ALISON PENTECOST

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freelance creative focus and productivity

Day One Energy: A New Year Reset for Body & Business

January 7, 2026 by AlisonP Leave a Comment

By Alison Pentecost — Voice Actor & Host of Freelance Fitness

A Reset Doesn’t Necessarily Mean Starting Over

Today, I want to talk about new beginnings.
Or better yet—
resets.

You don’t need to burn everything down and start from scratch to feel nerves, doubt, or uncertainty. You can feel all of that even when you’re experienced, but still evolving. Even when you’re working. Even when things are technically “going well.”

I feel it too.
New year. New plans.
Branching out in my voiceover business.
Closing doors on things that weren’t working. (Hello, doubt!)
Stepping into new areas. (Hello, terror!)

Waiting, stalling, or staying comfortable doesn’t grow a freelance business—especially not a creative business like voiceover. So instead, I’ve had to learn how to move forward with the nerves. Adapt. Pivot. Reassess. Keep going.

If you’re feeling nervous—or honestly scared—about a new direction in your freelance career, welcome. That reaction is normal. Healthy, even.

So, what if today wasn’t just another workday, another audition, another January resolution?

What if this was Day One?

This day.
This action.
This feeling in your body right now.

You know what we forget as adults?

You’re allowed to be bad at the beginning.

But Being Bad Is Embarrassing!

Let’s be honest with ourselves.

Your first voiceover auditions? Probably rough.
Your first demos, edits, marketing emails, reels, websites? Clunky.
Your first attempts at 
anything new in your creative career? Awkward.

There might be flashes of brilliance—little diamonds in the rough—but mostly, it’s messy.

And you know what? That’s great news.

Because if everyone sucks at the beginning, the pressure is off. You don’t need to wait until you feel ready. You just need to begin. And beginning is the only way anything ever improves.

Here’s another truth that applies directly to running a sustainable creative business:

When things start to feel automatic—when you could sleepwalk through your reels, your reads, your designs—that’s usually your cue to switch things up.

Because when you’re phoning it in:

  • Is that really your best work?
  • Is that what your clients deserve?
  • Is that why you chose freelance voice acting in the first place?

Those butterflies you feel before a job?
Before a workout?
Before trying something new?

They’re not a problem.
They’re a signal.

They mean you care.
They mean you’re challenged—not bored.
They mean you’re alive in the process.

But this is also where shame tends to creep in.

All the “I shoulds”:

  • I should be further along.
  • I should be more confident.
  • I should have launched already.

Here’s a small shift that changes everything:

Replace “I should” with “I would prefer.”

I would prefer to be more consistent.
I would prefer to feel more confident.
I would prefer to move forward.

That’s very different from tearing yourself down for not being somewhere you’ve never been before.

I had to learn this lesson the hard way when I launched Freelance Fitness. I had a plan. A timeline. A neat little deadline that made perfect sense—until real life showed up.

Work. Family. Learning curves I didn’t anticipate.
I missed my own deadline and felt ashamed… even though I had never launched a podcast before.

Would I talk to a friend—or one of my kids—that way while they were learning something new?

Never.

As adults, we forget how learning works. Kids fall, wobble, look silly, and keep going. Adults worry about being watched.

Hate to break it to you, but most people aren’t watching.
Most people are too busy with their own stuff.

So forget about it.

Growth requires failure.
Creativity requires courage.
And laughter helps more than shame ever will.

A Practical Reset for Your Business

So what do we do with this reset—especially as freelance creatives trying to build something sustainable?

First: manage your expectations.

Freelance life isn’t a salaried job. No one covers your tasks if you don’t finish them. Your energy is limited. You’re one human.

Starting a freelance business is a lot like having a newborn:

  • If the essentials are handled, the day counts as a win.
  • Some days, you’re polished and client-facing.
  • Some days, you’re in pyjama pants eating cereal over the sink.

Both days are valid. Both move the business forward.

Yes, you need a plan.
Yes, you need checklists.
But you also need 
wiggle room.

Course corrections aren’t failures. They’re part of the process.

So here’s your New Year reset, simplified:

  • Treat today like Day One, not a test.
  • Let yourself be bad while you learn.
  • Switch things up when you feel stale.
  • Welcome the butterflies.
  • Speak to yourself like someone you love.
  • Keep moving forward—even if it’s slower than you planned.

You don’t need a perfect start.

You just need an honest one.

