Time is your most valuable resource—and if you’re constantly stuck in your inbox, chasing invoices, or scrambling to reply to client inquiries, it’s time for a change. In this episode, Rebecca breaks down 5 powerful automations that every entrepreneur (not just designers!) should be using to save time, reduce overwhelm, and run a smoother business.
And no—you don’t need fancy tech or a team of VAs to get started. These are simple, strategic systems you can set up one at a time, starting today.
She dives into how automating your client intake process can instantly elevate your professionalism while saving you hours of back-and-forth. You’ll learn the value of setting up simple email templates (aka canned responses) so you’re not starting from scratch every time a client reaches out. Rebecca also shares her go-to tips for streamlining invoicing and payments—because no one wants to waste time chasing money. She walks you through her content batching process to help you show up consistently without the stress, and wraps it all up with advice on scheduling regular project updates to boost client trust and eliminate unnecessary check-ins.
These are the systems Rebecca wishes she’d implemented sooner, and she’s not holding back—expect honest stories, practical tips, and zero fluff. Whether you’re running a creative studio, a service-based business, or anything in between, these are the automations that will help you get your time back and grow your business with more ease.
episode highlights
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The one thing Rebecca used to do manually that cost her way more time than she realized—and how a simple template changed everything.
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Why automating your client intake process doesn’t mean losing the personal touch—and how it can actually increase trust and professionalism.
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The surprising reason designers (and most entrepreneurs) leave money on the table—and what Rebecca did to finally stop forgetting to send invoices.
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How batching content helped Rebecca take back control of her marketing—and why she still sometimes scrambles last-minute (real talk).
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The mindset shift around “automation” that doesn’t require fancy tech, just repeatable systems that let you work smarter.
Episode Resources
- Learn more about Power of Process
- Calendly
- Acuity
Read the Full Transcript ⬇️
00;00;00;03 – 00;00;32;01
Rebecca Hay
Doing these little bits that we think are just a bit here in just a bit there. They actually add up and they take up a lot of our time that we could be spending on other, more important tasks in our business. Time is our most valuable asset. Time matters. All right. I’m Rebecca Hay and I’ve built a successful interior design business by trial and error, podcasts, online courses, and so many freaking books.
00;00;32;03 – 00;01;02;21
Rebecca Hay
Over the last decade, I’ve grown from an insecure student to having false starts to careers. And now I’m finally in the place where I want to be. Throughout my journey, it’s been pretty obvious that I’m passionate about business and helping other entrepreneurs do the same. Each week, I’ll share tangible takeaways from my own experience and the experiences of other badass women to help you build your confidence and change your business.
00;01;02;23 – 00;01;38;20
Rebecca Hay
Hey hey hey, it’s Rebecca, and you’re listening to Resilient by Design. Today’s episode is very useful. I believe I could have found so much benefit in learning firsthand what programs and automations I could implement in my business early on. It took me several years to sort of figure out what really mattered and what really wasn’t worth it, because I can tell you, I made a lot of mistakes trying to do automations and platforms and programs that took a lot more time and energy for myself and my team than it really was worth it.
00;01;38;20 – 00;01;58;12
Rebecca Hay
So think you guys are going to enjoy today’s episode? I’m going to share with you five time saving automations that literally every interior designer should have. In fact, I think every entrepreneur or small business owner should have. They are time. Time saving. What I mean is this is meant to save you time, make you more efficient, not drain you.
00;01;58;14 – 00;02;24;06
Rebecca Hay
So here we go. In the early years of running my interior design firm, I didn’t have any automation set up. I didn’t even have a system. Really. So what I would do is I would reinvent the wheel. One of the things that took a lot of time for me was emails. It’s funny, because I went to school, I did I did an English major in university, and so I’m a pretty good writer and I can formulate my words and communicate relatively well.
00;02;24;07 – 00;02;45;21
Rebecca Hay
But sending emails, especially emails to clients, used to be so time consuming. This is before ChatGPT, of course, right? So I couldn’t brainstorm with the internet on how to say it professionally with a friendly tone, etc. etc. but what would happen was especially when I would get a new inquiry, I would get a new potential client, reach out to me and I would need to reply to them.
00;02;45;21 – 00;03;05;22
Rebecca Hay
And instead of having a standard and sort of copy and paste response every single time I was writing it from scratch, and there would be times where I’d be like midway through typing my email and I’d think, oh, I should be like, I just sent this a couple weeks ago to someone. Maybe I should go back and find that email and I can copy and paste it.
