If You’re New to The Age of E, Start Here…

 

The Age of E is a platform and resource for women entrepreneurs at any stage, anywhere in the world. You could be daydreaming about becoming an entrepreneur, just starting out, or many years in. You could be in any industry, with a team or solo, raising capital or self-funding your business. The reason that Age of E can be such a powerful resource across so many variables is because the Age of E is not focused on external tactics or strategies that might only apply in certain situations, but on the internal experience of you—the entrepreneur. You see, you are your company’s biggest asset. You are the leader, the decision maker. And the caliber of your decisions relies almost exclusively on the quality of your thinking.

This platform is an offering, a way to help you connect more to yourself, to your innate wisdom as the leader of your life and your business so that you can make decisions that are more aligned, and therefore more prosperous.

The best part is, when you learn how to do that, your entire experience of being a business owner becomes more enjoyable, lighter, and more lucrative. Instead of feeling restricted and worried, you experience more expansiveness and possibility. And from this place, whatever you create is super-charged for success.

The story of how Age of E started is quite unique. It was never intended to be a business. Elizabeth’s path working with other women entrepreneurs happened by first experiencing for herself how hard entrepreneurship can be. Initially, she started a project that became her business. It was a business blog for the fashion, luxury and tech industries. When she first leapt into entrepreneurship, she made way less money, then, soon after a lot more money. Her company grew and she became sought-after as an industry expert, working with brands like CHANEL, Google, Christian Dior, Gucci, Facebook, and many others. If you asked her if she was happy, she would have said yes—because it would seem ungrateful not to be— but the truth is that she was unsatisfied.

Unsure of what to do, she followed an inner calling to move from New York to Los Angeles. She invested the equivelant of a Harvard MBA in her own self-directed education, working with the country’s best coaches, shamans, joining masterminds, practicing art therapy, meditating on surf boards in the Pacific, and going on retreat to remote islands. She continued saying yes to what called to her.

Along the way, she decided she no longer wanted to run the company she created—but her family needed the money it provided. She and her husband decided to downsize their life so that she could downsize her business, opening up space for something new to come through—though she wasn’t sure what.

Serendipitously, she was invited to lead a breakfast at SoHo House on a topic of her choosing. She chose, “How to Design Your Business for the Life You Want to Lead”, because that’s exactly what she was in the process of doing herself. There were 8 spots at that breakfast table, and over 200 women on the waiting list. This event was the launching pad for her private coaching practice, which eventually grew into her elite mastermind.

Coaching so many successful women showed Elizabeth one critical thing that the fears, insecurities, doubts and worries we have are what we have in common.