Marketing Tips from an Embodied Success Coach
- Jennifer White

- 1 day ago
- 2 min read

This week on Live with Stacy and Jen on Facebook, we talked about Marketing. Here are some of the tips I discussed on the show. I hope you find these useful.
Marketing that actually works doesn’t come from shouting louder—it comes from standing steadier. Embodied success marketing starts inside the nervous system and ends in trust, resonance, and revenue. Here’s how to do it without selling your soul or shrinking your ambition.
Market from regulation, not reactivity. If your content is driven by panic, comparison, or “I need clients now” energy, people feel it instantly. Calm authority converts better than hustle chaos. Ground first. Post second.
Sell the result and the lived experience. Your audience doesn’t just want the outcome; they want to know how it feels to work with you. Safety, clarity, expansion, relief—those sensations are part of the offer. Name them.
Let your body lead your brand. If your calendar is full but your chest is tight, something’s off. Your marketing message should match your actual capacity and values. Over-promising is a fast way to erode trust—with others and yourself.
Be specific enough to repel. Embodied confidence doesn’t chase everyone. It speaks clearly to your people and lets the rest walk on by. Repulsion is a sign of clarity, not failure.
Use repetition without apology. Regulated leaders don’t reinvent themselves weekly. They repeat the core message until the market finally catches up. Consistency builds safety. Safety builds sales.
Story over spectacle. Share lived moments, not polished performances. Real stories land in the body. Algorithms may like trends; humans like truth.
Price like you trust yourself. Embodied success includes charging in a way that honors your energy, expertise, and impact. Underpricing is often a nervous system issue disguised as a marketing strategy.
Bottom line: when your marketing is aligned with your body, values, and nervous system, it stops feeling like performance and starts feeling like leadership. That’s when clients don’t need convincing—they’re already leaning in.
Embodied marketing isn’t softer. It’s cleaner, clearer, and far harder to ignore.




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