Freebies

Be That Woman with fitness coach Michelle Bishop

Michelle is a world class ISSA Certified personal trainer and ISSA Certified Nutritionist (CNC) who resides in Columbus, Ohio with her husband and daughter. “Michelle’s mission is to help women break free from the lies and limitations that have been placed on them both mentally and physically. With an amazing culture, and 23 minutes of high intensity weight training, she is helping women acquire many things into their lives, one of which is time. Her belief is that health and fitness should fit around your life, not your life having to fit around health and fitness. What Michelle is known for most is her ability to connect with women in a raw, authentic way in a very filtered world. She wholeheartedly believes in her mission and shows up for a live workout everyday with her community.”

In This Episode You Will Learn About:

  • Michelle and how she got started in fitness, lifestyle, and wellness coaching  (2:15)
  • Why authenticity trumps all when building a business online (6:00)
  • What it means to “Be that woman” (8:45)
  • The importance of showing up for your business, your brand, and your community (14:05)
  • How busy seasons of work can effect motherhood in a surprisingly good way (15:15)
  • The power of live events for your community (26:00)
  • Michelle’s biggest advice for balancing motherhood with business  (32:30)
  • Rapid Fire Questions (48:00)

Resources:

How to maximize your influence & business using video with VidProMom Meredith Marsh

Youtuber & podcast host Meredith Marsh is one boss mama who has a passion for helping other create impact with video content. 

In This Episode You Will Learn About:

  • Who Meredith is and how she got started in video content creation (1:30)
  • How to repurpose written blog content into video (5:00)
  • How video yields connection & community (6:30)
  • How to get started & the 3 things you need to know about YouTube (7:35)
  • YouTube community, collaboration, and the algorithm (15:10)
  • Meredith’s 5 Tier Filter for YouTube success (19:00)
  • The importance in creating videos that solve a problem for others (26:00)
  • The importance of consistency & time management on YouTube (27:20)
  • Rapid Fire Questions (and the best gear for video) (38:00)

Resources:

MIP Mini: What’s the deal with Instagram creator accounts & should you switch?

In this episode, we dive in to Instagram’s new creator account and discuss whether or not you should switch!

Follow Christy on IG- www.instagram.com/christykeanecan

MIP Insiders Facebook Group- https://www.facebook.com/groups/themommyinfluencerpodcast

Intro: 00:06 You’re listening to motherhood ignited a podcast for mompreneurs creatives and influencers who are rocking the beautiful balance between working passionately and nurturing. Presently I’m your host, Christy Keane, and every week I interview inspiring mom, bosses, brands and industry experts to bring you the knowledge, tools and strategies to grow your influence and business through purposeful online content creation. So come in and cozy up mamas and get ready to ignite your goals.

Christy Keane: 00:36 Oh boy. Okay. Today I am a little bit over 36 weeks pregnant, feeling every single bit of it. So I am trying to batch as many of these mip minis as possible and we talk about batch content a lot and how that can save you time. I’m just so excited to be able to keep brand new content week after week and being able to be home with my baby boy when he comes. It’s just so exciting. And a few of you know, my daughter cammy’s been gone for a little over a week and she gets back today. I’m so excited. I am doing my maternity photos, I have packed my bags and yeah, my parents come and then once they get here he can come any time. So thank you guys for reaching out with so many well wishes. And rest assured the motherhood ignited podcast will still be coming on week after week after this baby gets here.

Christy Keane: 01:34 So you do not miss out on any content or any good tips for all your mompreneurs creatives and influencers out there. So today I want to talk about what the deal is with Instagram’s new creator accounts. So Instagram is making some changes and one of the big buzzworthy items that I keep hearing a lot of mompreneurs and influencers and creatives talk about is the new creator account. And so why these new creator accounts? Okay, so brand sponsorships and collapse have almost replaced traditional advertisements. Right? At this point in time when I’m recording this, it’s 2019 and I know so many more people that are responsive to ads on Instagram or stories and content on Instagram than they are commercials. I don’t even see a lot of commercials right now. I watch Netflix but no commercials or I watch Hulu and I fast forward through them or check my phone during them.

Christy Keane: 02:28 So creator profiles, our Instagram solution to give influencers back a bit more control in this space of advertisement and their value because we all know influencers are invaluable to Instagram, their messaging and their following is why people keep showing up and open their phone as much as they do. That’s why they’re opening their wallets as much as they do these days. So what is a creator account? Cause I know a lot of people are very confused about that and myself included, I am no expert, I’m just sharing my experience and some things that I have found out along the way. But similar to a business account creator accounts are, um, accounts will have access to exclusive stats and analytics, but they’re more reserved for influencers, public figures, bloggers and creatives. So with the extra analytics, the rumor is that Instagram is going to be rolling out in Instagram Creator Studio Dashboard, which is going to help creatives better track their growth and their engagement over time.

Christy Keane: 03:31 They’ll have access to more follower demographics, which is huge because whenever a brand reaches out, they asked for all of these statistics and sometimes what Instagram gives me isn’t necessarily all of the analytics that these brands would like to see. They’d like to be able to narrow down better which city and demographic your audience is. And while Instagram right now does give you some analytics related to that, it’s not as in depth as I know a lot of brands would love to get their hands on when they’re working with brand partnerships. So that will definitely be a great for pitching specific brands and just getting really well aligned partnerships. I had switched to a creator account and one of the statistics that I noticed was a little bit different than the business account is that I was able to see my follow and unfollow statistics.

Christy Keane: 04:25 So not only just seeing how much I have grown over the past seven days or whatever time frame I put in, but I also could see how many people unfollowed me, which was actually like pretty depressing when I looked at it every week. Because, um, as if you listen to my interview with James Nord this week, that’s the trend. People are unfollowing every day. Accounts aren’t growing hand. Yeah. So just to see the trend of how many people unfollow every time you post. It’s pretty eyeopening. But that is one of the analytics that I did notice was different. The other big thing that was different is messaging. So as somebody who is a big brand in Instagram or somebody who is an influencer or a blogger, you get a lot of messages and it can be overwhelming. So with the creator accounts they have um, direct messaging filters.

Christy Keane: 05:19 So you have a primary account that you can filter through unread red and you can flag them, you can even mark them as unread, which is my favorite feature. And then there is a general mailbox as well who are people you have accepted requests from but aren’t maybe in your primary circle of who you communicate with [inaudible]. And then you have your request. And one big difference in the requests folder is that you now have your top request or all requests that you can filter it down to. So top request would be based on following from what I can see from the way did that it filtered my own dms. And so a brand or an influencer who reaches out with the larger reach will show at the top of that folder. So the other thing that is new with creator accounts is that you have a little bit more profile control.

Christy Keane: 06:15 So in general you can aim to control a little bit better who is messaging you, but mostly how they are messaging you. So their goal is to have decreased spam and cold messages and over time you would have more meaningful messages. The other thing that you have control of on your profile with the creator account is being able to show your creator category or your email. So you can, you can block your contact information and you can block what if you’re a public figure, if you’re a blogger, just whatever general category that your Instagram account is. I found that helpful because I’ve listed my account as a public figure sometimes. I felt kind of weird about that because, because I’m not necessarily a blogger because I’m on a podcast host now and then we do have a lot of media inquiries because of Charlie and her journey and my messaging as well.

Christy Keane: 07:12 So when I had a creator account, which I will get into, I don’t anymore. I did, I’m hide that, but he kept my contact information open because for me, I still wanted brands or other families with hearing loss to be able to reach out to me directly. But for somebody who is a celebrity who has millions of followers who does not want them to be able to see their contact information, you can hide that right there. So I thought that was a pretty cool feature. The other thing that’s rolling out a shoppable post, and it’s rumored to be something that creator accounts will have access to. I didn’t notice that when I had started my creator account or even know how to work that, so I can’t get into that right now. But as that grows I would love to get an expert on to share that a little bit more with you guys cause I know there are a lot of awesome brands who really want to take advantage of that and figure out the best ways to use that who tuned into the podcast.

Christy Keane: 08:09 So I will definitely be researching that more for you guys. I guess the big question is is if you are somebody who is, I’m an influencer, a celebrity, a blogger, a public figure who might benefit from these creator accounts, do you switch or do you not switch? So I cannot answer that question for you, but I can share my experience with you because whenever I saw the message pop up that I could get a creator account, I went ahead and switched just because it sounded cool. I want to see the analytics and I’m just like an experiment or I just like to see what the new thing is, how it affects your profile. I’d rather try it on me and let you guys know how it works and I don’t, I just get a kick out of that. So I switched to a creator account.

Christy Keane: 08:58 The first thing I can say for me personally from the day that I was, and I was a business account before, from the day that I switched to creator account, my engagement dropped off a lot and I know that you could argue that it was just something that was going to happen any help. But it is literally the day I switch my account, my likes went down almost 2000 likes or more and my engagement went down. So I was like that’s interesting. I didn’t like it obviously because this, you know, brands look at that, your engagement when they want to work with you and that’s how I make my income is off of brand deals and brand sponsorship. So I was a little bit bummed about that but I still wanted to like keep it going and see. The other thing was the messaging. Like I said, I really thought it was too many filters.

Christy Keane: 09:47 I got a little bit overwhelmed when I went to go check my dms. I liked with the business account, I had my regular folder of dms and then I had my request. I already have a hard time keeping up on top of dms anyhow, but just to have like three different email boxes and so many different filters, it became a little bit overwhelming for me and I understand what they were, what the goal of it is and I appreciate that. But just for me, I already have a hard time managing my inbox and that just made it a little bit overwhelming. Um, what did I like? Oh, I loved again that I could hide the fact that I have my account as public figure and still leave on my contact information. And I think that changed because when they first allowed you to hide things, you had to hide both at the same time.

Christy Keane: 10:33 And I didn’t like that cause I was like, why I want to hide that I’m a public figure, but I want to be people to be able to reach me. But in order to hide the public figure, I had to hide my contact information since then, since they first rolled it out. That has changed where you can hide one or the other. So I had a creator profile for maybe, I want to say about two months and just last week again I was getting really down on the engagement and I wanted to improve my analytics a little bit if I could, if there was anything that I could do just to keep giving brands the best reach and the best engagement they could get when we do work together. So I switched back to business account last week. I’m really actually pleased with the results because my engagement is starting to climb back up again.

Christy Keane: 11:19 So I don’t know what the deal with that is and I don’t know why engagement went down so much when I switched to create her account. It’s something I think whenever Instagram, uh, rolls out these new profiles, they’re awesome and they have great intentions, but they have to work out the kinks a little bit. Right? Like, just like with anything, just like when you get an iPhone before the next generation iPhone, they work out the kinks. So I’m super interested to try creator account again in the near future, but right now I think I’m just going to hang tight the business. That’s just what working a little bit better for me and my account. There was something else I was going to say about the Creator Council. Let me think here for a second. Oh, I know what it is. So if you are an influencer who uses, um, platforms like aspire IQ or popular pays that require you to link your account in order to, for the brands to see your analytics and in order to get accepted to for jobs creator accounts, we’re not linkable on those platforms.

Christy Keane: 12:27 Um, so that was really hard for me because that was where I would get along to my brand deals. So to not be able to link to them and not be able to share those analytics, I lost out on some opportunities that I love to do every month with brands that I love to work with. So that’s just a little bit of food for thought there too. So I don’t know if I helped you or confused you more on Creator Account, but I hope you have a better idea of at least what they are. Um, in terms of whether or not you should switch. If you are somebody in this space, I will leave that entirely up to you. I have nothing to base it on except for my personal experience and I’m just gonna wait it out a little bit longer to switch back to creator account.

Christy Keane: 13:10 I’d like to see when Instagram releases that dashboard. That sounds really great. And you know, once a few of the kinks are worked out, I know a lot of people who love the idea of getting these analytics sooner than later and aren’t effected at all with their engagement. So it’s really just up to you. Like I said, I love when Instagram releases something new. I just, I can’t help myself. I like to try it out. Um, oh, the other thing I can say too, but, sorry, this is just one last point I want to bring up. When I got a verified blue check mark. It was when I switched to a crater account, so I don’t know if that played a role or not. I mean that is just totally me just telling you. It could just be a coincidence of timing, but I wanted to put that out there because I don’t know, maybe they will start to verify accounts creator accounts a little bit more easily that way.

 

Christy Keane: 14:03 That is me starting a rumor. Don’t take that as professional advice. I’m just telling you I got a blue check mark verified account after I switched to creator, so whew, I’m out of breath doing these podcasts. Just talking gets me out of breath when I’m nine months pregnant, but I’m so glad you guys continue to tune in with me week after week and I appreciate you guys. If you’d like the podcast, please subscribe, leave a rating and review screenshot when you’re listening and tag me on Instagram. My Instagram is Christi Keen, can C H R I s t y k e a n e c a n. And I just love to repost that and share that you guys are enjoying things. So thank you so much for tuning in and I hope you guys have an awesome week.

 

Trends in Influencer Marketing with Fohr.co CEO James Nord

James Nord is the visionary CEO behind one of the top influencer marketing companies in the world, Fohr. Co. With over 80,000 influencers in their network and state of the art tech advances in the market, James has super accurate and targeted information about trends in this space. 

