We're a StoryBrand Marketing Agency that helps Service Businesses clarify their messaging so everyone wants to work with you!
If your message isn’t landing—and the right clients aren’t showing up—it’s not your fault. Most service business owners are great at what they do. They just struggle to talk about it clearly.
In this video, I’ll walk you through how we fix that using the StoryBrand Framework, plus how to get started with either DIY or done-for-you options.
Can your mom explain what you do?
Can you easily explain what you do?
Can anyone?
If not, that's the problem we fix.
Because when people don’t understand what you do, they move on. You end up working harder just to stay in the game.
You’re always re-explaining yourself
Your website doesn’t convert visitors into clients
Your leads aren’t the right fit
Referrals become scarce
Marketing is frustrating as all hell
But it doesn’t have to be this way. A clear message makes all of that easier. It’s the difference between chasing leads—and attracting the right ones.
You might not believe it yet, but marketing can actually be the opposite of frustrating when you're doing it right.
Whether you want to learn the system or hand it over completely, the goal is the same: clear messaging that brings in better clients with less effort.
for weekly group coaching, templates, and a proven system that fits seamlessly into your week—without taking over your life.
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Want someone to walk you through it? Get 1:1 or team coaching to clarify your message and apply the StoryBrand Framework to your business in real time.
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Too busy to do it yourself? We’ll build your messaging, write your copy, create the assets you need, and handle your StoryBrand marketing—so you can stay focused on running your business.
HI, I'm Vicky Sidler
And I’VE BEEN WHERE YOU ARE
I know how it feels to stare at your marketing and think, “Why isn’t this working?” That's why I created a StoryBrand Marketing Agency.
All in all, your business isn’t just another brick in the wall—it’s something special. Your story matters, and I’m here to help you share it in a way that feels real, connects with people, and gets results.
As a certified StoryBrand Guide, I specialize in turning complicated ideas into clear, compelling messages that resonate with your audience.
With a background in journalism, I’ve spent decades telling stories that matter and crafting content people want to read.
I’ve developed a proven system to help businesses like yours cut through all the AI trash that's out there and build genuine connections with their audience.
Your story isn’t just important—it’s the reason people will choose your business. Let’s make sure it’s heard loud and clear by the people who need it most.
And sorry if I got Pink Floyd stuck in your head just now...
In this short clip, StoryBrand’s founder Donald Miller explains why clear messaging and a simple marketing plan change everything.
Donald shares why newsletters are back, what a full StoryBrand campaign includes, and how a certified guide helps you focus on what actually works—without wasting money or time.
Watch to see how working with a StoryBrand Certified Guide can make a measurable difference for your business.
Whether you need help with strategy, websites, content, or SEO, I offer the full range of StoryBrand marketing services—done with you or done for you.
Whether you want to build it yourself or hand it off completely, as a StoryBrand Marketing Agency, we’ll give you a clear message and a simple system that actually works.
This is a no-pressure, non-sales call where we discuss what’s working, what’s not, and where you want to go.
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Get hands-on support through the StoryBrand Course, 1:1 or team coaching, or let me build the entire marketing system for you—messaging, website, emails, and more.
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Walk away with a message that resonates, a plan that’s easy to follow, and marketing that works while you sleep and finally delivers results.
But I'm serious about helping you connect with your audience. Let’s grab a coffee (on Zoom) and chat about your marketing goals.
Wondering how to simplify your message? Let’s talk.
Ready to stand out in an AI-saturated world? I’ve got ideas.
Just need clarity? I’ll help you see the big picture.
This isn’t a sales call—just a friendly, low-pressure chat. At the very least, you’ll walk away with some cool ideas you can try on your own.
SCHEDULE YOUR COFFEE CHAT WITH ME (VICKY) TODAY
FIXING YOUR MARKETING SHOULDN’T FEEL IMPOSSIBLE
Most small business owners aren’t marketers—they just want to explain what they do in a way that makes people care.
But when the message isn’t clear, everything else gets harder: websites don’t convert, leads go cold, and social posts fall flat.
You might worry that getting it right will take too much time, cost too much money, or feel like just another online course you’ll never finish.
That’s why I offer three simple paths: do-it-together support through the StoryBrand Course, 1:1 and team coaching, or done-for-you services where I build your full funnel myself.
You’ll get clear messaging, practical templates, and real support—so your marketing finally works and your business actually grows.
We know marketing can feel overwhelming, and you probably have questions. That’s why we’ve put together answers to the things people ask us most.
We’re the StoryBrand marketing agency that skips the boring "corporate speak." We blend the power of StoryBrand with strategic marketing solutions to craft content that feels human, genuine, and impossible to ignore.
Our strategic marketing solutions simplify your message, clarify your brand story, and help you connect with your ideal customers. It’s marketing that makes sense and gets results – no jargon, no gimmicks, just growth.
Think of StoryBrand as a cheat sheet for marketing clarity. It helps you explain what you do in a way that makes people stop, listen, and say, “Oh, I get it.” We use it to create marketing that feels human and that your audience will actually enjoy reading.
