Jen Gottlieb: The Importance Of Being Seen From Award Winning PR Agency Owner – Episode 66

Jen Gottlieb is an expert at helping people and brands to be confidently seen! Jen is the founder of a full-service PR agency, awarded “Best New Agency” in the 2019 Bulldog Awards, …

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Jen Gottlieb is an expert at helping people and brands to be confidently seen! Jen is the founder of a full-service PR agency, awarded “Best New Agency” in the 2019 Bulldog Awards, is a powerful influencer with 250,000 social media followers, and has been featured on many top podcasts, as well as in Forbes, Business Insider, Shape, Women’s Health, Goop, and on Good Morning America, PBS, Well + Good, and more. As a Former VH1 host and Broadway actress, Jen uses her decade of performance and mindset experience to inspire entrepreneurs and leaders connect better with their teams, the media, and ultimately, themselves.

Jen is half mindset coach and half media coach. As one of the leading PR execs and minds in the country, her passion is giving clients and audiences the confidence, authority, and social proof/ credibility to place them at the top of their industry. Along the way, Jen helps them leverage their own strengths, transforming them into the best version of who they are.

In between being on Broadway and VH1 to now owning a PR firm, Jen created and ran a fitness training and high-performance mindset coaching brand helping celebrities, CEOs and entrepreneurs transform their bodies and, frankly, their lives. Helping clients shed up to 70 pounds was incredible, but her favorite part was seeing them shine. Beyond stepping into a smaller suit or dress, they were now stepping onto the stage, stepping in front of the camera, stepping into their full potential. Jen wanted more of that. So now, she’s living out her full potential, excited to inspire your audience from the stage.

To get to know or book Jen as a speaker: https://slot22.silverline.dev/portfoliotype/jen-gottlieb/.

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Jen Gottlieb: The Importance Of Being Seen From Award Winning PR Agency Owner

Joining us is Jen Gottlieb, the Founder of a full-service PR agency awarded the best new agency in the 2019 Bulldog Awards, and is a powerful influencer with 250,000 followers across all social media and with real connection and reach garnering millions of likes and comments. Jen has been featured on many top podcasts, as well as in Forbes, Business Insider, Shape, Women\’s Health, Goop, and on Good Morning America, PBS, Well + Good, and many more.

Formerly as the host of a popular show for fourteen seasons on VH1 and as a Broadway musical theater actress, she uses her performance and mindset experience to help entrepreneurs and leaders connect better with their teams, the media, and, ultimately, themselves. Please, join me now with the incredible Jen Gottlieb. Jen Gottlieb, thank you for joining me here on the show. How are you?

I\’m good, Chris. I’m excited to be here. This is going to be fun.

This is going to be great. I am looking forward to this. You are such an exciting speaker. You are awesome on the stage. Your message and your content are relevant and needed in today\’s world. I\’m excited to unpack your story and what you\’re all about. It\’s exciting that you are somebody who\’s a big influencer out there in the world but an influencer with content. You have over 250,000 followers, which says something about your content, that it resonates with people. I love that about you.

I know you\’re going to have a major book coming out soon in the future that\’s going to be awesome about people being seen. That\’s what you\’re all about. You\’re all about getting people to not only be seen but be confident in the step it takes to be seen. Building people\’s not only visibility but their confidence and their potential. This is something you yourself went through. This is pretty much the world that you live in.

Back in my past life, about a while back, I was a host on a show on VH1. I got to interview some of the biggest rockstars in the entire world. We\’re talking people like Slash and the guys from AC/DC and Guns N\’ Roses, and these people that you would think have the most confidence ever. They\’re performing in front of thousands of people all the time. They would come backstage. After their interview, what do you think was the first thing they would say to me after they were done with their interview?

“That was great. You were awesome. That was fun.”

