How One Coach Transformed Her Relationship With Magnetic Marketing Energy-Based in 90 Days

This is an illustrative example. The practitioner described is a composite character representing patterns commonly seen in coaches who do this work. It does not depict a specific real person.


When the coach — call her Maya — came to the work, her showing up was technically consistent. She was posting regularly, engaging genuinely with her audience, producing content that was thoughtful and well-written. But something wasn’t producing the pull she expected. The engagement was polite. The clients who arrived were serviceable matches. Nobody seemed to find her through genuine recognition — through the sense of “this person understands something about my situation that I haven’t been able to name.”

Maya had diagnosed her situation as a reach problem. She needed more people to see her work. She had been investing in strategies to expand her audience. The audience had grown; the quality of what the audience was doing with her work hadn’t changed.

Days 1–30: The Diagnostic Work

The first shift came when Maya sat honestly with a diagnostic question: what would her magnetic showing up look like if she were settled — genuinely settled — in the value of what she offered? The gap between her answer and her current practice was significant.

She could describe the showing up she’d produce from that settled place. It was more specific about who she was actually trying to reach. It was more willing to say hard things about what the clients she wanted to serve were actually carrying. It was less about demonstrating expertise and more about genuine encounter with the territory.

The daily practice foundation of this 90-day transformation began here: a five-minute morning practice of attending to what was genuinely alive in her thinking, and a commitment to writing one honest observation per day — for herself, without the pressure of immediate publication.

The diagnostic also revealed a somatic pattern. When Maya imagined sharing her most genuine material — the harder observations, the more specific truths — she noticed a quality of contraction that preceded whatever came next. That contraction was shaping what made it to the page and what didn’t.

Days 31–60: The Shift in What Got Published

The second month involved a specific experiment: before editing any piece of showing up, Maya identified the sentence or paragraph she most wanted to remove — the one that felt most exposed — and kept it. Sometimes this changed the piece significantly. Sometimes it changed nothing visible. But the practice of noticing what she was systematically protecting from publication produced a steady stream of information about the specific gap between what she knew and what she was showing.

The identity shift at the heart of this transformation began to show in the content. The showing up became more specific. The people she was writing for were more clearly named — not in a demographic way, but in a recognitional way. The content started to read as if it was written for someone who was carrying a specific thing, rather than for an audience of potential clients in general.

The response changed quality before it changed quantity. The comments became more substantive. One or two people per week started to make contact saying something in the range of “I found your work and it’s exactly what I’ve been looking for.” Maya had been hoping for that response. Now it was starting to arrive.

Days 61–90: The Compounding

The quiet signs of this kind of magnetic transformation appeared steadily through the third month. The creating became less effortful. The monitoring — the compulsive checking of response — quieted without conscious effort. The clients who were arriving through the updated showing up were better fits. One of them mentioned that they’d been reading Maya’s work for three months before reaching out, and that the specific shift in the quality of what she was sharing in the second month had been what moved them from interested to committed.

Somatic practices that supported this transformation helped Maya work with the activation that still arose before sharing the more exposed material. The activation didn’t disappear. But it became less automatic in its influence on what made it to the page.

At the 90-day mark, Maya’s showing up was producing something different: not more reach, but more genuine recognition among the people who were finding it. The pull was more specific. The clients were a better match. The sense of being undervalued that she had normalized — the chronic sense that the work was worth more than its current market — had started to shift.

Not because she had found a better strategy. Because the quality of presence she was bringing to the strategy she already had had changed.


The Abundance GPS Skool community supports this kind of 90-day development — with the practices, the community, and the framework for developing genuine magnetic presence over time. The door is open at https://www.skool.com/miraclesforme/about.