What You'll Discover In This Episode:
At the young age of 16, Sarah Walton had to make the very difficult financial decision of whether to take care of her family OR take care of herself and pay for something she had wanted for as long as she can remember. The thought that I canāt do both got locked in childhood and for the next couple of decades, a 16 year-old girlās belief ruled Sarahās life and her relationship with money.
Fast-forward to her thirties, Sarah was sitting at her corporate desk listening to the clock tick away seconds that she could never get back and had a recall of that memory. She made a decision right then and there that she wasnāt going to do this to herself anymore. She was going to transform her belief system and achieve more for her family AND herself. She was going to seek out abundance, success, and a life centered around family and freedom. She was going to start a business, decide who to serve, decide how much she was going to make, and decide how much she was going to pay herself.
Sarah has since created a successful business with the goal of putting more money in the hands of more women and helping them live out their dreams in this incredibly abundant world. As Sarah says, āWhen women have money, they do amazing things.ā
In this episode of the Small Business Straight Talk Podcast, I sit down with Business coach & Sales Expert, Sarah Walton, to dive into business ownersā relationship with money. We discuss how it can transform into a growth mindset that plugs in to money, abundance, and success, and uses it to serve others and do amazing things
Episode Links & Resources:
About Guest:
Sarah Walton is a business coach and sales expert whoās been featured on The Today Show, speaks at womenās conferences all over the world, and has helped hundreds of women start and grow businesses they LOVE.
From growing up in a low-income household with a single mom to helping moms turn their passion into a business they love that can support their families, Sarahās lived experience shows how women can powerfully change their lives and the lives of their families and communities.
Sarahās transitioned from being ājust another coachā to being a change-maker. Itās time to put more money in the hands of more women, and Sarah is all in.