

I’ll never forget handing off my content that first month.
It felt like standing at the edge of a cliff and realizing the only way forward is to jump.
A mix of thrill, terror, and quiet hope.
I know everyone says your business isn’t your baby but honestly, it kind of feels that way.
You build it from scratch, feed it ideas, protect it from bad advice.
You know every quirk, every tone shift, every subtle cue that makes it yours.
So when you hand it over, even a little piece of it, it feels like leaving your kid with a babysitter who says “I’ve got it!” and then forgets the bedtime routine.
Still, I wanted the freedom more than I wanted the control.
I was exhausted from being the content department, the strategist, and the face of the brand. All before noon.
I craved space.
Space to think bigger.
Space to build systems.
Space to just breathe without thinking in hooks and captions.
So I did it.
I signed the contract and handed over my passwords (they’re all the same, obviously), my colors, my fonts, and every file that felt like a piece of me.
And when the notification came in “Your content for the month is ready”
I was giddy.
The first post was fine.
The second one was, too.
By the third post, I could feel my stomach sink and the excitement drained out of me so fast it was almost embarrassing.
I kept scrolling, gaslighting myself … “it’s fine, you’re overreacting”
Maybe I just needed to “get used to” someone doing it for me?!
But with every line, it became harder to ignore.
It didn’t sound bad, which somehow made it worse.
It just sounded like everyone else.
Empty. Blah. Like the 10 other accounts I follow.
There was no brand pulse, none of my fire, unique POV, nada.
I thought I was paying for custom content strategy & ideas that fit my business.
What I got was sandpaper.
I closed my laptop, sat in silence, and realized I’d just paid for permission to disappear from my own brand. *cue lump in my throat*
Here’s exactly where I went wrong and the key questions I wish I’d asked before I paid $2,000 to sound like a stranger….
I hired the aesthetic.
I fell for the feed.
I assumed that because I liked their vibe, they’d understand mine.
I expected them to read my mind instead of learn my brand.
I thought “beautiful” would automatically translate to “strategic.”
Spoiler: it doesn’t.
And here’s the thing, it’s not entirely my fault, or theirs.
The truth is, the whole landscape changed underneath us.
You can’t just hire for execution anymore.
You need to hire for translation. Someone who can turn your conviction into content.
And that’s where most people go wrong.
They hire hands before they hire brains.
Or worse, they hire “content creators” when what they actually need is a strategist.
When you’re ready to bring in help, start with better questions.
These are the ones I wish I’d asked first!
Step 1: Know what you’re actually hiring for.
Step 2: Ask the hard questions.
At SPF House, we start by getting to know you.
Not just your brand — you. The way you think, talk, and connect.
The words you use without realizing it. The kind of energy you bring into a room. Because when we understand that, we can create content that actually sounds like you.
We ask questions. We study your feed.
We look at your last 10 posts to see what’s landing and what’s missing.
We read your comments and DMs because those conversations are micro-informants that matter.
Those moments show us what people are feeling from your brand, not just what they’re seeing.
From there, we build strategy that reflects that depth not one built on trends or templates, but on connection.
We call this Depth Marketing™ (and it’s the game-changer for 2026 marketing btw.)
It’s our way of helping you grow without losing the soul of your brand.
Because when your marketing sounds unmistakably like you, it doesn’t just attract — it converts.
If you want your first hand-off to feel smooth instead of stressful, a little prep goes a long way. (You don’t have to have all of this btw… gather together what you do have.)
Here’s what I tell every founder before they bring someone into their marketing world:
Think of this as your brand starter kit.
The clearer you are, the easier it is for them to nail your voice, protect your edge, and free you up to lead again.
If I’m honest, this piece has been sitting in my drafts for months.
I didn’t want to write it because it still stings not the $2,000, but the reminder that even when we know better, we can still forget who we are in the process of growing.
But I’ve learned this over and over again in business:
The moments that make us cringe later are the ones that made us credible.
I wouldn’t know how to protect my clients’ voices if I hadn’t once lost my own.
I wouldn’t have built our SPF House process if I hadn’t needed it myself.
So if you’re standing at that edge, the one where freedom and fear hold hands…
I hope this reminds you that it’s safe to hand things off when you do it with clarity.
Hire help.
Ask better questions.
Protect your edge.
And keep going. You’re closer to leading like the founder you’re meant to be than you think.