Incorrect. They would say, “How was I? Was I good? I was nervous. Was I okay? Was I good enough?” I\’m like, “You\’re Slash.” That proved to me that every single person on the planet, even real-life rockstars, experienced things like Imposter syndrome and not feeling good enough and insecurities. The more that we work with top entrepreneurs and CEOs and big companies and getting them in the media and getting them visible and helping them teach them how to put themselves out there, the more we realize that it doesn\’t matter how successful you are, fear is a thing that everybody experiences, including myself. There\’s this massive fear about, “What will people think of me if I say that? What will people think of me if I wear that? I\’m not as good as that person.”

\"VSP Being Seen: It doesn\’t matter how successful you are. Fear is a thing that everybody experiences.

 

I call it comparisonitis. We all get this horrible case of comparing ourselves to other people. All of these symptoms of fear, I call them symptoms of fear, Imposter syndrome, comparing yourself to other people, perfectionism, they hold you back from speaking your truth and teaching other people and showing people what you do. Essentially, it is taking away an opportunity for those people to be helped by you.

What we do is we flip it all around and we explain to people that it is your responsibility to be seen. Every day that goes by that you\’re not making yourself visible to the people that you can help is another day that those people are going to go listen to somebody else or hire somebody else that isn\’t as good as you and doesn\’t care as much as you simply because you\’re too nervous or insecure about putting yourself out there. We teach people the confidence to be out there to be seen.

There are many metaphors that that can be used. Even being seen in your own community or your own organization or your own family, taking a step forward and saying something that you\’re scared to say because you\’re feeling afraid people are going to reject you or maybe they\’ll get angry, or maybe they\’ll think that you\’re not worth listening to, and you\’re afraid of getting that rejection.

There are so many different ways to look at that. I love that you have tackled all of that. I know before you had a PR agency, which I know as a full-service PR agency was named the best new agency in the 2019 Bulldog Awards. That\’s pretty awesome. Before that, you were helping celebrities get fit and look their best and feel their best as well.

My first experience being an entrepreneur after my experience being an actress. I\’ve had many different facets of my life and many different careers. My friends and I joke that if I had a real-life resume, which I don\’t, because I\’m a business owner and entrepreneur, but it would be all over the map because I was an actress and then I decided I wanted to create a business helping people feel their best so that they could be seen. The crazy thing is, as I was helping people get fit and helping them feel their best, these people were pretty high-level people.

The more they felt great and looked great, the more they would be visible, the more they would be seen, the more they\’d be on camera, the more stages they would book, the more confident they would feel. That was the piece that I loved the most. I was like, “I don\’t care about talking about food anymore. I don\’t want to teach people how to exercise anymore. I want to teach people how to feel good inside so that they can then go shine and they can help lots of people out there.”

[bctt tweet=\”The more people feel great and look great, the more they will be visible. The more they would be seen, the more they\’d be on camera, the more stages they would book, and the more confident they would feel.\” username=\”calentertainmnt\”]

That morphed into the PR business essentially.

I met my fiancé and business partner, Chris. He was doing these events that connected entrepreneurs to the media so they could get themselves into publications and on television. I was starting to get a lot of media myself to build my fitness business. We came together and we realized that many of these entrepreneurs he was having at his events had a lot of mindset and confidence issues when meeting these media people. I was like, “What if we partnered and came together and created this company where we did PR differently where we incorporated the mindset piece?”

We taught them the tangible tactical tools on how to get themselves out there, how to pitch themselves to the media, how to message themselves, how to talk about themselves, and how to introduce themselves. We also give them the framework and foundation of confidence and mindset tools so that they can walk into a room and be fully confident in who they are and not who they think everybody else needs them to be. That birthed into our company. We have an educational portion of our company. We have events where we teach. We don\’t just represent different big companies and celebrities and thought leaders. We also teach people how to put themselves out there and gain confidence to do so.

\"VSP Being Seen: We don\’t just represent big companies, celebrities, and thought leaders. We also teach people how to put themselves out there and gain confidence to do so.

