Setting the Stage: Integrity, Visibility, and Wealth
When you think of those things that maybe you want to share but are blocked or like get that
analysis paralysis on, are those typically a you thing like you're recognizing your own shame or
your own guilt? Or are those like, I'm going to be saying something that could affect somebody
else's life? Definitely the latter. Yeah. So that that's a really great clarification and
distinction that whenever it gets into things about my life and parts of my life that I've shared
with other people, that's whenever it starts to feel tricky and like, can I massage this enough that
it's still true and accurate and does not potentially do harm to someone else? Before we dive in,
let me tell you about the book that started a podcasting revolution. Make Every Podcast Want you. It
is not just a bestseller, it is a two time gold medalist. Baby. This book is your ultimate guide to
landing dream podcast interviews, building authority authentically and making your voice the one
they remember. If you've got a message and a mission, this is your mic drop moment. Grab your copy
today in the link below and step into the spotlight that you were born for. Welcome to the
Communication Queens podcast for the visionary leaders, speakers, service providers, and podcasters
who are looking to stand out sharing their story. I'm your host, Kimberly Spencer, former
screenwriter turned master communications coach. On this podcast, I'll be coaching you on how to
share your own transformation story so that you increase your visibility, influence, and income on
podcast interviews. Let's get your voice heard.
From $162 to 1,000% Net Worth: Amanda's Financial Awakening
Ananda, welcome to the communication Queen podcast. Like I know we can dive into all things note
investing, bringing forth real wealth and transformation since you have transformed your life quite
substantially from walking away from everything with 160 bucks in your pocket to increasing your net
worth by 1,000% in five years, you badass. And it sounds so good when you say it. You know, it's so
funny with podcast interviews I've had that happen, like when I first started going on a lot of
interviews and I would have my bio read back. I'd be like, damn, I am pretty awesome. And it also
requires me to take a deep breath. Yeah, I mean, you've had such a transformation and only now are
you starting to really show up very visibly online on social media, putting yourself out there,
what's been this shift in your visibility strategy? Is it just a business strategy or is it part
visibility business, part personal development?
The Visibility Shift: From Analysis Paralysis to Alignment
I think that's a fantastic question, and it really is both. I think part of me recognizes that for
my business, people can't find me if I don't show up like I am. They can't find me if I don't show
up. So that's part of the equation. But I have really found that I had so much resistance to showing
up publicly for. Parts of my story that didn't feel comfortable with or just being seen. I grew up
in the generation of other young southern women who don't speak into your spoken to. And learning
humility was an important quality. All of those things were really set me back. And I also
recognized that to heal some of those things and break out of that conditioning, I just have to feel
the fear and do it anyway. And yet you guys follow. You're a follow Miss Congeniality. I love that.
Pageants, Presentation, and Personal Power
So the thing that I found was beauty pageants, because it's very rare that I get to speak to anyone
else who's been in the beauty pageant. I found them to be very liberating and also terrifying,
because that interview question that's out of nowhere, that's like, you know, suddenly all that that
you have is only who you are and only what you have up here in your brain. And some things are the
questions are just random and out of the blue because it's like about world events. And if you're
not informed on those, it's good luck. Um, but smile big did did beauty pageants in any way have a
beneficial, uh, outcome for you for learning your voice? Not so much about learning my voice, but
more about like, how to show up. I mean, I learned a lot about presentation and comportment, for
sure, and also the willingness to be seen even under a really almost false narrative of the beauty
pageant. But for me, it was really wanting to feel I wanted valid. I definitely wanted validation,
and I didn't know that at the time. You know, I was 14, 15 and 16. I wanted validation. I wanted a
sense of security, I wanted approval. And so for me, the beauty pageant, like I loved getting things
like Miss Scholastic and Miss Congeniality probably more than I enjoyed winning first place or the
main Crown, because that actually felt less hollow to me than the hollow victory of great. I got the
pat on the back. I got the fantastic crown. I look great in pictures. So those were more of a hollow
victory. That didn't really solve the problem of me seeking security from other people. Mhm. I think
that that's such a poignant point. I too found much more validation. Or self-affirmation, I would
say with the Miss Congeniality and winning certain specific awards for my actual achievements,
rather than seven random humans judging me and saying that I should be, you know, the one who holds
the title. That's actually why I named my my coaching business Crown Yourself was because I was
like, I realized I didn't need their validation in order to put a crown on my head. That's