Follow Christy Keane on IG: www.instagram.com/christykeanecan

In This Episode You Will Learn About:

  • How James got started in this space and his influence for starting Fohr (1:25)
  • What Fohr is, what analytics and insights it offers, and how it can tell you whether an influencer is authentic (14:30)
  • How Fohr is using unique technology to build brand/influencer relationship OFF of its platform as well (19:00)
  • Current trends in social media marketing (24:00)
  • Why you are losing followers (27:25)
  • How intentions and sponsored content are changing content creation (32:00)
  • Why taking a break from sponsored content actually is a huge turn on to brands (38:00)
  • What influencer marketing companies are looking for (following count vs. reach vs. engagement) (42:15)
  • Creator accounts and if you should switch (48:50)
  • How to get blue check mark verified by Instagram (51:30)

Resources:

Christy Keane: 00:00:04 You are listening to motherhood ignited a podcast for mompreneurs creatives and influencers who are rocking the beautiful balance between working passionately and nurturing. Presently I’m your host, Christy Keane and every week I interview inspiring mom, bosses, brands and industry experts to bring you the knowledge, tools and strategies to grow your influence in business through purposeful online content creation. So come in and cozy up mamas and get ready to ignite your goals. So today I am interviewing James Nord who is the founder of fohr.co that’s f o h r . c o, which is a self serve influence and marketing platform that connects brands with influencers based on verified analytics. And you guys, they can even tell if an influencer has fake followers. So I’m super proud of the fact that I am for verified account and I’m super excited for James to c ome on today because he has such an expertise on the trends in the influencer marketing space and working with brands and influencers alike and kind of how that relationship balances. So thanks for coming on to talk to me today. I feel like we are similar and that I feel like you’ve lived so many different. Yeah,

James Nord: 00:01:15 that is true. I feel like I definitely have.

Christy Keane: 00:01:18 Yeah. So I think you started out like on a year of a New Yorker. That’s the one thing you are in New York right now anyhow. And you started out in Wall Street and I know you talk a lot about how you ended up as Oscar de la Renta as photographer, which is just crazy to me as a little small town Virginia girl right now. And then now you’re the founder and CEO of such a huge successful marketing company. And then you also have a podcast, a drink with James. So it’s just, you do so much and like as that, it feels like a thousand different lies. And I’d love for you to tell listeners a little bit more about who you are and how you got started in this space.

James Nord: 00:01:53 Yeah. So again, thanks for, thanks for having me on. I’m always happy to talk about myself and influencers in general, but, um, yeah, I mean to keep it short, I mean, you kind of, you kind of, you know, hit the nail on the head. I, I’m, I’m from Georgia actually. I was born in Queens, but like when I was six months old, we moved down to Georgia. So, uh, I can claim like that im a New Yorker, uh, mostly I was, I was raised in the south and moved to New York after college and yeah, I think I wanted to work in marketing or advertising, but, um, I’ll graduate in 2006. The economy was a little soft. I ran my own business in college. I didn’t have any internships or anything. I thought, uh, I thought employers thought would think that was kind of cool. Um, they didn’t think that was very cool.

James Nord: 00:02:42 Uh, so what was Your Business in college? I, uh, well like when I was in high school, I worked at Cinnabon for like two months and like, you know, just like serving 2000 calories Cinnabons to people in a mall, right? Yeah. And I was like, okay, this is not for me. I’m like, just standing behind the cash register is just like not, you know, for, for f whatever it was, $5 an hour. It wasn’t really working for me. So I had this vintage car in high school, um, my parents that I had to have an SUV and I was like, what if I get a huge car? Um, so I actually, I drove a 1957 Chevy Bel Air when I was in high school and I used to, yeah. And I used to, uh, I just detailed people’s cars. I would drive, um, you know, I would detailed people’s cars in their driveways.

James Nord: 00:03:36 Um, and I did that for like five or six years and made enough money to, you know, not have to work that much. Um, and I really love washing cars and I still love washing cars. I miss being able to do it. Um, in New York there’s just like this instant gratification of going from like a, you know, dirty car to a clean one. But, um, so yeah, I, I did that all throughout college and um, couldn’t get a job in marketing or advertising and uh, yeah, I got a job on Wall Street cause like they were always hiring and, and, and uh, essentially you’re just cold calling. I was making 225 phone calls a day, uh, and it was, it was truly, truly terrible and I hated it. And then I kind of bounced around in, you know, pretty unimpressive jobs and when I was 26, kind of looked at my life and it was just not what I expected.

James Nord: 00:04:31 Uh, I think I expected to come to New York and, and do something special and different. Like that’s why you come here to see kind of how far you can make it, what kind of person you can become and the person I was becoming or, or certainly the life I was living was just not, um, one that I really wanted. And I, I then started a tumbler, which was very, very new with it goes, started the tumbler few months after the platform launched. And that was kind of fun to just like, you know, throw photos up and, and, you know, I mean, nobody cared about it. It was very small. Um, and then as tumbler grew and I started taking photography more seriously and getting into that a little bit and, and that found out how to, you know, modicum of talent for it. And so I was shooting more and more, and, you know, this was maybe back then, 2009, 2008, 2009.

James Nord: 00:05:26 There just weren’t that many people putting photos on to the Internet in that way. Um, and so I was like a recommended user on Tumblr as a photographer and that, you know, that grew my following quite quickly. And I think in 2010 maybe I had like 50,000 followers, which was staggering at the time. Um, you know, Instagram maybe had just launched. Um, but that was one of the largest followings on the platform. And, uh, and eventually, I think, you know, a couple of years later, it was, uh, in the mid 100 thousands on Tumblr. And, um, you know, that totally changed my life. I, I all of a sudden was kind of like good at something for the first time I was doing something interesting. I was kind of starting to, I think, live the life in New York that I had had wanted and a lot of ways expected for myself.

James Nord: 00:06:20 And so that was really exciting. And I, uh, I saw the, kind of the value of, of what I was doing and what the value brand saw that I was, you know, after Wall Street I went into marketing, advertising. Um, and I could kind of see how this could eventually be a really interesting thing for marketers and advertisers to have access to is these, you know, we weren’t called influencers at the time. We were just bloggers. I think Tumblr bloggers we call ourselves, I’m not sure. But, um, yeah, I, I felt like, you know, that maybe in the future that was going to be, could be a bigger part of advertising. Uh, and, and then kind of started this company to see if that was going to be true. Uh, the idea was to create a platform where brands could find new influencers, bloggers, whatever you want to call them to work with. And once you found them, be able to actually understand and validate their following. Um, so that you could be sure or a little more sure about what you were going to get if you worked with this person.

Christy Keane: 00:07:24 Gosh, just to have that foresight with the tumbler phase. Obviously it would have been super nice if back then marketers understood the value because, well, you know, you know what, if they understood at that point then maybe you wouldn’t have started four and you wouldn’t be in the position you’re in now. But that’s such a huge thing to like understand what’s going to be huge and to, to make a bet on that by starting a whole company around it is just, it’s huge. You, I mean, you, you, the timing was great. Your

James Nord: 00:07:53 timing was very good. I was very lucky there. I mean, I think a lot of ways it was lucky, you know, I mean, yes, it was very personal thing. You know, I wasn’t, I wasn’t, uh, I don’t think I, I guess I just don’t want it to sound like I was as visionary. I think as, as maybe it would sound like I, I just had this personal experience where like I, I kind of fell into having this following and I saw the value in it and I saw brands struggling to find more people like me and, and I wasn’t happy with my professional life. And so it wasn’t a huge, you know, it didn’t feel like a really big risk, um, to give this a try. And, and again, it, it, it came out of just, hey, like a, like again, a very personal experience that I had had and said, okay, well this changed my life.

James Nord: 00:08:42 Um, you know, when I had that following before I started working with Oscar and other brands like that, I was, I was trying to get work, I was trying to talk to brands and tell them why, you know, what I was doing was interested in interesting and none of them were listening. And then I started working with Oscar and Tuma and a bunch of other big brands, and then they all kind of came around. And so I, I could kind of see, you know, that again, if I could take my personal experience and expand it that like maybe that could be interesting. And I think, you know, we’ve been very fortunate that, um, this industry has continued to grow. I, uh, it, it certainly is, has, I don’t think it’s exceeded my wildest expectations, but I’m very pleased that it happened this way for sure.

Christy Keane: 00:09:26 Oh, definitely. And I think you’re not giving yourself enough credit on being at the visionary in this space because I mean that whenever that mindset came to you, it’s kind of before people were doing the whole four hour work week and quitting your jobs to pursue influencing influencers again, just weren’t even necessarily a thing when you dream this all up. So. Okay.

James Nord: 00:09:49 Well, yeah, the worst definitely did not exist.

Christy Keane: 00:09:54 And now it’s like a bad word. It’s like crazy. Well, it’s not, and that’s part of the reason why I was so passionate about starting this podcast because I’m like, influencer, like all of a sudden people are like, oh, you know, influencers who are making, you know, hundreds of thousands of dollars are like, oh, I hate that word influencer. I’m like, it’s not a bad word. Like you’re making some good money doing it and you know, it’s all about what’s your messaging is too, and what you’re influencing. But yeah,

James Nord: 00:10:22 I mean, if influencer, if I hear influencers being like, ah, I don’t like the word influencer, I’m like, oh my God, shut up. Like what is wrong?

Christy Keane: 00:10:31 I know it’s just a word. It’s like the I word, you know?

James Nord: 00:10:34 Yeah. I mean, it is what they are, so I don’t, I don’t really pay much attention to it, but yeah. Um, it’s been a wild, you know, it’s been a wild few years. I, you know, I always think about this Keith Richards quote and he’s the lead guitarist for the rolling stones. And I read his book, which is incredible. I can’t, you know, shocked that he could remember his life given the amount of drugs he did. But, um, it’s an incredible book. And He, you know, he, he was saying that like in an interview, someone was like, could you ever have imagined, like, could you ever have imagined that this was going to happen? Like you’re, you’re now the biggest rock star in the world. You’re in the biggest, at least rock band in the world. Um, and he was like, I imagined it every day. I just didn’t think it was going to happen.

James Nord: 00:11:22 And that’s in some ways what I feel like, like, yes, I like, this is what I wanted to happen. I just never actually thought it would necessarily. Um, so it’s a pretty big trip, uh, in general. And then, um, uh, you know, loving life and feeling very fortunate to now have 30, I dunno, six people, um, working on the company. Wow. Here in New York. Um, and, uh, 80,000 influencers on our platform and ethic will run 400 campaigns, this, uh, and, and maybe have two or 300 clients who use the self serve platform. So it’s, it’s certainly, you know, grown so far beyond me and I have now all these incredible people working on this every day and I get to meet incredible influencers such as yourself who are, you know, going out and creating the life that they want. I think that’s, for me, I think what was so like personal and important to me was that like I really was unhappy with my life and social media totally changed it.

James Nord: 00:12:26 You know, like I was on this kind of mediocre path and then I built a following and it allowed me to build a, like a new network of friends and, and uh, and colleagues and people that I could build relationships with. So it changed by like friendship groups. It, it helped me dive into passions that have shaped my life, like photography and cycling. Uh, those are super important. Um, and definitely something the Internet helps like fuel. Uh, obviously it helped me create this business and so I really, when I started this, wanted to do that for more people because I, I think that bad jobs are like to generate diseases. They just kind of like, if you’re doing something that you don’t like or if you look at your life and you’re not happy that starts to eat away at what makes you you, right.

James Nord: 00:13:20 You just, you start to become this kind of shell of who you are. And if you could do what you, if you could love your job, um, and you could be really happy or you could just be, you know, more satisfied in your life, I think it totally changes everything in your life. So it’s been a really, you know, it’s been a trip to be able to do that, to have people, you know, come up and say how, you know, they quit their job because they were able, you know, they were able to put their job because of the money they were making from our campaigns or you know, that since joining the platform, they’ve been getting more work and they were, you know, able to afford that vacation or something else. Like that’s pretty, that’s pretty cool. Um, it’s cool to, to be able to empower it, kind of new class of, of entrepreneur. Um, who doesn’t, you know, who can kind of live life the way they want, which is, which is as you said, um, obviously becoming more and more of a, of the goal for people. I think

Christy Keane: 00:14:16 it’s so true and you guys do such a great job of that at four. And for listeners who don’t know what four is, which for most of them I hope they do, but I would love for you to tell them a little bit more about what four is and, and the analytics that you guys give to influencers I feel like are so great. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve had a brand reach out to me and want to know certain demographics or analytics. And you know, Instagram just wasn’t giving those to me. So the first thing I always do is go over to my four account and pull up my profile and you guys basically give everything you need for a media kit or to reach out to brands right there. And then you guys also do the for verified accounts, which I mean, I remember when I got the email back with my little four picture that said I was for verified. I felt, I don’t know, it just felt good. And I would love to see other people’s, and I know brands appreciate the fact that you, you know, are giving them valuable influencers to work with who are authentic and it just adds more value to the work that they do together. So I’d love for you to tell the listeners a little bit more about,

James Nord: 00:15:24 well you know, at its, at its core, it is a platform, you know, an influencer marketing platform. So influencers sign up, it’s free to sign up, you connect your accounts through platforms, API APIs, Instagram, youtube, Google analytics, Facebook, Pinterest, et cetera. And a, and then we pull data from those platforms and presented in a way that makes it really easy, as you said, for influencers to understand and really easy for brands to understand who is this person, what do they talk about, who are they talking to? And, uh, you know, what value could they potentially be bring to that brand? Um, so we do that in certainly a number of ways and in different ways for brands and influencers. Um, but that was kind of the, the, you know, beginning for us was yeah, I was trying to make influencers make sense to marketers. Uh, so that, uh, if even if you weren’t super familiar with the influencer space, you could look at these numbers and feel like, oh, I get it.

James Nord: 00:16:24 So she is a mom, she’s living in Virginia. It looks like she’s mostly speaking to other moms that have this kind of income bracket. And this is how many the kinds of brands she talks about. Now I can kind of understand who you are and put you and give you context, right? Because if, if we also try and show like, here’s, you know, here’s this influencers performance and here how here is how it looks in relation to other influencers. They’re same size, right? Because if you say to a normal person, oh, hey, you have a 2% engagement rate. Was that good or bad? Because you know, to a normal person that doesn’t sound very good. But if you see that the average is 1%, well then you’re doing twice as well as most people. Now that’s really great. So, um, you know, we’re constantly trying to, you know, pull in new data, uh, so that brands and influencers can have better understandings of their following and their account and what makes them special.

