Ep 007: 7 Lessons on Bravery, Vision and Building a Business That Feels Like You
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You don’t need a perfect plan. Or a polished brand. Or even a full-blown business idea.
Sometimes all you need is a little courage — and a nudge in the right direction.
This week on the podcast, I’m sharing 7 lessons that came out of my conversation with Wendy Batten — a creative entrepreneur who started with two blog posts and a whole lot of heart. These takeaways go beyond her story though. They’re the kind of reminders we all need when things feel foggy, hard, or just plain out of alignment.
Whether you’re just getting started or you’ve been at this for years, these are the kinds of lessons that’ll meet you right where you are.
Key Points from This Episode
Do it scared.
You don’t need full confidence to begin. Wendy said yes to a blogging conference before she had more than two posts — and that one brave move kickstarted everything. Sometimes the best thing you can do is start before you feel ready.
You don’t need the whole map.
Wendy didn’t have some big vision from day one. The path unfolded piece by piece — kind of like building a puzzle without the box. You just need to keep going long enough for the picture to take shape.
Learn your niche inside and out.
Real traction comes when you go deep. Wendy didn’t stay surface level — she studied, invested, and really got to know the people she serves. That’s where the momentum came from.
Dream bigger… then dream again.
Wendy calls it “vision storming” — letting yourself imagine what could be possible, even if it feels out of reach right now. You don’t need your current reality to match your vision. You just need to give yourself permission to dream.
Every shift comes with trade-offs.
Pivots aren’t always clean. Sometimes they’re messy and emotional. Wendy shared how selling their dream house made room for a better life — but that didn’t mean it was easy. Change always costs something, even if it’s worth it.
How you invest shows what you value.
Wendy’s business transformed when she started investing in coaching and mentorship — not as an expense, but as a commitment to growth. Time and money both speak. Are yours saying what you want them to?
Debrief the flops.
When something flops (and it will), don’t just bury it. Feel the feelings, grieve if you need to, but then pull the lessons out. Flops aren’t the end. They’re part of the process — and they often carry the most clarity.
Quotable Moments
“You don’t need full confidence to begin. You just need a little bit of courage and a little bit of bravery to do it even if you’re scared.”
— Shannon Acheson, 02:43
“You’re not supposed to see the whole picture. Every little step reveals the next — kind of like building a puzzle without the box.”
— Shannon Acheson, 03:39
“Wendy didn’t just dabble. She invested in learning the ins and outs of her people.”
— Shannon Acheson, 04:07
“Vision storm your life. What do you want to do, be, and have? And what if it could be even bigger than that?”
— Shannon Acheson, 04:36
“Pivoting sounds clean in our heads, but it’s usually messy. Sometimes there’s real grief in letting go of what was.”
— Shannon Acheson, 05:32
“Your time and money speak for you. Are they saying what you want them to?”
— Shannon Acheson, 07:55
“Feel the disappointment. Then take what you can from it and move forward.”
— Shannon Acheson, 09:17