fantastic. And like, if you ever see pictures of my parents, my parents are gorgeous. Like, I have
nothing to do with how I have very little to do with how I look. My parents are just gorgeous people
and like, this is just everything else is just a side effect. Except for the things that I've worked
for and earned and created myself. Yeah. So I speaking of earning, like I know that earning and
integrity I found they go very much hand in hand. And I know you and I very much share that. But
that integrity is such a high value for both of us. And like, how is showing up and showing parts of
you and also choosing to keep certain parts of you private, like where is the dance with your own
integrity with that? This is that's actually one of the biggest things that stops me from showing
up, or what's stopping me from showing up. And I still get whenever I'm creating content, this
analysis paralysis around that, because I do like integrity for me, is simply, am I in alignment in
my thoughts, my words, and my deeds from the inside out? Am I who am I being who I say I am?
Integrity is a huge thing. And then if I want to, if I only want to focus on some aspects, how I do
that, can I still do that and be in integrity for me, can create a real honestly, at times a real
battle. And that's something I have. Again, I do get analysis paralysis around that. Yeah. I think
for me, one of the one of the things I found is there are just certain clear lines of like what I
will and will not share. And like, I'm I'm very open, obviously, about being a mother and having
young kids. And there's some really funny things, but also really hard things that come with young
kids and toeing the line that like kids are not necessarily content, but they definitely are a part
of my life. And looking at how can I present my kids? Because there are some things that I've seen
online that I'm like, your children are going to hate you in ten years. Like for showing videos of
their kid like partying on camera or, you know, just going to the bar, I'm like, that's your child.
Like you are literally putting that out there for the world to see. And I would never want to put my
child in a position where I put something out that's congruent for me, but not actually an integrity
with them. And so, like, there's boundaries that I have around, like what I share around what my
kids are going through and with who I share those with and how I share what I learn from those
experiences so that it's from the vein of my perspective, but it's not. Anything that's that could
be that they could look back and be like, oh, I really wish mom hadn't shared that about me. Um,
but. And I hope I toe that line. Well, I think I do, but that's where my integrity boundaries are
is. Like, typically if it's involving somebody else that that's that's where I'm like, okay, how can
I gracefully share from my perspective? When, when you think of those things that maybe you want to
share but are blocked or like get that analysis paralysis on, are those typically a you thing like
you're recognizing your own shame or your own guilt? Or are those like, I'm going to be saying
something that could affect somebody else's life? Definitely the latter. Yeah. So that that's a
really great clarification and distinction that whenever it gets into things about my life and parts
of my life that have I've shared with other people, that's when it starts to feel tricky and like,
can I massage this enough that it's still true and accurate and does not potentially do harm to
someone else? And that's the the line that I find I steered to more a mission than And take in more
time to figure out how to do that better. Yeah, I, I think that in that space, that's such a great
space to navigate in, in terms of respecting other people's privacy. Like, I know that for me, I had
definitely had boundaries around my father, around like what I would share while he was alive and
what I said that I, I also had his permission to share certain things once he'd passed. Um, and I
asked my mom for permission as well. Not that I really needed it, but she was like, your father
would have wanted you to share certain things about her past, my past, and certain childhood abuses
that I experienced. But for example, when it comes to my ex, like I share more from the perspective
of like my both my ex husband and my ex business partner. I share from the perspective of what I
learned from those situations, rather than sharing on interviews about like what they did. I think
when we point the finger of blame and we label something as like, oh, they're a narcissist or
they're abusive, or like, that's a delicate line to tell, especially. And this is what I've known
from having coached and work with women and had clients and who have been through domestic violence
situations, like there is a very real presence that your safety, first and foremost comes first. I
think that that is so I think that that's a great way to craft around that. And that's something
that I think I've definitely played with. And for me, it is that sense of like there's there's a lot
more that I probably would share openly about my life experiences whenever my parents are no longer
on the planet. You know, I am their native girl. I am single on the planet, and I don't want them to
worry about me. Yeah, yeah, worry about me. I've got, you know, I'm doing okay, but I think that,
yeah, they might become alarmed at some of my life experiences and I'd rather avoid that. I just
shocked my mom and put it into a movie. Maybe that'll be her second project. Yeah. I think it's, um.