 

When you mentioned that you were the actress and that you had the show on VH1, that\’s where all of this started. I know that you yourself had a moment where you realized you were feeling like an imposter. You felt like maybe you weren\’t being yourself and you were feeling a little awakened in that you weren\’t being you and weren\’t enjoying what you were doing, even though you had this massively famous appearance. It was weekly on VH1 with a major show for those of us who love rock and roll. You said, “This isn\’t for me.” You obviously have a deep story there. Tell us a little bit about that journey and then the realization part of it.

I was an actress. Before the heavy metal show on VH1, I was playing my dream role in the Broadway national tour of The Wedding Singer. I was traveling all around the country playing this rock and roll chick, Linda. I remember seeing the show on Broadway. I was like, “I\’m going to play that part.” Through a crazy story of auditioning and getting rejected again and again, I eventually got my dream role. I played that part all over the country. I came back and I got this audition for this hard rock and heavy metal talk show. I\’m like, “I did that for a year. Easy peasy. I\’m going to go in. I\’m going to rock this audition. I\’m going to get this part.” I didn\’t necessarily believe 100%.

There was still a little bit of doubt. When I sat in the waiting room and I saw all the other girls in the audition waiting room and they all had piercings everywhere and tattoos and they were real metal girls and I was a pretend metal girl. I was a little nervous. I went in. A funny story is at the end of that audition, I pretended that I knew all this information about heavy metal music, which I don\’t. Spoiler alert, I know nothing about heavy metal. I\’m not a heavy metal fan, but I went in there and I faked it, but they didn\’t care about that. This is crazy.

At the end of the audition, they asked me, they\’re like, “I see on your resumé that you do a great Britney Spears impression.” I\’m like, “I forgot that that was on there. I\’m not going to do my Britney Spears impression in a heavy metal audition.” “Would you do it for us?” I\’m like, “This is going in the wrong direction.” I do my Britney Spears impersonation at this heavy metal audition.

Is this her singing or her talking?

Singing. I sing I’m Not a Girl, Not Yet a Woman, a Britney Spears ballad. I leave. I get the call, “You booked the part.” The reason that I booked it was not because I knew everything about heavy metal music. It was because they were like, “You made everybody laugh with your Britney impression. We loved you. We want you to have the part.”

What did that teach me? That taught me that being yourself is always the thing that makes people lean in, makes people remember you, and makes opportunities happen. You teased this well. I lost myself because while I was myself to get this role, I then spent years playing a version of myself that wasn\’t me, pretending I liked heavy metal music, being this super vampy metal chick in the public eye. I was living a lie because I didn\’t like metal. This wasn\’t who I was.

[bctt tweet=\”Being yourself is always the thing that makes people lean in, remember you, and make opportunities happen.\” username=\”calentertainmnt\”]

Not even any metal?

Not even a little. What I did like was it was a great job. I loved meeting the metal audience. They have live studio audiences. They\’re great people. I loved meeting the musicians. They\’re great people.

Who is your favorite musician who you interacted with and met? I know it\’s hard to pick.

It\’s not. When I was on the road with The Wedding Singer, I discovered this artist named Lita Ford, who is a rock and roll woman. She was part of the Runaways, I believe, back in the day. I would listen to her before a performance because I based my character off of Lita Ford because she was like the ‘80s rocker chick.

In my first season on That Metal Show, Lita Ford walks into the room. I\’m like, “This is crazy. How crazy how the dots are connecting?” I got to connect with Lita and say, “I\’ve been listening to you every single day, building this character off of you. Watch my YouTube. This is you.” She loved it. We connected and it was amazing. There were a lot of great pieces of me being on VH1. I learned so much. I had a lot of doors open for me. At the end of the day, I was living out of alignment from who I was.

How did you figure that out? How did you have that realization? It must have been a dark time.

During that time, my hair was falling out because I was bleaching it platinum blonde. I was severely bulimic because I thought that I needed to be this super sexed-up girl. I experienced a horrible eating disorder. I was depressed because I was in a relationship with this guy. He wasn\’t a rocker guy. It was a toxic relationship. I believe that when you\’re out of alignment in your job, you\’re out of alignment in your life.

