Season Finale: Ingredients For Your Creative Vision with Yulia Denisyuk

The season that just ended on our podcast, season four, was a very special season for us.

This fall, we celebrated our first anniversary. This has been an amazing journey because starting this podcast connected me with many incredible women creators. It keeps teaching me new lessons about our creative paths, resilience, self-worth, and what it means to be in community. 

This season we also celebrated a significant milestone, reaching 10,000 downloads in our first year. I want to thank every one of you who has been listening to our show and supporting us by sharing our content and leaving us reviews. Every single one of these things helped us to get to that milestone. And what an honor and a privilege it has been for me to come and share this space with you. Thank you. 

This season, we wanted to map out the ingredients necessary for keeping the creative vision we have for ourselves. If you've been listening to our show, you know what some of those ingredients are. It's taking action, committing to this path, not paying so much attention to our fears or to the inevitable rejections we will face, and surrounding ourselves with structures of support so that we can keep going. 

We did this by sharing the stories of incredible women who also face challenges, have doubts, and persevere and know how to ask for help when they need it. We also brought back some of our wonderful guests from earlier seasons to check in on their journeys as we celebrated our anniversary.

In this final episode of the season, I would like to look back and share with you a couple of beautiful moments we had on the podcast this season and celebrate our amazing guests.


Everything in life is a work in progress. At no point are you the ultimate version of what you want it to be. There is no Nirvana. You’re constantly evolving. You’re constantly changing. And being okay with that is a big part of growth.
— Sarah Munir
People ask me a lot, why I got into writing and why do the things that I do? I think when I really think about it, and I really grind down to the hardcore answer, it’s that I wanted to create this lifestyle that created freedom for me.
— Breanna Wilson
I think my biggest one [fear] was that I just didn’t know how to do it. I did, I do enjoy writing, but I just didn’t know how to break into the industry. I didn’t know how to write a pitch. I didn’t know who to contact or how to even look for who to contact. It did feel really overwhelming.
— Kimberli Werner
We all get farther when we cultivate generosity and abundance and collaboration with each other, especially as freelancers when there’s already a power dynamic between freelancers and editors.
— Iona Brannon

What you’ll learn in this episode:

  • [02:46] Sarah Munir reminded us to focus on progress

  • [05:08] How to develop angles for your stories and pitches

  • [08:07] Checking in with travel writer, Breanna Wilson

  • [12:25] Learning to pitch with confidence with Kimberli Werner

  • [17:18] Iona Brannon talks about the power of cultivating abundance and generosity

  • [22:06] Yulia’s insights from Season 4 and words of advice

Featured on the show:

  1. S4 E38: A Work In Progress with Journalist Sarah Munir

  2. S4 E39: How To Find An Angle For Your Story

  3. S4 E43: Catching Up with travel journalist Breanna Wilson

  4. S4 E44: Pitching with Confidence with Our Student Kimberli Werner

  5. S4 E46: Working Full-Time As A Freelance Journalist With Iona Brannon

  6. Want more insights on pitching? Get my private pop-up podcast, Three Secrets to Successful Pitching.

  7. Check out our membership community, The Circle, the place where brilliant womxn creators in travel media go to claim their dreams, get support, take action, and build their dream creative lives.

  8. Come join us in the Genius Womxn Facebook Group

  9. Interested in travel writing or photography? Join the waitlist for our travel journalism masterclass, Storytellers In Action, in which we help womxn creators get a footing in the travel media space, dream big, work through our fears, and take action.

  10. Introducing Travel Media Bootcamp: A 3-day immersive media trip experience run by industry veterans—travel journalist Yulia Denisyuk and PR executive Paula Carreiro — and sponsored by Waco, Texas Tourism Board. ​​Join us for the Travel Media Bootcamp.

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Get the show’s transcript

[00:00:00] Yulia: Welcome to the Genius Women Podcast. I'm your host, Yulia Denisyuk, an award-winning travel photographer and writer with work in some incredible publications like National Geographic, AFAR Magazine, and more. And this year you see my name in places like Conde Nast Traveler. I'm on a mission to help other women who want to grow their trouble, storytelling, careers, go after their dreams while feeling supported, worthy, and bold. If you're ready to ditch your fear and doubts to the side, step into your brilliance and take action on your dreams. You're in the right place. Let's go. 