It's so great that you have this level of honor in what you do and in respect that you have for
others. I think that that is what makes you such a successful investor as well, is that you respect
others. You you treat others money and investments with incredible amount of respect. And it's these
values that are driving the success of your business that I also honestly think could drive the
success of your your great having greater visibility. Thank you for acknowledging that. And I will
say like I am a daddy's girl. And my gold standard for my investors is that if I wouldn't put it in
my dad's portfolio, I wouldn't put it in your portfolio. And that really is I am I am incredibly,
again, loyal, loyal, love, love and loyalty. Pardon me, integrity or my service or my top values. So
I in what I do in investing, I get to honor all of those qualities of me. And again, my dad gets to
be my gold standard. Like if I have to lower the bar, I wouldn't lower the bar for my dad ever. I
think that's such a powerful standard. So what are the stories that you've maybe in the past have
felt uncomfortable sharing that now you're at a space where you're like, I feel like I could share
this and not feel like there would be worry on your family's part or on anybody else's part of like,
are you okay? Did you like did you survive?
The Turning Point: Walking Away from Mediocrity
I have survived, and I have, I, I have I have had a fantastically active life with lots of
variables. And one thing that I am getting more honest about with myself, and I am starting to
acknowledge that I was in a mediocre marriage and I wasn't made for mediocrity. I seriously look at
me. I am not made for mediocrity, and I and this is where that part of navigating, like I accepted a
mediocre marriage. And the day that I realized that it was all just it was a literal, visceral
moment. I know that we're both sensational people. We really live into our senses. And I had a
visceral moment. I remember exactly where I was. I was on the dance floor at a retreat in Texas, and
I had this incredibly visceral moment of everything is just. It. That part was non-negotiable. I was
living in a very complex situation, and my husband was invited to come with me or not again. My then
husband and I figured we had a 5050 chance of survival, and I was really okay with that, or with
those odds and even just taking ownership of that for the first time out loud to anyone else is is a
novel and also incredibly powerful. So thank you for the question. You're very welcome. I think the
other piece of your story, that's so one of the things that I love about your your one sheet, your
bio, I know you've done our Do Your Deliverables masterclass. I know you are one of the first
readers of the book. Like you're like, I know you've got the book. So like I, I you've done such a
masterful job in how you present yourself with a level of specificity in your story. And so many
women who want to empower women financially don't do that. And yet your story just just being able
to say that you were able to walk away with everything from everything with 160, $162 in your pocket
and then increase your net worth by 1,000% in five years. That's incredible. And those are all very
specific numbers that you really leverage. Walk me through the story behind what happened and how
you were able to do that. Although my intuition in making better choices and everything else, I
would say it happened by accident. But you know that that's not the truth. I took a lot of risk, and
I was no longer like, if I can risk. I risked leaving everything behind with $160. 100. It was 662.
Well, look at our records. Just so I could be accurate in this conversation. And I love this. Like,
I really do respect and love the specificity of $162. When I first started my coaching business, I
was like, I made no money for a year. And I was like, no. I first and then checked. I was like, I
made $15, but I'm not sure if it was my own self buying my own program because I didn't know how to
test my my checkout page worked so hard, and then I was like, no, I did have one coaching client
that was a a $100 a month, so I did make $100 in my first year. It wasn't zero, it was 115. And 15
of those dollars might have been my. Get tested and. Yeah, so I, I got, uh, I applied for my very
first job in the United States, and I got that job, and I was fired from that job within six months.
