An aligned offer isn’t just about what you sell – it’s about matching your energy, your life, and how you actually work with your ADHD brain. It needs to fit into your big vision for the life you’re creating. When your offer is aligned, you can show up consistently without burning out.
Unstuckable is clearly your most aligned offer. Eight calls a month for $400-500 is accessible pricing that actually serves your audience, and it’s recurring revenue which is exactly what you need. The structure works with your ADHD brain because you’re doing what you’re good at – coaching and connecting – without having to reinvent the wheel every month. Your target audience description for Unstuckable is also spot-on, which tells me you know exactly who you’re serving when you’re focused.
You’re running six different businesses. Let me count them: Unstuckable group coaching, Intentional Microdosing course, 1:1 coaching sessions, a nervous system regulation course you’re building, Fit Fab Websites web development services, and AI assistant products. That’s not a business – that’s six part-time jobs competing for your attention. Every single one of these requires different marketing, different sales processes, different delivery systems, and different mental energy. You’re context-switching yourself into exhaustion and wondering why you can’t get traction anywhere.
When you have six offers, you have zero offers that are actually optimized. You can’t build a consistent sales system because you’re selling six different things to slightly different audiences through different processes. You can’t create predictable income because you’re hoping something will hit each month instead of building one thing that compounds. And here’s the kicker – you’re teaching ADHD entrepreneurs to focus while you’re scattered across six revenue streams. The misalignment between what you teach and how you’re running your business is creating cognitive dissonance that’s probably exhausting you.
Your target audience is about understanding the ONE specific problem you solve for ONE specific person. When you’re clear on this, your marketing writes itself. When you’re vague, everything feels like pushing a boulder uphill.
Your description of your Unstuckable audience is phenomenal. “Solo entrepreneurs with ADHD, mostly women 35-55, perimenopausal, running their own businesses or trying to. They’re overwhelmed, have a million tabs open literally and figuratively.” You can see them. You know their pain. You understand that they’ve tried productivity systems that don’t work and they’re frustrated they can’t execute like neurotypical people. This is crystal clear, specific, and you clearly know this person intimately because you ARE this person.
But then you’re also trying to serve people who want to microdose, people who need web development, people who want AI prompts, and people who need nervous system regulation. These might overlap somewhat, but they’re looking for different solutions to different problems. Someone coming to you for web development isn’t necessarily your Unstuckable client. Someone buying a $7 AI prompt isn’t in the same buying journey as someone investing $400/month in group coaching. You’re diluting your authority by trying to be the answer to too many different problems.
When someone lands on your LinkedIn profile or finds your podcast, they should immediately know: “Oh, this is the person who helps ADHD entrepreneurs build businesses that work with their brains.” Instead, they’re confused. Are you the microdosing expert? The web developer? The AI prompt creator? The business coach? Confusion kills conversions. And it’s killing your ability to build a reputation as THE go-to expert for one specific transformation.
ONE traffic source. That’s it. When you’re consistent on ONE platform, you build brand authority. You become the person people think of when they have that problem. When you’re scattered across 5+ platforms, you’re invisible everywhere.
You’re active on LinkedIn and building your network there. Your Substack is ranking #46 in Science, which is legitimately impressive and shows you can create content that resonates. You co-host Psychedelic Revelations podcast, which gives you consistent visibility and positions you as an authority. These are all solid assets.
You just listed seven different traffic sources: LinkedIn, Substack, your podcast, guest podcasting, Instagram, multiple websites for different businesses, conference speaking, and strategic networking. Then you said “Do I have a plan? Sort of?” That’s not sort of – that’s no plan. You’re throwing spaghetti at seven different walls hoping something sticks. You said it yourself: “I know I need to focus but I also feel like I need to be everywhere to build authority in this space.” That’s scarcity thinking, and it’s keeping you scattered. You don’t need to be everywhere. You need to be consistently SOMEWHERE.
