Each week, I share no-fluff pageant coaching to help you lead, speak, and leave a legacy. With 300+ interviews and coaching across Miss Universe, Miss USA, and Miss America, this isn’t theory—it’s what works. Free subs get tips, interviews, and ad-free access. Paid subs unlock mini-courses, priority Q&As, and direct support.
Timestamps
0:00 Do you need a coach before your first pageant?
6:42 Beginners don’t know what they don’t know
8:40 How to pick your first pageant
15:57 Research before committing
19:37 When coaching really helps
The Truth You Might Not Hear From Most Coaches
I know this might come across as a bit of a hot take, but here it is anyway: you absolutely do not need a coach before entering your first pageant.
Yes, I said it.
And yes, I’m a pageant coach myself.
I know, it sounds like I’m talking myself out of a job. But hear me out — because if you’re standing on the edge of your very first pageant journey, this could be the piece of advice that actually sets you up for success, not confusion.
You don’t need to be perfect on your first attempt.
You don’t need to have everything mapped out.
And you sure as hell don’t need to have some guru whispering strategies into your ear before you even know if you like pageantry.
Your First Pageant Should Be About Fun, Not Perfection
Here’s my theory: your first pageant is your chance to just have fun.
Go in. See how it goes.
Wear the dress, walk the walk, say the words, and soak in the experience.
Then — if you find you actually enjoy yourself — you can make the decision to commit more seriously. You can set your sights on winning a specific title, or levelling up your skills, or polishing areas that you realized need work.
But why kill the joy before it’s even born?
Why burden yourself with ten thousand tips, tricks, critiques and to-do lists before you even step onstage?
The risk I see (and I’ve seen it happen so many times) is this: you get coached too early, and you lose the chance to discover your natural voice. Your instinct. Your personality.
Instead, you start trying to check off a list of "pageant rules" and "must-dos" that someone else gave you.
Suddenly it’s not fun anymore.
It’s a performance.
It’s a checklist.
It’s... exhausting.
And when you overthink everything, you almost guarantee you won’t perform at your best.
The Overthinker’s Trap (And Why I Know It So Well)
Believe me, I’m speaking from experience.
Some of us — myself very much included — have a tendency to massively overthink things. We want to prepare. We want to be perfect. We want to "do it right."
But sometimes preparation becomes paralysis.
Sometimes too much advice, too many voices, too many strategies create a fog that’s impossible to navigate.
Before you know it, you’re second-guessing every choice you make.
Did I say that right?
Was that too much hand movement?
Should I have worn the blue dress instead of the red one?
Does my smile look fake?
You can’t flow if you’re stuck in your own head. And the most magnetic contestants I’ve ever seen — the ones who captivate a room — aren’t overthinking.
They’re living in the moment.
That’s why I say: go and experience it first.
Feel it. Live it. Mess up a little. Laugh at yourself. Learn naturally.
Then come back and build on what you’ve learned, when you actually know what you want and why you want it.
Coaching Can Help... But Timing (And Trust) Matter
Now don’t get me wrong — good coaching can absolutely help.
When you’re ready to level up, when you have specific goals, when you want to squeeze every ounce of potential out of yourself — that’s when good coaching becomes worth its weight in gold.
But here’s the kicker: good and professional are not the same thing.
There are plenty of people out there flashing certificates, charging insane amounts, promising you the world.
But being "professional" just means someone gets paid for their services. It doesn’t necessarily mean they’re good. It certainly doesn’t mean they care about you.
You need to be very, very discerning about who you let into your pageant journey.
Find someone who listens more than they talk.
Find someone who sees you — not just a product to mold into their idea of "perfect."
Because if a coach’s advice doesn’t feel aligned with who you are, it’s not advice you need.
It’s noise you need to cut out.
The Best Gift You Can Give Yourself As a Beginner
If I could bottle one piece of advice and hand it to every first-time pageant contestant, it would be this:
Allow yourself to be a beginner.
You don't need to be a titleholder on Day One.
You don't need to dazzle every judge on your first try.
You don't even need to know exactly what you're doing.
You’re allowed to be new.
You’re allowed to be messy.
You’re allowed to just try.
Because here’s the truth: you can’t find your unique magic until you stop trying to be someone else’s idea of perfect.
You’ll never figure out what makes you different and unforgettable if you’re busy following someone else’s script.
And that first pageant? That’s your sandbox.
That’s your playground.
That’s where you start figuring it out — not by thinking, but by doing.
Final Thought: Start Where You Are
If you’re about to enter your first pageant, let me just say: I’m proud of you.
It takes guts to step into the spotlight for the first time.
Trust yourself.
Give yourself permission to just experience it.
Save the heavy coaching for later — when you’re ready, when it’s time, and when it’ll actually serve you.
And remember: no amount of coaching in the world can replace the magic that happens when you show up as yourself.
That’s your real superpower.
Own it.
If you’re ready to go deeper, consider becoming a paid subscriber. You’ll get access to mini-courses on everything from interviews to sponsorship, priority answers to your questions, and the chance to ask me anything directly in the comments.
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