Filed Under: Freelance Fitness Tagged With: businesstips, CreativeFreelanceLife, female voice, freelance, freelance business momentum strategies, freelance business tips, freelance creative focus and productivity, freelance voiceover career advice, FreelanceFitnessPodcast, freelancehacks, professional development, professional female voice talent, Small Business Advice, voice actor business planning, VoiceActor, voiceover

Strong Body, Strong Vision, Strong Business: Making a Business Plan

December 31, 2025 by AlisonP Leave a Comment

By Alison Pentecost, Bilingual Voice Actor & Host of Freelance Fitness

Why Creative Freelancers Need a Business Plan (Yes, Even You)

Alright, let’s get focused.
New year, new strength, new clarity.

In the latest episode of Freelance Fitness, the workout is built around effort and intention — and your business goals need that same energy.

You probably have goals for this year.
Maybe they’re crystal clear. Maybe they’re still a little fuzzy.

But even with grit, motivation, and talent — and if you’re here, you have all three — goals don’t magically turn into results on their own.

They need a plan.

Not a 40-page corporate document.
Not something rigid that boxes you in.

A clear, flexible business plan that outlines:

  • where you’re going
  • how you’ll know if it’s working
  • and what doesn’t belong on the path

I avoided this for years. I tried winging it. Sometimes it worked. Sometimes… not so much. And the inconsistency was exhausting.

Life has no guarantees — only risks worth taking. You can’t control outcomes, but you can control your focus, your effort, and how often you reassess your direction.

Success isn’t about following the algorithm or copying someone else’s strategy.
It’s about defining what “enough” looks like 
for you — and building toward that on purpose.

The Hidden Cost of Distractions (a.k.a. Energy Leaks)

When we talk about focus, most people think distractions = phones, notifications, endless scrolling.

But for creative freelancers — especially voiceover artists — distractions are often sneakier.

They look like:

  • Projects that don’t align with your long-term goals
  • Clients who drain more energy than they’re worth
  • Marketing tactics you “should” do but secretly hate
  • Busywork that feels productive but moves nothing forward
  • Tweaking your logo instead of sending auditions or pitches
  • Constantly comparing yourself to other creatives

All of the above?
Yeah.
Been there, done that. More than once.

Here’s the rule of thumb I come back to again and again:

If something doesn’t move you toward your goal —
or support your well-being so you 
can reach your goal —
it’s a distraction.

Your energy is a limited resource.
Where you spend it matters.

Focused creatives deliver better work. Clear systems create better collaborations. A sustainable business benefits everyone involved.

How to Build a Simple, Effective Business Plan

This is where most people overcomplicate things — so let’s not.

A business plan for a creative freelancer should be simple, actionable, and aligned with real life. A few pages. Not a thesis.

Here’s a practical framework you can actually use.

1. Your Vision

Ask yourself:

  • What do I want my work life to feel like?
  • What kinds of projects light me up?
  • Who do I genuinely want to work with?

This is especially important in voiceover, where burnout can sneak in fast if you say yes to everything.

2. Your Offer

Be clear:

  • What do you actually sell?
  • What problem do you solve for the client?
  • What’s the value or transformation they get?

3. Your Market & Positioning

  • Who needs your work the most?
  • How do you stand out naturally — without forcing a niche that doesn’t fit?
  • Where do your best clients spend their time?

4. Your Numbers

Nothing fancy — just honest:

  • Income targets
  • Baseline expenses
  • Booking rate or project volume needed
  • Time capacity

Simple metrics you can check monthly beat perfect projections you never revisit.

5. Your Systems

Write down:

  • How people find you
  • How you onboard clients
  • How you deliver
  • How you follow up

Even a bare-bones version of these five sections gives you more clarity than most freelancers ever take the time to get — which gives you an edge.

And remember:

  • You can adapt the plan
  • You can rewrite the plan
  • You can throw parts of it out if they stop serving you

The goal isn’t rigidity.
It’s 
direction.

Your Next Steps (Keep It Simple, Silly!)

  1. Picture your goal clearly — and put it somewhere you’ll see it.
  2. Identify one distraction you can eliminate this week. Just one.
  3. Sketch a one-page business plan using the five sections above.
  4. Track what you actually do (real behaviour > ideal behaviour).
  5. Adjust with curiosity, not shame.

This is your path — not anyone else’s.

You’re allowed to want great things.
You’re allowed to take up space.
You’re allowed to build a business — and a body — you’re proud of.

Let’s train with purpose.
Let’s work with intention.
Let’s make this our most focused and productive year yet.

Filed Under: Freelance Fitness Tagged With: businesstips, creative freelancer business plan, CreativeFreelanceLife, exercise, female voice, fitness, freelance, freelance business momentum strategies, freelance business tips, freelance creative focus and productivity, freelancehacks, how to grow a voiceover business, professional development, professional female voice talent, Small Business Advice, VoiceActor, voiceover

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