More Cringe, More Money

Episode 11 April 13, 2026 00:41:18
More Cringe, More Money
Rich and Remote with Alex and Karla Booth
More Cringe, More Money

Apr 13 2026 | 00:41:18

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Show Notes

What if being a little more cringe is actually good for business?

In this solo episode of Rich and Remote with Alex and Karla Booth, Karla talks about why visibility matters more than polish, why being too “normal” online can make you invisible, and how bold self-expression can open doors in business.

If you’ve been holding back online because you don’t want to look awkward, annoying, or too much, this episode is your reminder that playing it safe might actually be costing you.

In this episode:

This one’s for the business owner, creator, or entrepreneur who knows they have something valuable to say but needs a little more courage to actually say it.

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Produced by: Proximity Outsourcing

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Episode Transcript

[00:00:00] Speaker A: If you want to talk about branding and how to stand out as a brand, you will know very easily that the Internet rewards what is different. There is another marketing mantra that I remember which is different is always better than better. That is where cringe comes in. So being cringe and being different gets rewarded because in the online world, they reward distinct personality, they reward unusual opinions, they reward memorable behavior, and they reward polarizing viewpoints, because these are the things that help make the Internet alive. When people are fighting, when people are disagreeing, when people are shocked, when people are angry. Of course, on the positive side, too, when people are moved by something emotionally, when people are relating to something so deeply, when you have an online business, you have to remember that normal means invisible. So let me tell you this. If no one thinks you're a little weird on the Internet, you're probably too normal to be memorable. [00:01:10] Speaker B: So you weren't born to sit in traffic, work for approval, or wait for Fridays. You were built to be free. Welcome to Rich and Remote, the show for the ones who dare to do life differently. Here we talk about building businesses that give you choices where you work, how you live, and what you create. This is for the entrepreneurs who crave freedom, financial freedom, location freedom, and freedom from everyone else's expectations. If you're ready to design a life on your own terms, you're in the right place. Rich and Remote, hosted by Alex and Carla Booth. [00:01:53] Speaker A: Hello. Hello, welcome, good morning and happy Monday. Welcome to another episode of Rich and Remote. This is Carla Singson Booth, and today I'm going to talk about something that I've been thinking about for a long time, and it's actually how you can be more cringe but also make more money. Being cringe has such a bad reputation right now. This word has earned such a bad reputation because a lot of young people, especially have related the word cringe to something that's embarrassing or deplorable or just something that you have to be shameful of and you don't want to do again. But here's a controversial idea, especially for online entrepreneurs and everyone who wants to live that hashtag rich and remote life. The more cringe you're actually willing to be on the Internet, the more money you can make. And I'm living proof of this. And I know that sounds insane, but hear me out. In my previous years, I've been a journalist, an event planner, a PR strategist, and now I'm an online business owner who also has a few investments in real estate, a few Airbnbs that I manage. And I can say that I have built myself a pretty rich and remote life and business. And eventually I realized something. The people who win on the Internet are actually not the most polished. They're the ones willing to be visible, opinionated and a little bit weird. So today I want to talk about why cringe is actually a business strategy and how doing different things is what separates you from everyone else and how learning to express yourself might be the most profitable skill you can develop. And yes, I'm looking at you, especially you, dear Introvert. So I hope that this helps getting you out of your shell. Basically. I've been embarrassing myself online since high school. I was writing blogs. I was a student journalist. If you live in the Philippines, you probably know what RSPC is, the Regional Schools Press Conference, which is a contest and a gathering of all student journalists. And I did qualify for the regional, but I wasn't able to qualify for the nationals. But either way it was a few very good experience. You guys have already heard me talk about how great it is to have the experience of competing as a child and joining competitions and how that really built my grit and perseverance and how I look at life as a series of like discipline and rewards. Discipline and rewards. Now I'm in my late ish 30s now. I'm not, I'm pretty probably not going to do anything crazy like, you know, join a CrossFit competition or whatever is new high rocks. I think that's the new thing right now. That is something that