• Building a Personal Styling Business Around Identity Work with Anna Rova
    Jul 2 2026

    Anna Rova came to personal styling from a place I don’t hear very often. She built a seven-figure dating coaching business, closed it down, and then decided to become a personal stylist, even though she had never styled friends and family or really seen herself as the stylish one.

    Anna grew up in Moldova thinking style was something other people were just born with, usually women from rich families who somehow knew how to dress well. As she built her first business and started earning more, she began to notice the gap between how she saw herself as a successful woman and how she was actually showing up. That was the beginning of realizing style was not some mythical thing she could never access. It was a skill she could learn.

    In this episode of The Six Figure Personal Stylist Podcast, Anna and I talk about what happened when she moved from dating coach to personal stylist, why her past business success did not automatically make this business easy, and how she is using style as a tool for identity work, not just better outfits.

    1:34 – How Anna went from running a successful dating coaching business to realizing she wanted to help women with style

    4:25 – Why Anna’s path into personal styling looked different from the stylists Nicole usually works with

    8:23 – The pressure Anna felt to close the gap between the success she had built and how she was showing up

    13:38 – What happened when Anna started building a styling business after already having online business success

    17:21 – Why Anna’s polarizing message worked in dating and what she’s figuring out now as a stylist

    20:12 – How working with Nicole helped Anna see the rare combination of experience she was bringing into styling

    24:47 – Why business growth depends on your capacity for discomfort, not just the right program or strategy

    26:54 – What changed after Anna finished the Accelerator, including enrolling four clients and launching her first styling group program

    30:17 – Anna’s YouTube strategy and the difference between content that gets views and content that brings in styling clients

    40:21 – What Anna is excited about next, including her group program and her first repeat styling client


    Mentioned In Building a Personal Styling Business Around Identity Work with Anna Rova

    Anna Rova | Instagram | YouTube

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    43 mins
  • What Fall Looks Like When Your Styling Business Has a Plan
    Jun 25 2026

    There’s a version of success in your styling business that doesn’t usually get posted about because it isn’t dramatic enough. It’s not the viral post, the big press placement, or the six-figure reveal that makes everything suddenly feel legitimate. That Cinderella version of business success is what a lot of stylists think they’re waiting for, but it’s not what the beginning of a stronger business usually looks like.

    In real life, it often looks like relief. You know what you’re selling. You understand why your marketing is starting to connect. Your sales calls feel less like convincing and more like logistics. The right people are noticing what you’re saying, even if the volume hasn’t exploded yet. And instead of walking into fall with a dozen open tabs in your brain, you have a clearer sense of what’s working and what needs to stop taking up so much space.

    In this week’s episode of The Six Figure Personal Stylist Podcast, I’m wrapping up this summer series by showing you what can change when you actually use the audit we talked through last week. I’m talking about what happens when your offer gets clearer, your credibility becomes more visible, your content gets sharper, and you start walking into fall with more control over your styling business and its future.

    2:34 – What changes in your marketing when you commit to one clear styling offer for 60 to 90 days

    4:44 – Why stylists can lose steam when success starts feeling more like relief than a breakthrough

    6:33 – How making your credibility more visible can change the quality of your styling inquiries before the volume increases

    8:51 – How one stylist reconnected to her purpose after a 10-year stretch of inconsistent results

    12:27 – Why looking at the facts of your business can make you a stronger entrepreneur before fall

    16:08 – What pricing struggles are usually pointing to when you’re an established stylist

    20:02 – How stronger messaging can bring past styling clients back into the conversation

    23:28 – How auditing your styling business helps you walk into fall with fewer open tabs in your brain


    Mentioned In What Fall Looks Like When Your Styling Business Has a Plan

    Taking Time Off in Summer Without Going Quiet in Your Styling Business

    How to Stay Visible in Summer Without Being Online All Day

    How to Audit Your Styling Business Before Fall Gets Here

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    26 mins
  • How to Audit Your Styling Business Before Fall Gets Here
    Jun 18 2026

    If you’ve been with me for the last two episodes, you know summer is the setup season. So if you’re not where you want to be right now, this is a really good time to stop assuming “summer is just slow” and look at what’s actually happening in your styling business before you head into fall with the same problems you had before.

    Because most of the time, the sales problems you’re feeling today started 60 or 90 days ago. But when you’re too close to the client work, the content, the day-to-day, and the pressure to bring in the next sale, it gets very hard to zoom out and see what is actually running and what is not working. That’s when stylists either pull the wrong lever and create more people-pleasing content, or they go quiet because they’ve decided summer isn’t worth marketing through anyway.

    In this week’s episode of The Six Figure Personal Stylist Podcast, I’m walking you through the business audit I run on my own business and with clients when they’re having a hard time seeing where to look. We’re talking about how you are marketing your offers, where you may be burying your credibility, how to look at your last 90 days of marketing without getting distracted by likes and reach, and why getting off your screen and strengthening real relationships may matter more than another post.