I was lost in all these ways. Sometimes when you can\’t get yourself back into alignment on your own, I truly believe that the universe comes in in some way, shape, or form, and it does it for you. Within a week\’s time, I found out my boyfriend was cheating on me with one of our friends. The show got canceled. He kicked me out of our multimillion-dollar apartment.

I had no money, no show, no connections, no job, no boyfriend. I found myself going from this beautiful, perfect on paper life, which was not perfect, but perfect on paper, to living in this tiny little room with six other actors in New York with a window facing a brick wall. I had to start over. I remember thinking at that moment, “One day, I\’ll know why this happened.” That was the only phrase that could get me through that time because I was so helpless. I was like, “Jenny, you\’ll know why one day.”

I dove into finally figuring out who the hell I was and what I wanted to do. I decided that I was going to stop waiting for someone to pick me because when you\’re an actress, you\’re always saying, “Am I good enough for you?” and going into rooms and saying, “Am I good enough? Will you pick me? Can I sing your song? Can I say your words?”

\"VSP Being Seen: Figure out who you are and what you want to do. Stop waiting for someone to pick you.

 

I was like, “What if I decided to choose my own destiny?” I put acting aside. I knew in the back of my mind, “This is what I\’m born to do. I\’ll end up back on stage. Maybe not in that way, but I\’ll end up back on stage somehow. I didn\’t know how. I didn\’t know it was going to look like this, but I knew eventually.” I put on the back burner and I started building a business, helping people. That\’s how my fitness business started to build. I created a successful business fast through the power of being seen, visible, and morphing metal girl, changing the narrative into fitness, wellness, mindset girl. I used the media and visibility to help me do that.

You already had training in that. You already knew how that worked a little bit with getting people to answer your calls and talk about you, picking you right to be on their publications and in their media. Now you\’ve been in Forbes, Business Insider, Women\’s Health, Good Morning America, and PBS. This is an amazing resume here. I know something funny happened with Forbes. I saw this new article of you in Forbes. I said, “How come you didn\’t tell me you were in Forbes yet?” I have to see it online to find out you\’re in Forbes. Tell everybody what that story is because it\’s a great story. It\’s also you teaching about what part of the things are that you teach.

I did this specifically because I have a talk coming up in Vegas and speaking with people like Gary Vaynerchuk and Ed Mylett and some big speakers. I\’m teaching how I took one Forbes piece and turned it into about $370,000 in revenue by leveraging it, telling a story around it, amplifying it, getting on a big radio show, talking about it, and getting different leads from those different things.

What I want to circle back to at this talk that I\’m doing is to teach people that you can take old media placements or old content and repurpose it and make it new and use it again. What I did was I took the old Forbes article. I put a new photo. I wrote a new story, all about something else, for my post. The same article, I shared it to provide value.

I shared it in a different way. I got hundreds of messages and people sharing it and saying, “Congratulations, you were in Forbes. Including you.” I was like, “That\’s an article that I did last year. I just decided to share it again in a different way.” People don\’t realize that not everybody sees your stuff. Not everybody remembers. People aren\’t paying that much attention. You can repurpose and reuse content to tell different stories and give you that credibility, influence, and authority again and again. If you\’ve got media, it\’s not just one time. We can reuse that again and again and again.

What was that article about? That was a good article, obviously. You liked it well enough to share it twice. Tell us a little bit about the premise of the article.

It\’s powerful. It started for me as an Instagram Live. I did this Instagram live because someone asked me this question. They\’re like, “I\’m an introvert. How do I do well networking? I hate networking and networking events.” I am an introvert as well. I don\’t like networking events. In fact, I used to be terrible at networking.

We\’re coming out of a pandemic where everybody was locked inside. Now they got to relearn these tools. It’s like when you\’re dating somebody for a long time, then you\’re single again. You\’re like, “I forgot how to date.”

