Tilly Davies

Tilly Davies Inconsistent Revenue Starts With a Broken Pipeline. Fix Yours Here. booking.bizwithai.pro

The hardest thing I've ever had to unlearn:That my worth was tied to my output.I used to power through illness.Work thro...
06/06/2026

The hardest thing I've ever had to unlearn:

That my worth was tied to my output.

I used to power through illness.
Work through grief.
Quietly apologise for needing a break — as if rest was something I had to earn.

As if my value as a human being was measured by what I produced.

It wasn't until everything slowed down — when I had no choice but to stop — that I realised how much of myself I had abandoned chasing "more."

I'm still unlearning it.

Some days I'm better at it than others.

But I'm slowly, truly learning this:

Rest is not the enemy of growth.

Rest is where growth actually happens.

What's something you're still in the process of unlearning? 💛

(This is a safe space. No judgment here — I promise.)

Nobody warns you that building a business can feel like standing outside a party.You can see the lights. Hear the music....
04/06/2026

Nobody warns you that building a business can feel like standing outside a party.

You can see the lights. Hear the music.
Everyone inside seems to know something you don't.
Like there's a secret formula being passed around — and somehow, you missed it.

I felt like that for years.

Trying to fit into rooms that weren't built for me.
Shrinking myself to belong somewhere I was never going to truly belong.

Until one day I stopped trying to get into someone else's party.

And started building my own table.

A table where different thinking is welcome.
Where "I'm still figuring it out" is a badge of honour, not a confession.
Where questions are celebrated, not judged.

If you've ever stood on the outside of something you desperately wanted to belong to —

You belong here. ❤️

Tag someone who needs to see this today. 👇

I used to think asking for help was weakness.I'd figure it out myself. Always.Google it. Watch the tutorial. Lose three ...
03/06/2026

I used to think asking for help was weakness.

I'd figure it out myself. Always.

Google it. Watch the tutorial. Lose three days going down rabbit holes.
All because I didn't want anyone to see that I didn't already know.

It took me longer than I'd like to admit to realise:

The people who grow the fastest aren't the ones who know the most.

They're the ones who ask the best questions.

The ones who can say "I don't know — can you help me understand this?" without shrinking an inch.

That shift changed everything for me.

From performing like I was further ahead than I was.
To being genuinely curious about what I still had to learn.

There's so much freedom in that. I wish someone had told me sooner.

What's something you wish you'd asked for help with earlier?

(Mine was learning to delegate. I held on way, way too long.) 😅

Six months ago, I genuinely didn't know if I was going to keep going.Not "keep going" as in succeed.Keep going as in kee...
02/06/2026

Six months ago, I genuinely didn't know if I was going to keep going.

Not "keep going" as in succeed.
Keep going as in keep going.

I was exhausted in a way sleep couldn't fix.
Doubting everything. Wondering if I'd built something real — or just a beautiful-looking idea that was quietly falling apart.

And then something small happened.

A client sent me a message.

Not about results. Not about ROI or metrics or growth.

Just: "You changed how I think about my business."

That was it. One sentence. From one person.

And I remembered why I started.

Sometimes hope doesn't arrive as a lightning bolt.

Sometimes it arrives as a quiet message on a Tuesday morning.
From someone who didn't even know you needed it.

What's the smallest thing that has ever given you the biggest hope?
Tell me below. I genuinely want to know. ❤️

There's a specific kind of lonely that comes with building something.It's not the kind where you're sitting in an empty ...
01/06/2026

There's a specific kind of lonely that comes with building something.

It's not the kind where you're sitting in an empty room.

It's the kind where you're surrounded by people who love you — but don't quite get it.

Who can't understand why you can't just switch off after 5pm.
Why you're up at 2am rethinking a conversation from three days ago.
Why a bad month doesn't just affect your bank balance — it shakes your whole identity.

For a long time, I thought something was wrong with me.

Until I found my people.

The ones who celebrate the small wins because they know exactly how hard they were.
The ones who say "me too" before you've even finished the sentence.
The ones who don't need an explanation — they just know.