[00:00:38] The season that just ended on our podcast. Season four was a very special season for us. This fall, we celebrated our one year anniversary. This has been an amazing journey because starting this podcast connected me with so many incredible women creators and it keeps teaching me new lessons about our creative paths, about resilience, about self-worth and about what it means to be in community.

[00:01:04] My amazing podcast, producer, NOI, Aaliyah scientists, shout out to, you know, Eyelea keeps telling me that numbers don't tell the whole story. And I absolutely agree with that, but still our human brains love milestones. And in this season we also celebrate it an important one reaching 10,000 downloads in our first year of running the.

[00:01:27] I want to thank every single one of you who has been listening to our show and supporting us by sharing our content and leaving us reviews. Every single one of these things helped us to get to that milestone and what an honor and a privilege it has been for me to come and share this space with you.

[00:01:45] So thank you. 

[00:01:46] What we wanted to do the season is to map out the ingredients that are necessary for us to keep. The creative vision that we want for ourselves. If you've been listening to our show, you know what some of those ingredients are, it's taking action committing to this path, not being so much attention to our fears and two rejections.

[00:02:07] We will inevitably face and surrounding ourselves with structures of support so that we can keep going. And we did this by sharing the stories of incredible women who also face challenges, who also have doubts, but who also persevere and know how to ask for help when they need it. We also brought back some of our wonderful guests from earlier seasons to check in on their journeys as we celebrated our anniversary.

[00:02:35] So in this final episode of the season, I would like to look back and share with you a couple of wonderful moments we had on the podcast this season and celebrate our amazing guests.

[00:02:45] Yulia: In episode 38 Pakistani based journalists. And my dear friend, Sarah Manir reminded us how we so often sense of focus on the gap between where we are and where we want to be, rather than on the progress we've already made.

[00:03:01] We are a work in progress and it's a beautiful one at that.

[00:03:05] I think one of my biggest learnings. Boston a couple of years has been that everything in life is a work in progress at no point, are you the ultimate version of what you want it to be? Or, you know, there's no Nirvana or you're constantly evolving.

[00:03:21] You're constantly changing and being okay with that is a big part of growth that, you know, I'm here right now. I might not have all the answers because I'm a work in progress, but I'll figure it out and move to the next step. And that might be completely different, but I'll figure it out then, but we don't look at things like that.

[00:03:38] Like we set all these targets for ourselves. And I think that begins at a very young age from like when we're in school, you know, we are taught to like, think of where we'll be, who we want to be, what kind of jobs who you are and what kind of money we want to be making. And while I do think that kind of direction is valuable, I think.

[00:03:56] What people really need to focus on is that is the fluidity that we deprive ourselves off that I might want this today, but it's okay for me to sit down three years down the line and reinspect, if this stuff is even making me happy, if the skillset that I've acquired in the past couple of years makes me a better fit for something else.

[00:04:14] But because I think most people, and that includes me, have such singular focuses and ideas and dreams about who we want it to be as a kid. And then we just really stick to it dogmatically when it's not serving us at times. It's in fact, it's holding us back because you might put yourself in a box, but you're capable of so much more.

[00:04:35] We can see in your experience, right? You, it's not that you were unsuccessful and left something. You were very successful, but was it really, truly making you happy? And even if it's making you happy, maybe there's more that you want to do. Right? We all have that just one life. And if the pandemic has started as anything, it's that capitalize on it now, you don't know how off limits things might get due to factors that are completely beyond your control.

[00:04:59] So I think just that sitting and thinking, I'll do this when I'm 40 or I'll do this. And I'm 45. Why if this makes you happy right now, do it right now. 

[00:05:08] Yulia: In episode 39, which by the way, was one of the most popular episodes. This season I shared with you an excerpt from a monthly workshop we did in the circle recently, that was all about developing angles for your stories and pitches. This is a question I get asked a lot and I was very happy to share this workshop with you.

[00:05:28] Are there podcasts?

[00:05:29] the three key aspects that I think are important in pitching are first again, finding an angle, which we'll talk about today, actually.

[00:05:40] Actually doing the research with publication and newsworthiness. And so those three aspects, finding an angle fits and newsworthiness is something we're going to discuss all three of those today. And we'll spend the most of our time on finding the angle. Because again, I know a lot of you guys are asking, what does that even mean?

[00:06:00] What is an angle is a story. The angle. It's the angle of the story. How do we think about it? Right. So what is an angle and angle of the story is something that answers the question. So what, or why does this matter? Right? Why does the story matter? Why are you telling the story? So what, like when somebody reads your story, If they can answer that question.