00;03;05;25 – 00;03;31;07
Rebecca Hay
And then I would look at the clock and I would look at my to do list, and I would think, this is my thought process that’s going to take too much time, that’s going to take more time than it’ll take me just to write the email. So I’m just going to write it. Can anyone relate to that? We go through this a lot as a business owner, especially in the early years where we want to maybe offload a task to a new hire to an assistant, but then we really consider it and we’re like, okay, first I gotta explain what the task is.
00;03;31;07 – 00;03;52;03
Rebecca Hay
Then I’m gonna have to sure where to find everything. And you know what? I’m just gonna let her do that other thing because I can probably do this in five minutes and get it over with. It’s that same concept. However, doing these little bits that we think are just a bit here, in just a bit there, they actually add up and they take up a lot of our time that we could be spending on other, more important tasks in our business.
00;03;52;04 – 00;04;22;27
Rebecca Hay
Time is our most valuable asset. Time matters. If we can find a way to collapse time and do more in less time, we are going to grow. We are going to feel more ease. We are going to feel more successful and likely we will generate more revenue, believe it or not. And one of the biggest changes that I made in my business when it comes to automation was really mostly client facing.
00;04;22;29 – 00;04;48;22
Rebecca Hay
I’m going to walk you through all five in just a second, but truthfully, the first one is about onboarding your client, right? And that inquiry process. The second one I’m going to share with you is emails, because that is an area we lose a lot of time in the third areas about payments, invoicing and systems. Their fourth is about your content that you create, whether it’s social media, emails, labs, blogs, all that thing.
00;04;48;22 – 00;05;06;21
Rebecca Hay
And then the fifth one is really about project communication. So those are the five areas I want to walk you through. The five automations that I have seen make a big impact on myself and other people’s businesses. But I will tell you, the majority of them are client facing. I think that’s an important distinction to recognize and see the power of.
00;05;06;24 – 00;05;29;26
Rebecca Hay
You can still automate things even when they are involving your client. What I see as a typical struggle that designers make is there’s too much time spent on administrative tasks. I feel like I’m on a zoom call right now. Raise your virtual hand. Say yes in the chat if you can relate. I’m just coming off doing a bunch of workshops on zoom, so it’s like coming naturally to me to say, say yes in the chat.
00;05;29;27 – 00;06;03;01
Rebecca Hay
Type in me if you haven’t been to one of my workshops, you don’t know what you’re missing. It’s very interactive, but truthfully, that common struggle is that they are spending too much time on administration. That could include emails, manual tasks, data entry, invoicing, following up order, placing tracking orders. All of those administrative tasks take a lot of mental bandwidth, even though they can be relatively easy and don’t necessarily require a lot of thinking.
00;06;03;01 – 00;06;27;08
Rebecca Hay
I can tell you I was just on the call with my new executive assistant, Leanne. She’s amazing. She just started with me. It’s been it’s a it’s an adjustment period for me to relinquish control of some things that I’m used to doing, like my calendar and my email. But I was in a call with her the other day, and what I found was we were trying to get into a program so that we could download some financial information and it was like needed a two factor identification.
00;06;27;08 – 00;06;44;10
Rebecca Hay
And then when you when it needed to upload bank statements and I was like, Leanne, this is the shit I hate. I see this. And to someone like Lee and she’s like, oh, she can flip through it in five minutes. And all I could see was time sucking. I’m like, where am I going to go? I got to go log in.
00;06;44;10 – 00;07;05;20
Rebecca Hay
Oh my God, I gotta go log into my online banking and then I gotta go and pull the right documents. Oh my god. And then I have to upload. Like, I know it sounds so ridiculous, but like for me, that feels heavy and daunting. Whereas going and coming up with the perfect fabric scheme, with the right amount of prints and color and texture, I’m like, oh, I feel like I could whip that out in a second.
00;07;05;20 – 00;07;30;16
Rebecca Hay
Would be so fun. But you see how you need to lean into where your skill set is. It is not my skill set to be doing those administrative tasks. And for many of you listening, this is you too. Okay, so let’s dive in to number one. The first time saving automation that every entrepreneur should have in their business is automating your client intake process, automating your client intake process.
00;07;30;16 – 00;07;50;24
Rebecca Hay
So what do I mean by that? When someone reaches out to you, what is the next step? Do you not have a process or a system? And do you simply answer the phone or send them an email or agree to go to their house? Maybe decide to hop on a call? Depending on where you’re at in the day, what’s going on in the week, right?
