#41 Hot Baths & Hard Truths about Sustaining Your Business by Refusing to Neglect YOU
カートのアイテムが多すぎます
カートに追加できませんでした。
ウィッシュリストに追加できませんでした。
ほしい物リストの削除に失敗しました。
ポッドキャストのフォローに失敗しました
ポッドキャストのフォロー解除に失敗しました
-
ナレーター:
-
著者:
In this episode, Steph pulls back the curtain on the most overlooked growth strategy in your business: you.
If this episode hit, here’s where to go next:
- ✉️ Get on Steph’s email list because it's the real real about life & business in a way that you can actually absorb & implement like all the time:
https://stephrubio.myflodesk.com/letsconnect
- The place to start is getting crazy clear on what you actually want (and why it feels terrifying):
https://www.stephrubio.com/your-terrifying-vision
After powerful conversations at Power Table Live, one truth kept surfacing—most women are building businesses that rely on them… while completely neglecting themselves. Steph breaks down what it actually looks like to treat yourself as a stakeholder in your business, why “self-care” isn’t fluffy—it’s foundational—and how prioritizing yourself directly impacts your revenue, relationships, and long-term sustainability.
This is the episode that will challenge how you think about productivity, success, and what it really means to build a business that lasts.
Key Takeaways
- Why your reputation = your revenue (and how your experience shapes both)
- The concept of stakeholder experience—and why you belong in that category
- How neglecting yourself quietly sabotages your business growth
- Why 30 minutes a day can radically change your life (and business)
- The real reason you struggle to prioritize yourself (hint: it’s not time)
- How to communicate your needs without guilt—and actually stick to them
- Why boundaries aren’t selfish—they’re protective
Memorable Moments
“Your reputation is your revenue.”
“If you can’t sustain, the business can’t sustain.”
“I give my kids what they need 23 and a half hours a day. The other 30 minutes? That’s mine.”
“Boundaries aren’t the point. They protect what you value.”
“You’re not lacking time—you’re lacking permission.”