I want to tell you something I say to my clients often, and it usually feels somewhere between relief and mild offence.
You probably don’t have a visibility problem.
I know that’s not what you were told. Somewhere along the way, someone convinced you that if the numbers aren’t moving, the answer is simply to do more. Post more. Email more. Show up on another platform you don’t even enjoy. If you’re posting twice a day, post seven times. If you’re sending ten emails a week, send fifty. I understand the logic. Scaling activity feels like progress. But before you compound anything, I need you to answer one honest question first.
What exactly do you want to be visible for?
### The Wide Net Doesn’t Catch More, It Catches Confusion
Here’s where a lot of skilled, credible people get stuck. You have real experience. You’ve helped people before. But when someone asks what you do, the answer comes out broad. Something like, I help entrepreneurs save more time and achieve their goals.
On paper, that sounds generous. In practice, it tells your ideal client nothing. Which entrepreneurs. Real estate people, salon owners, group business owners, actors, influencers. And which goals. Personal goals, business goals, money goals, habit goals, team building goals. You’ve cast a wide net thinking the wider it is, the more fish you’ll catch.
The problem is human beings are not fish.
People have priorities, and those priorities are ranked. A busy mother might genuinely want to learn how to swim one day. But right now, making sure her team has the right tools and her business is stable comes first. That’s not a lack of interest in swimming. That’s a hierarchy of needs, and your offer has to know exactly where it sits in someone’s hierarchy before it can compete for their attention.
### Shouting Louder In The Wrong Market
Think about walking into an electronics shop when what you actually want is a wig. Now imagine you’re the one selling wigs, standing inside that same electronics market, convinced that if you just shout louder, someone will eventually buy. You could have the best wig in Lagos. It won’t matter. You are loud in the wrong room.
That’s what happens when visibility becomes your strategy without positioning underneath it. You’re not reaching the wrong number of people. You’re reaching the wrong people, loudly.
### Why Boundaries Matter More Than You Think
This is where I want you to sit with the idea of clear boundaries, not as restriction, but as filtering. Boundaries help you filter out the rubbish, the irrelevant, the activity for activity’s sake that doesn’t move your top line or your bottom line. Without them, you end up trying to do everything, for everyone, everywhere.
And when you scatter your energy across ten directions, nothing gets the depth it needs to actually work. Things move slowly not because you’re lazy, but because your effort is spread too thin to build momentum anywhere.
More visibility without clear positioning doesn’t bring you better clients. It brings you more of the same friction. More conversations that go nowhere. More I’ll think about it, or it’s too expensive, or let me pray on it, from people who were never your right fit to begin with. Not because your offer lacks value, but because it never spoke to them clearly enough to matter more than their excuses.
### The Real Work Is Releasing The Idea That Loud Equals Understood
Here’s the mind shift I want you to take from this. The people who genuinely need what you offer aren’t sitting there wondering if they need help. They already know that. What they’re actually asking, silently, is this. Do you understand my problem well enough to solve it for me?
That understanding doesn’t come from volume. It comes from clarity. Until you know exactly who you are, where your value sits, and what your specific strength is, you can’t build that into a product or service that genuinely helps anyone.
When you try to be everything to everyone, you end up being memorable to no one.
I know the fear underneath the resistance to narrowing down. It feels like if you get specific, you’ll miss out on the people outside that lane. But you won’t. What is yours is yours, and it responds to being called by name, not shouted at from a distance.
If you’re still in a season of soul searching, that’s fine. Your results will reflect that, scattered, inconsistent, everywhere at once, because you’re still discovering who you are and how you prefer to work. But the moment you decide, clearly, on who you serve and what you solve, you gain the ability to say it in a way that pulls in the people who are ready, willing, and able to buy from you again and again.
That’s not a visibility upgrade. That’s a positioning decision.
And once your positioning is clear, the systems that turn that clarity into consistent income are what we build inside the 7 Day Launch Challenge.

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