5 Things I Wish Someone Told Me Before I Became A Founder with Michelle Lewis

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Michelle Lewis is a Visibility and Publicity Expert who helps established entrepreneurs discover their unique online identity, shape their pitch plan and start landing press quickly.

Co-Founder of The Publicity Place™ , Michelle Lewis is a leading authority on color psychology, brand positioning and publicity strategy. She's helped thousands of entrepreneurs land their dream features and impact their ever-expanding audience with her techniques.

Michelle's journey began in 2016 when she left Hollywood and started with her first e-book, which became an e-course, which became a steadily growing brand.

She currently lives in Coeur D'Alene, Idaho with her husband, pug, and three ducklings - and can't be parted with her garden or fresh brewed iced tea.

Thank you so much for joining us in this interview series! Can you tell us a story about what brought you to this specific career path?

I had zero plans to work in PR, but thinking back on it, I’d always had my hands in it. Working with actors, directors, and producers, I was always assembling reels and drawing up press pages as a friend to help them get their names out there. And when we were pitching a tv show I had written and produced, I had to get the word out there about it myself. We ended up premiering at the Gary Marshall theatre and getting a write-up in Hollywood Magazine. Little did I know that - years later - I’d get into entrepreneurship. That led to meeting Kristin Marquet, a renowned publicist that co-authored “Publicity Jumpstart” with me. And now we’re launching a PR business together to help entrepreneurs get their own press.

Can you tell us a story about the hard times that you faced when you first started your journey?

Finding what specific talents you offer in the online space is staggeringly hard. I think we’ve all fallen victim to course-buying fever and thinking our success is dependent on what programs we purchase or masterminds we join. That was my biggest struggle. I wish I could go back in time and tell myself to shut it all off and just go with my gut. That was my best advisor.

Where did you get the drive to continue even though things were so hard?

I’m a stubborn lass. And I’ve had a lot of careers that didn’t work. I think most entrepreneurs have. And, for some reason, I refused to let go of this one. Every day I’d do at least one thing to move my business forward. And I think that persistence is the only reason things have grown to where they are today.

So, how are things going today? How did grit and resilience lead to your eventual success? 

Trying was my key. I just refused to stop. That led to me booking TEDx, getting on some major stages like Heart Behind Hustle, Epic Mastermind San Diego, and even BossCon. Behind the scenes, I was always working, tweaking, and testing my products and funnels. That persistence helped me grow slowly but steadily to this point, where my programs run pretty hands-free. And that gave me the opportunity to partner with Kristin with PR.

Can you share a story about the funniest mistake you made when you were first starting? Can you tell us what lesson you learned from that?

There have been so many! I remember going to Melissa Pharr’s event in New York City. I was taping her event and had gotten food poisoning on the plane. Trying to get to her house at 5 am on the train system...well, it’s a miracle I made it. She graciously let me sleep at her place and got me to the event’s hotel so I could rest in my room. Talk about embarrassing! But I gave the event my best and she ended up with some really great footage she used for future events. I think I learned that full transparency and vulnerability are okay. You just have to do your best despite your circumstances!

What do you think makes your company stand out? Can you share a story?

I’ve seen a lot of PR programs or done-for-you services over the years. And I get pitches for my podcast every single day. Honestly? There’s something missing in how people are approaching PR. I see people getting frustrated because either they’re not booking what they want to book or they don’t take action because everything feels too overwhelming.

I think The Publicity Place™ stands out because Kristin and I have a lot of experience working with clients. Kristin has done some of the biggest PR for people worldwide. And I’ve spent a ton of time inside of teams helping them build their PR strategy from within.

That experience has helped us create actionable and easy-to-understand strategies that really work.

For example, I worked with Laura Rike recently within her team. We were able to build up the PR leg of her business and her features just skyrocketed. Podcasts, blogs, publications, she has booked an incredible amount of press. Nothing complicated, just actionable strategies that work.