If you're feeling that kind of lonely right now —

You haven't found your people yet. But they exist. And they are looking for you.

Drop a 🙋‍♀️ below if you know this feeling. Let's find each other. ❤️

01/06/2026

You’re stronger than this moment

Even if it doesn’t feel like it

Hard moments pass

Growth stays

This is shaping you

Have a blessed day… keep going

01/06/2026

You’re carrying too much pressure

To succeed
To figure it out
To get it right

But pressure doesn’t create clarity

Space does

Breathe… then move forward

CTA:
Stay with me… one step at a time

01/06/2026

AI is making you faster… not better

That’s the truth

AI increases output massively
but doesn’t fix strategy

Speed without direction leads nowhere

Follow me… let’s get direction right

I came across this post by Alex Hormozi on Threads:“We stay poor until we’ve learned all the lessons poverty has to teac...
01/06/2026

I came across this post by Alex Hormozi on Threads:

“We stay poor until we’ve learned all the lessons poverty has to teach.”

It’s a powerful statement, and it certainly makes you stop and think.

But the marketer, strategist, and entrepreneur in me couldn’t help questioning it.

Does poverty really have all the lessons we need to learn? Or does it teach one set of lessons, while wealth requires us to learn an entirely different set?

Here’s my perspective…

On one level, it captures an important truth: poverty can teach resourcefulness, resilience, delayed gratification, creativity, gratitude, and the ability to distinguish needs from wants. Many successful entrepreneurs credit difficult circumstances for developing strengths that later became advantages.

However, taken literally, the statement can become misleading.

Poverty is not always a teacher. Sometimes it’s simply a constraint.

Warren Buffett wasn’t successful because he learned every lesson poverty had to teach. He became successful because he learned the lessons of capital allocation, investing, and compounding. Likewise, many people remain poor despite learning resilience, hard work, and sacrifice. The missing lessons are often about leverage, ownership, networks, sales, investing, and value creation.

A more accurate version might be:

“We stay poor until we learn the lessons that poverty makes visible, and then acquire the lessons that wealth requires.”

Those are two different educations.

Poverty often teaches:

* Survival
* Resourcefulness
* Discipline
* Appreciation
* Persistence

Wealth requires learning:

* Ownership over wages
* Investing over spending
* Leverage over effort
* Systems over hustle
* Long-term thinking over short-term relief

One of the biggest traps is turning poverty lessons into permanent rules. For example:

* Saving every penny is useful when you’re struggling.
* Investing aggressively is often necessary when you’re building wealth.
* Doing everything yourself helps when you have no money.
* Delegating becomes essential when you’re trying to scale.

The lesson that got you out of poverty is not always the lesson that creates prosperity.

The real question isn’t whether you’ve learned all of poverty’s lessons.

It’s whether you’ve started learning the lessons of wealth.

How many leads has your business lost simply because nobody followed up?Most businesses don't have a lead problem.They h...
01/06/2026

How many leads has your business lost simply because nobody followed up?

Most businesses don't have a lead problem.

They have a follow-up problem.

It's easier to believe leads disappeared, weren't qualified, or weren't serious.

But more often than not, they were simply neglected.

A message was never answered.

A follow-up never happened.

A prospect showed interest and then slipped through the cracks.

That's why one of the most valuable questions a business can ask is:

"What happens after someone raises their hand?"

How are leads being tracked?

Who is responsible for following up?

How many conversations are still sitting in someone's memory instead of a system?

The uncomfortable truth is that many businesses are working hard to generate more leads while quietly losing the ones they already have.

More marketing won't fix that.

More traffic won't fix that.

Better systems will.

Because growth isn't only about attracting attention.

It's about managing opportunities.

And when you stop asking, "How do we get more leads?" and start asking, "How do we take better care of the leads we already have?" everything changes.

Sometimes the fastest path to growth isn't finding more prospects.

It's stopping the loss of the ones already in front of you.

What's one thing your business does to make sure leads don't fall through the cracks?

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