind of huge transformation that changes everything. But here’s what I realized: The bigger the problem, the harder it is for someone to say “yes.” And then it hit me—what if the key isn’t solving everything at once… but solving the Minimum Viable Problem first? -The small, bite-sized, very real problem that someone is actually wrestling with today. -The thing they’re already googling at 2AM. -The problem that feels tangible enough to fix right now. Instead of trying to package the whole mountain, I can just give them the first step. That’s the power of the MVP model: -Start with the problem that’s closest to their pain. -Create one small win. -Let that win naturally lead to the bigger transformation. This honestly feels like a massive weight lifted. I don’t have to solve everything in one product. I just have to solve something that matters, and build from there. I'm curious to hear from you: What’s one “bite-sized problem” your people face that could become its own product?
0 likes • 25d
@Kimesha McDowell thank you.
Your Offer Doesn’t Cost Too Much
You don’t have a pricing problem. You have a cost framing problem. One of the biggest lessons I’ve learned in sales lately is this: If you present a price without presenting the true cost, you might as well not present the price at all. For years I obsessed over my number. 👉🏽 Is it too high? 👉🏽 Will they think it’s worth it? 👉🏽 Should I lower it? But the number youI charge is never the real decision point. The real decision point is: what will it cost them if they don’t do it? If you don’t frame that, they will. They’ll compare your price to a vacation, a bill, or whatever else is top of mind. Because you didn’t set the frame, they’ll create their own. But the real cost isn’t a number. The real cost is: - Another year of stalled growth. - Another round of unfinished courses collecting dust. - Another cycle of missed opportunities. That’s the cost they’re really deciding on. And it’s your job to make that crystal clear every time you present your offer
1 like • Aug 27
This is Awesome Kimesha. It reminded me that people rarely say ‘it costs too much’ when they feel the value clearly outweighs the price. The real challenge is showing them what it’s costing them to stay stuck — emotionally, financially, even spiritually. Price is just a number, but framing the cost of inaction reveals the transformation they’re actually saying yes or no to. Once I started communicating that, I noticed conversations shifted from debating numbers to imagining possibilities.
Product Ladder and Pricing Dilemma
I have the following challenge : how to price every step of the Product Ladder ? I do not want to make it too high so that it can still be affordable but I don’t want it to be perceived as cheap and low quality neither . I need your help ! Thanks
2 likes • Aug 27
Hi Mohamed, I’ve wrestled with this same pricing question. What helped me was realizing that price is only one piece of the equation — what really matters is how people frame the value of the transformation you’re offering. If the outcome you deliver helps someone break through a deep frustration, gain clarity, or experience real change, then the price should be aligned with that transformation. Too low, and people may not trust the quality. Too high, and it feels out of reach. I started asking myself: ‘What is the value of the transformation in their life?’ That number isn’t about my costs, it’s about the shift they experience. Once I could articulate the value clearly (in their language, not mine), the price found its natural place on the product ladder.”
Small Steps Create Big Change
We live in a world where everyone wants quick results. The flashy “overnight success” stories make us believe that if something doesn’t work fast, it won’t work at all. But the truth is, real success is built on small, often boring, consistent steps. Think about how compound interest works. A little money invested every day grows into something massive over time. The same is true for your habits. Ten minutes a day learning, improving, or creating doesn’t feel like much, but in months or years, you’re unrecognizable compared to when you started. The problem? Because small steps feel “too small,” most people ignore them. They want the big leap, the viral post, the dramatic success story. But those who commit to the little actions — showing up daily, learning consistently, improving gradually — they’re the ones who build something that lasts. Celebrate small wins because they are proof that you’re moving. Walking a mile starts with a single step. And every little step builds momentum that compounds over time. So don’t underestimate the power of small daily actions. They look invisible today, but tomorrow, they’ll be the reason people call you “lucky.” 👉 What small daily step are you committed to right now?
2 likes • Aug 27
This is so true. Small steps aren’t just progress—they’re identity-shaping. Every little action says, this is who I am becoming.
1-10 of 16
Darryl Krige
4
76points to level up
@darryl-krige-6161
I help Christians secretly battling addiction get clean, stable, and spiritually anchored in 28 days—without shame, rehab, or religious fluff.

Active 19h ago
Joined Mar 22, 2023
Jeffrey's Bay, South Africa
Powered by