Chat soon, Teryn 💋

  • Quick Chat with Teryn

    Last year, I got “no’s” and “not interested” plenty of times. Some were ignored altogether. It didn’t break my ego, but it did remind me of this messy part of business—the part where most people give up. Because it is embarrassing, frustrating, and exhausting when you’re a one-woman band.

  • If it was easy, everyone would be doing it. And I mean everyone.

    If it was easy, we wouldn’t stand out. But there are only a handful of people actually doing this work at the level you’re doing it.

     

  • You Are Not Behind — You’re Just Getting Started

    We think someone’s going to come knocking, offering us a seat on their stage. But let me be blunt: most of the opportunities you want—no one is going to hand them to you. You’re going to have to build them. You’re going to have to speak up. You’re going to have to start something messy. You’re going to have to knock on a few doors your damn self.

  • Rage Baiting the Rage Baiters 👀

    As a consumer myself, I totally understand this. There are things I’ll gladly pay more for, because I see the value. There are also things I’ll hunt for cheaper, because I just don’t care about them that much. Everyone has their own value meter.

  • Beauty Pros, Mark Your Calendars — April 2026 Is For You

    You’re laying out your outfit, something that feels like you, with a little extra polish. Think elevated business casual meets confident baddie. You’ve got your iced coffee (or your third espresso, we don’t judge), and maybe your bestie is tagging along for the ride. Whether it’s your first time or you’re back for round two, you can already tell… this year hits different.

  • Nails Are Part of the Ride—People Are My Passion

    I’ve realized that nails isn’t my ultimate calling—it’s just part of the ride. What really lights me up is helping others grow, sharing my experiences, and supporting them in whatever journey they’re on. I love deep convos with my clients, offering guidance, and just showing up for them. My true passion is people—cheering them on, building them up, and helping them create something meaningful.

  • Accountability: The First Step Toward Real Change

    Accountability is one of the most important pieces of growth—and yet, it’s the one thing that most people will avoid their entire lives. When you don’t have it, everything feels heavier. Every situation lingers longer. Pain drags on. Bitterness sets in. And you stay stuck in a loop of “Why me?” and “Look what they did.”

  • Are You a Leader in the Industry—or Just an Artist?

    A leader doesn’t just say “that sucks, move on.”
    A true leader helps analyze the situation and asks, “How can we work through this?” Not everything needs to be thrown in the trash the second it gets hard. Most situations are fixable. Most situations come with a lesson, even the uncomfortable ones.

  • Stop Arguing. Start Showing Up.

    You don’t need to explain your worth to people who aren’t even your clients. You just need to be solid in how you show up—in the chair, on social media, in your energy. Let them find a cheaper artist if that’s what they want. You? You keep showing up and being the proof.

  • You’re doing enough. Even when it doesn’t feel like it.

    The “I should be doing more” voice? It’ll always be there. That’s the wild ride of being self-employed. You are the business. So when you rest, it feels like your business is resting too—and that freaks you out. I get it.

     

  • It’s Just Business Presents: The Nail Artist Networking Event 2026

    2026 is the glow-up.

    We’re back at the stunning Caledonia Event Center in Layton, Utah—but this time, we’re taking over the whole day. We heard what you wanted: more time, more speakers, more connection, more value. So that’s what we’re giving you.

  • INSECURITIES: THE THING THAT MAKES US HUMAN

    It’s wild to think how confident we were as kids. The outfits? The makeup looks? The random dance routines? We truly didn’t care what people thought—until someone said something. And once someone says something, and someone else laughs, suddenly the confidence chips away. It doesn’t happen all at once—it’s little by little.