James Nord: 00:17:24 And then also provide context for that data so that, um, brands and influencers can understand where they stand on it. And, you know, and, and the verified accounts were a big part of that, which was, you know, three or four years ago, people started talking more and more about fake followers. And I was like, well, this is, you know, this sucks for influencers because if, if the idea spreads that everyone’s buying followers, it’s going to de legitimize the entire industry. And I believed on a whole, most people were not buying followers. And so I created or recreated our follower health tool or verified authentic following tool, um, not to catch cheaters and call them now, but to celebrate the people that have a real authentic audience who’ve done the hard work of building a following over years and, uh, and you know, and doing the hard work to, to kind of, um, build that following in an authentic way. And so that’s been really cool to see that become kind of industry standard and something that, uh, we see brands asking for, even if they’re not our clients. So they’ll ask an influencer, you know, to see if they’re verified on fourth, they have a real following. So as the industry grows and as brands spend more money, they need more ways to make sure they’re spending their money in the right ways and with the right people. And that’s a pretty big, pretty big focus of ours.

Christy Keane: 00:18:53 And another thing that I noticed that you guys do just by being, um, uh, for influencer is I will get emails that say that I’m the number one influencer for a certain brand that I’m, I don’t think they are one of your brands. I think it’s just a brand that I had worked with and it is that, how does that work?

James Nord: 00:19:13 Yeah, so we have, you know, kind of the top 500 brands that we’re tracking and we’ve look at all 80,000 influencers and we see who in certain following tiers, whether you’re, you know, zero to 25 k 25 k to 50, 50 to 100. I, I’m not actually sure what the tiers are. Um, in that tier who talked about the brand the most that month, you know, who, who kind of organically mentions them a lot. And you know, those have been great because I think as a s, especially if you’re an influencer who has, you know, 30,000 followers, you can feel like that’s not a lot, but that’s actually a lot of people. 30,000 people is bigger than any basketball stadium in the country. You know, it’s, it’s for sure the size of most baseball stadiums. It’s huge. That’s a lot of people following one person’s life. And, uh, and so we wanted to give influencers that all tears away to brag and to say, hey, like x brand that I love.

James Nord: 00:20:16 Um, you know, that brand may not be paying as much attention to you because you may not have, you know, 2 million followers. But being able to say, Hey, amongst my peers and amongst people at my following size, I’m talking about you more than anyone else. Um, and we’re, you know, we’ve, we really want to, I guess I should say, when I started the company, I didn’t want to keep brands and influencers apart. You know, if you think of a traditional influencer agency represents the influencers. They make money by being a gate between the influencer and the brand, right? They don’t, the brand can’t just go to the influencer. Um, so they have to go through this agent. So it’s almost like you’re paying a toll or attacks to get to this person. Um, and we didn’t want to do that. You know, we wanted to bring these two groups together and, and kind of understood that that is what the internet does in general is trying to bring these groups together.

James Nord: 00:21:19 I mean, just look at the whole influencer space in general. What it’s done is cut out the middleman between content and people who consume concepts. So that middleman used to be magazines or newspapers or television or whatever it might be. Um, we just got rid of that, right? Because it used to be like if you, if you had the best tips for about motherhood, right? And you want it to be able to talk, speak to other moms 20 years ago about that, you would have to, you know, kind of become a contributor to a magazine that was read by mothers because there was no way to get scale. You know, there was no way to directly reach the people who wanted access to what you knew to your knowledge. And so magazines became these gatekeepers to that advice and that content that people wanted and the way they made money off of that, it was obviously that to sell advertising against it.

James Nord: 00:22:23 So now the internet comes along and now you don’t need vogue or you know, l or GQ or any other magazines because the people who want to consume content and the people who create content can just connect directly. So that is the trend. The Internet like always takes with everything as it cuts those, those middlemen out. Um, and so some of the tools that we build, like the top brand mentions is in an effort to, you know, continue to bring those groups together. And so if you have a brand that you love, let’s say it’s Nike and you’re the top influencer for them, we want to give you tools to go to Nike and say, Hey, look at what a great job I’m doing for you. We should kind of deepen this relationship.

Christy Keane: 00:23:09 And I can say I’ve gotten a couple of those emails and I, I get so excited when I sit down. I was like, oh my gosh, I did so good this month with this particular brand. And I’ve reached out and it has created opportunities for me based on just getting that email and, and sharing like that along with the posts that I did or some stories that I did that would have corresponded with it. And I love that expanding the conversation. So, yeah, you, you’ve helped me out there. So I appreciate it. And I, and I love the texts. I don’t know, I’m just, I geek out over maybe what the tech side of making these, um, different, like just doing the fair fide accounts and, and doing the brand, the top influencer brand posts. Like it just, yeah, that’s your team is awesome. Whatever they’re doing. I just think it’s so awesome. It’s, it’s, it’s like you have a tech company to, on top of doing influencer marketing, which is really neat. Yeah.

James Nord: 00:24:06 We started as a technology company. I never, you know, and so, I mean, we’ve probably spent in salaries and stuff. I mean, I don’t know, millions, millions of dollars, um, building this technology. Um, so they are amazing and they’re, you know, we have, I think, I don’t know, it was eight or nine people in our, our technology on the technology side of the business, uh, here in New York, putting stuff out constantly. So that’s pretty, you know, I think that that’s pretty unique and certainly a differentiator for us is that we’re not buying other people’s technology. We’re not, you know, we’re not just doing things without technology. Everything we do, we think about how can we, how can we do this more effectively with technology? How can we use technology to help us see things that we couldn’t see with our, you know, feeble, human brains, um, and, and use those stories to, uh, to kind of augment the really human side of the business, which is you guys are people and you’re people with personalities and with viewpoints.

James Nord: 00:25:10 And, um, some of that stuff can’t be captured by a computer. And so we need to make sure that we also have, um, you know, the human kind of art side of the business. We talk about it like an art and science a lot of times. Um, and you really need to kind of bring both of those together, which is why, you know, I, you know, we could make so much more money if I got rid of my technology team, I could certainly have a much nicer apartment and pay myself a lot more because this is so expensive to build this stuff. But the, the end goal for, for me and for, for is, uh, is very much that technology is going to be the difference maker in this, in this industry. And that we, um, by investing in it for so long and investing so much and having such great people will eventually emerge as the, you know, the kind of undisputed leader of the space. You know, I, I want to have, uh, you know, I want a thousand people to work at this company. I want to be massive. I want, I want to see like, when you think of influencers, I want you to think about us in the same way. When you think about, you know, ordering something online, you think about Amazon, that’s kind of how dominant we want to be.

Christy Keane: 00:26:24 Well to me, I do think of when I think of Amazons or marketing companies, I do think of you guys at the top. But I love that and I want you to stay connected to me when you are the Amazon of influencer marketing. I’ll give a shout out to your tech team right now, the men behind the curtain, because you know, people don’t think about that stuff in it. It is huge. It’s gonna pay so big for you guys in the future. And I am so here for it. And I want to switch gears a little bit and dive into the trends you’re seeing right now and social media and influencer marketing or anything you think could help people in this space. Who it’s a, it’s a hard time right now on at least on Instagram and trying to grow and all the changes they’re making. So I would love to hear some trends that can help us out in this kind of plateaued stage. And we’re trying to keep the amplification up working with brands and growing our own personal brands.

James Nord: 00:27:16 I mean it’s, it’s really hard, you know, and, and if you look at our platform right now, um, I think when you get over 50,000 followers at that level, over 50% of our platform is losing followers month over month not gaining. So one is like, if you feel depressed, if you feel like, oh my God, this is like what is going on? What’s happening? Like I’m losing followers almost again. Almost half the platform for us to 80,000 influencers are losing following month over month. Um,

Christy Keane: 00:27:47 okay. That makes me feel better right off the bat because I feel like hitting 100,000 followers was the worst thing that happened too. It’s my Instagram.

James Nord: 00:27:56 It is. Yeah, it’s really hard. And, uh, I think, you know, just to kind of understand that, I used to do a good amount of email marketing at a, at an old job. And what was interesting about, you know, marketing was if, if you sent one email or 10 emails a week, your rate of unsubscribing didn’t go up. Um, which was kind of surprising, but every time you send an email as a business, you lose subscribers, I believe. I think, well, no, this is just true. Every time you post on Instagram, you lose followers. And so if you go back three years, people used to post once, twice a day. So let’s see, you know, you were posting between 30 and at the high end, 80 or 90 times a month, but now you’re posting once a day on your feed, but maybe you’re posting five to 10 stories a day. So that could be between 150 and 300 stories and 30 in feed. So you could be posting up to 330 times a month. That’s 330 opportunities for somebody to unfollow you, which they absolutely will. Um, which is a big, which is part of the driver of why people are losing followers. It’s just you’re giving people so much more opportunity to lose the following and then it’s gotten so much more competitive when, you know, when did you start your Instagram?

Christy Keane: 00:29:17 Oh, I started my Instagram back in 2011. Okay, so you were involved,

James Nord: 00:29:23 you were early. Maybe there’s 50 million people on the platform. There’s a billion, billion people have Instagram accounts now. You know, like it’s, it’s so hard. And, and when I built a following online, I don’t got, I mean, 15 years, not 15 years ago, 10, 12 years ago. Um, there just wasn’t that much competition. I had a professional camera and I walked around New York City taking photos and there just weren’t many people doing that. And there certainly weren’t many professionals really talented people doing that. So if you were interested in New York and you wanted to see photos of it, you know, I, I was doing that and not many people were, but now the best photographers in the world are putting stuff online so it gets harder for the amateurs to compete because the, you know, the, the bar has been raised so high. And then another problem that, you know, um, I think some influencers are facing is that they’re getting older and they’ve been doing it for a long time.

James Nord: 00:30:26 I think that some influencers probably are not realizing it, but like they have lost the passion for what they’re doing. You know, when I was growing my following, I got out of bed and every day my main focus was, I used to say I want to take five great photos today, like five really, really great photos and I would, you know, take a diff, I would walk a different way to work during the day so I could see something different. I would, I would be, you know, up to date with what was going on in the city so I could go shoot something. If there was a protest or there was an event happening or prayed, I would go to different landmarks at night. I would, if it was snowing, I was up out all day shooting. If it was raining, I was out all day shooting. Like if it was the first day of spring, I was like, I need to get a photo that like is, you know, just totally quintessential spring in New York City.

James Nord: 00:31:22 And then I got more successful and I got busier and I stopped caring as much. You know, I stopped being as passionate about the photos. I stopped, you know, going to these parades and events and shooting it and, and like the content just got worse. And, and you know, now I sit in the conference room, you know, sit my office 10, 12 hours a day. Um, and it’s impossible for me to, to kind of create content I think that people are interested in. Um, but I think a lot of influencers who’ve been doing this for awhile, you just, you have fatigue and then your audience has fatigue. You know, if I’ve been following you for five years, I may really like you. Uh, and I may still find what you have to say valuable, but I’m not, it’s like any relationship. I mean, how much different is the first six months of a romantic relationship then five years in? It’s not to say that, it’s not to say that, that, that relationship is weaker five years. In a lot of ways it’s stronger, but it’s not as, you know, it’s not as passionate maybe. And, and I think that like that is also kind of contributing to um, to this. And when you started your Instagram, there was no money in this.

Christy Keane: 00:32:44 None. Yeah.

James Nord: 00:32:45 And so like your, your intentions and the reasons for doing it were pretty pure. But now again, you’re, you’re constantly, it’s a business, right? And so it just changes the fabric of what you’re doing because you’re trying to make money on it, not just, Oh, I’m, I, this is just really fun. I mean I remember, I don’t know if this was true for you, but when I first started to get a following even 500 people, it’s, it just felt so cool. I was like, this is amazing. 500 people following me. Like that was such a trip for me. And

Christy Keane: 00:33:16 I know I keep, I actually was talking about it earlier today. I was like, I don’t even know exactly what the point was. And I started out in fitness, so it was really easy to grow. And the popular page was like everybody saw you there was on the platform and you got on the popular page. You kind of forget that now you’re just showing the same kind of feeds over and over and over again. But you could grow really fast back in 2012 and it was just, I got a kick out of it. Like I just loved. Yeah, I don’t even know what the, what was the perk? I don’t know, like self people leg in your big,

James Nord: 00:33:47 I was like, it was, it was just fun, right? It was something to do. And you’re like, and, and it’s exciting to have people excited about what you want to do, but then, but then money gets involved or you know, a lot of influencers now they’re so focused on brand partnerships, which I understand, right? You gotta make money. But I think they fail to realize that like brands aren’t your customers. You know, your customers are your followers and if you’re so focused on getting the next follower, I think you’re doing a disservice to your existing followers. Like are you, are you doing what you can to keep them happy? I mean, if you, especially if this is your career, you know, if you are making money on this, um, and these people who’ve hit follow randomly and started, decided to follow you have literally changed your life.

James Nord: 00:34:38 You know, and they are the entire reason for your success. And without them, you have no business. Right? Um, because advertisers are really only paying for access to your following. And so if you as an influencer aren’t focusing on what am I doing to keep those people who are already following me happy, keep them engaged, uh, you know, go out of my way to create content that doesn’t glorify me, doesn’t make me look awesome, doesn’t just get me paid, but actually helps them. And again, I think that like as influencers get more into sponsored content, they lose sight of that and they start to think, my client, my customer is the brand and I’m going to make the brand happy. And they do that at the detriment of their audience. And once you lose your audience is trust, uh, and once lose their attention, you have nothing to sell because again, you’re selling, you’re selling access to attention. Um, you’re selling access to eyeballs and I think you hit you really, influencers have to focus more on keeping, you know, keeping their audience happy and doing things for them, um, rather than just for themselves.

