The CLARITI Method Applied to Magnetic Marketing Energy-Based
Showing up consistently in your marketing isn’t primarily a scheduling or willpower problem. That’s worth sitting with, because most practitioners address it as if it were — adding another calendar system, another accountability structure, another streak tracker.
The deeper issue is usually identity. Not in a vague, motivational sense, but in a precise structural sense: you can’t sustainably show up from an identity that doesn’t include “someone who shows up.” And building that identity requires something more specific than telling yourself to believe it.
The CLARITI method offers that more specific sequence. Applied to the showing-up dimension of your work, it moves through six stages that address not just your behaviour but the identity infrastructure underneath it — including the places where that infrastructure is genuinely underinvested.
Why Identity Is the Underlying Layer
What the CLARITI method actually addresses is the gap between how you want to show up and how you actually do — not the gap in knowledge or strategy, but the gap in identity. When showing up feels like performance rather than expression, the problem is usually that you’re trying to show up from an identity that hasn’t yet integrated consistent presence as one of its traits.
Identity alignment as a foundational component of magnetic presence means that the work of building a genuine showing-up practice isn’t separate from the work of building the identity that can sustain it. The CLARITI sequence is the map for doing both simultaneously.
The Six Stages Applied to Showing Up
C — Construct Identity
The first stage is definitional: who are you, specifically, in relation to showing up? Not who you aspire to be — who you currently are, honestly. Most practitioners discover here that their current identity includes something like “someone who wants to show up more consistently” rather than “someone who shows up.” The gap between those two is the starting point, not a problem to be ashamed of.
From this honest starting point, you construct a clearer picture of the identity you’re building toward: someone who creates and shares from genuine conviction, who maintains presence through the ordinary weeks, who recovers from missed days without drama. This constructed identity becomes the reference point for the stages that follow.
L — Liberate Beliefs
The beliefs that block consistent presence are specific. They’re not random. The price-to-value framework, applied here as a diagnostic tool, reveals something useful: the practitioner who doesn’t show up consistently has often — consciously or not — done a kind of cost-benefit analysis and concluded the value isn’t worth the vulnerability cost.
“I might be judged for what I share.” “I’m not sure my perspective is distinct enough to warrant a regular voice.” “The effort of showing up authentically isn’t returning what it costs me.”
These are the beliefs that need examining. Not through affirmations layered over them, but through the same value-revelation process applied in price-to-value communication: what is actually available through genuine presence that isn’t available through continued invisibility? When this is examined honestly rather than through the lens of abstract motivation, the belief often shifts.
A — Acquire Skills
The identity layer of showing up distinguishes between identity and skill: you can have the identity of “someone who shows up” and still lack specific skills that make showing up easier. These skills include things like: the capacity to move from a contracted, defensive state to a grounded one before creating; the practice of writing from genuine knowledge rather than from what you think the algorithm wants; the ability to notice when you’ve drifted into performance and return to presence without self-judgment.
These are learnable. The acquisition stage is about building them deliberately rather than hoping they’ll emerge from increased motivation.
R — Reinforce Traits
The traits that characterize consistent magnetic presence — groundedness, service orientation, the ability to create without approval-seeking — are built through repetition. This stage is about identifying the specific daily or weekly practices that reinforce those traits in your nervous system, not just your intentions.
What practices, done consistently, reliably produce the state you want to be in when you create? This is a question worth answering precisely, because the answer is different for different practitioners. For some it’s movement. For others it’s a brief connection to service before starting. For others it’s a writing ritual that bypasses the internal editor.
I — Identify Roadblocks
Moving from method to daily practice always encounters friction. The roadblock identification stage is about naming the specific friction points in your showing-up practice — not the general “I struggle with consistency” but the precise moments when it breaks down.
What specifically triggers the contraction? What time of day does the practice reliably dissolve? What kind of internal event (a piece of content that didn’t land, a difficult comment, a week of low visibility) leads to extended absence? Naming these precisely makes them workable.
I — Transformational Work
The final stage is integration in its deepest sense: the point at which the identity you constructed in the first stage has been tested, refined, and reinforced through the practice. The full CLARITI sequence applied doesn’t produce a fixed, finished identity — it produces an identity that can continue to deepen. The transformational work is ongoing, cycling through the six stages as each round of practice reveals new edges and new possibilities.
The Value Underneath
The price-to-value lens, brought fully into this framework, reveals something worth naming: the value of genuine, consistent showing up is almost always underestimated by the practitioner who hasn’t yet done it consistently. The internal cost of invisibility — the unexpressed perspective, the accumulated resistance to one’s own voice — is rarely calculated against the vulnerability cost of visible presence. When it is, the calculation usually changes.
The CLARITI method gives that calculation a structure. And structure makes the work possible in a way that intention alone never quite does.
The Abundance GPS Skool community applies the CLARITI method to the full range of showing-up challenges — including the identity layer that most approaches don’t reach. If you want to build this kind of practice with others doing the same work, the door is open at https://www.skool.com/miraclesforme/about.
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