That\’s right. People forgot how to network. They forgot how to be in person and talk to people. I have these four hacks that I use personally to be able to work in any room, dust off your networking skills, be great in person in the room, and make people feel seen and want to follow up with you. That is what this article\’s about.

[bctt tweet=\”People forgot how to network. They forgot how to be in person and talk to people.\” username=\”calentertainmnt\”]

What are the four hacks or maybe a couple of them?

The first hack is to announce your vulnerability. You may be thinking, “What? I thought I was supposed to go in and be super confident. I got it all going on.” The thing that connects people the most is when you\’re real. Think about it. If you and I were at a party and you\’re secretly feeling uncomfortable and I\’m also feeling uncomfortable, but we both pretend that we\’re not, it\’s going to be a weird conversation. If I went up to you and I\’m like, “Chris, I haven\’t been to a networking event in a whole year. I\’m seriously nervous. Would you be my buddy here? We can hang out and be right here and be awkward together.” You\’d be like, “Yes, Jen, I love that. I am, too.”

We would instantly connect. That\’s how you connect with people. Announce the elephant in the room, “Do you know that person? I don\’t know anyone here.” “I don\’t know anyone here either.” “Great. Let\’s be friends.” That\’s the first one. The second one is to go in with a goal. Don\’t go into any networking event, like, “I\’m going to go in and I\’m going to whatever,” then you\’re going to be there forever. You\’re going to be bored. You\’re not going to be interested. You\’re going to be flopping all over the place, not even knowing what you\’re doing.

If you go in with a goal, maybe your goal is you make it a game. “I\’m going to find the most interesting person in this room. I\’m going to talk to them.” Maybe that\’s your goal. “I\’m going to get five different contacts and then I\’m going to leave.” I like to get myself and out. Once I\’ve accomplished my goal, I can Irish exit. You know in your mind that you can leave once you\’ve accomplished it and feel satisfied instead of being there and saying, “I\’m going to go now.” No, you go, you have your goal, you accomplish your goal. Once you get that goal, you can leave.

I know you work with mostly companies and brands with the PR company. I know that you also work with people who want to get better at all of this as entrepreneurs as well. What is it that you\’re hearing the most right now from people in this world that we live in? Are people scared to put themselves out there because of the fear of backlash because there\’s so much sensitivity to everything right now? Is there a lot of people worried about how they\’re being perceived and not knowing what to say? What\’s the main thing you\’re seeing out there right now?

I\’m seeing some fear around this whole cancellation thing. That\’s a real fear. That\’s a thing to think about. Also, at the end of the day, it\’s fear of not being perfect. People have this fear of like, “It\’s not good enough yet. I don\’t have the perfect website. I don\’t have the perfect Instagram. I don\’t have the perfect spouse. I don\’t have the perfect body. I don\’t have the perfect face.”

At the end of the day, nothing\’s ever going to be perfect. People don\’t like connecting with perfect people. People like connecting to, buying from, and learning from people they can relate to. Since nobody\’s perfect, being a little bit messy and not having it all together and doing it anyway is the best way to connect with people and get people to listen to you and get people to follow you.

\"VSP Being Seen: Nothing is ever going to be perfect. People don\’t like connecting with perfect people. People like connecting to, buying from, and learning from people they can relate to.

 

At the end of the day, it\’s not going to be perfect, but you\’ll get closer to perfect the more you do it. You got to do it. You got to go on camera and do it. It\’s got to suck in the beginning and that\’s okay. The more that you do it, even though it\’s not that great, it\’ll get better each time. If you just sit around and wait for the perfect time to come, the perfect time\’s never going to come and then it\’s going to be a year later and you never did anything. Stop waiting for it to be perfect and say, “Better done than perfect.”