Christy Keane: 00:36:00 And it’s hard to balance that sometimes because like you said, it is a business and once you get to the point where you’re monetizing you, you also want to make brands happy. But who’s like somebody in the space who’s doing a good job monetizing but keeping the brand first or keeping the audience and following first rather because I just am always looking at, I would love to see people who are doing it right as an example because it’s just so hard to navigate and balance when you’re not. It’s also new to everybody. It’s just not, it’s not how, how advertising or how business or how I, I mean I was a nurse by trade, so, you know, I, I always loved to look up to people who are doing it the right way.

James Nord: 00:36:40 Yeah. I mean, I think that, uh, you know, like areo something navy. I think she’s like, while her life has changed drastically and dramatically as far as how much money she makes and everything, I think her feed has kind of stayed pretty similar. Um, and she’s kind of stayed true to what she does. Um, I think that there’s a lot of influencers out there who are doing a great job and we try and, um, we try and suggest keeping the sponsored content under 25% as a general rule of thumb. Um, because beyond that it starts to feel like just too much sponsored content. Um, but, uh, I mean, who else is, who else does a great job? I mean, some of the kind of traditional bloggers that got, I just had grace at what, on the show. Um, she’s a smaller Instagram following, I mean smaller.

James Nord: 00:37:30 That’s again, she has like you as like 100,000, which is a shitload. Um, but um, but I think she’s done an awesome job of staying connected to her audience and has like you t has a podcast now that is doing really well and uh, she’s found that to be really helpful but it feels like she’s very audience focused and I think that like that that can be for people listening. I think that can be a mindset shift, you know, to just say if you feel like you’re in a Rut and you know, brands aren’t reaching out or you know, you’re getting really stressed with like all the brand collaborations and it’s, it’s kind of making you not like what you’re doing anymore. You could take a week off, you could take two weeks off, you could take a month off and say, I’m going to recommit myself to my audience and I am going to try and go back to like why I started this and I’m going to go back to creating content that you know, I think will be really helpful and valuable and I’m going to go the extra mile.

James Nord: 00:38:31 You see this a bit with like, um, you know, I don’t know that, I don’t think this is as big of a thing in the, in the mom space specifically, but if you think of like escapism accounts like accounts that aren’t supposed to be like real life, they’re just supposed to be beautiful and, and kind of a magical, I’ve seen a lot of influencers kind of really leaning into that and doing really creative editorial shoots, um, with and with brands but also not with brands and paying for it themselves. And, and again, if any other, you know, media outlet that was making more money, they would be creating more content that hopefully their audience finds appealing so that they can grow their audience. So that they can, you know, charge more for access to that audience. So it’s, it’s a small thing, but I think most influencers I talk to, if they really are honest with themselves, I don’t think they are thinking a lot about their audience and what they can do to keep their existing audience happy.

James Nord: 00:39:34 Because if you’re losing a following, there’s a few ways to kind of grow. Right? And like one thing again that people aren’t thinking about is that like if you can, if you can have, if you can cut down the amount of people unfollowing you by 50%, then your account will naturally grow because every day you’re losing following, you’re also gaining followers every single day. Um, so one way to grow your following is to not lose followers. Right? But, but that’s not, nobody thinks of it that way. They’re just like maniacally focused on gaining a following instead of, again, paying attention to those hundred and 40,000 people or 10,000 people or 500 people who already follow you.

Christy Keane: 00:40:21 Like you blew my mind just now making that statement because I just, it is so true. I mean, you get so focused on the growth and the, and then you see the unfollowing numbers and then that’s, you know, a distraction and you’re wondering what you did wrong. Yeah. And I love your advice about taking a little bit of break from the sponsored post and reigniting that passion for why you started in the first place. I know that’s my hope when I have, um, I’m due August 15th with a little boy and I’m like, that’s my time where I just, I want to re like start creating content that’s has nothing to do with brands, just enjoying that little phase of motherhood. And remember why I started doing this. And the good thing too, for those listening is that then you can get a bunch of content and patched as well that you’re proud of and that is purposeful and that you know, you, sometimes it feels icky when you are doing too many sponsored posts. So it just feels good to create some time, you know, it feels really good to create,

James Nord: 00:41:22 you’re taking a break and a brand reaches out. I can’t tell you. We would love to hear that. Oh, thank you so much for reaching out. Like I’m currently just taking a little from sponsored content. Um, and really just like focusing on, you know, reengaging my audience and all of this. But like I’m kicking sponsored content off again in two weeks. Like any brand is going to love hearing that, you know, and maybe a bit of a frustration cause they want it to work with you on something and sure maybe your, you’re giving up a little bit of money, but I would see it as, as not I’m giving up this money on this activation but an investment in the long term. Cause again, if you, if you start to lose your audience and you start to lose their trust and especially now with like, you know, we don’t even look at follower accounts anymore.

James Nord: 00:42:11 We’re really almost exclusively looking at reach numbers and impressions numbers. So the thing is like, once you lose your audience’s attention, um, it gets, the algorithm gets pretty brutal and starts kind of cutting you down pretty quickly. And if, you know, it’s not just us, I think across the industry reach and impressions are becoming, um, more important than follower account. Um, so you really do have to focus on, um, how you can keep those people engaged, keep them hitting, like keep them commenting. Um, so that Instagram continues to serve, um, you know, serve your content to those people. Do you have any tips for keeping your audience engaged? You know, I, I don’t, um, which may be frustrating, but like there are, every single account is different. You know, what could I possibly tell you about your audience that you don’t intimately know? Um, and you know, I think stepping back and saying, well, what makes, you know, what makes me unique?

James Nord: 00:43:16 Why do people follow me? What do they want from me? What is, what am I providing value to them? And kind of, you know, going back to those kind of core fundamental things. Um, and also watching the stats on your, on your account and seeing what’s working, what’s not, you know, print, print, every photo that, you know, print your 10 highest photos with the highest reach and your 10 with the lowest reach. And see if you can see what are the trends here, what’s working, what’s not working. Um, you know, a lot of influencers that I’ve talked to who are growing really well and who have big reach, they are like every single time I post I want it to be a home run and I won’t post something if, if I don’t think it’s going to knock it out of the park. But then grace Atwoods, she is like, I don’t care about Instagram.

James Nord: 00:44:06 You know, I, I’m focused on my blog. Instagram is great, but I don’t really care about growing on Instagram and I’ll post whatever I want. Um, both of those things are valid. And so I think that anyone out there that, you know, I’ve been doing, I’ve been like, as you said with this podcast and youtube thing, I’ve been, you know, once a week, I think I’m 160 episodes into giving influencer advice, which is funny. Um, but much I like it some, one of my favorites, but like as I guess as you know, if you listen, I don’t ever say like, this is what you need to be doing. You need to have colorful photos, you need to be using an iPhone and not a, you know, um, DSLR. Because you know, when you kind of have the view that I have of, of looking at 80,000 influencers and all of these hundreds of millions of data points, you see that like there are no rules for what works and what doesn’t.

James Nord: 00:45:02 Um, and each person, you have to find your thing and you have to figure out what your audience is or is not connecting with. And so anyone who’s out there being like 10 tips to grow your influencer or your Instagram following this week, you know, I think that’s all just like a bunch of bullshit and uh, I wouldn’t listen to it, but there are fundamentals, you know, uh, of things you should be doing, like paying attention to what’s working, like experimenting, right? If your account’s not growing and you just keep doing the same thing, like what’s the, what’s the definition of insanity? It’s doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result. So people who are like, my account’s not growing and it’s like, okay, what have you changed in the last couple of weeks? Nothing. Okay. Like, okay, so do you just expect for the, like it just to magically one day start growing and start working.

James Nord: 00:45:56 That’s not how the world works. You know, and what you did a year ago that was successful, that’s not going to work today probably because the world is changing and the things that people want are changing. Um, and you can see that everywhere in culture. I mean look at, just look at like pop culture and five years ago Taylor swift could do no wrong, right? She’s this like cute, like kind of girl next door, very sweet, very wholesome person. Like she’s the biggest star in the world. And now you’ve got Billie Eilish who you know, is like totally grunge kind of punk. I’m very much not girl next door, very much not Polish, you know, no matter what Taylor swift does, she, she can’t do what like Billie Eilish is doing. Right. Um, because culture is just changing and, and what youth, like what youth culture is saying is like, we’re not really interested in polished, perfect Taylor swift anymore.

James Nord: 00:46:58 We’re bored of that. We want something grungier we want something with a little bit of an edge. We want something that feels different. Um, so I think that like influencers need to understand that like, what worked for you in the past is not going to continue to work. And reinvention is your only path to staying relevant, you know? Um, because going back to like my, let’s use another musician, going back to my rolling stones example, like the rolling stones couldn’t stay relevant, right? They’re like the greatest rock band of all time unless you’re a Beatles person. Um, and they eventually fell out of relevancy. So I think like you have to understand that like that is going to happen and the only way to, to kind of continue to have a connection with your audience is to grow to such an enormous scale that you just become a classic and like you’re just like part of the institution or you have to keep, you know, keep changing and keep that keeps switching things up so that that audience stays connected to you.

Christy Keane: 00:48:06 I really liked that. You touched on the reinvention part too, because I feel like people are a little bit afraid to these days or afraid they’ll be punished if they, you know, get reignited over something else. That’s not what people are used to sharing. But I don’t know. I guess if you don’t grow with your content in that way, then it’s just cyclical. Like you were saying, then you’re not passionate about it, then you don’t even want to post and then it’s half-assed and yeah, I love that advice. And so before I hit my rapid fire questions, I do want to ask real fast, speaking of trends and things changing, like the world changes, culture changes, but Instagram also changes and they recently rolled out the creator profiles and I haven’t had any like expert opinion on what the thoughts are on this and what the advice is as far as switching over. I did switch over when I saw the option, um, and my engagement is down like 40%, but I did have, I mean, I don’t know if it’s ironic, but I did ended up getting a verified account on Instagram. So I’m like afraid to change anything right now. Um, but I would just slip to know your thoughts on the creator profiles cause there’s such a mystery right now.

James Nord: 00:49:15 They’re, you know, they’re still testing it and we’ll kind of see where they’re going to roll it out. I switched to they, um, and uh, you know, I don’t, I don’t think it’s changing the algorithm or anything. I think that if, you know, if you’re seeing any change, it’s probably, um, like circumstantial. It’s probably just like, you know, maybe the last few posts that you did just didn’t connect. I don’t think that

Christy Keane: 00:49:41 it’s amazing. It’s all me. I need to own that

James Nord: 00:49:46 thing. Um, I do know that they’re not passing, uh, some of the business data, like the insight, like the reach impressions, stories, they’re not passing that through the API. So if you use third party, uh, analytical platforms that use that data, um, it won’t work if you switch to a creator platform. So I know that is happening. Um, now they may,

Christy Keane: 00:50:10 does that effect for, do you Instagram

James Nord: 00:50:13 with the Cambridge Analytica stuff? Last year they, they revoked, um, business access for all influencer marketing platforms. So unfortunately we lost access to that information, um, through the getting it through the API. We get it through screenshots and stuff now, but we lost access to that, um, last March when they had all that stuff happen. So, you know, I think you can try it. Look, you can always switch back. Um, you could just go to your settings and switch back. Um, I haven’t seen any big change yet, so I don’t, you know, it doesn’t seem like there’s a huge reason to switch and there doesn’t seem like there’s a huge reason not to switch. Um, so I, uh, I think, you know, it’s kind of personal thing, but I don’t think it’s gonna really change your, um, reach or any of that stuff.

Christy Keane: 00:51:00 This is a selfish question as press. Do you ever know to them to like take the blue? I’m like, so I got the blue check mark and I really like it because I feel like when I’m reaching out to a brand or if I’m reaching out to another thought leader, it, they recognize it and I’m getting more responses and getting more good conversations that way. But I’m afraid if I switched, I don’t know if it will take it away.

James Nord: 00:51:21 I think there’s a lot of misinformation about verification as well. Verification is simply like, you know, if you’re a public figure, if you’re someone who, you know, the way they do it is pretty simple. Um, they simply say like, okay, they do a Google search for your name essentially. And like if you have Google results and if you have press pieces on you, then they verify you. It’s not a big, it’s not a big mystery. They, they, you know, it is kind of slow to, to do it and it’s like, can it be frustrating? But um, but yeah, they’re not gonna they’re not gonna take it away. Cause that would mean that like they’re now saying you’re not the person you say you are.

Christy Keane: 00:52:00 Oh, that’s true. It’s just like one of those things like I didn’t, yeah, I don’t know. You know, the blue check marks for it to have it.

James Nord: 00:52:07 They won’t give it to me, which I’m like, what the hell guys? Come on. I need to, I need to apply again.

Christy Keane: 00:52:12 Yeah, you do. I feel like definitely complete check mark. So I did, I’d love to end each podcast asking a few of the same questions to everybody. And the first one is my favorite, which is what do you influence that you’re most proud of?

James Nord: 00:52:26 Um, what do I influence that I’m most proud of? Uh, I mean, I think it’s been really fun to, uh, do this podcast and half to once a week come up with insights and advice for influencers and for all these people who are trying to kind of run their own business. And that’s been really great. It’s been great to talk to people and say that, that anything I’ve said it’s really helped them. So I love giving advice and so that’s been really fun.

Christy Keane: 00:52:56 Yeah. And I can tell you firsthand, I’m one of those people, like when you said you would come on a podcast today, I was like, oh, I’m so excited because I listened to your podcast week after week. And so to hear your voice talking to me is just mind blowing. You give such great advice, everybody tunes into that. And how much time do you dedicate to social media?

James Nord: 00:53:17 I’m on it a good amount from more of like a research perspective. Uh, you know, for me, publishing and creating content, a big part of my life anymore. I mean, even drink with James, you know, I mean, we have a team that does this stuff and, and I sit down and they, they show me the three questions they’re gonna ask and then I answer them. Um, so I don’t spend more than the time it takes to record drink with James, doing drink with James every week. And then in my personal life, photography and, and, and that side of things. Like I, you know, I’ve still passionate about photography and I still love it. So, um, I enjoy publishing it, um, just because it gives me a reason to take photos. Um, but it’s not, that’s not a huge focus of mine, but you know, obviously I’m on social all the time trying to understand trends, what’s going on, what’s working, what’s not, what do I like, what do I not like, what can we learn as a business? What can our clients learn, et cetera.

