Summer launches don’t have to be slow.
In this episode of As Good As You Are, I sat down with Nikki Trailor—launch strategist, marketing coach, and host of Marketing Icks—to talk about what it really takes to make money in your business when the rest of the internet is on vacation.
Nikki built her business in the middle of the pandemic after the travel industry shut down. With time on her hands and zero online business experience, she went down the rabbit hole of online education, discovered marketing strategy, and never looked back.
Now she helps entrepreneurs create launch strategies that sell—without burnout, gimmicks, or endless hustle.
Most business owners see summer as “the slow season.” Clients are out of office. Leads dry up. Motivation dips.
But Nikki doesn’t buy into the myth that summer means sales are impossible.
“You still have a business to run,” she said. “Just because it’s harder doesn’t mean it won’t work. You just need to get smarter about the way you do it.”
Her approach? Prepare early. Build anticipation. And warm your audience before your promotion begins.
Because when summer hits, people’s attention is divided—and the only businesses that win are the ones that started the conversation weeks before.
If there’s one thing Nikki preaches, it’s pre-selling.
That means starting the sales process before you officially promote.
“If you go into a launch knowing you’ve already sold a few spots, everything shifts,” she explained. “You have proof, confidence, and energy—and that energy is contagious.”
To do that, she uses what she calls a hand-raiser strategy:
It’s part visibility, part psychology. When people feel like they discovered your offer early, they’re more invested.
Nikki believes there’s no “wrong” type of offer for summer—only misaligned messaging.
Instead of rewriting your entire offer, tweak how you frame it.
For example:
“The success of a summer launch comes down to positioning,” she said. “If you know your audience’s objections—like not wanting to sit at a screen—you can flip it and make your offer feel like freedom, not work.”
Here’s how Nikki plans a stress-free summer promotion:
“You don’t need high pressure,” she said. “You just need clarity. People buy when they understand why now is the moment to act.”
When it comes to growing your list before a launch, Nikki isn’t chasing trends—she’s chasing relevance.
Forget generic freebies. The best lead magnets now are quick, valuable, and genuinely useful.
“People don’t want another 10-point checklist they’ve seen everywhere,” she said. “They want something that gives them a win.”
Her advice:
And if you want to stand out? She’s loving the rise of custom GPTs as interactive lead magnets that give personalized results while showcasing your expertise.
After watching the chaos of Black Friday unfold year after year, Nikki predicts a new wave of “summer sales” for service-based businesses.
But her take on disruption isn’t louder—it’s more human.
“Everyone’s scaling everything—automation, AI, funnels. But what actually stands out now is interaction,” she said. “Give people more of you.”
That might look like:
People are craving real connection—especially after being burned by faceless group programs that overpromised and underdelivered.
“There’s a level of mistrust now,” she said. “If you can show your audience what’s real, you win their trust faster than any sales page ever could.”
When it comes to building scalable, human-first offers, Nikki is a big believer in asynchronous support—like voice or video messaging instead of constant calls.
“Most clients are busy. They don’t want to sit on Zoom all day,” she said. “They want access and progress without the pressure.”
It’s a model that allows her to serve more clients, maintain her energy, and protect her schedule.
Boundaries are part of her brand.
“I decided early on I’d never spend more than 20 hours a week at my desk,” she shared. “I reverse-engineered my business from there—my pricing, my offers, everything.”
The result? A six-figure business built on freedom, not fatigue.
Nikki treats her calendar like a non-negotiable strategy.
Every boundary has a data-backed reason. Every goal connects to capacity.
“If I’m working more than 25 hours a week, something’s off,” she said. “That means I’m doing tasks that don’t drive revenue or joy.”
By reverse-engineering her income goals based on how she wants to live, she’s proven that flexibility doesn’t come from “doing less”—it comes from doing what matters most.
Because the real luxury isn’t freedom of time—it’s freedom of focus.
If you’re a seasoned professional—a dentist, interior designer, chiropractor, therapist, or any other expert who has spent years building a solid reputation—then you may have noticed a shift in your industry. Clients are making different decisions, new competitors are entering the scene, and the way people choose businesses doesn’t feel the way it used to. […]

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