But that was the whole nother catalyst of change, really quite dynamic. And weirdly, for me,
dramatic. Lots of things came to a head from that and simply sheer perseverance. One I don't ever
spend more than I make. I think that that's a skill set that a lot of people have lost. Yes, that
means that I've made some really difficult choices to go without things that most people find they
wouldn't make the sacrifice. And I really paved the first five years of don't spend anything that
you don't have to. And I'm an experience person and I happen to be a minimalist, so that wasn't as
challenging as it might sound, but I did without a lot of things, and I made a lot of really tricky
choices. I chose to live for free. I also manifest a mansion for a year on a lake. So a combination
of true manifestation, working at anything that I could work at, not spending anything I didn't need
to spend, and looking for every opportunity to leverage every dollar that I could. I think one of
the things that I've seen more entrepreneurs struggle with than not is like once they start hitting
revenue numbers that they're, like, really impressed by. And then sometimes we have those seasons of
life where our revenue numbers get and the spending doesn't get adjusted for the revenue that's
actually being made versus the revenue that you know, that you can make. And I've seen this happen
with fitness. I've seen it with like people's bodies where they're like, they know they can eat a
ton of calories because they're training for a marathon. I did this myself. And then suddenly it's
like, oh, I'm no longer training for a marathon. I probably shouldn't be eating 400 more calories
per day. Uh, so there's that that. How were you able to, like, what is your financial practice that
you put into place so that when revenue fluctuates, you're able to make those very fast adaptations
that I think this is a necessary skill for any entrepreneur entrepreneur to know. I have my practice
is that I buy myself one treat, and that treat might be a really fantastic meal out, or it might be
a pair of cowboy boots or an infrared sauna. But I buy myself one treat and then after that,
everything. I might buy one investment. And then after that, everything goes back into the business
or into an investment. And so I just I don't change my lifestyle. My budget doesn't change, but I
give myself one reward. I mean, you know, I'm 55. So my I recognize that my runway to create the
kind of financial impact that I want is shorter than it was 30 years ago. So I really have to I
really consider that I'm laying down low to tracks so I can have the life, that my life can be
easier, and I can eventually not have to do all the things that I do right now. But I definitely
have the end game in mind. And again, I just don't change my budget. And I do live by a budget.
That's a lesson that most entrepreneurs either need to learn or learn the hard way. Yeah,
definitely. You know that profit first mentality. I get the tree, I don't change my budget. I have
one business investment and then I make person everything else goes back into a personal investment.
Mhm.
Building Wealth with Note Investing
When you are supporting people in note investing walk us through what note investing is. And like
let's see if we can make it even sexier. Because I already think that investing is precisely because
one thing that I love about it is it gives for me to think about, you know, a little bit more about
my history than what we've shared here, that the sense of security and whether you think about
beauty pageants, uh, and the need for security or financial security. The thing I love about note
investing is that it does give me the financial security and the sense of safety, because I'm
helping women become first line holders, and in that they gather the or they inherit the rights of a
bank or a lender. And so for me, that sense of security gives me personally so much because of my
life experience. And then with those transferable rights, it means that the my women investors are
secure in nonpayment and they profit whenever there is payment. And what I love about that, again,
that sense of you get passive income. So it's a super easy investment to make. There's not a lot of
research to be done and you are simply becoming you're replacing the bank and becoming a first lien
landholder on a single family home that's been paying on a regular basis. And with that, you are
simply getting that monthly income. So if you've ever paid a mortgage, then now you're being paid
someone else's mortgage. Note and again, there's that paper behind it that says it's secure that in
the event of non-payment that you have legal recourse. How did you stumble upon note investing
compared to other forms of real estate investing or other forms of investing, and why? Why is this
the one that you're like, yes, I want to empower women to be able to make money and have an invest
in a life that they love. I stumbled upon it. So I had those first five years of just pure frugality
and hustle like and mindset and manifestation. Like, I was doing all of that. And that led me to
like, okay, well, I'm starting to figure out how to make enough money. So now I have money to