I cannot like. Physical contests. I'm not down for that right now. It's not my physical contest era, but I'm still down to join a few writing contests and a few essay writing contests. Poetry writing. I actually submitted some of my poems in some folios. Fingers crossed. But yeah, I've been, I've been writing poetry journalistic pieces since high school. And then when Friendster social media platform came to the Philippines when I was in high school, I went hard on writing there, writing blogs, writing testimonials for my friends. Testimonials were kind of like you like, like a nice essay, almost like a living eulogy on why your friend is an amazing friend. And then if you are in the Philippines, like you knew what Friendster was. It's kind of like MySpace. It was very colorful and it was such a big deal. And it was all that was the rage when I was in high school. And then after that Multiply came on. So Multiply was another social media platform that had everything. So you can upload photos, videos, blogs. It was pretty nice. I love Multiply. Actually, fun fact, I started my flower shop which is now a 17 year old business of mine, my very first business. I actually started that business on Multiply. I just started selling flowers on that social media platform, posted the flowers that I arranged. I was still in college then and when I graduated college, I graduated early. So I graduated when I was 19. I was luckily offered a column at an iconic regional newspaper where I was asked to write about youth culture. So this was such a huge milestone in my life. And I remember my column would go out every Wednesday and I wrote an essay about youth culture. So I wrote about what the young people are into and the editor in chief of that newspaper said that she really liked my, my like young voice and like fresh take on things. And of course because majority of the readers of local newspaper like a, you know, like a paper newspaper are mostly like older and people who are in the office working like people in their mostly like 30s and 40s and 50s, they wanted to have a little bit of variety in the voices that they were presenting. So I was very lucky and I was very privileged to have that opportunity. And so my column was called Live out Loud and I had some pretty interesting opinions there, I remember. And I talked about feminism, I talked about politics a little bit. I talked about like 50 cents or whatever. I talked about like whatever was the trend, really famous brands. So I really enjoyed it. I think I kept that column for a few years until I was so busy with my other work. And as you guys know, journalists don't really get paid a lot. So unfortunately I had to stop it. And so with this kind of background, you can see that expression or expressing myself has always been natural for me. But what people call cringe specifically is actually not mere expression. It is differentiation and differentiation. I want you guys to know this and remember this word because this is the foundation of personal brand and how to make money from a personal brand. So yeah, I was cringe before. Cringe was cool. I didn't really care that I would have a different opinion on something. In fact, maybe I got extra lucky because a very well respected newspaper kind of validated my thoughts and kind of validated that it was okay to have a different opinion. My editor in chief actually never went against whatever I wrote about. She gave me a lot of freedom and I really, really am grateful for her to give me that level of, of expression. So the lesson here is whatever you're doing right now and wherever you are, being more comfortable with your Expression or with you expressing yourself and not even thinking of monetization and not even thinking of how this can help your business, this can help your personal brand. Just, just think about this. How can I be more comfortable with expressing myself? So if you are the kind of person who's kind of a pushover, you're kind of a people pleaser and you know, your, your girlfriend says hey, I want to eat this food, I want to at this restaurant. And you kind of just like agree to it even if you don't want to eat there or if you feel like you, you are peer pressured to do something that you don't really want to do or pay for something that you don't really want to pay for. How you can deal with these little kind of social emergencies, minor social emergencies is, is with expression. So try to practice in your daily life how you can express yourself better and how you can feel more comfortable about expressing yourself. And my number one tip for that one is tell the truth, especially if the truth helps the other person. So a lot of people would come to me asking for advice, should I do this, should I do that, should I say this, should I say that? I always ask them what is the truth? And do you think that the truth could help your friend or could help your relationship with this person? And usually if the answer is yes, I would encourage them to just tell the truth and do it right. So that is a great way or a great like mental exercise to ease into properly and more often expressing yourself. So and then of course that is the most, most core lesson of it all. And then once you can apply that to attention, personal