Christy Keane: 00:54:20 I love that. And I feel like even influencers could probably spend a little bit of more time doing research on social media as well instead of getting distracted and the comparison game. And is there a mistake you’ve made in this space that you would go back and change?

James Nord: 00:54:33 Um, I mean, you know what, I change anything. Probably not. Like I’m, again, I love my life, so I’m like pretty stoked on that. But mistake I made, like when Instagram came out, I thought it was kind of a joke. Um, and Tumbler was super dominant at the time and I had a huge following on Tumblr, or at least a huge following for Tumblr at the time. Um, and I did not move my audience over at all. So, and by the time I kind of realized that Instagram was going to kind of be the next thing and the tumbler was, was going to die, it was too late. I, um, I then didn’t have the opportunity to move that audience because they already had stopped logging into to tumblers. So, um, you know, I have 120, 130,000 followers on Tumblr who, and I have 24,000 on Instagram, you know. Um, so that was definitely, yeah. But that was definitely,

Christy Keane: 00:55:37 but yeah, it would’ve been nice to convert them over. But you know, like you said, you just, everything happens for a reason and your timing was so great and now you’re doing something probably much bigger and, and more successful than you probably ever could imagine with just growing a following in that space. But like I keep thinking about your car washing days. If there was Instagram, then you’d be like the best advertise what we know, classic car wash or right now, so everything definitely. Yeah.

James Nord: 00:56:07 Yeah. And I know I didn’t, I think you also have to like understand what you want to do with your life. You know, I actually, I didn’t want to be a photographer full time. It just, for me, it wasn’t, um, it wasn’t very intellectually stimulating. And so I, you know, wow, I could have gone down that path. I, to your point, I am glad that, you know, I didn’t, it didn’t blow up more and I didn’t feel like, oh, you know, I’ve got this all this money coming in. Um, I’m living this kind of cool life and, and I don’t want to give that up to start a business. Um,

Christy Keane: 00:56:44 I love that. And then just finally, I know you are a gear guy. I know you’re a camera guy and everybody always likes to hear, um, what gear people are using, what camera you’re loving right now. Any editing tips or apps that you recommend?

James Nord: 00:57:00 Recently? I, um, I bought a Leica m six, um, film Kara, um, from the, that mine was made in the late nineties. Oh, he’s still fun. It’s incredible. I have a canon five d mark four and a 50 mil one, two and a 24 Mil, one for on my Canon. And I love that camera. And I’ve taken hundreds and hundreds of thousands of photos on, um, I think I had a, you know, a five d mark too. And then I had a mark three and then now a mark four. Um, but I, I essentially haven’t picked it up in six months, um, since I’ve got this film camera. So, you know, I think, you know what, what’s that saying? Right? Like the best camera is the one that you want to take pictures on. So if you’re feeling yeah, I think if you’re feeling inspired with photography, buying a new camera, buying new gear, buying a new Lens, you know, can totally re inspire you and change, you know, changing your perspective can kind of yeah. Get you reignited and wanting to shoot more. But right now, yeah, I’m, I’m, I’m loving it and anyone, if you’re into photography and you, you know, and you can swing it, um, they certainly are not cheap cameras. Um, the like has been pretty amazing.

Christy Keane: 00:58:19 That’s awesome. What, uh, what Lens do you have on that one? Summa crown on it, which is like a 2.0 it’s so much fun. Oh my gosh. We’re going on an hour. I appreciate your time so much. Where can listeners find you and are there any exciting updates for, for that? We knew to be on the lookout for it. Yes. The next couple of weeks

James Nord: 00:58:38 for influencers, we have a bunch of stuff. Collaging, we’re having all new profiles launching that are a lot more visual. Um, so there’s gonna be new profiles. We have a new kind of opportunities page where brands, um, can, uh, can kind of post different opportunities and, and influencers can kind of directly, um, state their interest in those. Now those aren’t like, it’s not like a marketplace, but you’ll kind of see when it, when it comes out, how it works. Uh, we’ve also got a brand testimonials products coming out. So when you finish working with a brand, you’ll be able to send them, similar to kind of how linkedin works, you’ll be able to send them a link even if they’re not a for client and they can leave you a testimonial or review. Um, so that, you know, as you’re, you know, pitching another brand six months from them, they can see these 10 other big brands who are like, oh, we work together. Collaboration was amazing. We loved it.

Christy Keane: 00:59:39 I love that. I was just talking to, I had a gal on the podcast earlier this week who only has like 1400 followers. She’s, I just wanted to get their perspective and we were talking about, you know, getting feedback from your brand so that the, it just, you can share that with other brands is so important. And so I love that. I’m excited you guys are doing that last couple of weeks. That’s awesome. I,

James Nord: 01:00:01 I love for so much. And where can, where can followers on Instagram and, and a, if you follow for.co on Instagram, you’ll get, you know, uh, we’ll tell you when there’s a new drink with James and all that good stuff. Thank you so much.

Christy Keane: 01:00:14 So much for coming on today. Like I said, I, I know you’re in the business of, of influencer marketing and, and changing lives and minds certainly is one that actually has been super affected by, for in such a positive way. So the fact that you would come on today and spend an hour with me is the so kind. So I appreciate it.

 

MIP Mini- Taking back the power from social media with this simple mindset exercise to decrease anxiety around post engagement

Instagram has been glitching and engagement has been down across the board for many mompreneurs, creatives, and influencers in this space. There have been so many conversations surrounding the anxiety and depression that follows these ruts and today I want to help you take back the power from Instagram with this simple mindset exercise!

 

Intro: 00:06 You’re listening to motherhood ignited a podcast for mompreneurs creatives and influencers who are rocking the beautiful balance between working passionately and nurturing presently. I’m your host Christy Keaneand every week I interview inspiring mom bosses, brands and industry experts to bring you the knowledge, tools and strategies to grow your influence in business through purposeful online content creation. So come in and cozy up mamas and get ready to ignite your goals.

Christy Keane: 00:36 Hey Mamas, thank you so much for tuning in to this week’s MIP mini. Today we’re going to do a little bit of a mindset exercise because there has been a lot of talk lately about Instagram and the decrease in engagement and the decrease in likes on people’s posts and I did find out Instagram has been down this week, so everybody across the board is having issues with liking post, getting as much reach on their posts, so that is normal for everybody. I just want to let you know if you’re worried about what brands are thinking, they all know this is a trend that is happening right now. I cannot wait to post my interview with James Nord because he has insights for 80,000 influencers and across the board people are losing followers, their engagement is down. It is a trend and it is okay. It’s normal people and we have to shift our mindset about that today.

Christy Keane: 01:28 Instagram could be gone tomorrow if just after one day of it being down, we feel a little bit out of control or if after a couple of weeks of decreased engagement we start to question our abilities and ourselves. That is a problem. So I want us to come together today to change our mindset and this is my new mindset exercise for when this happens to me because it’s definitely happening to me. I am not immune to this at all, but what I’m doing now and what I want you to do is to imagine your children when you are posting. Imagine that they are the ones that are posting something that is important to them, whether it’s a picture or the caption that goes along with the picture. How would you feel if they had taken the time to create this content or to take this picture and capture this memory and they put it up and they immediately slandered themselves for not getting the engagement from strangers about it.

Christy Keane: 02:28 It would break my heart like seriously, my heart would be broken if my girls were putting any value on their self worth through this app. It would break my heart. So that’s what I want you guys to do. Like imagine when you’re posting something, imagine that it is your, your beautiful daughter posting it or your bright, enhance some sun posting it and how you would want him to feel about what he’s posting, why he’s posting it. And if he gets zero back, you would still want him to feel excellent about himself and you would still want him or her to love what they put out into the world. It shouldn’t be any different for you. So I would want my kids to post what matters to them and it might not matter to the rest of the world. And that’s okay. Right? When you think about it in the eyes of your children.

Christy Keane: 03:20 It seems silly but it’s okay. I would just want them to post what makes them happy and what makes them smile and I wouldn’t want them to live their lives or somebody else. I wouldn’t want them capturing their memories for Instagram. I would want them living their lives for them and capturing their memories for them and we need to shift our mindset to be similar in that way. You know what it comes down to is that, I know, I know that a lot of us rely a lot on the space right now, right? This is our, this is our playground. This is where we work, especially as mompreneurs who are launching businesses and as social media influencers and creatives. The space is important to us but it is not everything to us and we need to take back the power. You guys, you are giving Instagram so much power every single day.

Christy Keane: 04:07 You are giving them the power to change how you feel about yourself. Think about that for a second. That’s huge. I don’t even think I had been this affected by like relationships in my life to make me question myself and my abilities like Instagram has. So like it’s huge that this single platform can just change the way that you feel about yourself. You’re given the algorithm, the power to change your self worth and then it’s not. Okay. So we need to check, take that power back because when you think about it, if you are creating for this social media platform, you’re not really being that creative anymore. We’re losing our power to create, you’re losing your power to become a world class entrepreneur. Think about that for a second. You could be a world class entrepreneur, but not if you’re you relying on Instagram for it.

Christy Keane: 04:57 You have to, you have to be creating and building businesses for yourselves. You have to, you know, be thinking about what you’re doing on and off of the platform and then you need to be happy. You guys, you need to be excited. And I don’t know, I just felt such a pool in my heart to come on today and share this because I don’t want a decrease in likes a couple of weeks or a decrease in engagement to stop you guys from following your dreams. And maybe some of you guys are just starting out from zero. It is really hard out there right now on Instagram and you cannot give up because of what one app, statistics and analytics are telling you. Okay? So I bet all of you guys today, every single time you post, imagine you’re posting through the eyes of your baby girls or your baby boys and be proud of what you’re doing.

Christy Keane: 05:53 Be Proud of the message you’re putting out in the world, even if nobody, and I mean even at zero people had anything to say about it. I want you to feel good about it and I want you guys to take back the power today. Build something off of social media. I want you guys to just take that control in what you create and who you inspire and how you build your business. Like take back that control. Today. I was joking in a group, I have a fabulous group of women that I chat with daily on Instagram and we were all sharing our feelings about just how Instagram had been down this week and the lack of engagement. And I had brought up this message, which is why I decided to make this my mid mini today, but I brought up the message of taking back the power from Instagram.

 

Christy Keane: 06:43 And so you know how there’s that phrase, it’s like dance like nobody’s watching. I feel like the new quotes should be posts like nobody’s liking, just post pose, whatever you want, posts what makes you happy. So yes, change that mindset and take back the power. You guys, if you like today’s episode, please subscribe, leave a rating and review. I was so happy when I saw that I was on new and noteworthy this week and not one but three categories, business management and marketing and kids and family, you guys, that’s because of you of tuning in and listening and showing this podcast so much love and I can’t wait for us to just keep growing together. Another great way that we can grow together and build a community is over on Facebook at the MIP insiders group and my p insider’s group on Facebook. And I would just love to continue the conversation there as well. Thank you so much for tuning in, and I hope you have a wonderful week.

 

Creating success outside of social media with blogger & MLM marketing mom boss Casey Wiegand

Casey Wiegand, a mama of 4, is a blogger, influencer, and Royal Crown Diamond team leader with Young Living. On today’s show, Casey dives into balancing mom life and MLM marketing with confidence. 

In This Episode You Will Learn About:

  • Who Casey is and how she got started in social media and Young Living (1:25)
  • How Casey grew her Instagram to 160k followers (6:45)
  • How to honor your family and spouse’s privacy on social media (10:45)
  • How to create success OFF of social media and how Casey grew an MLM marketing team of over 78,000 (20:40)
  • How Casey outsourced and found her dream team in order to buy back time as a present mama (28:00)
  • What apps and time management tools Casey uses (29:00)
  • Mom guilt and the beautiful lesson that hard work teaches your kids (33:45)
  • How Casey balances working passionately & nurturing presently (35:00)
  • How Casey has grown a pinterest to over a million monthly views
  • What oils are helpful for labor and postpartum
  • How Christy and Casey handle the emotional toll of social media and stagnant growth (46:20)
  • Rapid Fire Questions ((49:45)

Resources:

Christy Keane: 00:06 you are listening to motherhood ignited a podcast for mompreneurs creatives and influencers who are rocking the beautiful balance between working passionately and nurturing. Presently I’m your host, Christy Keane and every week I interview inspiring mom bosses, brands and industry experts to bring you the knowledge, tools and strategies to grow your influence and business through purposeful online content creation. So come in and cozy up mamas and get ready to ignite your goals.

Christy : 00:36 So today’s guest is a mom I absolutely adore and I think it’s important to chat with her today because so many people associate Instagram with social media influencers that you kind of forget that the mom who’s behind these profiles may be killing in other areas of their business off the platform as well. And Casey Wiegand is one of those mamas! And as a busy mom of four, she manages an IG of over 160,000 followers while maintaining an active blog for over 11 years now and a thriving young living essential oils business with over 78,000 team members. Is that right? 78,000 oh my gosh. And a Pinterest page with over 1.2 million monthly views. And yes, I said monthly. So Casey, you know, I love you and I adore you and I’m so excited to share your motivational story today. Why don’t you share a little bit more about who you are and what you do? Well,

Casey: 01:26 super honored to be here. You obviously inspire me so much and your friendship has been such a gift to me. So getting just to hang out, like this is the best. I agree. That’s like the best part of this entire process. No know the community that I have found online truly is priceless. It really is. So, I mean it, you mean the world to me and I can’t imagine my life without your friendship. Same girl thing. So yes, I am Casey. I’ve got four little ones. Um, ages 10, eight, six and two. And we live in Dallas, Texas. And I’m married to my husband Chris. Um, and just like a quick synopsis. I know we’ll get deeper into it, but, so, um, we owned an art studio for kids, which led me to blogging. Then we had a little design network show, we started a blog conference, we did a documentary and then it led us lastly to young living. So we’ve really had one, um, dream to the next and it’s been really neat to see how it all has connected over the years.