00;07;50;27 – 00;08;10;18
Rebecca Hay
That’s chaotic. That is not streamline, that is not organize. And believe it or not, it actually takes you more time than if you have the same experience for every single client is going to build trust and professionalism. When someone reaches out to you and you’re like, here’s our next step. So what I recommend you do is to automate certain aspects.
00;08;10;21 – 00;08;34;20
Rebecca Hay
Before I dive into this, actually want to give you a disclaimer. When I say automate, I don’t mean digitize. I don’t mean everything has to be computer. What’s the word like? It’s not. I’m not saying it has to use tech. Not all automation includes tech. I want to be very clear from the start because this first step, this first area that you can automate doesn’t require tech.
00;08;34;20 – 00;08;53;04
Rebecca Hay
Okay. So come back to me here. If you’re if I’ve lost you and you’re like, oh Rebecca, I don’t need automation. I’m not talking about technology. I probably should have said that at the very beginning of the episode. Yes, you can use technology to assist you if you so choose. I want you to automate your inquiry process.
00;08;53;06 – 00;09;15;25
Rebecca Hay
So whether you decide that is an inquiry form on your website or a Google form, that you could send a new lead to fill out with questions, that is a way to use tech to automate it. If you don’t want to do that, you don’t have to, but I recommend that you have a way to gather information from that client.
00;09;15;27 – 00;09;32;11
Rebecca Hay
This has to be the same way with every client, so for many of you, you’ll have an intake form on your website, or you’ll send a Google form or some type of survey to get questions from that client. Because you want to pre-filter, right. You want to filter them out. And then what I would do is have a discovery call that’s not automated.
00;09;32;11 – 00;09;49;11
Rebecca Hay
Right. In that call, you could ask those questions. You could even just ask certain questions in an email if you prefer. But whatever that process is, it needs to be automated, meaning that it needs to be the same every time so that it’s automatic, that either the computer does it for you or you know what to do. I hope you see the distinction.
00;09;49;11 – 00;10;20;02
Rebecca Hay
It’s the same thing. We’re just looking at analog versus digital and scheduling consultations. So this the second half of this client intake process. So first of all you need to have an automated reply whether you go in and manually send it or it’s automatic to your website, it needs to be the same every time someone calls you on the phone and they haven’t come through the regular system, do you send that maybe to that system, send them the link to fill it out, or send them the questions or ask them the questions on the phone and then set up a discovery call.
00;10;20;06 – 00;10;47;00
Rebecca Hay
And I recommend that when you go when you’re going to schedule, whether it’s a discovery call or a consultation, you have a repeatable system. So that could be using Calendly or acuity, one of those calendar systems. But here’s one caveat I actually not that I’m anti scheduling programs. I think they’re really useful in our business world. I actually don’t believe you need it.
00;10;47;02 – 00;11;04;18
Rebecca Hay
So here’s the thing. I’m not going to go too deep on this. I talk about this a lot is my power of process. I’ll just I’ll save you the detail here. But what I will say is consider who your client is. For me, sending a client a calendar link to find a time to book a call with me is like an obstacle for them.
00;11;04;20 – 00;11;23;04
Rebecca Hay
We’re putting the onus on them. It’s like playing tennis. Ping the band now the ball’s in your court. You don’t want to make your clients do the work, unless that’s the type of client you are attracting. For me, I’m trying to say we take care of all the details for you. You don’t have to lift a finger. Why am I asking them to go sift through my calendar?
00;11;23;07 – 00;11;49;23
Rebecca Hay
What I recommend you do, whether or not you use a calendar booking system on the computer, is you send an immediate email and you offer up two dates and times that could work for you. Then you could say after you offer up those just typed into an email, not a link. Then you can say afterwards, you know, if neither of these times works for you, please feel free to offer some suggested dates or times or provide some availability.
00;11;50;00 – 00;12;15;08
Rebecca Hay
Or here’s my link to find a different time to suit you if you have a link. So automate your client intake process. That’s number one. Number two, create canned email responses. Create canned email responses. So what I mean by that canned I never even heard of that before in my life. I learned this term actually when I used a program called Baseado for a few years.
00;12;15;08 – 00;12;31;01
Rebecca Hay
We don’t use it anymore, but we were using auto for a lot of automation because I was really excited about automating everything in my business. I kind of want a little extreme. I do obsess over process and operations and systems. It’s I don’t know, my brain just always thinks that way. Logistics are. So it’s part of my DNA.