branding, making more money for your business, you will learn that the proper ways of expression, these things compound and the people who start early, you can build your confidence muscles. And the more that you do this or the more that you try to do this, this will be more natural to you. You know I already told you about my very crazy way getting my, my, my voice out there. So let me tell you about my crazy non linear career as well. So I had a career as a journalist. I learned storytelling, I learned how to write properly, how to compose my thoughts, I learned how to extract interesting narratives. I would interview some people or do research when I was writing my articles. Of course it has to be presentable. My editor in chief was very, very, a very good writer. And you know, the newspaper is actually a very well acclaimed newspaper. So it would be embarrassing to submit a piece that would not be worthy of the space in that newspaper. And as a Spin off of that career, because of course I can't make money just writing once a week in the newspaper. Actually, whatever you're watching, whatever you're watching on Sex and the City with, with Carrie writing once a week in her sex column and somehow affording a New York apartment is very unrealistic. So journalists don't really get paid a lot, guys. And so I had to find other ways to make money. And so I eventually took up some public speaking gigs, like emceeing. I was a professional emcee. I emceed corporate event MC'd weddings, I am seed launches. And then when I realized that I could make more money in these events, I also decided to start an event planning company. So I actually had a pretty long event planning career in my adult life. I was in that career for over a decade. And I learned a lot of things about, like logistics, about people's psychology, about high stakes execution. And as a spin off of kind of my experience as an event planner and as a journalist, I also got into pr. So I also helped a lot of brands launch their new products, their new campaigns, and I did the events for them. But then I realized these companies are spending so much money for these events, but no one knows about it, so how can I help them get people to know about it? And so I went into pr. It was a very, very good and natural segue because I was able to sell things in one go. And I actually named my business prep, which is a colloquial word for preparation. In the Philippines, we use this word a lot. Like what, what does your prep look like? Or in debate, actually, this is another very special thing close to my heart. In debate, we call it prep when you're like preparing your cases for, for the debate. And, and so as a debater, some of you guys know that I had a career as a debater, as a competitive debater. When I was in college, this, this word was kind of like close to my heart. And actually I, I found out later on that it was also like a pharmaceutical product to avoid AIDS or to get, like to avoid getting AIDS or something like that. So I just laughed that off a while later. But prep is still a very, like, colloquial world that you use to refer to like, preparation. And so PR events and promotions, that actually was kind of the word play. Prep, PR events and promotions. And in my career as a PR strategist, I learned positioning, I learned media angles, and I also learned what makes people interesting. And so I realized that when I look at my Career, I. I literally have spent my entire career learning how to make people and how to make products interesting. You know, when I do these events, my clients would spend somewhere between 20,000 to US$200,000 just to throw an event for like a hundred people. And in this event, their brand needs to have the spotlight and to be talked about and to make it interesting. And same thing for pr. You know, if I only had like a PR project that didn't include an event, I had to think about ways to make, make that product, make that person interesting, make that brand interesting. And I realized that, yeah, I learned a lot on how to make other brands and other people interesting, but I'm not. I wasn't really like fully applying it to myself. So one teeny lesson here is look at your past careers and look at all of the skills that you learned from it and think about how you can use those careers or the skills that you learned from it to build your personal brand. Because it really goes into this amazing storm, this amazing mix of skills that can really help differentiate you. And so in my career as a PR strategist, journalist, event planner, I made a lot of money, actually in my 20s, I made a lot of money, especially for someone living in the Philippines. And it compounded every year I was making more and I was using basically the exact same strategy that I'm using now, which is just to make myself more out there and to be an open book. But I want to share also, guys, that this doesn't mean that I am losing my privacy. I'm just actively choosing what to show people, and I'm showing them more of what my life looks like, more than what other people or what business owners are willing to show. So that is key. Are you willing to do more of this talking thing, of this showing thing to other people? Because let me tell you, the Internet