
Sales Gravy: Jeb Blount Stop Worrying About What Your Mom Thinks of Your LinkedIn
Dec 11, 2025
Giselle Ugardi, a performance coach and personal branding expert, challenges the norms of LinkedIn presence. She reveals how worrying about perceptions from non-customers can hinder authentic engagement. Through her Transform 20 framework, she emphasizes daily habits like genuine interactions and personalized video messages to bolster visibility and confidence. Giselle advocates focusing on potential clients rather than friends or family, crafting messages that resonate deeply with your target audience for meaningful connections.
37:11
Technology Should Multiply Relationships
- Most professionals use technology to avoid people instead of to multiply relationships.
- Giselle Ugardi says sales must be built on relationships first, not transactions.
Follow The Transform 20 Daily System
- Do the Transform 20: connect with 5 new people, send 5 meaningful messages, leave 5 meaningful comments, and record 5 one-to-one videos.
- Commiting to these daily actions builds real relationships and predictable leads.
Connect With Familiar People
- Connect with five people you met recently or who recognize your face; avoid random requests.
- Make each connection feel familiar to increase trust and recall.
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Intro
00:00 • 51sec
Giselle's focus: confidence and visibility
00:51 • 2min
What holds people back from owning presence
02:56 • 1min
Befriend self-doubt with journaling
04:23 • 4min
Daily habit to build confidence
08:32 • 2min
Transform 20: a practical daily system
11:02 • 2min
Why profile photos must look like you
13:06 • 2min
Meaningful messages beat passive engagement
15:18 • 2min
Leave thoughtful comments to build trust
16:49 • 3min
One-to-one videos as a pattern interrupt
19:39 • 3min
Transform 20's business impact
22:13 • 26sec
Balancing authenticity and professionalism
22:38 • 2min
Respectfully, they are not your audience
24:55 • 7min
Humanize your brand with personal details
32:05 • 2min
Final mindset reframes
33:38 • 3min
Outro
36:21 • 50sec
#901
• Mentioned in 34 episodes
The LinkedIn Edge

Jeb Blount Jr.

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The book introduces the Four Laws of Behavior Change: make it obvious, make it attractive, make it easy, and make it satisfying.
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The book is filled with actionable strategies, real-life examples, and stories from various fields, making it a valuable resource for anyone seeking to improve their habits and achieve personal growth.

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Fanatical Prospecting is a detailed guide that explains the importance and methods of prospecting in sales.
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The book is designed to help salespeople, sales leaders, entrepreneurs, and executives improve their sales productivity and grow their income by consistently and effectively prospecting.

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Is Your LinkedIn Personal Branding Built for Buyers or Bystanders?
"Respectfully, you are not my audience."
Performance coach Giselle Ugarte said that on a recent episode of the Sales Gravy Podcast, and it might be the most liberating thing you'll hear about LinkedIn personal branding this year.
Because somewhere between building your profile and hitting publish on that post, you've started making decisions based on what your college roommate might think. Or your former boss. Or yes, your mom.
The hard truth? None of them are writing you commission checks.
The Real Reason Your LinkedIn Personal Branding Falls Flat
You've heard "be authentic" and "show up as yourself" so often that the advice has lost all meaning. So you end up in a strange middle ground where you’re not polished enough to impress executives and not human enough to connect with actual buyers.
Your LinkedIn personal branding suffers because you're creating content for ghosts. People who will never hire you, never refer you, never sign a contract. You're worried about the wrong audience, and that hesitation shows up in every word you type.
Think about the last post you almost published but didn't. What stopped you? Probably not a legitimate business concern. More likely, you had a flash of "what will people think?" and that voice didn't belong to your ideal client. It belonged to someone in your network who wouldn't buy from you if you were the last salesperson on earth.
Who Your LinkedIn Content Is Really For
Your LinkedIn personal branding should speak to three groups:
Current clients
Prospective clients
People who can refer you to clients
That’s it. Everyone else is background noise.
When you post about closing a tough deal, your brother who works in IT might think you're bragging. Your client, who fought through the same challenge, is nodding in agreement.
When you share a lesson from a deal that went sideways, your high school friend might wonder why you're airing dirty laundry. Your prospect is realizing you understand their world.
The disconnect happens because you're trying to serve two masters. You want to build real relationships with buyers while also maintaining some imaginary professional image for people who have zero impact on your business.
The Transform 20: LinkedIn Personal Branding That Actually Works
If you're going to shift your LinkedIn personal branding from performative to productive, you need a system. Not another "post three times a week" generic advice pile, but something that forces you to focus on real humans instead of vanity metrics.
Giselle’s practical framework, Transform 20, breaks down into four daily actions, each designed to build actual relationships:
Connect with 5 new people.
Not random connections. People you met this week, people on your calendar, people who recognize your face. Every request should feel familiar to them.
Send 5 meaningful messages.
Check in. Reference something personal. End with a question. “Let me know” is where leads go to die. Meaningful DMs teach the algorithm who matters to you — and who should see your content.
Leave 5 meaningful comments.
Two to three sentences. Add context. Reintroduce yourself if needed. A thoughtful comment builds more trust than another like or emoji ever will.
Record 5 one-to-one videos.
Sixty seconds or less. “Hey, I was thinking about you because…” It’s a pattern interrupt in an inbox full of text and one of the fastest ways to stand out. This is where confidence compounds.
Twenty actions. Most people won't do it because it feels like work. But if you woke up to 20 qualified leads tomorrow, would that change your business? That's what you're building here.
What Your LinkedIn Profile Should Actually Show
Buyers want to know you’re a real person. That you have a family, hobbies, interests, failures, and lessons. That you care about something besides your quota.
If you blur your Zoom background because you think it’s more professional, you’re missing an opportunity. Let them see the bookshelf, the Peloton, the framed photo. These details give people something to ask about and a reason to remember you.
The same goes for your LinkedIn headline. Yes, include your title. But also include the detail that creates connection. "Mom of four," or "Proud Michigan alum," or whatever matters to you and might matter to them. Make it easier for people to find common ground with you.
Stop Creating Content for People Who Will Never Buy
You already know who matters: current clients, prospective clients, and people who can refer you to clients.
Your former colleague who always has something snarky to say about your posts? They've never sent you a referral. Your friend from college who thinks sales is beneath them? They're not signing contracts. Your family member who wants you to be more buttoned up? They're not in your market.
Have the clarity to know that you can't build an effective LinkedIn personal branding presence while trying to please everyone. You'll end up pleasing no one, least of all the people who could actually benefit from working with you.
You cannot build effective LinkedIn personal branding while trying to please people who don’t impact your business.
Before you write that post or record that video, remind yourself: someone would be lucky to hear from me today. You have something valuable to offer — and the courage to show up as a real human.
The salespeople winning on LinkedIn aren’t the most polished. They’re the most human. They make it easier for the right people to decide they want to work with them.
Send the videos. Start the conversations. Show up as the person your clients actually want to buy from. That’s how you win on LinkedIn — and everywhere else.
Want the full LinkedIn playbook? Buy The LinkedIn Edge by Jeb Blount and Brynne Tillman. It’s packed with non-negotiables that will turn your profile into a pipeline-building machine.