What do you think about people who\’ve never done any social media? They\’ve never put their companies out there too much. They don\’t think that that\’s necessary for their job or their company. Do you see a lot of people having a light bulb go on and saying, “I never thought this was for us as a company or this was for me as a leader or this was for our consumers were going to care if we did anything like this on social media or anywhere at all online?” Are you finding that there are a lot of people who the light bulb goes on and they go, “I wasted all these years not doing anything in the public eye,” because they think they are supposed to do it through word of mouth and being who they are in their industry?

It\’s never too late to start. If you\’re thinking that right now, like, “I wasted all this time,” throw that thought away and start now. I\’ll give you a great example without just saying yes, I agree with you. We worked with this amazing law firm lawyer. Lawyer and then I\’m going to talk about something that you would not think is typical for a lawyer to do. When we met this lawyer, he did one of our programs and got his first TV segment as an expert on the news, talking about some case that was happening. He was the lawyer expert on TV. He was great on camera. We influenced him to take that news segment and put it on TikTok.

[bctt tweet=\”It\’s never too late to start. If you think you’ve wasted all this time, throw that thought away and start now.\” username=\”calentertainmnt\”]

You may think, “TikTok? That\’s for dancing. That\’s for kids. That\’s for young people.” This guy\’s name is Ugo Lord. That\’s his name. You can look him up on TikTok. Ugo Lord put that media segment on TikTok. He got lots of views, hundreds of thousands of views. He was like, “This is interesting.” He put another video on TikTok. He got millions of views. He went overnight from being nobody on TikTok to having hundreds of millions of views on TikTok, millions of followers on TikTok, so much so that TikTok called him and he is now a content creator for TikTok. He is the TikTok lawyer. TikTok pays him to make content now. His business has exploded.

He\’s a thought leader about law and ways that we, as citizens, can think about the law.

He wasn\’t a thought leader before. He was a lawyer, but he turned into a thought leader and that has skyrocketed his business. He emailed us. He\’s like, “Thank you so much for kickstarting my entertainment career.” He had no idea that he had this entertainment career now and now he does because he decided to share on social media. I use this example because many, especially older companies or people in industries like law or corporate industries, think, “TikTok, that\’s for kids. That\’s dancing,” or Instagram. This guy is making bank on TikTok right now when he\’s a lawyer.

He\’s probably got a ton of people calling him to be their lawyer.

His business has 10x.

A lot of the conferences that I book speakers for, the people in the audience are not necessarily the owner or the founder or the entrepreneurial type. They may be somebody who works at the company. They may be in sales. I still feel like there\’s pushback from some of these people that, “I don\’t need to go on social media. That\’s not going to help my job because this isn\’t even my company,” but I still think that this visibility and influential teaching that you have is good for anybody, even the people who aren\’t the owners and are salespeople.

I\’m talking about daily interactions with customers, be it in person or on the phone or online. I still think that this confidence discussion and living up to their potential and creating that influence and authority in sales is huge. What do you say to that? This stuff works for people who aren\’t the owners and don\’t need to be on social media. This also works in our everyday lives, the stuff you talk about.

A thousand percent, because at the end of the day, you want to ask yourself, are you living to your full potential? I like to think about this often, I think about the end of my life. When I\’m on my deathbed and it\’s the end of my life, and I envision this crazy thing might happen where my creator shows me who I could have been if I lived up to my fullest potential. If that\’s not matching who I am on my deathbed and that\’s somebody that I don\’t know and doesn\’t look familiar to me, that\’s going to be the ultimate regret. When I get to the end of my life, I want to be able to be as close to that version of me as humanly possible.

I don\’t want to meet that girl. I want to be that girl. I know that everyone has a desire. Maybe it\’s not to be an entrepreneur or be a CEO or any of that, but live their life to their fullest potential. Make the most powerful relationships, be the best person that they can be, and live the most magnificent life, whether that means building your beautiful family, going on amazing vacations, or having beautiful connections with other human beings.