invest. Now that I'm investing, I want to go with I think real estate is a great avenue. And I grew
up with my dad, understood real estate and he had some investment properties. So for me, that just
made sense. And whenever I started to do that, I recognized that it didn't bring the sense of
security that I wanted, and it also recognized that it wasn't passive. You know, having a landlord,
having a tenant and having to manage through storms and non-payment whenever there's different legal
recourses, that's not nearly as severe. So basically, I figured out and dealing with contractors was
not part of my life language. It was work that I, I didn't have the skill set for, but it also
didn't make me feel safe and secure. And so through navigating in real estate, I actually went to a
three day real estate investing event. And the very last speaker that I heard happened to speak
about investing. And, you know, it's that time of the day. It's the last of the three day event, the
last speaker. Very few people are still left. And I still feel I feel like I've milked the event and
I haven't left with what I wanted. And it was that last speaker that talked about investing. I was
like, that is what I'm looking for. And it is simply the fact that I get a steady return. I get
monthly payments that I can literally bank on. For me that ticked all of the boxes. And with the
women that I work with. And I'd say that most women that I know have had some level of insecurity.
They feel like they are in a relationship or a home or a job that they don't have the security to or
safety to walk away from. And whenever you have insecurity in your finances and you have insecurity
in your life, for a lot of people, that leaves them to paralysis and some level of trauma. So
removing one of those obstacles, I feel like I am really contributing to them. Not only their sense
of safety, but hopefully from that safety. And then they're able to find freedom. And that's where I
think women thrive, is when they have the freedom to walk away from the people, places and things
that no longer serve them. I would say that is right. There is the core of your message because I've
never heard it explained like, and I've talked to a lot of investors in the past. My husband needs
to do real estate investing. We have our own real estate investments and like, but the way that you
frame it so eloquently, not only as a female investor. But the story of of safety and the loving
ness that comes with a you fund, as you've called it. When you're feeling sassy, I'm like, yeah, I'm
no longer tolerating this because I have I have certainty. I've. I've completed Maslow's hierarchy,
like the base foundation of Maslow's Hierarchy of needs. And that foundation is so critical. And I
think that as business owners and as entrepreneurs, especially for so many people who who tolerate a
level of risk, like I know that I definitely have taken on more, more risk than, than most would be
comfortable with. However, there is a need, and I agree with you of that, that the trauma response
that comes from relational insecurity, job insecurity and financial insecurity that leads to like
just complete paralysis and a generation, a generational problem for women specifically of like not
being able to get out of the systems that have kept the stock, aka patriarchy. And so being able to
break free of that, I think that your voice and your message and how you frame that so brilliantly,
correlating financial trauma or trauma in general and trauma responses to financial insecurity is is
literally a message that I have not heard, phrased exactly how you have been able to phrase it here.
I think that that is one of your greatest assets in messaging to move forward on more podcasts that
that that piece right there, because you've been there, you've been in that trauma place. Thank you.
That's that's fantastic. And that's fantastic feedback. And it really was like I found out investing
was successful for me. And I was toying with the idea of it being my business. And can I do we have
a few more minutes on this story about why this is now a business? So I, I help open a yoga studio
during the middle of Covid, because who else does that while everybody else is closing down the
studio during the middle of Covid and the very last day that I'm teaching, I, I, I was the lead
teacher, the trainer, I was the person who opened the studio. We are a year in, we are successful,
we're growing, and we feel this amazing community and it is legit. My last class and I've had a
miscommunication with my coffee date, which was a fellow teacher and student, and I'm there in my
last class and there's this lady I've seen in several classes, but we've never gone out to coffee or
anything, and she is hanging around the studio and I said, hey. Do you want to go for a coffee? And
she's like, yeah. And we go to a coffee shop just a couple of doors down from the yoga studio. And I
get, I, I know that she is very attentive on her yoga mat, but I don't know anything about her. And
very seemingly with great ease. I'm going to actually take that back. That's not true. Um. She tells
her story, unfolds about she is with her husband and their kids. He's cheated on her. She doesn't.