Here’s what’s actually happening: You’re spending so much energy maintaining a presence on seven platforms that you’re not going deep enough on any single one to actually build authority. Your Substack is about metabolic ecology and neuroscience. Your podcast is about psychedelics. Your LinkedIn is about ADHD entrepreneurship. Your Instagram is inconsistent. None of these are feeding the same funnel toward the same offer for the same audience. You’re not building a traffic source – you’re building seven different audiences that don’t know what you actually do or how to work with you.
Let’s talk about what you’re really here for: predictable income.
Predictable income comes from:
You have sales pages and checkout systems set up, which means you’ve done the technical work. Some people find Unstuckable through LinkedIn or the podcast and join directly, which means your organic content is doing some heavy lifting. That’s good – it means when you’re clear and consistent, people want to work with you.
You have five different sales processes for six different offers. Unstuckable is direct sales or DM conversations. Microdosing course is a sales page. 1:1 coaching requires discovery calls. Web development needs consult calls from referrals. AI assistants are just checkout pages. Every single one of these requires you to show up differently, sell differently, and manage the buyer journey differently. And your income? “Not very predictable honestly. Some months are great, some months are slow. I can’t really forecast because it depends on who decides to join Unstuckable that month, whether anyone buys the microdosing course, if any web dev clients come in, etc. It’s pretty much a surprise every month which is stressful.” That’s not a sales system – that’s hope-based revenue.
Unpredictable income isn’t a revenue problem – it’s a focus problem. You can’t create a predictable sales system when you’re selling six different things through five different processes to audiences coming from seven different platforms. The math doesn’t work. Every month you’re starting from scratch, hoping something hits, instead of building a system that consistently converts. This is why you’re stressed. This is why you can’t forecast. And this is exactly what you’re teaching your Unstuckable clients NOT to do.
Here’s what’s actually happening in your business: You’ve built six different revenue streams because your ADHD brain saw six different opportunities and said “yes” to all of them. Each one made sense in the moment. Each one serves a real need. But together, they’re creating a business that’s impossible to scale, impossible to systematize, and impossible to make predictable income from.
You’re scattered across seven traffic sources because you’re afraid that if you pick ONE, you’ll miss opportunities on the other six. You have five sales processes because each offer needs something different. And your income is unpredictable because you’re essentially running a different business every month depending on what sells.
The root cause isn’t that you’re doing anything wrong – it’s that you’re doing EVERYTHING. And for an ADHD brain, everything equals nothing. You can’t build momentum when you’re context-switching between web development, course creation, group coaching, 1:1 sessions, AI prompts, and podcast hosting. You’re bleeding energy at every transition.
Here’s why you can’t fix this alone: Your ADHD brain is really good at seeing possibilities and really bad at choosing just one. Every time you sit down to focus on Unstuckable, you think “but what about the microdosing course?” Every time you consider shutting down web development, you think “but what if I need that income?” Every time you try to pick ONE traffic source, you panic that you’re leaving money on the table. This is textbook ADHD paralysis – too many options, inability to prioritize, fear of missing out, and the constant feeling that you’re not doing enough even though you’re doing way too much.
You need external accountability to make the hard calls. You need someone who can see the pattern of “I’ll just add one more thing” before you do it again. You need support to stay focused on ONE thing long enough for it to actually work, instead of pivoting every time you hit resistance. And you need to stop trying to figure this out in your own head, because your head is where the problem lives.
You need someone in your corner who can see your patterns before you spiral, who can help you stay on track to make predictable income, who gets that your ADHD brain needs a different approach than neuro-typical business owners.
That’s what Unstuckable provides: 8 live coaching calls per month at a price that’s actually accessible. Not $3K/month gatekeeping bullshit – real support that makes sense for solo entrepreneurs.
In Unstuckable, you’ll:
This is how you go from scattered to focused. From knowing you need to change to actually doing it. From unpredictable income that stresses you out every month to a business that actually supports your life.
And here’s the thing – you’re already teaching this. You already know this works. You just need support to do it for yourself.