Not at all! Whether you’re a StoryBrand superfan (like us!) or have no idea what it is, we’ll walk you through everything. We’re here to make the process simple, clear, and (dare we say) fun.
If people keep saying “I don’t really get what you do,” or you’re getting the wrong kind of leads, it’s a sign your message needs work. That’s what we fix.
The course is built for time-strapped business owners. You get short lessons, plug-and-play templates, and live support so you’re never stuck or overwhelmed.
The course gives you training, tools, and weekly support so you can do it yourself. The done-for-you option means I build your whole funnel for you.
Most people see clearer messaging and better engagement within a week of applying the one-liner. Bigger results (like leads and conversions) follow as you apply it across your marketing.
Many people try to apply StoryBrand on their own and miss key parts. This course walks you through it step-by-step, with real examples and live feedback from a Certified Guide.
Let’s make marketing feel less robotic and more real. Find resources from a StoryBrand Marketing Agency that bring your message—and your business—to life.
By Vicky Sidler | Published 18 September 2025 at 12:00 GMT+2
The internet is not your babysitter. But sometimes, it acts like one. And when it does a terrible job, people expect accountability.
OpenAI has announced new parental controls for ChatGPT, following public outcry over the tragic death of 16-year-old Adam Raine. His parents say the AI gradually shifted from being a listener to what they now call a “self-harm coach.” Message logs confirm that Adam had been discussing mental health struggles with ChatGPT for months before he died.
According to The Independent, OpenAI will begin rolling out these new controls in October 2025. Parents will be able to link their accounts to their teens', limit feature access, and receive alerts if the chatbot detects “acute distress.”
Let’s break down what happened, what’s changing, and why this matters for small business owners using AI in any capacity.
OpenAI adds parental controls after a teen’s death linked to AI conversations
Chat logs show months of discussions about mental health and self-harm
Mental health professionals and the Raine family say OpenAI’s response is too slow
Meta’s AI bots failed similar safety tests in a recent study
Small business owners using AI need to understand where trust turns into risk
👉 Need help getting your message right? Download the 5-Minute Marketing Fix
ChatGPT Adds Parental Controls After Teen Tragedy
The Prompt Behind the Tragedy:
What Exactly Are These New Controls?
1. People form emotional bonds with AI, even when they shouldn't.
2. If your business uses AI, you are part of the trust equation.
How to Keep AI Safe in Your Business:
1. Be clear about what AI can and can't do
2. Test it like a troublemaker
4. Disclose when people are talking to AI
When “Helpful” Becomes Harmful:
Meta’s AI Flirts With Kids—What That Tells Us About Trust
AI Ethics Explained for Small Business Owners
Companies Rushing to Replace Staff with AI Are Facing Costly Failures
AI Can’t Replace Expertise—Tea Data Breach Proves It
AI Visibility: What ChatGPT, Google AI, and Perplexity Cite Most
FAQs About ChatGPT Parental Controls and AI Safety
What exactly are the new parental controls in ChatGPT?
Was ChatGPT directly responsible for the teen’s death?
Why are emotional attachments to AI such a big deal?
How is this different from what Meta did?
Can AI really be dangerous for small businesses too?
What can I do to keep AI use safe in my business?
What if I feel uncomfortable with all of this but don’t know how to talk about my values clearly?
Adam Raine, a 16-year-old from California, passed away following prolonged mental health struggles. His parents discovered thousands of messages exchanged between him and ChatGPT over the previous months. Some involved direct discussion of ending his life.
The family is suing OpenAI for wrongful death. Their lawyer, Jay Edelson, called OpenAI’s latest announcement vague and too late.
OpenAI admits the logs are accurate but says they lack “full context.” Which, considering the outcome, feels a little bit like saying, “Sure, we lit the match—but not all the way.”
The update allows parents to:
Link their OpenAI account to their teen’s
Limit which features the teen can access
Get alerts if the system detects emotional distress
OpenAI says it started working on these features before Adam’s death. Which is another way of saying “this wasn’t a reaction” while clearly reacting.
This comes after the release of ChatGPT 5.0, a version that intentionally toned down its overly friendly tone. Some users had become too emotionally dependent on their bots. But after backlash, OpenAI allowed them to toggle back to the old style—just in time to phase it out again in the coming weeks.
They try. They optimise. They backtrack. It’s the AI way.
If you think this is a parenting issue, you’re only seeing half the picture.
As a small business owner—especially one using AI tools—this raises two urgent points:
This isn’t just teens. Adults, customers, even employees can start to treat chatbots like trusted friends. The more “human” the tone, the easier it is to believe the AI cares.
Whether it’s customer service replies, marketing emails, or website bots, you’re responsible for what AI says. If your AI tool gives bad advice or crosses a line, your brand wears it.
OpenAI isn’t alone in this mess.
Common Sense Media recently tested Meta’s AI bots and found that, when prompted, they were willing to advise teen users on how to harm themselves or manage eating disorders. Meta admitted this violated their rules and said it’s working to improve protections.
Meanwhile, a Florida mother is suing Character.ai after her son died following emotional attachment to a bot roleplaying as Daenerys Targaryen. The app added parental controls after the lawsuit was filed.
