If you're a solopreneur trying to grow your personal brand without burning out, this episode answers the most common questions about building authority, crafting a signature talk, and getting on bigger stages, including TEDx.
What is the difference between authority and credibility for solopreneurs?
Ashley Stahl explains that most coaches and consultants spend too much time pursuing additional certifications (credibility) when what actually attracts clients is authority, being a recognizable name in your niche. Authority is built through visibility on platforms, podcast appearances, and signature talks, not another training program.
How do you build a personal brand without posting every day?
Ashley recommends focusing on one brand-building channel per year rather than trying to be everywhere at once. Year one: write and deliver a signature talk. Year two: master one social platform. This marathon approach creates a sustainable brand that doesn't consume your life.
What is a TEDx talk, and is it worth pursuing for business owners?
A TEDx talk can reach the TED platform's 45 million+ subscribers and continue generating inbound leads, speaking opportunities, and brand partnerships for over a decade. Ashley built her entire personal brand around two TEDx talks and credits them with a book deal in Taiwan, a fintech spokesperson deal, and 50,000+ book sales.
How do you write a talk with no speaking experience?
Ashley's framework starts with identifying original thinking, the unique angle you bring to a familiar topic. She recommends asking current clients what you've said that changed the way they think. Then structure the talk: a powerful emotional opening (25% of total length), two to three core points, and a closing. At 115 words per minute, a 20-minute talk fits roughly six pages of 12-point Times New Roman.
What are core values and how do they affect your career?
Core values aren't things you aspire to; they're the non-negotiable conditions under which you function at your best. When a core value is missing, you feel it. When a core value is violated, the reaction is visceral. Identifying your core values helps solopreneurs filter which clients, services, and opportunities are actually right for them.