Episodi

  • The True Cost of Styled Shoots (and Why You Don’t Have to Do It Alone)
    Feb 23 2026
    Hello Flower friends. Today we're gonna talk about style shoots, and I've been reminded of really like the costs, not only from a, you know. Actual phy physical costs, like money, you have to pay for the flowers and all these things, but like the emotional costs and the mental energy that you're using there, it's so much bigger than I think somebody looking in on Instagram at somebody's magical moment really is.So, style shoots are super glamorous on Instagram, but let's really talk about the actual cost you. Because that's way, way, way, way, way more than flowers. All right, so let's start off with the real cost of flowers. You are usually not putting your shoddy foot forward, so we're not usually putting in things that are leftovers or are maybe not at their peak of their prime, usually not basic Betty Flowers you're using.Buying premium blooms, you're designing multiple pieces for content. So a ceremony, a table, a bouquet, an installation on and on. Flowers are often not easily repurposable for paid work, so you're not like able to just, I'm gonna take all these and then tear it apart and then use it for a paid job. Usually there isn't that like great opportunity to do that. And then there's a risk of waste if designs don't photograph well, like you could potentially have something that just doesn't photograph well for some reason. Um, this is a marketing expense, not a fun creative project. It costs money to market. In styled shoots are a way to market your business in several levels.Marketing with the pictures that you're getting in the long run. Marketing, hopefully if you have a team on board that is stellar and is, you know, uh, people who are usually kind of at their top of their game that are, are vendors that like to be submitted for styled shoots for potential publication. Then there's a relationship capital. The relationships that you build at these, it's just, there's just domino of value, and I would love for you to get that value out of those situations, but I would love for you not to blow your marketing budget on one. All right, the next one. Is really the time costs, and nobody really talks about this, but as someone who backs into what my hourly wage is. Often and does that with coaching clients, like things take time, mood boards, conceptions, like all of those things, take time. Emailing with collaborators, coordinating schedules, chasing deliverables, packing and loading, and set up and tear down, editing content, posting, tagging, following up. You could easily put in 24 40, 22, 40 hours into one shoot.Easy. Um, and that's time you could have spent designing for paying clients, working on your business or imagine this resting. All right. The next one is the mental and emotional load. This part is exhausting. Will the photographer deliver the actual. Like look and feel that I'm going for, will this venue share the images?Will this even attract my ideal client? Do I choose? Did I choose? Like, you know, you're always looking at something and you're just like, oh my God, it's so beautiful. But really, did you choose the right color palette, concept model, and all of that for the right. You know, venue and all of that with the right photographer.'cause like all these things kind of meld together. The emotional labor on this is totally real. All right. Then there is the collaboration tax. Even with donations, you are still coordinating a mini production. You are often carrying the creative and logistics load because like the flowers are the prettiest part of that. I care about things being really fucking pretty when I'm doing these types of things, and that can sometimes be dicey, so I, I wanna make sure that I'm getting the right team in place. All right, and then you're relying on other people's professionalism. You can't, don't control timelines, edits, or brand alignment, and sometimes you walk away with images you don't even want to use, which is a complete truth.I had this exact example when gay marriage was legalized in Minnesota. Somebody invited me into a inclusive shoot that was basically like a pride themed. It was in June, so it was going to be published in like a local pride, um, themed magazine and on and on, and. The photographer, like I really liked them as a person, but that was some dark and booty shit.Like they just have a darker photo style than I like to fill my feed with. I like light and airy. I think light and airy speaks to money, and so I spent close to a thousand dollars of flowers and I mean, I can say that I did it and I did it for a good reason to celebrate, but. I didn't post those photos because they were too dark and it just wasn't my jam. All right, then here's the hard truth. Style shoots are high effort, high emotional output, like high cost, low certainty from an ROI perspective. They can be, but. They're not only the one way to build a portfolio or elevate your brand...
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    13 min
  • You Deserve to Make Money: Money Mindset Shifts Every Florist Needs
    Feb 18 2026

    Money is one of the most emotional, loaded topics in the floral industry—and it’s keeping too many florists stuck in survival mode. In this episode, Jen dives deep into the money mindset shifts florists need to make to stop undercharging, stop feeling guilty about profit, and start building a business that actually supports their life.

    If you’ve ever felt awkward charging what you’re worth, told yourself “I do this because I love flowers,” or normalized burnout as part of the job—this episode is your wake-up call.