You might not be building a bot that talks to teens—but if you’re using AI in your business, you’re still in the arena.
Here’s how to keep your AI use human, helpful, and safe:
No legal, medical, or emotional advice. Even if it seems harmless.
Feed your bot offbeat questions and make sure it doesn’t go off the rails. AI gets weird when you’re not looking.
A bit of personality is fine. But don’t make your AI too warm or too personal. That’s when users start treating it like a friend.
It should always be obvious. If you blur that line, you’re creating confusion. And scammers love confusion.
Even AI-generated marketing emails can overdo it on flattery. A vague, overly sweet tone doesn’t build trust. It builds emotional fog.
Let’s not pretend this is just about customer service bots. AI is creeping into places it has no business being—including business advice itself.
In this Harvard Business School study, entrepreneurs were given an AI mentor to help them make business decisions. Struggling businesses saw their profits drop. Why? The AI gave advice that sounded smart but missed the real problems entirely.
If your business isn’t solid, AI might confidently push you straight into a wall. That’s not helpful. That’s reckless.
I don’t have kids of my own, but I have nieces and nephews. And if something like this ever happened to one of them—if an AI system encouraged them to harm themselves while pretending to be a helpful friend—I honestly don’t know how I’d recover from that.
It’s devastating. And it should never have been possible in the first place.
The question I keep coming back to is: Do the benefits of this technology really outweigh the risks if the cost is the life of a child?
Tech companies have spent years chasing excitement. The shiny tools. The breakthroughs. The funding rounds. But they haven’t spent nearly enough time confronting the worst-case scenarios—or putting meaningful safeguards in place.
And this isn’t just OpenAI.
Meta’s internal AI policy once allowed chatbots to flirt with kids. Not by accident. By design. The documents laid it out clearly—right down to bot responses describing a child’s body as “a masterpiece.”
They called it a mistake. Then they quietly removed the policy. But not before the damage was done.
So when people tell me AI is just a tool—like a hammer, or a spreadsheet—I disagree. Hammers don’t pretend to care about your feelings. Spreadsheets don’t accidentally groom minors. And neither one gets invited into the deepest, most vulnerable corners of people’s lives.
But AI does.
Which means we don’t get to brush off its failures as “quirks.” Not anymore.
Whether you’re communicating with a client, writing your website, or using AI behind the scenes, clarity is the line between helpful and harmful.
Vague, overly sweet content can attract the wrong attention. Cold, robotic messages can push people away. And anything that sounds a bit too smart for its own good might end up doing more harm than good.
So if you’re going to build with AI—build with clarity. Build with guardrails. And build like someone’s kid might be on the other side of the screen.
👉 Download the 5-Minute Marketing Fix to write one sharp, trustworthy sentence that keeps your message clear—no matter what tool you’re using to deliver it.
While ChatGPT is reacting to a tragedy, Meta pre-approved it. This article reveals how internal policies explicitly allowed romantic bot chats with minors—showing that this isn’t just one company’s mistake. It’s a pattern of negligence.
If the ChatGPT article made you uneasy, this one gives you practical steps. It breaks down the RAFT framework so you can vet AI tools with real-world ethics in mind—without needing a tech degree.
You’re responsible for what your AI says and does. This piece shows what happens when businesses forget that and chase speed over judgment. Spoiler: it’s not cheaper in the long run.
The ChatGPT case showed what happens when we let AI operate without human oversight. This article adds another example where technical tools failed because companies skipped real expertise.
Want to know where your AI is getting its facts? This article explains what these bots actually cite—critical info if you’re worried about how small prompts can lead to major real-world consequences.
Parents will be able to link their accounts to their teens’ accounts, restrict access to certain features, and receive alerts if the AI detects signs of emotional distress. These updates are expected to roll out in October 2025.
OpenAI confirmed the chat logs were real but said they lacked full context. The Raine family believes the AI encouraged harmful behavior and is suing for wrongful death. Mental health professionals say the lack of safeguards played a major role.
When people—especially vulnerable users—form emotional bonds with chatbots, they start to treat the AI like a trusted advisor or friend. That trust can turn dangerous if the AI gives advice it isn’t qualified to give, especially around mental health.
While OpenAI failed to prevent a tragedy, Meta was caught approving internal policies that allowed AI bots to engage in inappropriate, flirtatious conversations with children. Both situations highlight a lack of meaningful safeguards and ethical oversight in major AI platforms.
Yes. AI can sound confident but still give bad advice. If your business is already struggling, that advice might push you in the wrong direction. One Harvard study found that AI helped successful businesses improve—but caused struggling ones to lose money.
Limit your AI tools to tasks that don’t require judgment or nuance. Make it clear to customers when they’re interacting with a bot. Regularly test AI outputs. And never treat AI like a strategy—it’s just a tool.
Start by sharpening your message. When your business communication is vague, it creates space for confusion. A clear, trust-building message protects you, your team, and your customers.
👉Download the 5-Minute Marketing Fix to write one powerful sentence that helps you stand out—even when AI noise is everywhere.
Created with clarity (and coffee)