rewards that. It's called personal branding, right? What are the feelings, the attributes, and the values that people usually connect to your brand? So when I was in college, I majored in marketing, and, and I remember my marketing professor, Mr. Serapio, he actually passed away. So rest in peace, Sir Freddie. He was an amazing professor, one of the best people really, at marketing. And I cannot forget this. And he said that what is a good brand? You know, he asked us that question, and we were students, we didn't know what we were talking about, so we had all these other answers. A logo, color, a set of colors, a font. But actually a good brand or a real brand is a gut feel. So I realized that wow, that's. That actually tracks. You know, when you say someone has a brand or something has a brand, it usually conveys a feeling and a particular perspective, an impression of that thing of that brand, of that logo, of that face, of that service of that company. And so if you want to talk about branding and how to stand out as a brand, you will know very easily that the Internet rewards what is different. There is another marketing mantra that I remember which is different is always better and better. Sorry, different is always better than better. So that is where cringe comes in. So being cringe and being different gets rewarded. Because in the online world, and I'm especially looking at you business owners of online businesses or fully location dependent businesses, algorithms and you know, optimizations on the online world, they reward distinct personalities, they reward unusual opinions, they reward memorable behavior, and they reward polarizing viewpoints because these are the things that help make the Internet alive. When people are fighting, when people are disagreeing, when people are shocked, when people are angry. Of course, on the positive side too, when people are moved by something emotionally, when people are, you know, when people are relating to something so deeply, that's why pages like humans of New York, they grew so fast, almost like they always go viral, because something is different in their storytelling. So when you have an online business, you have to remember that normal means invisible. So let me tell you this, if no one thinks you're a little weird on the Internet, you're probably too normal to be memorable. So let me put a little bit of my strategy hat on and let me tell you and delineate what is cringe that works. So cringe that works is a slew of truthful but bold opinions, things that are true to you, unusual delivery or a pattern interrupt. So even if you're saying something common or something that other people have already talked about, if you're delivering it in a very different way, maybe a different reel or a very well rehearsed or well edited or maybe humorous way to present it. That is cringe that works. Amazing storytelling. That also is very strategic and showing your personality. That is also a strategic side of cringe. But also it's not all positive. You have to be able to, like I said earlier, delineate what is cringe that doesn't work. And so for me it's random trends or just following a trend to follow a trend. It's forced gimmicks like cringe looking videos that look forced or that look fake. So the other thing is copying other creators. So sometimes when you stand for a certain brand or certain philosophy, it is normal that your strongest followers also follow other creators in that philosophy. And so if you copy like a concept, it might backfire against you. But honestly, personally, to be truthfully honest, I'm 5050 on this because I have copied some stuff and put my own flare into it and put my own like, relatability and it still worked well. So you might have to just have a little bit of a, of a discernment. And so let's talk about like what is the cringe threshold? Or I want to explain the psychological barrier of being cringe and what really may keep you from being cringe. So a lot of entrepreneurs hide behind logos or they hide behind brand names, or they avoid showing their personality and they always want to stay quote, unquote professional for the camera, for the social media, because mostly they fear judgment, they fear embarrassment, or they fear rejection. But to be honest with you, the worst that can happen is them ignoring you. And of course, a little bit of caveat if you did not say anything cancelable. But I would also argue that if you really believed in your truth, and if people want to cancel you, maybe they will and maybe there's nothing that's stopping them. I had a very viral post go out in 2019. It had 5 million impressions and a lot of people disagreed with me and they called me names and they hated me. But I grew my following to like tens of thousands overnight and I was quick to jump on this wave. I actually, believe it or not, I launched a roadshow, a five city roadshow in the Philippines. This was when I was still doing public speaking and I was doing workshops for small business owners. And let me tell you, I sold out a multi city roadshow just because of one post. And I made actually a lot of lifelong friends from people who saw how I dealt with that situation and they saw my bravery and they saw how I handled my life after something