She doesn't have any security. And he's threatened that if she leaves, she he will take the kids.
He's got the money, the power and the clout to make that a true statement. And during the course of
this conversation, and this all comes out over a cup of coffee, you know, after practice. I'm not
expecting any of this, but I used to also be a counselor, so I'm also not surprised. And I've heard
this story many, many other times. Then she goes on to recognize that her mother or share with me,
rather that her mother was in exactly the same position and her mother chose to take her life. I can
only listen and be there and offer support. And I walk out of that meeting and I'm like, you know,
I'm incredibly visceral experience. I remember exactly where I am, and I lean on my car and I didn't
bang my car's little lid, and I reckon I was like, this is why this needs to be a business. I've
heard this story from countless other women who, whether it's a marriage or some other relationship
that they want to leave. I've even, as a counselor, a toxic home full of mold that they didn't have
the resources to walk away from. And there's like, this is the why behind your business. And then
from then I was like, I am really committed to making this not just about my own personal success,
but how can more women step into their power, of their financial power and their financial freedom?
I think that whenever women have money, they have choices. And generally speaking, we do great
things when we have choices. Yeah, yeah.
Generational Trauma, Literacy, and Legacy
And I think that that mission behind it, like, thank you for sharing that story because I think that
that. Leading with that story in any show that you go on brings in so much heart and also fear,
because I too have known the women who have left with them, you know nothing in their pockets and
who are going through situations and relationships that, gosh, just just the other day, I walked
into the kitchen and I gave spike the biggest hug and I was like, thank you for not being an
asshole. Because I met another woman who shared with me another story about just being with a total
douchebag and how she now has to provide for her single like her daughter, because her husband
decided to make some other choices. And that experience alone is just like it's heart wrenching for
me when women have been deprived of a financial literacy. I think intentionally, because when we do
understand finances, we can be really freaking good at finances. I turned around a cash flow problem
in 45 days and I was like, boom! But that that happens only because I knew what I was doing and I
knew myself, I trusted myself, I backed myself, and so many women don't trust themselves with money.
So I think it's imperative that you go on more podcasts. It's imperative that you share your story
and that you overcome this analysis paralysis in any way, shape or form and just keep on sharing
those two stories alone. Your own personal story and the story of the origins of your business.
Because. Those two stories alone. You're going to go on multiple podcasts and you're going to think,
oh, they've heard this before. No they haven't. They you're speaking to a different audience every
single time you've heard yourself say it before. But for the most part, most of your audience will
not know that story, especially if you're going on other people's shows. And so by you sharing just
those two stories, I'm immediately connected. I'm like, I'm like, take my money. Like, let's go. Do
you have an initiative as well like to give back to these women? Like how do we how do we help more
women? Like, that's it's it's I feel the calling from your story and that is, is is so powerful that
I don't think you need to try to find and dig and try to find multiple stories. I mean, you'll find
more stories as you go along and as you're, you know, sharing more stories of clients and whatnot
and success stories. And as more people come to you and you have more conversations with women in
the real estate investing world, but I think just in general, like just those two stories alone, you
lead with those two. You're golden. Thank you. Thank you. I feel such relief. I'm glad I could
provide you with relief. That's good. Can you. You know, you've seen my win sheet, and there's.