    3:22 – The offer I want you to market first and what your reaction to that tells you about where you’re stuck

    6:50 – Why your client lifecycle, offer suite, and marketing cannot be separated

    9:57 – How to audit your past marketing and see what you’ve actually been pointing people toward

    11:50 – Why marketing one higher-ticket offer can make your other styling offers easier to sell

    14:08 – How burying your background and credibility makes it harder for clients to connect with you

    17:46 – What to look for when you audit the personal brand pieces missing from your content

    18:37 – How to find out which content actually made clients want to hire you

    21:01 – Why getting off your screen and strengthening your network can change the nature of your business

    26:20 – The one-hour audit to run before fall and why picking one or two areas is enough


    Mentioned In How to Audit Your Styling Business Before Fall Gets Here

    Taking Time Off in Summer Without Going Quiet in Your Styling Business

    How to Stay Visible in Summer Without Being Online All Day

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    31 mins
  • How to Stay Visible in Summer Without Being Online All Day
    Jun 11 2026

    You know going quiet in your marketing during the summer is part of what creates a slow fall. But knowing that doesn’t magically solve the real-life problem of kids being home, trips being planned and paid for, clients still needing you, and your actual life requiring attention.

    Most stylists think visibility has to be one of two things. Either you’re online all the time, posting every day and responding immediately, or you’re fully off and you’ll deal with the consequences later. Neither of those options works if you want rest and a real business. There is a third option, and it’s the one I’ve been using for years.

    In this week’s episode of The Six Figure Personal Stylist Podcast, I’m walking you through how I stay visible when I’m taking real time off from my business. I’m talking about what runs while I’m away from my desk, how to capture content without putting the rest of your life on hold, why lifestyle content is not automatically marketing, and what personal stylists actually need to stay visible without burning out.

    2:18 – The third visibility option that keeps your business showing up without requiring you to be online all day

    3:45 – The marketing advice I give personal stylists when they’re trying to do less without disappearing

    7:08 – How often I take time off in my business and what I plan before those breaks happen

    9:26 – Why this system works for personal stylists with high-touch service businesses

    11:40 – Why your business and your life cannot keep moving in opposite directions

    15:14 – How to capture content inside the life you’re already living

    18:05 – The visibility plan I use when I’m taking time away from my business

    21:45 – When a one-off personal post actually helps build connection with your audience

    24:24 – How I handle email, sales calls, and DMs while I’m on vacation

    26:29 – What I do not do in my business when I’m away

    28:00 – Why documenting your life is not the same as marketing your business

    31:12 – The bare minimum your styling business needs to stay visible through summer


    Mentioned In How to Stay Visible in Summer Without Being Online All Day

    Taking Time Off in Summer Without Going Quiet in Your Styling Business

    HoneyBook

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    35 mins
  • Taking Time Off in Summer Without Going Quiet in Your Styling Business
    Jun 4 2026

    Every spring, stylists get busy. Client delivery picks up, the calendar fills, and the marketing starts to slow down. You're still showing up, maybe sharing what you're wearing, leaning on the links, but that deeper thought leadership that actually gets people to trust you and hire you starts to slip. Then summer arrives, the kids are home, the trips are planned, and pulling back feels not just reasonable but earned. And because the industry has always told you summer is slow anyway, it's easy to believe you're just doing what everyone else is doing.

    What most stylists don't connect until it's too late is that what you're doing in your marketing right now determines what your styling business looks like 60 to 90 days from now. So when you go quiet in June, you're not just having a slow summer. You're setting up a slow September.

    In this week's episode of The Six Figure Personal Stylist Podcast, I'm starting a four-part series on what it actually looks like to take real time off in summer without your styling business paying for it. I've taken roughly three months off every year for years, and my business has continued to grow. This episode is about why that's possible, what the 60-90 day marketing lag actually means for your business, and what we're going to cover in the episodes ahead.

    3:05 – The sequence that starts in your busiest season and ends with you chasing business months later

    6:07 – The well-established foundation behind why your styling business looks the way it does right now

    9:06 – What the "summer is slow" story misses about how your ideal clients think, spend, and make decisions

    11:07 – Why the spring and fall seasonal boost that many stylists used to count on is shrinking

    14:24 – The real reason your income pipeline runs dry in the fall (and why it's so predictable once you see it)

    17:35 – The meaningful distinction between stylists who step back and lose business and those who step back and don't

    19:32 – A preview of the next three episodes of what this summer series will cover


    Mentioned In Taking Time Off in Summer Without Going Quiet in Your Styling Business

    Booked, Profitable, and Magnetic Private Podcast

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    22 mins
  • Building a Custom Clothing Brand for Women From the Ground Up with Lauren Linnane
    May 28 2026

    Most stylists have seen the gap firsthand. A client wants something custom and the options are fast fashion off the rack or a men's tailor who adapts a suit to the female form. The fabrics are limited, the fit is a compromise, and nothing about it feels personal. That gap is exactly what Lauren Linnane set out to fill.