that was supposed to put me into oblivion and put me into something very cancelable, very deplorable. Actually, my life has only been in an upwards trajectory since 2019, so I don't regret a second of it all. But I think that was also a great experience for me because I kind of crossed the cringe threshold and I became more confident about my truth and about speaking out loud. And even though I had a lot of experience talking and expressing myself in public, that level of hate and that level of like, number of eyeballs that are just like watching me, waiting for me to fail, that definitely gave me a baptism of fire. And so one thing that I learned about myself is that I was quick to think about how I can use it to make more money. So let's talk about that. How I determined about what actually made money and how can you actually turn cringe into money? So not all attention equals revenue. We're going to talk about discernment. So how can you know that what you're posting, so you know you, now that I've convinced you, now you're super cringe yourself, how can you connect all these eyeballs into money? So number one is look for signals. So now that you're reaching way more people, and now people know what you do, try to analyze what people DM you about. What are the things that people ask you to help with and what are the things that people request advice on? Usually these are things that people are willing to pay for. These are recurring problems that people think or believe that you can solve for them. So there is definitely something there worth looking at. So then my next tip is look for leverage. So topics connected to, you know, business outcomes or growth or money or freedom, these are positive topics. These are topics that normally people who are willing to invest in a solution are typically attracted to or they typically align with these ideas. And so I love talking to people with an abundant mindset. And to be honest with you, not to be woo woo here, but I think it also has a lot to do with energy. So if you have an energy of growth, of money, freedom, positive business outcomes, I think that naturally you're going to attract people who are willing to invest, people who are open to ask for help and ask for support. And if it just so happened that they are dealing with a problem or an issue that you can solve for them and they already had you in their mind because you're so cringe, you're so different, you differentiated yourself against your competition. That is a good and positive thing. And then of course, avoiding burnout. The next word I want you to remember is repeatability. So something that makes or a process that makes this content production seamless and the least amount of effort from you and the content that you can talk about endlessly and naturally and with authority, that is something that you can repeat and that is something that you can easily leverage as well. And so quick, shout out if you're looking to grow your reach online, if you're looking to grow your impressions, but as a CEO or as a business owner, you don't have time to repurpose everything and you don't have time to track everything, and you don't have time to post in all of the platforms platforms and basically realizing that you're competing with full time content creators for attention. And here you are, this little CEO that has to manage their business but also has to be a content creator. Then definitely hit me up. DME My friend Kate Buck Jr. And I, who is by the way an iconic name in, in social media and growing on social media. You can look her up. I'll let you, I'll let you do the put her name on ChatGPT or on Google. Kate Buck Jr. Her and I are working on a project together and we are looking for our beta testers for a new service. A new solution called Yap Socials where you can yap with us for two hours a month and we will produce a month's worth of blogs, social media posts, newsletter and reels and we'll basically multiply it to so many pieces of content so that you can really leverage those two hours and those hours are not competing with the hours that you have managing your business because you have a business to run. So if you're interested, just send me a DM or join our [email protected]. we want to work with entrepreneurs who really know and understand that they have a huge advantage on social media. They have a great story and they kind of half ass posting on social media because they're so overwhelmed doing everything and they don't want to compete with full time content creators who are just like doing this all day. So nobody got time for that. So hit me up, send me a DM if you're curious. We're giving a very, very awesome price for our three beta testers because we want you guys to be the case studies of this new brand. We're launching this in Q3 of 2026, so I want you to be the first. So you guys are in my inner circle. You guys are a follower of rich and remote. I want you guys to have first dibs on this. So yeah, repeatability is very important. You have to do this consistently. No, so you have to be cringe consistently. You have to be differentiated, you have to be posting, you have to be visible. So honestly, this works even if you run ads. And most especially honestly, if you run ads. I'm not just