    In this episode, we cover:

    • Why wanting to make money does not make you greedy
    • The damaging “starving artist” narrative in creative industries
    • Why revenue does not equal profit (and why so many florists still aren’t paying themselves)
    • How underpricing actually hurts your clients, not just you
    • The invisible labor florists provide (logistics, emotional labor, problem-solving)
    • Why your business should fund your life—not consume it
    • The difference between survival mode and abundance mode
    • How being paid well allows you to show up more creatively and confidently

    Powerful Money Mindset Shifts:

    • Wanting more money = financial security, not greed
    • Being busy doesn’t mean being successful
    • Underpricing isn’t generosity—it’s self-sabotage
    • Your expertise has value beyond the flowers
    • You don’t have to struggle to be worthy
    • A profitable business creates freedom, not burnout

    Reflection Prompts from This Episode:

    • Where am I undercharging because I’m afraid?
    • What would change if I truly believed I deserved to be paid well?
    • What is one small money boundary I can set this month?
    • What hourly rate do I actually need to feel valued for my time?

    Links & Resources Mentioned:

    • Floral CEO Mastermind: https://floralceo.com/mastermind
    • Workshops & Education: https://floralceo.com/workshop
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    29 min
  • From Chaos to Clarity: A Post-Valentine’s Day Recap for Florists
    Feb 16 2026

    Valentine’s Day is over—and whether you crushed it or barely survived, the real growth happens after the holiday. In this minisode, Jen walks florists through how to do a post-holiday recap like a CEO so you can stop repeating the same chaos every year and start building a more profitable, sustainable business.

    If you’re tired of white-knuckling holidays and hoping “next year will be better,” this episode will show you how to turn Valentine’s (and every major holiday) into a data-driven growth strategy.

    In this episode, we cover:

    • Why the money is in the review, not just the revenue
    • How to use data (not feelings) to make better business decisions
    • The 5 areas every florist should review after Valentine’s Day:
      • Financials (revenue, average order value, profit margin)
      • Operations & systems (what broke, what worked)
      • Labor & staffing (overstaffed vs understaffed)
      • Product mix & pricing (what sold, what didn’t)
      • Your energy & capacity (burnout prevention)
    • How your Valentine’s data informs:
      • Mother’s Day
      • Prom
      • Wedding season
      • Hiring decisions
    • The CEO mindset shift from “survive it” to “optimize it”
    • How to make future holidays more profitable without working harder

    Free Resource:
    Download the free Holiday Recap Worksheet to walk through this process step by step:
    👉 https://floralceo.com/holiday

    This worksheet helps you review:

    • Your numbers
    • Your systems
    • Your staffing
    • Your pricing
    • Your own capacity

    So next year, you’re not guessing—you’re leading like a CEO.

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    15 min
  • Feeling Overwhelmed But Want to Grow Your Floral Business? Start With These 10 Moves
    Feb 11 2026

    Feeling overwhelmed, stretched thin, and still wanting your floral business to grow? You’re not broken—you’re human. In this minisode, Jen breaks down 10 simple, doable actions to help you regain momentum in your business even when life feels heavy. This episode is all about compassionate strategy: tiny steps, CEO-level thinking, and getting out of freeze mode without burning yourself out.

    You’ll learn how to shift from emotional overwhelm into grounded action, create forward motion without needing “perfect conditions,” and refocus your energy on what actually moves the needle in your floral business.

    In This Episode, We Cover:

    • Why overwhelm doesn’t mean you’re failing—it means you care
    • How to take action even when you feel behind or stuck
    • The power of micro-momentum when everything feels like “too much”
    • How to identify the one next step that matters most
    • CEO-level thinking when your nervous system wants to shut down
    • Why consistency beats intensity when you’re overwhelmed
    • How to simplify your priorities when your brain feels cluttered
    • What to focus on in your business when you don’t have extra energy
    • How to build habits that support growth (even in hard seasons)
    • Reframing overwhelm into clarity, control, and confidence

    Key Takeaway:
    You don’t need a perfect plan or unlimited time to grow your floral business. You need one small, intentional step that moves you forward. Momentum creates clarity. Action creates confidence. Even when life feels heavy, your business can still grow—if you choose progress over perfection.

    Resources & Mentions:

    • Floral CEO Mastermind: https://floralceo.com/mastermind
    • Floral Rockstar Workshops: https://floralceo.com/workshop

    Connect with Jen:
    Instagram: @‌thefloralceo
    Website: https://floralceo.com

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    25 min
  • 🎧 SEO & Website Metrics for Florists (Simple Breakdown)
    Feb 9 2026

    🎧 SEO & Website Metrics for Florists (Simple Breakdown)

    Hey flower friends!
    I get genuinely excited when I see that lightbulb moment go off for someone in business—when things finally start to click. So today, I want to break down SEO and website performance in a really simple, practical way.

    There’s so much noise around websites, SEO, and analytics. Let’s cut through it and focus on what actually matters for florists.

    🌿 Step 1: Is Your Website Even Set Up to Convert?

    Before we talk numbers, ask:

    • Is your site easy to navigate?
    • Are pages labeled clearly?
    • Do people land where they expect to land?
    • Are your main revenue pillars obvious?
      (Weddings, events, everyday deliveries, sympathy, holidays, etc.)