Christy : 02:35 And I think that’s what I’m finding is so similar. The more I talked to different, um, women in this space is we’re also multi-passionate and I think it’s been so amazing that women aren’t afraid to recreate the idea of what success is for them and what the idea of what brings them passion is through all of these platforms. As things change. You are definitely a huge, exactly. I wrote down

Casey: 03:02 quote, um, before I hopped on today and it says, um, you know, no, no matter how similar the calling, there’s still a space for you. And I love that because I do think so many of our callings can look very similar and it could be easy to say, oh, she’s already doing it. Well, you know, there’s not a spot for me here. Um, and you know, I hope that through you telling so many stories that people really realize that there’s a spot for every story and really a need for every story.

Christy : 03:32 I love that. I really love that you’re going to have to send me that quote so that I can make sure I number one, like put it in a note. So I reread it for myself. And also just to share with everybody you see you had to do, you had an art studio. You know what? Actually I accidentally typed in just Casey weigand.com ended up blog of yours for me. It’s the weekend from back in the day we get to, oh my gosh, I’m saying your last name wrong. I’m so sorry. I probably do have some old websites with my art on it. That’s so funny. Yeah, it was so adorable and I think you are pregnant too. I was like, oh this is so cute. Um, so you had a kids’ art studio and then you said you had a design show. It’s funny

Casey: 04:14 because I started my blog. I mean, the reason why it’s called the weekend start column is because I never thought anyone would read it besides family. We had a child in the NICU. We actually are our four time NICU parents. Um, so we had, I wanted a space where we could update family. I had never even really truly seen a blog, what you and I would consider a blog today, you know, with beautiful photos and sponsorships. I just didn’t even know they existed. And um, so that’s how it started. And then I remember one night I was sitting up in my attic, that’s where my little desk and computer was, um, years ago. And I found a blog for the first time. Um, and it was amazing because I was reading this woman’s words. She lived in New York, I lived in Texas, we didn’t know each other. And I was weeping and I was inspired and I was moved. And I just remember thinking, this is incredible, that we can be all the way across the United States and have this common thread. And it just like lit a fire in me. Like, I’m going to do this. I’m going to share life in this way. And that’s when really the blog from what it started switched to more of what it is today.

Christy : 05:29 And obviously you have been very successful with that. And I don’t even think I knew that you had a blog conference. So tell me more about that. Cause I’m just like whoa. I know. So we, I guess three years, um, it was called hope spoken.

Casey: 05:45 My best friend, actually, the woman that I was just talking about, I emailed her in the middle of the night and we started a friendship and now we have done young living together. We’ve done a blog conference together, we’ve done so many things. And um, anyways, it was such an incredible experience. Um, but I tend to be someone where just like you said, I have lots of passions. And so after we did that for three years, my heart just kind of shifted onto the next screen.

Christy : 06:13 Wow. That’s just, I can’t believe how much you you’ve done that I didn’t even know about. And I follow your family so closely on Instagram and like I said, you kind of forget that there’s this, when you follow people it’s kind of like you pick up on that day and you move forward from there. I, you know, people these days aren’t going back as much and or doing as much deep searching off the platform. But you are somebody who not only on the platform is doing amazing but often you’re just killing it. Like I said, and I can’t wait to dive into that more today and I would love to find out how’d you get started on Instagram and what growing your following there? It looked like, cause I think you have, you have over 160,000 followers.

Casey: 06:54 Yes. And so I can remember, I feel like I’m in an a little bit of an unique spot because I started blogging so long ago and blogging really isn’t at all what it used to be. It, it changed so much when Instagram came onto the scene. And I actually remember for almost a year saying like I’m not gonna do that. Which looking back was like, not a wise, you know, strategic thinking move. Um, but I just, I was holding on to what was, and something I’ve learned so much along the way is that we have to be ready to change. I mean, more than ever, social media is changing, everything’s changing. And you know, when I realized that I got on Instagram and of course, um, it’s been the most beautiful community, but really I feel like blogging went away in a lot of ways, at least the way that it used to be did and everything moved to Instagram and moms were much more apt to be scrolling and reading bits and pieces here and there rather than sitting down, just like you said, and really digging deep into long blog posts or past archives.

Casey: 08:01 And so, you know, I just moved with that. And so really my following started on Instagram from so much so much of the community that I had created through my blog. And then, um, you know, from there it was like, okay, how can I learn this new, you know, new community and how to grow here. So I’ve met so many, you know, new friends through Instagram and have grown in new ways there. But that’s really how it began. Um, was kind of that shift. And what year was that that you started even? No winded Instagram really? Come on. I feel like it seems like forever ago. Um,

Christy : 08:42 I know, I think it was probably like 2011 ish that it’s starting to, yes. So

Casey: 08:49 I was going to say, um, cause I’ve been blogging about that because, let’s see, my daughter was born in 2010 and that’s really when I started. Yeah. So, yeah. And it was a lot easier to grow back then. Oh, I feel like, yes. I mean it was a completely different, it’s not at all what it is today. It’s changed so much.

Christy : 09:11 And do you remember like when you first started getting your big significant amount of following? Like in the tens of thousands

Casey: 09:22 we have had three miscarriages. And when I had my first loss, it was so shocking to me and so hard. I just used this, you know, this community that has really truly already given me so much back. Um, as a place to just, you know, I mean just share and just, it was so beautiful. Like I just opened up so many like raw vulnerable pieces of that part of our story. And I never imagined what I would gain back. I mean, if I look back on that, it’s, here’s the, I’m like my voice start to shake because, um, I mean it was just so beautiful. Like what people did, you know, they just really stepped into that pain with us and then we wound up having two more losses. But I think truly if I look back, that’s where like kind of the shift went from like, oh, this is a blog that we’re sharing our life to like, okay, we need to sit down. We’re, you know, our monthly viewers has changed drastically. And like, you know, we just need to like reevaluate as a family. We’re sharing our kids and we’re sharing our life and where do we land with all this? And, and that’s really truly where I feel like the, um, you know, the numbers really started to change.

Christy : 10:45 And I think that’s an important point you bring up about talking as a family about when you do start opening up about such personal things, which is that’s what people are longing for, right? Is that connection and to know the real you and the vulnerable sides of you and the good and the bad, not just the highlight reel, but what did that conversation look like with your husband? Talking about, um, sharing more with your kids. Cause I know that’s something that I still, you know, we’re still kind of navigating as our kids are younger and as your kids have grown kind of with you in this space, what are those conversations look like to yeah, feel.

Casey: 11:21 I mean, I mean they, we, we basically, I mean this taught, this was like, you know, a year long conversation. It wasn’t something that, it was like a one time and there was a whole lot of um, you know, prayer and just conversations and just really kind of navigating that. And we basically landed on, you know, I’ll share my story and I’m not gonna share anything that would embarrass them, you know, anything like safety wise, like I don’t tell anyone they go to school or you know, details of those kinds of things. And then also like things that really aren’t my story to tell. I’m not going to share. I mean there’s as much as I have shared, which I feel like as a whole lot, there are still so many things that are incredibly, deeply personal that I haven’t because, you know, it involves other family members that I’m like, you know, it’s, again, it’s not my story fully to share. And now as my kids are older too, um, you know, there was something recently with my son, Aiden, that I wanted to share and I sat down, I said, here’s the post. If you’re not comfortable with me sharing this, you know, I’ll delete it. There’s, there’s no reason to make you feel any certain thing. And he said, you know, involving them in those conversations, especially as they get older, um, I think is, is the key really, truly.

Christy : 12:42 And what did he say? He’s like, that’s fine, mom, go for it.

Casey: 12:45 Yes. And you know, it’s sweet because they’ve been a part of this since they were little. I mean, to be totally honest, there’s times they’re recognized out and there’s just, it’s just been a long journey of this. And so, um, you know, my heart truly is to be a light and to um, share, you know, our family as a light and they know that. And so as they’ve grown and understood that, you know, for the most part, they’re very happy to share. Every once in a while they’ll be like, don’t ever tell anyone that. And I’m like, I would never share that. But you know, if it’s something that’s, I mean I always want to share the, the beautiful pieces, but I mean, my son was sick, um, two years ago, like very sick and you know, I was hesitant at first to share because that’s his really truly his story. But you know, at some point we decided to kind of let people in. And again, this community is so amazing and has given so much. So it’s, it’s been a really good thing. You know, the, the good outweighs the negative.

Christy : 13:48 Yeah. And I think it’s really beautiful how you balance it and you know, it’s always so respectful to your family and your children. And I, and I feel the same way because I share a lot about Charlie’s journey with hearing loss. Yes. But I try to make it, you know, from a mom’s point of view or from the family’s point of view in what we have to navigate it so that when she’s old enough to tell her own story and hopefully she will be speaking it beautifully or signing it beautifully, but she can, she can write that story herself. But there still is as a mom, you know, so much that we go through and meet. I don’t, I don’t know what I would do when I found out about Charlie’s hearing loss if it wasn’t for Instagram. Cause you know, and like your experience with the NICU and you know, just reaching out to people and the people that maybe are in your real life don’t have the same similar experiences. And I know it’s hard for people to understand sometimes how you can grow such beautiful relationships online, but it’s truly just that connection that’s different

Casey: 14:52 that, you know, maybe the person that’s she’s living next door to you. It’s so true. When I was going to say you’ve done that in such an honoring way, which I think is huge, you know, when you’re honoring your child’s story and letting it be a light, I mean, like what a beautiful opportunity to be given that influence and that platform to do that. Um, and just like you said, it’s funny because, uh, I was thinking this morning, I was thinking about the enneagram when I was kind of, you know, thinking about us talking today and I was like, I don’t have that many friends in my, like real everyday life that are threes and they’re achievers and they want to, um, and there’s nothing wrong with that because my friends here in Dallas or you know, mean everything to me and are such beautiful of course and shit.

Casey: 15:39 But for me to have those friendships where I connect on that specific, you know, uh, level, um, oh, I can’t imagine. I mean, you know, to have mastermind sessions and just like you and I connecting on different things, it’s just something that has given me so much life. And, um, you know, so many fires in my heart. So I can’t imagine, just like you said, not, not connecting online in those ways. And so true. And that’s funny because I also am an enneagram three, four and of course, oh my gosh, it’s so funny. What is I think, what is it when you like get stressed? Do you know which one we go to as a three? Okay. It’s a nine. It’s a peacemaker. Oh, okay. Yeah. And isn’t, it isn’t going to kind of like a lazier one, two or something. I think what it is, is, is as a three, when they’re stressed, they fall into the peacemaker because they don’t want anyone to be upset, you know?

Casey: 16:37 Um, and so I, I have, I have found that that is very true for myself. Like I, you know, I don’t want, I, you know, mostly ever don’t want to upset anyone. But then expecially if I feel like, you know, in that stress mode, that makes total sense. It’s, I feel the same way. And then do you said masterminds, are you in a mastermind or have you done a mastermind group before? I’m always curious about those. Well, I just feel like at this point I’m in so many different, um, either Facebook threads or groups of women where we do zoom calls. And so I, you know, in my mind I call them masterminds, but, um, I just think it’s so neat, especially when everybody’s doing different things too, because, you know, it just makes you think outside the box. I know, I, I’ve actually have been doing a lot of research on masterminds just because I’m fascinated by them. And for those of you who are listening who have never heard of a mastermind, it’s basically a group of thought leaders that come together and encourage one another and hold each other accountable and um, really pour advice and insight into one another that can help them grow either in their business

Christy : 17:50 or in their influence or it just depends on really what the, what the overall goal of the group is. There’s a lot of really high end business ones, um, that, gosh, they cost, like people will pay like tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands of dollars to be in these masterminds. Yes. It just crazy. Like Lewis Howes, I love him. He actually shared the video of Charlie wants to know fan girling so hard and he had opened up his mastermind and I know great people like Jenna, Jenna Kutcher who were talking about earlier off of the recording, he did it. And I think Lori harder, who I’ve loved since I did fitness stuff, she did it just a lot of big name female thought leaders that are in the influencer space right now. But I’m like, okay, that’s my goal. But I’m not there yet, but it’s donating to me that people, we all crave that, um, connection and that validation from people who we respect and admire and people actually will pay for that too. And you know, it’s just so interesting to me.

Casey: 19:01 Yes. Well, and I was going to say, I am a huge believer in, you know, investing in your business in, um, spending money to make money. And you know, so much of my story is struggle. Um, when we started young living, we were, we had lost most everything we were, you know, in had moved in with family and I’ve been super, again, blogged, everything open with our story and you know, people would say like, how are you advertising on blogs? You know, this was back when it was different and then, you know, you’re struggling. And I’m like, because like I know where I’m going, I, I can see the picture and I know that I have to invest in my business. And so anyways, when you think about investing in a mastermind or something like that, but how much more you could get out of it and the potential of where it could take you? I think it’s a really good perspective to remember.