00;12;31;09 – 00;12;54;13
Rebecca Hay
And so I never heard of this term before. But canned emails basically is having email templates. They’re in a can, right? You just pick them out and plop. There they go. Stop wasting your time trying to type the same emails over and over again. Just like I said I used to do at the beginning, right? So what I recommend you do is to create a library of pre-written emails, templates for things that come up a lot.
00;12;54;19 – 00;13;17;00
Rebecca Hay
So these could be initial inquiry responses. Like I mentioned, they could be proposal follow ups. Right after you’ve reviewed the proposal and they haven’t signed on the dotted line yet, they could be for project updates and check ins. Do you have a template that you could use maybe towards the end of a project, right. When you have a testimonial request, how are you asking for that?
00;13;17;00 – 00;13;37;03
Rebecca Hay
Can you create a canned email response? That’s just four examples. There’s so many more places in your business you could use this, whether you just put them into a Google doc or you have them saved in your email system or you use an external program, it doesn’t really matter. The idea is you shouldn’t have to be reinventing the wheel every time you go to type an email.
00;13;37;05 – 00;13;55;14
Rebecca Hay
I do, however, recommend that you customize it per project for the project needs and for the client. You know, if you have an initial inquiry response that says, you know, thank you so much for reaching out, you might say, I’m so happy that Judy referred you. For example, I just realized I use Judy as an example a lot, which is so fun.
00;13;55;14 – 00;14;22;07
Rebecca Hay
I don’t have any friends named Judy. My mom does. Maybe that’s where it comes from. Okay, so that’s number two. Email canned responses. Number three automated payment and invoicing systems okay. If you’re multitasking, come back to me here. This sounds like a doozy, but it’s not I am not suggesting you need to have a system where clients get an email, and then they click and it automatically charges them or goes on their credit card.
00;14;22;09 – 00;14;44;04
Rebecca Hay
That’s lovely. If you want to have that, you do not need that. I hope you guys are catching my throughline in this entire episode. It’s not about integrating the latest tech. It can be if you want it, but you don’t need that to have really strong automation in your business. The reality is, chasing invoices is a waste of time.
00;14;44;06 – 00;15;03;14
Rebecca Hay
Now, if your following my pricing structure that I teach inside pricing with confidence and my billing system, then this won’t be happening to you. Hopefully you won’t be chasing clients for invoices. But that said, there are still times where you know they were supposed to pay it and they didn’t pay it, or you’re waiting on something to place an order.
00;15;03;17 – 00;15;30;26
Rebecca Hay
Don’t spend your time doing that. So can you create canned emails that are replies for people as it pertains to invoicing? Right. But then can you also set up reminders to invoice? It could be in a system, or it could be something as simple as in my Google calendar. I’m going to set a reminder or a calendar event for next Tuesday that if the client hasn’t paid us by then, that’s my reminder to send a follow up.
00;15;30;28 – 00;15;52;23
Rebecca Hay
Do you see where I’m going with this? It’s about creating a system in a structure so that you don’t have to be always pulling from your mental bandwidth. It’s better than a to do list, because to do lists are not the answer. Here’s the bonus I would say is if you do have recur occurring services are recurring a payment schedule of the same amount.
00;15;52;26 – 00;16;10;26
Rebecca Hay
Is there a way that you could automate that? Is there a way? If you do use a system like a QuickBooks or something, can you at the very beginning of your project, can you create those invoices and schedule them to go out on a certain date months in advance? We used to do that with auto and then it wouldn’t actually send it.
00;16;11;03 – 00;16;29;03
Rebecca Hay
It would send us a reminder just because things kind of change, right. And we do. The reminder would be like, oh yeah, no, we’re not quite ready to actually invoice that balance. I’m going to push it out a few weeks. Because here’s the thing. I lost time and money because we got so freaking busy we would forget to invoice.
00;16;29;06 – 00;16;44;25
Rebecca Hay
Not like forever. It would be like, oh my gosh. Like, I can’t tell you how many times this happened. We’ve got a reveal day coming up. You know, here we are, streamlined systems following our process. Seven steps boom, boom, boom boom. We’re forgetting to get the money because we’re so focused on serving and being in the next step.