In order to do that, you need to connect with who you truly are. You need to be able to not just be seen, but see who you are and what you desire. A lot of people spend years of their life. Many people woke up from the pandemic and realized they were doing this. Many people spend years of their life building a future that they don\’t even want, that somebody else wanted for them, that somebody else said, “You need to be a doctor. You need to be a lawyer,” and you said, “I\’ll do that. I\’ll do whatever this person says.”

\"VSP Being Seen: Connect with who you truly are. You need to see who you are and what you desire. Many people spend years of their life building a future they don\’t even want.

 

Whether it is a family member or a teacher or somebody that said that you needed to be this and have this future, you wake up and you\’re like, “This is not what is in alignment for me.” When you start figuring out who you truly are and what you truly desire and how you want to be seen in the world, and you start laying that foundation and you start building the confidence to be able to share who you are, all of these opportunities and doors start to open. It doesn\’t necessarily mean in your job or in your work environment. It means in your relationships, your fulfillment of your life, how you serve the world, and how you give back and your legacy that you\’re leaping. All of this works for anybody.

The two things that I\’m thinking about right now that are maybe the core things to what you are talking about is when you are an influential person or you have visibility in what you\’re doing and you\’re an authority on what you\’re doing, all three of those things are helping others. If you\’re an authority, you\’re the person who\’s going to help them understand something that they need to know. You\’re going to help somebody as a way of being an authority on it.

If you\’re an influencer, you\’re helping people with advice or with some ideas and with some tools that can help them. If you\’re visible, you\’re out there and finding people in your organization, in your community, wherever you may be where you can be a help or an inspiration to somebody else. Being that true confident person who gets out there and helps people. A lot of it\’s about helping people.

We live by these four letters. It\’s a great way to wrap up our chat because it\’s one of the most powerful things that help me put myself out there every day. It\’s the word HOPE. It stands for Help One Person Everyday. The best way to feel amazing is to help someone else. If you can wake up every day and think about helping one person, it will probably kickstart a snowball effect of helping more people, because maybe that one person, because you help them, will go out and be a better and kinder person to other people. Help one person every day and you\’ll be happier.

[bctt tweet=\”The best way to feel amazing is to help someone else.\” username=\”calentertainmnt\”]

Jen, honestly, this has been so much fun. I can say that we have scratched the surface of what you\’re all about and the things I\’ve learned knowing you in the years I\’ve known you. I\’m excited about you as a speaker. I\’m excited about people getting to know you as well. I appreciate you spending your time with me.

This was so much fun. I love it. I love talking to you. Every chance I get is always a pleasure.

Thank you so much, Jen. I will talk to you soon. Take care.

 

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About Jen Gottlieb

\"VSPJen Gottlieb is an expert at helping people and brands to Be Seen! Jen is the founder of a full-service PR agency, awarded “Best New Agency” in the 2019 Bulldog Awards, is a powerful influencer with 250,000 social media followers, and has been featured on many top podcasts as well as in Forbes, Business Insider, Shape, Women’s Health, Goop (who named her one of “11 Professionals who help people find more success and satisfaction in their careers), and on Good Morning America, PBS, Well + Good, and more. As a Former VH1 host and Broadway actress, Jen uses her decade of performance experience, confidence consulting, and media training to inspire entrepreneurs and leaders to connect better with their teams, the media, and ultimately, themselves.

Jen is half mindset coach and half media coach. As one of the leading PR execs and minds in the country, her passion is giving clients and audiences the confidence, authority, and social proof/ credibility to place them at the top of their industry. Along the way, Jen helps them leverage their own strengths, transforming them into the best version of who they are.

In between being on Broadway and VH1 to now owning a PR firm, Jen created and ran a fitness training and high-performance mindset coaching brand helping celebrities, CEOs and entrepreneurs transform their bodies, minds, and frankly, their lives. Helping clients shed up to 70 pounds was incredible, but her favorite part was seeing them shine. Beyond stepping into a smaller suit or dress, they were now stepping onto the stage, stepping in front of the camera, stepping into their full potential. Jen wanted more of that. So now, she’s living out her full potential, excited to inspire your audience from the stage.

 

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