    Lauren spent over a decade in corporate accounting in Boston before she took a buyout, moved to Milan, and started building a custom clothing brand for women from scratch. She didn't speak the language, she didn't know the supply chain, and it took close to two years of relationship building before she had the right partners to produce a single garment at the level she wanted.

    In this episode of The Six Figure Personal Stylist Podcast, Lauren shares the full story of building PARLA, what the bespoke client experience looks like from first fitting to finished garment, why custom clothing for women is so rare, and how stylists can start working with a designer like her.

    1:21 – Lauren's corporate background and the frustration with women's clothing options that started everything

    4:22 – Why Lauren chose Milan and her early attempts to manage the supply chain from the US

    7:28 – Building supplier relationships in a country where she didn't speak the language

    11:32 – The personal styling experience in Milan that inspired Lauren and why she chose design over styling

    14:02 – The client experience work Lauren and Nicole did together and where styling and custom clothing overlap

    16:38 – The bespoke process from first call to final fitting

    21:15 – What makes custom clothing for women so hard to come by and so expensive to produce

    23:19 – How people react to custom pricing and the fast fashion expectation Lauren runs into

    25:52 – Relationship-based marketing versus social media for high-trust businesses

    31:52 – Advice for stylists who have thought about starting a fashion brand

    34:54 – Lauren's upcoming trunk shows in Boston, New York, San Francisco, and London


    Mentioned In Building a Custom Clothing Brand for Women From the Ground Up with Lauren Linnane

    PARLA | Instagram

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    37 mins
  • The Part of Transformational Styling That Most Stylists Misunderstand
    May 21 2026

    I recently finished a full year of working with a nutrition and weightlifting coach, and I ended up weighing the exact same amount as when I started. On paper, that looks like a failure. But I actually think it may have been the first real shot I've ever had at lasting change, because what that year showed me wasn't that I needed a better strategy. It was that my life wasn't built to hold the identity the strategy required.

    I think a lot of stylists are accidentally misreading this exact dynamic with their clients. You do great work together, your client has a real breakthrough, and then a few months later they're reaching back into their closet for the safe options. And most stylists quietly start wondering if the work didn't land. But that pulling back is a normal part of how identity change actually works, and if you don't recognize it, you'll walk away from clients and evidence that your work was doing exactly what it was supposed to do.

    In this episode of The Six Figure Personal Stylist Podcast, I'm talking about what transformation actually requires beyond the reveal, why clients pulling back isn't evidence that something went wrong, and what your business needs to look like if you want your work to go deeper than one good shopping session.

    3:05 – The belief most stylists unconsciously carry about when and how transformation happens with a client

    5:53 – What's actually going on when a client retreats to safe options a few months after great work together

    8:31 – Why a client can genuinely want visibility and still have a part of them that reads it as a threat

    14:08 – What "doing the reps" looks like inside a program and how identity starts shifting before the hard stuff is fully resolved

    19:38 – Why repeat clients and clients who pull back are often evidence that your work went deeper than you think

    21:29 – What your business needs to look like if you want transformation to go beyond one exciting moment


    Mentioned In The Part of Transformational Styling That Most Stylists Misunderstand

    Booked, Profitable, and Magnetic Private Podcast

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    24 mins
  • What Personal Stylists Get Wrong About "Making It"
    May 14 2026

    Someone asks how your styling business is going and your stomach tightens before you've answered. You start calculating. How much to say, how enthusiastic to seem, how to make it sound like enough. Underneath all of it is a quiet belief that if the number in your bank account were bigger, or your months were more consistent, or you had a waitlist, the question wouldn't do this to you anymore.

    A client of mine recently said she'd know she'd made it when she could feel calm in her body during that exact conversation. I knew what she meant, because I spent years thinking the same thing. Then I signed a $36,000 contract, went to a family event, got asked about my "little styling business," and realized the calm I was waiting for had nothing to do with the size of the check.

    In this episode of The Six Figure Personal Stylist Podcast, I'm talking about the feeling stylists are actually waiting to feel when they say they want to "make it," why no external marker is going to give it to you, and what to start doing right now if you want to stop bracing every time someone asks how business is going.

    1:34 – The marker one stylist named for what success would actually feel like

    3:19 – The $36,000 contract, the family event, and the moment Nicole realized the calm she was waiting for had nothing to do with the check

    5:55 – Why outside things never rewrite the story you have about your business

    6:35 – The unconscious belief that's keeping a lot of stylists under-earning even when they're doing everything right

    9:43 – The question almost no stylist can answer about their own version of success

    11:01 – Why hitting bigger milestones doesn't deliver the calm you think it will

    13:43 – What the stylists who get where they want to go are actually doing differently

    16:52 – The question to ask yourself if you want to start building real internal markers of legitimacy

    Mentioned In What Personal Stylists Get Wrong About "Making It"

    Booked, Profitable, and Magnetic Private Podcast

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    20 mins