Which tips would you recommend to your colleagues in your industry to help them to thrive and not “burn out”?
I think finding your productivity curve. Coming from Hollywood, I was used to working 15 hour days. So, when I launched my online business, I put in that same work time. What a mistake! It took me a long time to learn to stick with the times I’m most productive. Personally, that means working from 9 am-12 pm. Then, if I need to create some new content or a new program, I do that in the afternoons from 2-4 pm. Sticking to 4-6 hour workdays and batching my tasks has made a huge difference with burnout. Don’t be afraid to shorten your workdays!

None of us are able to achieve success without some help along the way. Is there a particular person who you are grateful towards who helped get you to where you are? Can you share a story?

I’m grateful for my partner in The Publicity Place™ Kristin Marquet. We co-authored a book together early in my career and I honestly have no idea what she saw in me! But we launched that to Amazon bestseller status and she has always been such a huge support. She was the one that pushed me to get into publicity and now we have this incredible brand. I remember booking my TEDx talk in New York and she instantly said I had to stay with her. Since I was recovering from a back injury, having that kind of friendship meant the world. 

How have you used your success to bring goodness to the world?  

I’d like to think so! Every month, I have my students choose the cause to donate to. I give to the company Samaritan's Purse, which helps people all over the world. Some months it’s hurricane disaster relief, others are supporting low-income families. It’s a huge passion of mine and something I try to instill in every student. If you’re burdened to lead a business, then I believe you’ve been given a unique burden to help the world in some way. Tapping into that, even if it’s just $1 right now, is so key to helping the planet.

What are your "5 things I wish someone told me before I started leading my company" and why? Please share a story or example for each. 

  1. Get unique. There are so many people out there doing exactly what you do. What I do. The best way to differentiate yourself is to pick the very unique part that only you teach. For me, it was color psychology. I had a very different perspective with branding and that’s what booked stages, publications, and podcasts. So get that differentiator as quickly as you can.

  2. Keep it small. I think there’s a lot of pressure to grow fast and build a team quickly. I certainly got into the hamster wheel of hiring and outsourcing. For me, it was too much work! It took some time to figure out that all I needed was an amazing VA and a Pinterest manager. That’s it! Figure out what you really need taken off your plate and hire from there.

  3. Turn off your notifications. I don’t know about you, but I can’t get any work done if emails, texts, and social notifications are going off constantly. Turning everything off gives me laser-focused time so I can get more done. Nothing is truly an emergency online, right? So I’m not afraid to get back to people on my timeline so I’m less frantic and more focused.

  4. Focus on your value ladder. We’re tempted to build out too many products, too many offers, too many opt-ins. I wish I would have sat down with one opt-in, email sequence, and offer earlier on. I beg my students to do this first so they have a very clear path to start with. Because, once it’s built, all you have to focus on is traffic.

  5. Focus on visibility, then publicity. There’s a huge misconception in our industry that these terms mean the same thing...they don’t. Visibility is on your own platforms. It’s what you’re doing to attract traffic, subscribers, and customers. Publicity is the next step in sharing your message on other people’s platforms. So I shout this from the rooftops. Get your visibility plan locked in first, then work on your publicity.

Can you share a few ideas or stories from your experience about how to successfully ride the emotional highs & lows of being a founder”? 

There are going to be wonderful moments, then there will be moments of despair as a founder. And there’s honestly equal value in each. I think the best advice would be to not take things personally and not attach too deeply. I think you have to really analyze your personality type. Some people really need support and mentorship. I’m not that way at all. I’m much happier if I’m doing things on my own. Most people around me don’t even know what I do outside of work - I like it that way. Unplugging and getting in my garden or to the lake keeps me balanced and happy. So you have to find what gives you those moments of fresh air. 