00;16;44;25 – 00;16;58;07
Rebecca Hay
And where do we go? And okay, so when are we scheduling the deliveries for like I think revealed is going to be on Thursday the 17th. Awesome. Okay. Who do we need going through the list of people? Do we have Mittman coming? What about the photographers that booked? What do we need for accessories? Okay, where are we at?
00;16;58;07 – 00;17;19;19
Rebecca Hay
Oh shoot, that’s delayed like all the things we’re managing. And then we would forget that we hadn’t collected the balance from the client. And then we’d be days before the reveal thinking, oh my God, they still owe us, like tens of thousands of dollars for all these products we’re going to deliver to them. So we’d send the invoice to the client and of course, like we weren’t getting prompt payment.
00;17;19;19 – 00;17;37;14
Rebecca Hay
And I at that point, I’m not going to delay the reveal. I worked so hard to coordinate all the deliveries, automate your payment and invoicing system, even if it’s as something as simple as setting a reminder in your email calendar to send an invoice or the follow up. Tip number four has to do with the content and marketing.
00;17;37;14 – 00;17;56;25
Rebecca Hay
So content and marketing. Not everybody here is hot and heavy on Instagram, and that’s totally cool. Some of you are. But you know that it’s really important to shop consistently, and if you’re not showing up consistently, then you are not going to stay top of mind. Whether that’s an email that you want to send to everyone in a newsletter every month.
00;17;56;25 – 00;18;18;06
Rebecca Hay
That’s what I recommend to designers. I think that’s really powerful. Or is it on your Instagram? A couple posts a week? Maybe. It’s every day. So I highly recommend that you batch creating that content so that you’re not scrambling and working on it the night before. Now listen, the what is it? The road. The path is paved with good intentions.
00;18;18;09 – 00;18;38;14
Rebecca Hay
I still sometimes find myself in that scramble last minute, especially since I’ve taken over my own social media this year. It’s a bit of a learning curve for me. And so this, this tip for is for me too is pre schedule time in your calendar to work on it and then schedule it to go out. Don’t post it in real time if it’s Instagram.
00;18;38;16 – 00;18;58;28
Rebecca Hay
If you’re going to send the email, can you use an email platform like a MailChimp or an active campaign or ConvertKit or something like that to automatically send the email so that you can get it, set it, forget it, and it goes out. Now, this one does involve a little bit of tech. This tip, I could say, or you can schedule yourself if it’s Instagram in the Instagram app.
00;18;59;01 – 00;19;23;08
Rebecca Hay
I don’t love that system because you can’t kind of I haven’t figured out how to see ahead, what’s coming out and what’s not. Then I forget what’s scheduled. But if you’re more organized than that, that would be amazing. And then what can you do to help you batch that content? Do you use ChatGPT to help you assist you with captions, hashtags so you can create templates that you save in a Google doc somewhere so you can just pull them every time.
00;19;23;10 – 00;19;42;09
Rebecca Hay
I think you can automate a lot of that to take that weight off of you, even if it’s just you coming up with the ideas and maybe filming yourself, could you then automate send it to somebody else to put it together? Tip number five is client communication and project updates. You want to avoid endless back and forth emails with your clients.
00;19;42;12 – 00;20;02;16
Rebecca Hay
You want to be ahead of it. You want to let them know. Here’s what’s coming ahead. Here’s where we’re at. There’s different ways to do this. One way that some designers do. And I tried this, but it was not as successful as I’d hoped it would be, is they set up a client portal, so client portal would be, maybe there’s like a tab on your website where your clients can go click on.
00;20;02;16 – 00;20;27;01
Rebecca Hay
They can sign in, they can see their documents, they can have access to calendar scheduling, things like that. I tried that with Deb Sardo for a few years, but I can tell you again, back to what I said. At the very beginning of this episode, I realized I didn’t fully understand my client, my Eka, my ideal client. Avatar is not someone who’s going to take the time back to the booking in the calendar.
00;20;27;03 – 00;20;56;12
Rebecca Hay
Who’s going to take the time to find the link, log in and look for the thing themselves. My client is just either waiting for you to send it to them, or they’re just going to go direct to the source and be like, hey, can you send me that thing? Or hey, when’s this happening? So we remove that client portal because nobody was using it, and it was a lot of time on my end to update because I had to upload the latest card, I had to upload the updated revisions, I had to upload whatever look, whatever.