Christy : 19:55 Exactly, exactly. And that’s why I’m keeping it on my goal list. And Louis, if you’re listening or Jen, I think Jenna did. Jenna did a mastermind maybe. Oh yeah, fair. Yeah. So yeah, Jenna, if you’re listening I’ll be in your mastermind one day. I like we should do it. So Kathy, I’ll, yes. Oh my gosh, let’s do it. Okay, let’s have a side chat about that for sure. And I definitely want to talk to you. I know just we’ve had so many side chats. For those of you who are listening, me and Casey are friends and I’ve been looking forward to doing this podcast with her. And I know we want to talk later about kind of just some woes we’re feeling as things in social media change. But I really want to dive into again a little bit more of what you do off Instagram, which you have said a lot about what young has done for your life and how that works and just how you maintain all that and have a workflow. Cause I knew that you had a successful young living business, but until we recently dug into that more preparing for this podcast, I did not realize you had 78,000 team members. So I’m just like, wow, I’m blown away. I, I know there’s a lot of big advice out there for people in this space to diversify their income and find, um, you know, a network marketing platform or you know, business that they truly use and enjoy. And for you, that’s been young living. So yeah, tell me more about that and how that’s worked. I was

Casey: 21:29 going to say, you know, as do you and I are talking, I hope people remember like, so I’m an integram three on the strengths finder. I’m an achiever, I’m a maximizer. So I thrive, you know, juggling lots of things and running after things and working and not everybody’s like that. And so I think it’s super important to remember where is your strength and what is gonna lie to fire in you and you know, go down that lane. Um, you know, cause I think it’s so easy expecially online to to get caught up in, you know, oh well she’s doing it this way and just really figuring out what works best for me. You know, my family and my kids are my quote unquote my why. They were the drive. They were, I had a vision of, you know, and I still have goals and visions of where I want to go, but I knew that I didn’t want them to absorb the sacrifice and to work, you know, the way that we work.

Casey: 22:30 Um, I knew that I was going to have to have early mornings and late nights and it wouldn’t be forever. Um, but you know, I wanted me to absorb that sacrifice and not them. Um, so, and I know in a minute we’ll get into more some of my workflow and some apps and different programs that I’ve used that I love. Um, but you know, just, it is a whole lot of work. But also I think just finding, you know, I’m most inspired in the morning, so when I know that that’s my best work time, while it makes most sense for me to wake up early and get a lot done before anybody wakes up. Um, but yeah, so five years ago, um, my hormones, I mentioned we had had multiple losses. My hormones were kind of all over the place and people had talked to me about oils before.

Casey: 23:19 I did not grow up in a holistic comb. So it was like, ah, you know, I don’t know about that. Um, but I finally thought, what do I have to lose? Um, I got my kit completely fell in love with the oils and then I kinda had this other shift where I thought, you know, I’ve spent now at that point a long time building my blog and you know, trust with my followers and my brand that I just, it wasn’t something I was willing to share. Um, and then quickly that kind of shifted. I just, I fell so in love with the products and you know, just the more and more my eyes were opened up about safe, clean products and what these oils can do for families, I was like, how can I not share, you know, I’ve shared every other piece of our story, how can I leave this one out?

Casey: 24:06 And so I didn’t want it to take over my brand. And I think if you look at like, you know, my personal account, I could easily say it hasn’t. Um, but it became like a piece to my Pi. But what, what happened that I never expected was that that one, yes, led to 78,000, um, people in our team. And right now we’re the fastest growing young living team. We have so many influencers, um, and I don’t even just mean on line influencers, you know, just women in their communities who have influence in their homeschool groups and their ballet classes have just different areas that are passionate about sharing. And so, um, it’s just been really neat to see what’s happened and what, how much extra work do you have to do for the young living? So I would imagine just with such a large team and Maine tanning that whole, you know, it’s a, a whole business, so, all right.

Casey: 25:03 Yeah. So how does that work? Well, so my husband and I do this full time together now. Um, I mean, he’s still, he’s a filmmaker and a photographer, so he is still absolutely doing his things. But as far as, you know, the every day, um, you know, this is, this is our income. And, um, so you know, what that looks like is of course, this is like my full time job and it’s so much work, but also there’s so much freedom. Um, you know, we’re traveling all summer as a family and it just, you know, the sacrifice looks different. But, um, just what it’s been able to give us. And I’ve done posts before about when Aiden was sick, you know, when he was the hospital, that time freedom, it’s, it’s not something you could put a price tag on. Um, having that together and um, so that, you know, has been great.

Casey: 25:53 I mean, it’s changed our life and so I’ll be forever thankful for the opportunity. Um, but one thing is too, is now that this is our life, we have hired a team. Um, so now I’m not doing all this alone by any means. I got to where I am, you know, not without a team, but now to, to really be effective and to continue to grow. You know, I’ve brought on, um, a Pinterest manager, which you and I know we’ll get into. Um, I have someone running Facebook ads, I’ve got graphic designers and copywriters and, um, I have a full time assistant and a personal assistant. And I say all that to say that, you know, I had to work really hard to get to this space but now so that I can stay creative and um, you know, doing where I feel like is my sweet spot. Um, I really needed to start giving out tasks that, you know, maybe aren’t my best, um, use of time. Cause you know, we only have so many hours a day and we’ve got four little ones. And so I have to be smart with my time

Christy : 26:58 and no, I think that’s so important. I had Ashley Patreon on lately too and we were talking about the importance of protecting your time when you are a mom in this space because they still come first and it’s easy, you know, for, for people to forget that when you’re like doing a million things and you know, people, when you’re on line and on social media, people expect you to be present and in their dms and you know, answering back and when you’re doing young living, I’m sure there’s a big demand for quick responses with that too. But it’s so important to protect that time as a mom and with your kids at the same time. It’s just so you sound like you have figured out a really great balance to that. I mean, how did you call it? Finding your outsourcing too? I’m always, whenever I find out people outsource, I love to, well learn and I was going to say it’s not an easy thing

Casey: 27:49 then you have to fight for, you know, to really protect that time. And so I think it’s something that you continually have defy for, you know, and not start to fall in old ways. And, um, so okay, back to Jenna Kutcher. I actually went into her Facebook group. It’s the gold gold diggers Facebook group. And, um, I looked for, um, you know, I was like, who is an expert on Pinterest and Facebook? And so I have found, um, a few different amazing women through that group. And then, um, the others are on my oil’s team. And so we were already working closely together and so it was just like an easy natural fit. They, you know, they knew how the business worked. And, um, my personality and it just, it’s been a really huge blessing to my family, cause back to time, it’s given me more time with them

Christy : 28:40 and that’s the most important thing. And I love, I’m in Gen ed teachers group, someone have to use that license button and go through there and look at some more stuff because yeah, there’s just such a, she has such a powerful community of women in this space that I’m sure you found really great resources there. Right. And so what with your workflow, what is, what is a day in the life of KC look like?

Casey: 29:04 I was going to mention a few different programs and apps. Um, so we just switched everything over to something called air table and it’s been amazing because you have these huge calendars. So you know, for example, like a blog content calendar for me, I know everyone’s different, but for me to make sure that I have the best use of my time, you know, say I have a two hours of like power hours. Well, I need everything to be really organized. And so I know exactly what I need to sit down and get done. Um, so we’ll have content planned out, you know, months ahead. And then in there, I have all these different amazing women that I was telling you about so I can tag my graphic designer and you know, two weeks from Wednesday we’re going to share this recipe. So I need these graphics to be here in the copywriters and you know, my assistant who helps send out our monthly newsletter, she can pull from that.

Casey: 29:59 And so it’s just a really great way to, you know, all of us connect on what’s happening. Um, plantarly, which I hope I’m pronouncing that right is great for planning social media content. Um, through Instagram it has helped me, you know, I can grab maybe batch photos and then plan out what I’m gonna do. I’m not, I didn’t used to do that and I found that it really helped with time. Um, if I went ahead and planned ahead. Um, and then so I really, I, I get up at five, which I know is early, but you know, again, I have little ones in there up usually by seven 30. And so if I can have that two and a half hours of drinking coffee and I put in my headphones and just really sit down, um, to get things done, I like that to be like my inspirational time. And then some of the more mundane things like, you know, returning Facebook messages or dms or emails, you know, things that maybe I don’t need to be like fully inspired to do. I like to do an afternoon more during nap time or at night. So I think it helps to kind of plan out when you’re doing certain things. Um, so that, you know, cause sometimes if I tried to be inspired late at night when I’m really tired, um, I don’t think I would be able to crank out as much though.

Christy : 31:21 No. Yeah, I’m the same way. I mean I think I could probably benefit from a morning routine like that. I just, I can’t pull the trigger on it yet. I keep saying I’m going to, I had another guest on Amanda Hedgepath who talked about her morning routine. And did you just, are you always a morning bird or are that one day you were like

Casey: 31:39 five and Yam? I need, well I will say I’m, I am a morning person. I, I feel like I’m kind of a night owl too. I’ve never been somebody that I feel like needs like tons of sleep. Although I, you know, I am a, you have to get sleep. You have to, that’s important for our bodies. But I do think I’ve always kind of been a morning person, but I mean there was a time, you know, we were in the thick of growing our business. Um, when the month I had to Adelaide and really my biggest year of growth was from the moment she was born to her first birthday. I can remember, oh, I’d be so tired doing zoom calls and I can remember some, it’s falling asleep in her crib and just being like, I want to walk towards my bed that I’m going to walk towards my desk. And I think it’s just in those moments I just had that big picture, which is so huge, you know, just knowing, okay, why am I doing this and where am I going? Um, and honestly, I mean this sounds a little cheesy, but I have a huge passion for families and I want other people to be impacted and see success. And so my heart truly just has to revisit those things in those like really tiring moments. And then it just, you know, kind of ignites that fire. Right.

Christy : 32:57 Oh, I love that. And that gets me so much inspiration and hope and motivation for this year with welcoming Rona into our family because I’m kind of in the same spot as you, like you mentioned, like you just, you can see this bigger dream and purpose and life and you can see kind of where you’re feeling propelled and then you the day to day reality of, but wait, I’m going to have a newborn and two toddlers and I’m going to be fully, fully engaged there as well. And to know, you know, you just have to make sacrifices if you want these successes to come to fruition.

Casey: 33:40 Well, and I’ll, I’ll add to that too, cause I think this is a huge conversation is in that mom guilt. You know, cause I think it can be so easy to feel exhausted or overwhelmed by, okay I’ve got these precious little, you know, Kiddos that um, are my, my focus and my love. Um, but now I’m wanting to chase this dream and I’m wanting to work and you know, that balance. And I really think I had this light bulb moment when Adelaide was tiny. I mean I can remember it cause it was, you know, my first three were three under three, so it was like all babies at once. And then I have her. And so it was my first time to have older, three older children with a baby. And you know, it takes so much time to rock a baby and you know, that year that you’re really, it’s just a different pace. And I remember thinking, you know what, what a cool opportunity that I can show them what it’s like to nurture and take care of and sacrifice for a tiny baby. And I and I applied that same thinking to work is like what a beautiful opportunity for my, for me to show my kids what it means to dream and chase after something. And I just feel like when we shift those focuses too, it takes those heavyweights off of our shoulders because those moms that can be so much and it can really pull us down.

Christy : 35:03 Yes. I love that. I think that’s such beautiful advice and it’s true. Like just thinking about your kids and what you’re teaching them and, and I think that helps you ground yourself. I think it helps you find balance and I think it helps you make good decisions when you put your, you know, your sons and daughters in your shoes and think what you would want them to do or how you want them to react and spend their time meaningfully. So I think it just totally changes what you share and how you share and how you spend your time. So I think that’s really beautiful. Absolutely. So you get up at five, you have your coffee, you go through your two and a half hour power hours, and then the kids are up. I’m sure. So you probably have kids going to do you, you don’t homeschool, do you?

Casey: 35:52 I don’t, we have them at like a small, um, private school and so it’s actually was created by homeschool moms. So like my kids don’t go all day everyday til third grade. So my daughter, my kindergarten are only went two days, so it is much more, um, you know, home half home, half school until they get a little bit older. Um, but no, they are three of them. Three of the four are in school.

Christy : 36:21 And so when there, I’m sure you probably get a lot of work done then during nap times. Um, but when they’re home, are you just offline or are you kind of working sometimes in the background or how does that look for you?

Casey: 36:35 Um, I really try to put it away. Um, when I’m with them, you know, especially like when they’re, when they are in school and it’s not summer when they, when they walk through that door at four o’clock, I want to have everything put away until you know, bedtime. Um, sometimes things come up, you know, we’ll have a weekend sale or you know, some different things where they know that, hey, you know what, we just had two weeks in Florida. It’s okay mom us to spend the afternoon working. But for the most part I feel like we found a really good balance. Um, but again, I think it’s something that has to be fought for because our phones right there going off all the time, we’re getting messages, we’re getting texts and, um, direct messages. And I think it just really has to take discipline to say like, no, these are the times the day I’m going to check that. And then otherwise I’m just going to be present at home because you know, if that’s my why is to have freedom, you know, time freedom with them, then you know, I gotta make sure I’m not feeling it with other things.

Christy : 37:39 Very true. Very true. And I want to um, switch gears real fast cause I know that we had talked before about Pinterest and I am just so intrigued by this and I want to make sure I don’t forget to ask about it, but it sounds like Pinterest is really the way to go to grow your business. Has it helped with your Instagram as well? I mean 1.2 monthly followers or views or how does it work with Pinterest? 1.2 monthly views.

Casey: 38:09 Well it’s been amazing. So it’s really just been around January, January. Tell me everything about, cause I’m just so

Christy : 38:16 like I said, I have no Pinterest. I’m going to start from zero and, and try to figure this out and talk to your girl. But yeah, tell me.

Casey: 38:24 Well, I think the key is one, you have to have content coming out, you know, consistently for it to work. And so for me, I feel like that’s kind of like my sweet spot. I love generating content. Um, you know, I have used it as such a creative outlet for me. And so to really get back into that with recipes and hair tutorials and you know, sharing motherhood and you know, bedtime checklists, I mean, just, there’s so many different things that we have loved, um, over the years to share just our life. And then those kinds of fun things along the way. And so when I talked to her, I was like, okay, this is a really good fit because I want to generate content. And then her expertise is knowing like, what time of day depends something and what you know, tags do use and how many, and she, you know, I didn’t want to do any of that.