[00:06:23] So what, that's the angle of this story? Another way to think about it is the angle for the photographers in the room. The angle is the less. Through which you present your information, right? So you're shooting a landscape. You can choose to shoot it with a 50 prime lens, or you can choose to shoot it with, um, 12 to 70 millimeter, you know, different lens, right.

[00:06:48] And depending on which lens you use, your image of the landscape that you take is going to be different. So what lens are you taking through which you're presenting the information in your story? It's also a unique. On the story. It's also a lane in which your story will want to swim. So there's a story you want to tell, and don't worry if that doesn't make sense right now, I'll take you through an actual example that will make it clear, but let's say you have a story that you want to tell and.

[00:07:19] There are literally three or four different veins, different avenues, different roads through which you can take that story through, which you can tell that story in several different ways. Right? So those different ways in which you tell that story is the angle of the story. A practical way to think about it too, is that oftentimes the angle of the story is.

[00:07:42] Does anybody remember what a lead is from our class, from the storytellers and action class ride. The lead is that second sentence that you often see, like there is a title and then write on there. The title is the lead, which is like a short description of what the story is about. Well, the lead oftentimes actually contains the angle through which we're going to be looking at the story. 

[00:08:07] Yulia: In episode 43, I caught up with travel writer and just an amazing human Brianna will. Brianna was our guests on season two. And in this episode, we caught up with her to see, which is up to now almost a year after we spoke and how her plans to open a hotel in Georgia. The country are shaping.

[00:08:27] people 

[00:08:29] Breanna: ask me a lot, why I got into writing and why do the things that I do? I think I, when I like really think about it and I really like grind down to the hardcore answer it's that I wanted to create this lifestyle that created a freedom for me.

[00:08:44] Yes. And that's what I do every day. I mean, some days I can't. Right. And so I take the car out and I go on an adventure. Even if it's a little one, like just driving, I literally just drove a mile up my street and I have these back roads that I just go down and hilltops that I go to and stuff like that.

[00:09:01] It's not even anything crazy, but it's the freedom to be able to do that and not stress about it and not. Have a boss that I have to answer to because I left. That's pretend it's like, that is my nightmare right 

[00:09:13] Yulia: now. So 

[00:09:14] Breanna: it's not, I develop this lifestyle, you know, for specific passion for writing. It's a specific passion for just curiosity, I think.

[00:09:25] Yulia: Yeah. Yeah. No, it does. It absolutely does. And I love that. And same for me too. Right? Like I'm taking two months and living in Jordan now for two months because I can, because I don't have to have a desk that I am tied to, so I can do this, you know? and I think for me, at least the older I get the more.

[00:09:46] Crucial. It becomes for me to like, to really design my life. You know, it's, it's a, it's not a trendy word designing your life and your life, you know, because it's yeah. I mean, w w 

[00:09:58] Breanna: well, don't do it. They don't, it's hard. It's hard to make that decision and it's hard to. Decide what you prioritize, like money is not a priority to me.

[00:10:10] Freedom is fan. 

[00:10:12] Yulia: Oh my God. See, this is why 

[00:10:15] Breanna: we always have these great conversations because 

[00:10:18] Yulia: we just realized what 

[00:10:19] Breanna: values these things hold to us, which is very different from most people. And that's fine. I'm not saying that like we're doing it right. Or someone else is doing it wrong. And just saying, for me, this is what.

[00:10:30] Yulia: something that you said over there was an, and that's definitely been my experience too, in this industry is how competitive it is and how you feel like you're always, fighting and competing for the same opportunity. And I've found that an entrepreneurial community is not like that actually it's much more like, Hey, you're working on something.

[00:10:49] Cool. Let us, let us see how we can support you, you know? has that been your experience as well in even pursuing this hotel project? Yeah. I 

[00:10:58] Breanna: mean, I've, I've reached out to just random people here. That I casually know either through a first connection or a second connection or a third connection. And they've all been more than Stokes to just give me information and not like in a way that I feel like I owe them something.

[00:11:20] I mean, look, Georgia is great for that. Like, people here are just very happy to help and always very open and very like, what can we do for you? That's just the mentality in the community here. And that's part of why I like it here. 

[00:11:34] but I never experienced that in the editorial world. I mean, I, I always wanted to mentor people who would guide me and it was always very close to.