saying, oh, you have to do this, you have to get on this like hamster wheel of content just so you can keep selling. Actually no. You can boost your ads or you can lessen your cost per impression or your cost per acquired client by posting very relevant and differentiated organic content. My next advice is, as you're on this journey, don't forget this thing, because this is the most important thing on how you can turn cringe into money is don't be shy, ask for the sale. Don't forget that you're not just doing this for vanity views and impressions, you're doing this for your business. So every once in a while, say dme to get on a call with us or say, hey, you know, if you are curious about working with us, it only costs $399 to have your own team of remote professionals. You know, hit me up if you're interested. So ask for the sale, make offers, remind people what you do, remind people exactly who you help. And the next tip is follow up with lots of proof. So posts about, testimonials, reviews, case studies, proof of your expertise. So I always talk about this because this is one of most important things and reminding people how you are actually good at what you do. Because the puzzle here is now you have attention, then you have differentiation, then you connect it to the solutions that you're solving. Then now people know you're actually good at this. And so that line, those steps, those are the steps to go from cringe to money. So visibility is actually the shortcut in like growing your business. It encourages listeners, it encourages very special relationship between you and your audience. It even, I would go even as far as saying it gives you a cloak of a supposed friendship, for lack of a better term. And, and for them to feel a sense of closeness or familiarity at the very least towards you or your brand. A lot of entrepreneurs think they need better funnels, better offers and more automation. I don't disagree that sometimes that is a valid problem. But often a lot of them just need more visibility. Seriously. Let me tell you about a story about my mentor and I. So I talked to my mentor Last year in 2025, this was January, and he asked me about what I was doing to get more eyeballs. And I told him that I was investing money in ads. And when I told him how much I was spending, I was spending about 3,000 to 3,500amonth. And I wasn't getting anything, any, any sales. I think my targeting was wrong or whatever. Maybe the agency didn't really do a good job. So I didn't know what it was really. But he said, okay, stop doing that right now and put that 3, 500 into investing in a content team, a writer, social media repurpose like publisher, video editor, and a graphic designer or you know, maybe all of them can be part time or whatever and come back to me in one year and you're going to make a lot more money and you're going to attract better aligned clients. And I did that. And you know what? He was right. He was actually right. I met a lot of amazing people. My business grew and it was one of the most effortless sales years I've ever had. And so a lot of people don't have a monetization problem, they have an invisibility problem, they have a differentiation problem. There is a real cost in playing small. So let me ask you a few questions and I want you to really reflect on this. What opportunities never happen if no one knows who you are? What if clients never find you? What partnerships would even start? So I know that playing small feels safe, but it's actually the most expensive strategy. And when you jump into that paid ads route before even figuring organic content out, you are risking a lot. You're risking a lot. And for a bootstrapped online entrepreneur, you don't have no time for that. You don't have a budget for that. You just gotta do it and be cringe. So I want you to remember that being cringe is an asset to your personal brand. And so I wanna encourage entrepreneurs here that your personal brand gives you leverage, it gives you authority, it gives you optionality, and it also gives you a lot of inbound clients, it protects you from platform risk. So if your personal brand is, is a famous or is known in your space or in your industry, even if one of your accounts get shut down, if you know how to get attention. So right now I'm active on Facebook, Instagram and LinkedIn. On social, if one of them crumbles, then I can just move into the other one. I can even start from scratch on X. Like I'm not going to be afraid of that. Actually. Trivia my blog, I had to restart it three times when I was a teenager because for some reason I got, I got hacked. I would get like some sort of a virus. I don't know what I was doing. I was a kid and so I didn't really invest in protection. I didn't have money. I was just expressing myself online. And so I, I didn't really stress about it too much, I would just start over. But because I had a name and I had a brand and it had a special way of reaching people with the way that I talked, it was fine. It was fine. I was still able to get clients, I was able to get deals and, and yeah, when I turned 19, I had my own newspaper column, so that was awesome. So a strong personal brand can give you all those things. And it also, yeah, it protects you from platform risk, from