Casey: 39:18 I’ve just wanted to hand that over. And so it’s been incredible because I mean, I wasn’t focusing on Pinterest for however long. So I started with, I think it was like 30,000 views and then it went to over a million, like clearly, quickly, you know, and my hope is to keep growing it and growing it. Um, but I, I guess I’m always thinking through that business lens and I’ve done this long enough to know, okay, you know, what is my next step of growth? And so really on my list for this year was um, an email newsletter, you know, building an email list and then trying to get back into Pinterest. Um, rural really getting into it for the first time

Christy : 40:00 I went to Pinterest. Is it like Instagram where it’s all of your content that you’re pinning or do you pin other people’s content that inspires you and that counts towards your,

Casey: 40:10 so how can we pin like 95% my own content? I do get on there and use Pinterest, you know, for inspiration and houses and different things that I love to save for myself. Um, but as far as just like this strategic growth, um, W she’s pending cause she’s, you know, helping me do all this. Um, she’s pending like 95% of my own content.

Christy : 40:36 And is that content that you have to re make for Pinterest or is it content from your blog and Instagram already that she can?

Casey: 40:44 So that’s a great question. I was going to say it’s tricky because, so you know, an Instagram, everything’s in squares but for things to do really well on Pinterest, they really need to be like that long, you know, like rectangle shave not as square. So it’s, it’s cool because you know, for so long I was in the mindset of my blog and then really when Instagram take took over, I stepped away from my blog in so many ways because I just was sharing my heart and our life, you know, on Instagram. But what I have realized that it’s done with Pinterest is I’ve Kinda gone back to having things on the blog because she needs to pin it in this certain way, if that makes sense. Yeah, I didn’t, I have noticed

Christy : 41:34 you are so active on your blog and so I wanted to ask about that. So it’s funny that that ties together

Casey: 41:40 cause I really, I mean it was years, I really just, you know, it’s like, well if I’m already sharing it on Instagram, why do I need to go? Cause for so long it was my outlet and it was a journal and it was, you know, a love letter to my kids. But then when it shifted, but so I really feel like it’s brought it back and it’s been really neat to see how that has, and then, you know, I can still pull content from that and share it on Instagram. Um, and I do some and then some, I leave it just for the blog. So it’s been cool to see how it’s kind of all come full circle.

Christy : 42:13 Yeah. And obviously you’re doing amazing with it and I’m so proud of you for that and just everything you’re doing is really where I aspire to be as well. So I’m just so happy that you’re so kind to just share and be open about how you do what you do. What’s, what’s been like the most life changing thing out of all of, out of all of these platforms and everything that you do between young living and Instagram community like blogging. I’m sure there’s probably something for everything, but what would you say is the one most life changing?

Casey: 42:53 Well, I think it’s kind of like two things. I think as far as like blogging and Instagram, the platform that I’ve been able to have, I mean it’s been life changing. The community is so special. It’s literally changed so much of pieces of who I am over time. And I just feel like so much love in my heart for, um, just everything. When I think about blogging and Instagram, um, and then young living has completely changed our life just because of the incredible opportunity. And um, I really feel like, you know, called there. Um, I feel like so passionate about sharing with families and also so many entrepreneurs who, you know, really are looking for something and they’re looking for hope and just being able to like walk the side, all these incredible families. So I mean really both have been such beautiful opportunities. And again, both are so much work, but the best kind of work, right?

Casey: 43:58 Getting to connect with people. Um, I can’t, I still am like, how is this my job in my life? Which, you know, even just saying that, I will say I tried to tell people this in dms all the time, is that reminder that so many people that you see online, you know, there’s just a sliver of our lives and this is our job. So we’re bringing out content, you know, I’m going to take a picture of my room and it looks beautiful. Not when I have laundry around every, so just remembering that we have the so much real life happening, you know, behind the squares.

Christy : 44:34 It’s so true. I have a young living do I have, I have a diffuser. I’m like, I don’t even know the right words for these things, but I have a diffuser and like two oils and I just, I don’t know. I haven’t figured out how to get into it yet. It was Audrey Roelof who we talked about before we came on the podcast today. She has always inspired me with that and sent that over. And I’m like, I still haven’t figured it out. And now after this conversation I’m like, I really need to like figure it out. Do you ever have, like I am wondering, is there like oils that you infuse when you are in labor? Oh my goodness. Okay. So side note, I

Casey: 45:14 Adelaide, my littlest, it was my first like quote unquote oily pregnancy, oily postpartum. And like, I’m like, how did I ever do this three times before? Like I’m talking postpartum, like heaven,

Christy : 45:28 so me and aren’t really that big of a difference. Okay. I’m, yeah, I’m gonna need to know about this and then I will share with you listeners over Instagrams. I’m totally going side note, but I’m like, obviously there is something to this that is changing so many people’s lives. I mean on just your team. If there’s 78,000 people that are so dedicated and you know, so believing in oils and how they’ve changed their lives, like there’s something to that, you know, it’s not, it’s not hocus pocus. And I know I could use, um, I’ll the labor and delivery and postpartum oily magic that I can get at this point in time for sure. So I don’t have a side conversation with you with that. Definitely. And before I go into my rapid fire questions though, I did want to make sure that you and I touched on, we, we chat for those listening.

Christy : 46:18 Um, or we’ve, we’ve chatted in Instagram for years and we’ve seen kind of the ups and downs of what goes on in the platform and just to encourage everybody, we both have had conversations lately about the struggle with engagement and growth lately. And I feel like it’s especially like I, I honestly feel like I’ve said this before, but hitting 100,000 followers was like the worst thing that happened for my Instagram, which is interesting since so many people you know, are looking at getting those following numbers. But I know it’s hard when we’re putting this time and effort into content and wanting to connect. And it seems like it’s so much harder to connect with people and, and reach more moms and have our messages get heard. And I just want to hear how you’re feeling about that right now and share that to encourage some mamas.

Casey: 47:07 Well, and you and I had talked about that before and I actually talked to like an Instagram, I dunno, strategist expert and she said that actually as you grow it gets harder and harder to keep engagement cause there’s, you know, the, it’s more people. Um, and so I think that that absolutely lines up with you just said, and I think it’s just, you know, good for everyone to know that they’re not alone in that. I know that, I don’t know anyone that doesn’t really feel that way. It’s just like I said, kind of at the beginning it’s shifting again and it’s just kind of trying to figure out, okay, what is this going to look like, you know, moving forward. And so, um, I think because I watched what happened with blogging, you know, part of me, I tend to be like a glass half full kind of girl.

Casey: 47:58 So I’m like, feel helpful. Like, okay, maybe the next thing will be, you know, even better. Um, but I mean, it’s definitely hard and I think, you know, especially just like you said, you spent so much time pouring, you know, out your creativity and your story and your gifts and then to feel like, oh my goodness, are people even getting to see this? Um, and you know, when it is your job, it does feel a little bit scary. Um, and you know, that is one of the reasons why I decided to start working on an email list and other things because I think in some ways we always have to Kinda have that in the back of our, our minds. Yeah.

Christy : 48:35 Instagram could be here today and gone tomorrow and you’re so smart in how you’ve run your businesses and, and where you have your vision at right now and, and where you’re going to go. And it’s hard. It’s hard. But with just, you know, we both obviously like you care, you have such a big heart and it’s not just getting eyeballs on your content that you care about. You know, like you and I both care about the women who are behind the profiles, who are seeing us and who are hearing that message and who need to hear it. And you know, what do you just want more and more people to be blessed by what you can do to change their lives or to help them or to help them cope with a certain situation? It’s like Instagram just doesn’t, they don’t know that. They’re just showing you what, what you need to see and everything’s going to be okay. It’s just, it’s so true. It’s just yet you keep pouring your heart and purpose and everything and it’ll all be fine. And so I want to do my rapid fire questions. I don’t take up too much more of your time. I’ve loved chatting with you as long. What’s my first question is my favorite and it’s what do you influence that you’re most proud of?

Casey: 49:45 Brilliant. I’d say the thing that I’m most proud of is really, truly my heart is to be alight. And I feel like, you know, we have done that. Um, and hopefully we’ll continue to do that. And that really is truly my heart to be a light for, you know, Mama’s or, um, you know, just really meeting people where they’re at. And, you know, we’ve been really open with struggles and I think it can be easy to see beautiful photos and think, oh, they have it all together. But then to really read our words and say like, no, we’ve been through this and that and it’s really shaped us to who we are. Um, and you know, and I hope that they can see that light in us.

Christy : 50:23 Yes you do. You definitely can see it. You do a great job. And how much time do you dedicate to social media at day?

Casey: 50:31 Oh, okay. That’s so hard. I mean, it’s my full time job, so I do spend a good amount of time working. Um, you know, I spend what, like two or three hours in the morning, two or three hours during nap time. And two or three hours at night. So I mean you put that together. It’s definitely a full time job. But, um, I think the important thing is knowing that like when, when is the right time to be doing that right time of the day. Um, yeah. Yeah. So I’d say biggest piece of advice that is, you know, figure out what’s best for your family and you, and then figure out when you’re most inspired, you know, say you have one hour a day, when can that power hour be and have a list of exactly what you need to do.

Christy : 51:10 Amen. And you, you mentioned a few apps. Can you mention them again? There was a couple apps you talked about for time management.

Casey: 51:16 Oh yes. Um, so I love, um, Trello. I love slack. I love air table. Um, planfully and then also, I don’t think we touched on this or maybe we are going to, but um, I do have a list of like photo and [inaudible].

Christy : 51:31 Oh yes. Then just two more questions from now. It’s my favorite question out of all of them. Besides the influence one, is there a mistake you’ve made in this space that you would go back and change?

Casey: 51:45 Um, I’d say the biggest piece of advice or a mistake that I would tell myself not to fall into is just that comparison trap. Um, you know, no matter how similar in the calling there’s a place for each of us and um, what one person’s story or um, you know, following or engagement looks like it’s just gonna be different for everyone. And we have to remember not to worry about that and just step into kind of our gifting and our calling and just thrive there. Um, cause I think that that compares to chapel just, I mean there’s nothing good that comes from it.

Christy : 52:21 It’s so true. And you start out the podcast with that beautiful quote that I feel like just summed it up perfectly, that there’s just so much room and space for everybody and every story is so different, but it is hard. It is so hard and advice for somebody starting from zero.

Casey: 52:40 I think it would be along the same lines, just be yourself, share your story. Um, whether you have a hundred followers or 100,000, there’s somebody, somebody that needs to hear your story and you have influence, you know, whether it be online or you know, at your child’s school or at your church, wherever it is, or there’s people that know you and love you and trust you and they’re there watching. Um, and so just be consistent and just, you know, kind of step into that of, you know, just being yourself.

Christy : 53:08 Yes. And I love, love, love that. This is the second time in this interview that you’ve touched on influenced does not necessarily mean through a social media platform like you. And that’s what I keep trying to, people hate that word influencer right now. It’s like the dirty little word, but it’s like you, you have influenced in more areas of your life or the potential to influence more areas of your life than just social media. And you know, just being brave in those areas where you do thrive can just kind of help your story online if that’s where you choose to share it or that’s where you choose to have your influence. But absolutely, there’s so much weight in that, you know, it’s so true. We were just talking about this question gear. What, um, what’s your favorite year as far as like what camera do you use? Do you use any presets for editing? You have beautiful pictures. Anybody who got her her profile and she will tell you where to find her. But Oh my goodness, her pictures are so beautiful.

Casey: 54:11 Well, you know I mentioned my husband’s a filmmaker, photographer. So people are always like, what camera are you using? But I really just use my cell phone. Like everything you see is my cell phone. So I’m, I use light room. I love that JC Marie presets. Sames love them. I love Teza app. Um, it’s awesome. I love the Malibu app. Both of them are great for photos, especially if you’re not comfortable with light room.

Christy : 54:37 Um, and then Isaiah, so have question, random hair. Sorry to cut you off. Is Your Malibu been like making really blurry pictures? No, not yet. [inaudible] glory videos. Oh No, no, not yet. Yeah, cause I got the Malibu app because I love, uh, Sophia. El Ray has like really pretty um, yes, filters on there and every time I’ve got so sad because um, every time I went to upload a picture or a video rather it would upload totally blurry. Oh No. Yeah. And it just started happening. So I switched over to the Tesla app for that very reason because Tesla is always looks so beautiful and I haven’t had any issues with quality and yeah, that was just [inaudible] note when he said maybe I need to look closer. Maybe, maybe it is happening, you would know. Trust me, you would know minor, like very, very obvious. Okay. Sorry to interrupt you. Sorry.

Casey: 55:33 The M app in shot for like, you know, speeding up videos or different things with video. And then I also have this new app called add music and it’s been awesome cause you can add music to videos. So,

Christy : 55:47 and it’s all like copy, right? Yep.

Casey: 55:49 Breathing is, I mean I think we pay a monthly, I need to look back, but um, but then you can use anything in there.

Christy : 55:55 Yeah. And that’s, you can write that up to people if you’re listening because that’s part of your business and tell listeners where they can find you. Yes,

Casey: 56:04 well Instagram is Casey Lee Wiegand and my um, my wellness account more healthy living focused is Casey Lee essentials.

Christy : 56:13 Well I appreciate you coming on today to chat with all of us Mamas and pour all this knowledge into us and just taking time out of your day to be on the podcast, you know, love you and I appreciate you and I have so many side notes here that I’m going to have to just blast to you in an email or in a another conversation. Yes, let’s do it. Awesome. Okay, well thank you so much for coming onto the these friends. Uh, I love Casey so much. I loved getting to chat with her today. I will post where you can find her in the show notes and if you’d like today’s episode, as always, please subscribe, please leave a rating and review. We appreciate it so much and it really helps with trying to get motherhood ignited on the new and noteworthy and ranked in the podcast. So more Mama’s can come together and formed this beautiful community of encouragement and speaking of community. Don’t forget that you can also head over to Facebook to the MIP insider’s group where we network a lot more and just get to know each other a little bit more. And it’s still so small and intimate. And I hope to see all of you guys in there. Thank you so much for tuning in today.