“I could probably, if I wanted to learn how to go do that, do that. But it's not my happy place. One of the reasons I really love Emma is she's so good at what she does and it's not what I want to go do. I love having somebody that does really love doing that because I think that is Emma's happy zone.” - Karen Worthy
Partnerships are everywhere in small business: business partners, project collaborators, behind-the-scenes co-creators, podcast co-hosts (hear our origin story!). But we don’t talk enough about what makes them actually work. If managing yourself is hard, imagine navigating the commitment (and the scheduling tetris) of two people.
Emma Whittard (mindset coach) and Karen Worthy (executive career transition coach) had their “business meet cute” in one of Jessica’s classes. What started as simple client referrals turned into collaborations, a shared offer, and even Emma supporting Karen’s business behind the scenes. From the first casual chat to co-creating paid offers, sharing clients, and navigating logistics (like money, time zones, and email volume), we talk about how they built trust without a contract, how they make decisions, and what it means to do good work together.
We talk about the emotional labor of collaboration, the unspoken agreements, and what it takes to prioritize relationship over revenue in a world that teaches us to keep everything transactional.
Before teaming up with someone, listen to the foundation of what makes this collaboration work.
How a casual class connection became a long-term collaboration
Why their “Base Camp” offer came after the referrals, not before
What they’ve learned about setting boundaries, expectations, and pricing
The value of emotional support, operational partnership, and sounding boards
Navigating logistics: scheduling, tech, shared values—and the messy middle
Why trust (not contracts) is what makes these kinds of partnerships work
“We also both said upfront that our relationship was more important than the business together. So the relationship first. That means that hopefully we won't get into a situation where there's something icky happening and we can't address it, or it sort of ruins things. So again, it is back to values and priorities again.” - Emma Whittard
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