You are a person of great influence. If you could start a movement that would bring the most amount of good to the most amount of people, what would that be? You never know what your idea can trigger. :-)

Giving back. There’s too much focus on what we are buying ourselves on social media. If that shifted to where we were giving to help the world, I think that would be much more powerful. More attractive to our customers. And more inspiring to the next generation. If we stopped caring about what our income could buy the US and how it could change OTHERS for the better, that would be the movement I’d want to join.

How can our readers further follow your work online?

You can find us at thepublicityplace.com

This was very inspiring. Thank you so much for joining us!

New Book Release: Publicity Jumpstart

Hi Fem Founders, 

Happy Independence Day Week!

I hope everyone is relaxing a bit and enjoying the warm summer months! I've finally slowed down and taken off to spend time with my family.

Meanwhile,  I am so excited to announce my forthcoming book release called The Publicity Jumpstart cowritten with former actress and visibility expert, Michelle Lewis of VisibilityVixen.com.  Michelle and I talk all about how to get press for your startup in my recent podcast interview on The Visible Entrepreneur, which you can listen to here.  You can also find out when the book launches by signing up here

Kristin Marquet PR

Q&A with Actress-Turned-Entrepreneur, Michelle Lewis

Michelle Lewis, Visibility Vixen

Michelle Lewis of Visibility Vixen® is a Visibility Expert and thought leader who specializes in helping launching entrepreneurs grow their following online through branding, video, and livestreaming techniques; helping them skyrocket their visibility; monetizing their success; and finally start changing the world with their unique gifts.

With a history in television, she grew up on movie sets and has worked on shows like “Paycheck”, “Pretty Little Liars” and “Chuck”. Through her online courses, “The Visible Entrepreneur” Facebook Group and “Visibility Vixen” podcast – she provides a safe space of creative inspiration to help you learn the ropes and make an even bigger impact on your audience. She currently lives in the old Hollywood town of Toluca Lake where you can find her at the local coffee shop daily, hiking in the nearby hills, or FaceTiming with her east coast business bestie, Kristin M.

She's also the coauthor of the bestselling book, Publicity Jumpstart: 10 Ways to Get Your Brand in the Press

Can you tell our readers about your background?

I grew up in a small horse town right next to the big city of Los Angeles. Between following my Dad around the world on film sets, I would ride horses, play in tree forts, and raise chickens. Still having the film bug after high school, I got my degree in Film/TV and got into the industry myself. I worked in front of and behind the camera for about ten years before deciding to hop into entrepreneurship.

What inspired you to start your business?

During my last two years on television shows, I was also getting my degrees in natural medicine and interior design, so I knew I wanted more than what I was doing. In my heart of hearts, I really wanted to help people on a global level. My Father encouraged me to write a book, which led to exploring e-courses and creating my first one. I loved the flexibility and creativity of it all, so I made the leap and started Visibility Vixen®!

Where is your business based?

I work out of my home office in Los Angeles, CA, but can work pretty much anywhere as long as there’s Wi-Fi!

How did you start your business? What were the first steps you took?

I started my business with my first e-course, “Life Reboot”. It was definitely an ambitious undertaking as it’s a 30-day course! I made a plan, stuck to it, and spent the next two months recording videos, editing, and putting slideshows together. I’m so grateful to have known how to shoot and edit videos – I can’t imagine how overwhelming that would be in addition to starting a business. Those people are true titans!

What has been the most effective way of raising awareness for your business?

Definitely the “Comfy On Camera” challenge. I started it back in 2015 when livestreaming first started, so it was good timing to help entrepreneurs learn how to get comfortable live in front of the camera. I’ve had hundreds of people go through it in my Facebook group, so that’s been an awesome awareness booster for my business! I do it every few months and it’s amazing to watch people’s transformation and see their business start to grow immediately from it!

What have been your biggest challenges and how did you overcome them?

There are so many challenges when you’re building your own business. Technical and personal. How do you set up your website, how are you going to take payments, where are you going to host your material, how do you market yourself, etc. Those are worries that really permeate your first two years. Then the personal doubts, failures, and expectations. I think those are the silent killers that are responsible for taking so many businesses down in the first year. We tend to compare ourselves to other “successes” out there and throw in the towel thinking we’ll never measure up.