00;20;56;12 – 00;21;22;19
Rebecca Hay
It was so much work that wasn’t worth it. We weren’t getting a return on our time investment. It could work for you. If your client is that type of client who really wants to be on top of it and kind of manage it and needs transparency and all of that, you need to know your client. Regardless of that, you still can automate those progress updates with pre-scheduled email check ins.
00;21;22;25 – 00;21;42;00
Rebecca Hay
When I say pre-scheduled, what I mean is regularly scheduled. I don’t mean that you’re writing it in January to go out in June. Like, that’s not that’s ridiculous. Like, that would be so silly because there be no information in it, because you don’t know where you’re going to be in June. But commit to a cadence, commit to a regular schedule that you were going to update your clients on the project progress.
00;21;42;02 – 00;22;06;11
Rebecca Hay
And I can tell you, we do this regardless of what’s going on. So there could be a couple of weeks where there’s nobody on site. We’re just placing orders. There’s really nothing to say. We still send a progress update to let the clients know that we haven’t forgotten about them. You know, I’m working currently with a graphic designer on a on a rebrand for the whole coaching business online.
00;22;06;11 – 00;22;26;00
Rebecca Hay
Guys, it’s such a big it’s such a big time. But I don’t know, it’s a big project. It takes a lot of time. It’s all it’s like a lot. I feel like I’m like deciding who I’m going to marry in this new branding. So guys, when it comes out, please be gentle and kind with me because I’m just I’m nervous about this whole like committing to colors and thoughts socially.
00;22;26;02 – 00;22;49;06
Rebecca Hay
But what I can tell you is there’s like a 4 or 5 week period of time where I know that she’s working on things, but she doesn’t need my input or my feedback. And as time passes, I start to wonder, like, my gosh, like, is she forgotten about me? Like, I’m assuming she’s working? But there’s this uneasy feeling I want an update, I want to check, and maybe it’s not every week.
00;22;49;06 – 00;23;05;25
Rebecca Hay
And a project of that scope. It’s a smaller scope than an entire design project. Maybe just a couple updates to say. And now I’ll be fair, we we’ve just started this process. Or maybe she has these updates built in, but it’s just an example that feels fresh for me. I would love to know, you know, here where we’re working on this and we’re moving forward on that.
00;23;05;25 – 00;23;45;08
Rebecca Hay
Like, I don’t know, whatever it might be. And then those progress updates can be your opportunity to ask a question, and you can get ahead of objections and questions with the clients will have. Oh, all right. So just to recap the five automations that I recommend that you have as non-negotiables to save you time in your business are automating the client intake process, creating canned email responses, automating your payment and invoicing systems, content batching for social media, blogs, newsletters and marketing, and then lastly, number five is scheduled progress updates.
00;23;45;08 – 00;24;06;10
Rebecca Hay
The client communication portion. This might sound overwhelming to some of you. You don’t have to do it all at once. I didn’t go bang one week and involve all of these strategies in my business. Start with just one pick, one automation to start. I can tell you if I was you and I didn’t have anything set up, I would start with email.
00;24;06;13 – 00;24;28;14
Rebecca Hay
I would start with canned email, start to look at. And you don’t have to spend time creating it. Just the next time you reply to a client, who’s inquired about your services, copy that reply, paste it to a document, or save that as a template, an email, and then the next time use it, tweak it a little bit until you start to make it better with anything.
00;24;28;14 – 00;24;49;03
Rebecca Hay
When it comes to process, I always suggest to my students, don’t take half a year off to set it up. Just work on it. As you’re working through a project, you’re going to have the best outcome because it’s so fresh and you’re in it like you’re really in. It’s you’re thinking about what you would say. It’s very different than if on a Saturday you sit down, you think about, what would I write to a client?
00;24;49;06 – 00;25;08;10
Rebecca Hay
I hope that resonates truthfully, truthfully, truthfully. You will have more time. You’ll have more time to do the creative work, the sales, whatever it is that you really, really love. And I’m super curious to hear from you guys. Which automation are you going to try first? Which of these are you already doing? Send me a DM on Instagram.
00;25;08;10 – 00;25;25;12
Rebecca Hay
Please let me know. I’m going to ask and invite you to subscribe if you don’t already to this podcast and share it with a friend. If you found this episode useful and helpful to you, who do you know that could also use a little bit of help in this area? Feel free to pass it along to them.
00;25;25;15 – 00;25;45;07
Rebecca Hay
I would always, always love up review a podcast review. Leave a little hello, if you’re enjoying this podcast and if you like this episode, thank you so much for listening. I’ll see you soon.