[00:11:44] And I'm not saying that like, that's the community in general. I'm just saying that was my experience. And this is the exact opposite, which has given me a lot of confidence to kind of pursue it, which has been nice. And I'm just going to hold onto that and take that positivity. And I am a very optimistic person in general.

[00:12:04] I don't have time for pessimistic mentalities and this and that. So. When something presents itself in a way that this has I grasp it and I take it and I recognize that, that special and tell him, just go with it and 

[00:12:20] Yulia: for better, for worse. I love that. I love that Brianna 

[00:12:25] In episode 44, our very own genius women, community member, Kimberly Verner joined us to talk about her experience of pitching with confidence. Kim took our stories as an action masterclass and later joined us in our circle membership here. She talks about her fears and some of the amazing results she has been able to.

[00:12:46] I wanted to talk a little bit about the fears that. so many of us have when we are on this path, because oftentimes, you know, and related to the narratives idea that I was just talking about, oftentimes we can be our, really our worst enemies and a lot of people that I talk to who are interested in this path, they have these sort of ideas of, you know, it's too late for me.

[00:13:10] Or I don't know enough about this industry, or I don't know the right people, or, you know, I've got nothing to say or who am I to do this work? Like. So walk us through a little bit, through your, some of your aspirations and some of the fears that you had when you were thinking about, this past.

[00:13:29] kimberli: Well, I did definitely go through that. And every so often they still pop up. I think my biggest one was that I just didn't know how to do it. I didn't, like you said, I did, do enjoy writing. but I just didn't. I didn't know how to break in to the industry. I didn't know how to a pitch. I didn't know who to contact or how to even look for who to contact.

[00:13:51] and so yeah, at the time that I was thinking about taking the course, it was just, it did feel really overwhelming. It felt like there's just too much research that I needed to do. And so it kind of got set aside I focused on other things. But then reading the description of your course. I was thinking, well, maybe this is, maybe I'll be able to find out those things.

[00:14:11] kimberli: and then yeah. And then joined up. So, so yeah, I did go through, like I. definitely an optimist in the sense that I, I never think it's too late. but, 

[00:14:20] and I think part of, just being part of the art world has shown me that as well. There's a lot of people that have, you know, not, not become successful until much later in life. But yeah, I think my biggest one was just that.

[00:14:32] I didn't, know. I didn't understand. I didn't know to break in. And I didn't understand a lot of the, the verbiage and 

[00:14:38] just how it all worked. 

[00:14:39] Yulia: This, this and this industry can be so overwhelming, like you said, because, a lot of the mentality is still sort of this exclusive. Of some special people that get to do this, you know, and it always was so interesting to me that that was the case, that it wasn't really straightforward. And now I'm starting to see, you know, more and more publications are putting their guidelines, online and you can find more information online.

[00:15:03] People are more. Open about sharing, but, yeah, it's still a very overwhelming place for somebody who you know, it's not part of that industry. So that was definitely my motivation with creating the classes, like, okay, let's start putting some of that stuff all in there. 

[00:15:18] so let's talk a little bit about, some of the results or some of the things that you've been able to do since joining the class and later becoming our circle member.

[00:15:30] I know that you've been pitching, you've been pitching publications. I know that you've been discussing and exchanging ideas and angles with, people from Atlas, Obscura, from, you know, other publications as well. so tell me a little bit about that. Like how, how does that feel now, now that you're, you know, you're, you've been out of the class for a while and you're in our membership.

[00:15:53] kimberli: Well it's, I think I, I do have a lot more confidence. I was checking the, um,one of the resources that you gave us was w I was a spreadsheet on how to track your pitches and ideas. And, you know, and I took that and sort of added my own little tweaks here and there of, you know, 

[00:16:09] what I needed to remember or know.

[00:16:11] And we came on here, I went and looked at that. And so far, Pitch 25 pitches 

[00:16:19] and got accepted for three. It's just like what? So yeah, it's I didn't think it was that high of the amounts that I had sent out, but yeah, it was really, really encouraging. And, and I figured if I can do that since I took the class in April, may ish, About six months. Gosh. Yeah, definitely encouraging.

[00:16:39] joining these groups or your, class and also the circle, the other women that are in there and including yourself are so supportive. And so just welcoming and friendly. And, you know, it's just kind of like we've known each other for years and we can just chit chat about things and, And it's yeah, it's, it's given me a lot of, bravery to S to just, put myself out there and ask questions.