job risk. Let me tell you, a lot of my friends right now are being laid off from big companies. And because I don't have a personal brand, it's much harder to stand out in the job world. And so that's another tip that I would give to my friends or to everyone listening. If you have a loved one who is having a lot of trouble finding something in the job market out there, working on their personal brand is a very, very good way to stand out from the rest and industry shifts as well. And so remember, I am now working on my online business, my outsourcing company. So shout out to my company, Proximity Outsourcing, that is producing this podcast, by the way. So if you want to have a podcast and if you don't want to spend a lot of money, you can have your own podcast. Everything done for you for under $400 a month, hit me up and we'll make it happen for you. We'll even include promotion, collaboration with guests, and writing to your newsletter about it, show notes, everything. So we'll take care of that. So anyway, I shifted industries when I decided to go all in on my online business after 10 plus years of being an event planner. And you know what, it wasn't that hard. I was able to get clients within six months and I was able to really reach people and to have people remember what I did. And so I've gone through a few kind of evolutions of my brand. Like right now, I also coach other Filipino online business owners. Alex, my husband, and I actually accept three to five online agency owners, Filipinos only because they're close to my heart. They're close to our hearts. Per year, we accept three to five entrepreneurs per year to coach. This is a very intimate coaching. You get one on one and group stuff. So I'm doing that. We're going to be launching our third year this year and we're very excited. We also own a few Airbnb properties that we had to brand and market individually. But actually coaching Airbnbs or being an investor, being an event planner, being a PR strategist, being an online business owner, being an industry leader in outsourcing, actually these things are all very different, but some, for some reason, I was able to find relative success in each career or each role that I chose. And to be completely honest with you, that is because I was just willing to be cringe since I was in high school and I was year after year willing and open to do cringe things and differentiated things out to the public. So I want you guys to remember that cringe is just the feeling of doing something different. And being different is always better than better. Most entrepreneurs don't need better offers. They just need a lot more courage to be more cringe. Visibility is a very valid business strategy. And lastly, I want you guys to remember that normal, conventional or common, those things don't scale on the Internet. So your assignment today is how can I be more cringe today? How can I express myself better today? And how can I tie that to my business? And how can more people know what I do? All right? And I hope that you can apply that learning into your business right away and maybe even pre plan a set of content pieces for your business. And if you have any ideas, if you have any thoughts, comments, reach out to me on Instagram at. Carla Stefan, I would love to hear from you guys. And if you love this episode and if you feel like you know someone who can benefit from everything you learned in this episode, or maybe you have a friend or someone close to you just that just needs a little bit more courage to be a little bit more cringe. If you feel like they can benefit from it or their business can benefit from it, I would appreciate if you can send this episode to them. All right, thank you so much, guys. And remember, being cringe is one of the best and fastest way for that rich and remote life. Thank you so much and I'll see you next week. Thanks for listening to Rich and remote where freedom isn't a dream, it's a decision. This is Karla, this is Alex Booth, and this is our journey to our dream rich and remote life. If this episode inspired you, share with a friend who's ready to live life differently too. This is perfect for entrepreneurs who crave financial freedom, location freedom, and freedom from the opinions of others. And don't forget to leave a quick review. It helps more freedom seekers find this show. Big thanks to our sponsors, Huckleberry Consulting, getcsm and Proximity Outsourcing. See you in the next episode and check out our online hangout spot, richandremote.com.

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Episode 3

January 17, 2024 00:12:13
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What Makes us Different at Proximity Outsourcing

What Makes Us Different at Proximity Outsourcing In this episode, Karla Singson opens up about something most outsourcing companies never talk about: what truly...

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Episode 13

April 27, 2026 00:22:23
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Bali Remote Life – Is It Really the Dream?

Bali gets talked about like it’s the ultimate remote work destination. Cheap. Beautiful. Full of entrepreneurs. But there’s a side to it that most...

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