    Your website should guide people naturally toward how you make money.

    📊 The Only Website Metrics You Really Need to Watch

    Here are the key numbers I look at when someone says, “I’m not getting enough orders.”

    1️⃣ Unique Visitors

    This is how many individual people visit your site.

    Example:
    500 unique visitors + 1,000 sessions = people are returning (good sign!)

    2️⃣ Bounce Rate

    This tells you how many people land on your site and leave without doing anything.

    🚩 If your bounce rate is 70–75% or higher, people aren’t finding what they expected.

    This usually means:

    • The page doesn’t match the search intent
    • The layout is confusing
    • The site loads slowly
    • The offer isn’t clear

    3️⃣ Page Paths (User Flow)

    Where do people go once they land?
    Example:
    Home → Weddings → Gallery → Contact Form → Exit

    This helps you see:

    • What pages are working
    • Where people get stuck
    • Where they drop off

    4️⃣ Time on Site

    Longer time can be good… but sometimes it just means someone left the tab open. Use this metric alongside others, not alone.

    5️⃣ Cart Abandonment (For Ecommerce)

    If 10 people start checkout and only 5 finish, you’re losing 50% of potential sales.

    Common reasons people bail:

    • Checkout is too complicated
    • Too many form fields
    • Slow load times
    • Confusing pricing
    • Poor mobile experience

    I always recommend pretending you’re a customer and going through your own checkout process. You’ll spot issues fast.

    6️⃣ Conversion Rate

    This is HUGE.

    Industry averages:

    • ~3% = meh
    • 5–6% = strong
    • 10%+ = dialed in

    If you have 1,000 visitors and only 10 sales, your conversion rate is 1% — which tells us something on the site isn’t working.

    I’ve coached florists with 10–15% conversion rates. It’s possible.

    🔍 Where Are Your Customers Coming From?

    Traffic sources matter:

    • Google search
    • Instagram
    • TikTok
    • Email
    • Pinterest

    If TikTok brings tons of traffic but zero orders… that might not be where your buyers live.

    This is tracked through UTM links and Google Analytics, and it’s powerful info for deciding where to focus your marketing energy.

    🧠 The Big Truth:

    If sales are slow, you have either:

    • An audience problem (not enough right people),
    • A conversion problem (your site isn’t turning visitors into buyers),
    • Or both.

    Data helps you know which one it is.

    ⚠️ One Website Warning

    When you completely redo your website, you often wipe out years of SEO authority Google has built for you.

    Sometimes you don’t need a full rebuild — you just need:

    • Better structure
    • Better messaging
    • Better CTAs
    • Faster load speed
    • Cleaner checkout

    A tune-up can outperform a total overhaul.

    🌼 Final Thought

    Your website should be your best salesperson:
    ✔️ Clear
    ✔️ Easy
    ✔️ Data-driven
    ✔️ Built to convert

    If you’re struggling to make sense of your numbers or feel like your site isn’t working for you, I’m always happy to jump on a 1:1 and help you find the small tweaks that can turn your website into a lead and sales machine.

    You deserve a site that actually works for you, not just one that “looks pretty.” 💻🌸

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    14 min
  • How to Grow Your Floral Business Revenue (Without Guessing or Burning Out)
    Feb 4 2026

    How to Grow Your Floral Business Revenue (Without Guessing or Burning Out)

    Growing your floral business revenue doesn’t start with hustling harder — it starts with clarity.

    In this episode, Jen breaks down how to intentionally grow revenue by looking at what’s already working, identifying where your biggest opportunities live, and creating a strategy rooted in facts — not feelings.

    After a full month of deep coaching sessions and mastermind strategy calls, one thing became crystal clear: florists who grow sustainably understand their numbers, track their revenue intentionally, and make decisions like CEOs.

    If you’ve ever said:

    • “I want to make more money, but I don’t know where to start”
    • “I’m booked, but I’m not profitable”
    • “I feel busy but unsure if I’m actually growing”

    This episode is for you.

    In this episode, you’ll learn:

    • Why “I want to grow by 10%” is not a strategy — and what to do instead
    • How to break down your revenue by category (weddings, funerals, corporate, a la carte, etc.)
    • How to identify which part of your business has the most growth potential
    • Two main ways to grow revenue:
      • Increasing your average order value
      • Increasing the number of aligned clients
    • How small pricing adjustments (delivery, setup, labor, service fees) can unlock thousands in revenue
    • Why tracking and forecasting your weddings changes how you make decisions
    • How upsells, thoughtful design suggestions, and month-out calls can increase revenue without more bookings
    • Why paying yourself should be a forethought, not an afterthought
    • How cutting expenses and improving margins can increase take-home pay without more work
    • Why running your business on data (not vibes) is a CEO move

    Key takeaways:


    ✔ Revenue growth comes from reflection + forecasting
    ✔ You don’t need more bookings — you need better strategy
    ✔ Knowing your numbers gives you power, confidence, and options
    ✔ Paying yourself is non-negotiable — this is a business, not a hobby

    Tools & resources mentioned:


    • Profit First (book & audiobook)
    • Simple revenue tracking spreadsheets
    • Forecasting your booked weddings throughout the year

    Ready for support?


