Tasha Holz Instant

"I was waking up at 4:00 AM to check engagement rates before I checked on my toddler," Holz recalls, sitting in the now-finished farmhouse kitchen, which looks exactly like her "after" photos. "I had built a community based on authenticity, but I was performing authenticity so hard that I lost the plot of my own life."

She is also quietly developing a fellowship program for mid-career women who left creative fields after having children—"the best strategists no one ever hired," she calls them. tasha holz

As our interview wraps, Holz glances at her phone, which is face-down on the table. She doesn't pick it up. "Ten years ago, I thought influence was a number," she says. "Now I know it's a feeling. And if your audience feels calm, respected, and un-rushed? You've won. Everything else is just an algorithm." "I was waking up at 4:00 AM to

It’s an unlikely success in an industry that worships speed. But Holz points to the numbers: her average client has grown their revenue by 34% year-over-year while reducing their posting frequency by 52%. Burnout rates in her community are near zero. So what’s next for Tasha Holz? Unsurprisingly, it involves stepping back. She doesn't pick it up

That question became her business. What sets Tasha Holz apart in the saturated field of "influencer coaches" is her background in behavioral economics (a degree she completed at night, during her "burnout year"). She doesn't teach hacks. She teaches systems.