I think the key to sticking it out for me has been reminding myself {and more often than not, my husband reminding me} that entrepreneurship is a muscle. It starts weak. It’s okay to have no idea what you’re doing and for it to take months to create your first product. But, as you practice and dedicate daily time to it, tasks take less amounts of time, learning a new skill becomes easier, and the daily panic steadily decreases.

Trust me, there are still days it feels totally overwhelming, but now I know to break down my tasks and handle it piece by piece!

How do you stay focused?

Tending to be a thoroughbred-type personality, I don’t struggle too much with focus. But I also take rigorous care of my health and body. Our bodies are machines that need fuel, so if I’m going into a more intense season of work I make sure to keep my vitamin b, c, and minerals up so I can handle the increased stress. I’ll also do a lot of herbal teas and lemon water to keep acid {the body’s response to stress} flushing out of my system. That keeps my brain in top shape and my body able to handle launches, deadlines, and tech disasters.

How do you differentiate your business from the competition?

Man, I totally succumbed to comparisonitis to the competition for a solid year when I got started. What a waste of time! I was downloading freebies, stalking what everyone was doing trying to measure up. I finally unplugged from everything, went to a coffee shop and dug deep into exactly how I could help people. That’s how Visibility Vixen® really got started.

Most people think visibility is just video and livestreaming, but it goes so much deeper than that! What I provide is based 100% on the struggles I personally went through, so I give my clients a roadmap experience.

When they find me, they know to start with the inner work {Life Reboot}, then master their systems so they can handle increased exposure {Chic Systems}, then branding intentionally with color {Branding Like A BadAss}, then the tools to make gorgeous videos for their website and YouTube Channel {Video Youniversity}, then to increase awareness with livestreaming {FB Live FastTrack}. It’s a very intentional, specific journey that makes my tribe feel supported and guided every step of the way.

What has been your most effective marketing strategy to grow your business?

So, I build my business backward from how most people do. I created my courses first.

After the courses were done, I’d make a masterclass, then a free opt in. So, when I was ready to present my freebie online, people could automatically take my masterclasses, and purchase my courses.

It made everything much, much easier in terms of immediately making steady income when everything was completed. Everyone told me I was nuts, but it’s such a lesson of listening to your own gut about YOUR business!

What’s your best piece of advice for aspiring and new entrepreneurs?

Do it. Take that immediately daily action to get where you want to be. The people I knew when I first started, the ones who took that daily action are so much further in their business than the ones who have kept putting it off. You should be looking at new goals each quarter instead of playing catch up to complete the ones you had months and months ago.

I know it will take sacrifice and hard work, but if you want to be an entrepreneur, you’re embarking on something very few have the perseverance to do.

Stop ingesting information and start creating it!

What’s your favorite app, blog, and book? Why?

App: 528 Frequency. This app plays the “love frequency” and is so relaxing. I play it while I sleep and if I’m under a lot of stress.

Blog: Eep! I’ve got to be honest, I’m not a huge blog reader. I’m more of a podcast listener and my favorite right now is “Sounds Of The Trail” because I feel like I’m hiking with these people and it brings much-needed expansion into my day.

Book: “Breaking The Habit Of Being Yourself” by Joe Dispenza. Hands down. It’s a book that changes your life. I recommend it to every person I meet!

Who is your business role model? Why?

It would have to be a tie between Marie Forleo and Kimberly Ann Jimenez. I love how Marie’s made her course such an industry standard with an open and close formula. And Kim does a fantastic job with her membership group. They both inspire me so much and I’m hoping to build my business as a combo, inspired by them both!

How can our readers connect with you?

I’d love to connect with you! You can join the Summit, head on over to Visibility Vixen, or hop into the complimentary group, “The Visible Entrepreneur”.