    If this episode made you realize you need help building a real growth strategy, Jen offers:

    • 1:1 private coaching sessions Coaching Call-1 hr. $ - Jeni Becht
    • The Floral CEO Mastermind — monthly strategy, Q&A, and CEO-level support

    👉 Learn more at Floral CEO Mastermind

    You deserve a business that pays you well, supports your life, and grows with intention.
    This is your sign to stop guessing — and start leading.

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    20 min
  • 10 Habits of Successful Florists (That Actually Move the Needle)
    Feb 2 2026

    In this minisode, Jen breaks down the 10 habits she consistently sees in florists who are thriving—financially, creatively, and mentally. Inspired by Atomic Habits and grounded in real coaching conversations with florists at every stage, this episode isn’t about doing more. It’s about doing the right things consistently.

    If you’ve ever wondered why some florists seem calm, confident, booked, and profitable—this episode pulls back the curtain.

    In this episode, we cover:

    1. Successful florists plan before they design

    Calm wedding days come from preparation—not talent alone. Timelines, recipes, mechanics, and labor are reviewed before flower week ever starts.

    1. They know their numbers (even if they hate them)

    Average wedding value, labor costs, and profit margins matter. Profitable florists make decisions based on facts, not feelings.

    1. They communicate clearly and confidently

    No over-explaining. No apologizing for pricing. Clear, calm communication builds trust and authority.

    1. They say no more than they say yes

    Boundaries protect energy, creativity, and profitability. Saying no is a business strategy—not a failure.

    1. They take action before they feel ready

    Confidence is built through action. Posting, raising prices, and trying new designs all come before feeling “ready.”

    1. They build systems that support busy seasons

    Templates, workflows, and checklists reduce stress and prevent burnout when things get hectic.

    1. They protect their creativity

    Creativity is treated like a resource—not something to drain dry. Successful florists intentionally seek inspiration and avoid burnout work.

    1. They show up consistently (not constantly)

    Sustainable marketing rhythms beat burnout posting cycles. Visibility comes from consistency, not volume.

    1. They evolve instead of staying stuck

    Pricing, offerings, branding, and business models change as florists grow. Reflection and adaptability are key.

    10. They think like CEOs, not just designers
    Decisions are made with long-term sustainability, alignment, and profitability in mind—not short-term ease.

    Key takeaway:

    Success isn’t about working harder—it’s about building habits that support the business and life you want.

    Resources & Next Steps:

    • Want accountability and CEO-level support? Learn more about the Floral CEO Mastermind
      👉 http://floralceo.com/mastermind
    • Ready to reconnect with your creativity and skill set? Check out the Floral Rockstar Workshop Series
      👉 http://floralceo.com/workshop

    Let’s connect:

    DM Jen on Instagram and share:

    • Which habit you already have dialed in
    • Which habit you’re committing to build in 2026

    You don’t need to change everything—just start with one habit that moves you forward.

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    16 min
  • The Real Work of Building a Floral Brand
    Jan 28 2026

    Most florists think branding is something you do after you’re established — after the logo, the website, the luxury weddings, the polished feed.

    But the truth is this: you already have a brand.
    And if you don’t intentionally shape it, your clients will shape it for you.

    In this episode, Jen breaks down what a brand actually is (and what it isn’t), why your behavior matters more than polish, and how you can start building a powerful, recognizable brand from any stage of business.

    This isn’t about aesthetics — it’s about alignment, consistency, and becoming known for something.

    In This Episode, You’ll Learn:

    • Why a brand is a feeling, not a logo
    • How your behavior builds your brand faster than visuals
    • Why you are the brand (especially early on)
    • How to pick a lane instead of trying to be everything
    • The power of repetition in brand building
    • How boundaries create a premium brand
    • Why consistency builds trust and recognition
    • How personal branding accelerates growth
    • When (and why) it’s okay to evolve your brand
    • How strong branding attracts better clients with less effort

    Key Takeaway:

    A brand isn’t built in polish — it’s built in how you show up.
    Your energy, tone, boundaries, and consistency are the brand.

    Action Steps:

    • Choose 3 words you want people to associate with you
    • Update your bio with what you want to be known for
    • Audit your communication — does it sound like you?
    • Decide what you’re no longer available for
    • Start showing up consistently, not perfectly
    • Repeat your message instead of reinventing it

    Brand is a long game — and that’s what makes it powerful.

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    30 min