There is a lot there. And you've just made this process really easy. And the fact that the sense of
clarity, like I am incredibly driven, uh, I am incredibly driven to help other people. And thank you
for picking out those couple of aspects. That's, I think, the biggest thing that people trip up on,
especially with their one sheet and with speaking in general, is thinking it's about themselves. And
I'm not saying that this is you, but I think so often it's very easy for us to make the story about
ourselves. And you so clearly outline in the stories that you've shared that both you leaving the
mediocre marriage of and leaving and finding your like having for years until you stumbled upon
investing and suddenly like you're like, oh, this took off. Um, and then the origin story of your
business, like those two stories alone pave the way for the Y like that. That is the why. And it
thus it's no longer about you. It's just about you getting to be of service. Which I know is your
love language anyway. Oh, thank you. And thank you for pulling the strings together. Is it?
Visibility, Worth, and the New Edge of Healing
I find it incredibly vulnerable. I am weirdly an introvert and talking to most people don't believe
that I'm an incredibly energetic introvert. And same here. And the people I think, yeah, even
talking about myself, it's just not. Part of what I do. And funny, I heard a friend of mine say
something about me the other day. Somebody who does know me fairly well, and she probably doesn't
know half of the stuff that we've spoken about because it's just not a part of our relationship. And
somebody asked me in front of her and tell me about yourself. And I was like, I don't really have
anything to say. My friend's jaw dropped over and she's like, you're so interesting. You're the most
interesting person I know. Your life has been fascinating. And I was genuinely shocked. I was
shocked, maybe not, but definitely surprised. I thought it was hilarious. Um, I'm just not coming.
I'm not used to coming from that place of talking about me. I find that it's very interesting, as
people get more visible in their businesses, that suddenly, even if worth and wealth is something
that you've healed, it's now that worth piece gets to come into a whole new realm of healing when
the spotlight is on you. I am doing my best not to cry or cackle. It's it's and it's interesting
that I see a lot of women because when I work with them, when I work with coaches as their business
coach, like women who have overcome something and maybe they're like a relationship coach or a
health coach, that they have these principles down and they've healed it in this area. But suddenly
when it comes to business or finances, it shows up again. And so you're just you're just a reverse
because you've already healed it in the, in the financial sector. And now it's just on the
visibility side. I that feels really accurate actually. Like I've gotten my stuff and my story
together around. How I create and contribute and then yeah, the visibility aspect. But the reality
is, is I can't help women if they can't find me. And that's what I have to just keep reminding
myself of is that if they can find me, I can't help them. Mhm. So again thank you for pulling the
strings together. You're welcome. You're welcome. It has been my pleasure to have you on.
Final Reflections & Where to Find Amanda
Amanda. How do we find you. How do we work with you. How do we learn about note investing and get
more information so we can make solid, safe financial decisions for ourselves and our future? Thank
you. I am in all the places LinkedIn is actually. I'm really dedicated right now, the last quarter
and being on LinkedIn more frequently. My goal is to increase my reach so I can increase other women
as wealth. And so LinkedIn is a great place. And as far as education, I would love for you to have a
look at my YouTube channel. There's loads of education on there about how to make great choices in
your notes, and I am. Always up for a virtual coffee. Get it? Queen. I love it. Ananda, I just adore
you. I think that you have the biggest heart. You have such a versatile background, and I know your
heart and your passion for serving and supporting women to really, truly build freedom. And also
with the little side of you from time to time when appropriate. Uh, with that, as always, know, my
fellow sovereigns that you have the your story has the power to save at least one life. So go out
there and be heard. Queen, if what you just heard stirred something in you. If you are imagining how
your voice, your story, your genius could be positioned with the same clarity and magnetism than
it's time. Book your visibility consultation with me today. I will guide you personally through a
seven step communication queen strategy. Personalized connections to podcasts that need your voice,
and an implementation plan that makes you ignorable. But this isn't for everyone. It's for the
visionary who is ready to be seen. If that is you, click the link in the description to book your
visibility consultation now. Thank you so much for listening. If you love this episode, subscribe,
leave us a review and share it with your friends. For more tips on guest podcasting, storytelling
and communication strategies. Follow us on social media at Communication Queens Agency and visit us
at communication.com. I look forward to seeing you in the next episode. And in the meantime,
remember your story has the power to save one life. Let your story and your voice be heard.