[00:17:03] And, and even when I was trying to like, trying to, ask for support on my pitch challenge last month, you?

[00:17:09] know, I was trying to, I've definitely checking in with people, so it just felt a lot more friendly. and. So, yeah, it's, been a good, a good step. 

[00:17:17] Yulia: And finally in episode 46, a full time, freelance journalist, Ayana, Brandon talks about the power of cultivating abundance and generosity and how we can start asking for more, because, well, we deserve it.

[00:17:33] Iona: there's also a lot of scarcity involved in the travel writing industry. And one of the reasons that I initially really connected with you Yulia was just like, In clubhouse, there's, you know, maybe three of us that would talk about travel writing. And I was a little wary at first.

[00:17:49] I was like, oh gosh, you know, are they going to feel like I'm stepping on their toes? If I'm also rooms about travel writing and way that you are. So just generous and warm and open to collaboration rather than being like. Th this is my industry. I'm the one who has the expertise. Like I don't want to talk to you.

[00:18:07] In fact, I'm going to be your, whatever, 

[00:18:10] Yulia: Competition. Yeah. Because a lot of times that's how people see it in this industry. Unfortunately, I come across it all the time that you're like, yeah,

[00:18:17] Iona: Right, but we all get farther when we cultivate generosity and abundance and collaboration with each other, especially as freelancers, when there's already, a power dynamic between freelancers and editors in terms of what we're getting paid and what kind of information we get and all those things.

[00:18:33] So it's like you are able to. Create that kind of collaboration with other freelancers, we're able to create a union. You know, we're like we're able to, ask for higher rates and we're able to ask for more because it really is not, it's not a great industry right now for freelancers. And I, and I don't think that people can really live off of this one income alone from writing travel, writing, journalism, 

[00:19:00] Yulia: Yeah, it's so interesting that you are bringing this up right now, because we literally have a discussion about this in the circle, in our membership community this month about asking for more money and how do we ask for more money? And when do we ask for more money and you know, what I'm sure sort of sharing inside there is that like people ask me, when do you start asking for more money?

[00:19:23] And my answer is yesterday. Because there are so many people who are unfortunately willing to do this work for next to nothing. I mean, there's a lot of dynamics at play here, right? The print publications have lost a lot of their advertising clients and budgets and like they, they are struggling to, to make ends meet, but also people, lots of people are willing to do this work for next to nothing.

[00:19:45] And so that depletes our. Collectively and we as freelancers, unfortunately don't have the power, the bargaining power in a lot of times. And so what I'm sort of, where I want us to move towards is us asking for that power back in any situation that we can. You know, it starts with asking for more money when you're negotiating for a rate and it doesn't have to be something, crazy or something.

[00:20:10] Um, absolutely let's say unrealistic. That's just never going to happen. But what I've also shared with people in my community is that I've actually started doing. Year or two ago, or only fairly recently that I've started asking for every time I have a negotiation, when we're negotiating a peace, I always ask now and, you know, in maybe 80 to 90% of the cases, I get it.

[00:20:31] Yulia: Maybe I don't get exactly what I asked for, but I get some increase and it just blows my mind. How, if you don't ask or you leave all of that on the table, All that money. And, you know, unfortunately people don't ask because we're afraid. We feel like we don't have the power again, that scarcity mindset comes in, but it's just so, so important.

[00:20:48] And I love that you brought this up as well.

[00:20:50] Iona: Absolutely. I mean, I think that's the intersection of like finance and travel writing that really gets me is just like, you need to always be asking for rights. And I also view it. As the pout, like bringing the power of there's already a gender wage gap, right. There's already a color wage gap.

[00:21:09] So there's all of these wage gaps. And one way that I can the wage gap is literally. Asking for more, you know, asking more for me telling other people that I know to ask for more as well. And like you said, we can take back that power increase wages because yes, publications are getting hit in a certain way, but now more than ever, there's ways to make money when you have a big website, you know, there's affiliate links, there's ads, all kinds of things that small.

[00:21:38] Business owners, freelance journalists 

[00:21:41] Yulia: No. 

[00:21:41] Iona: start utilizing right in order to make wage, that those publications are using times a million. So it's not that they don't have the money. It's just. People aren't asking for more. So why would you give someone, know, $200 more when they'll settle for $200 less?

[00:21:59] That's just how capitalism 

[00:22:00] works, you know, and it's, it's horrible, but that's why we have to fight against 

[00:22:05] 

[00:22:06] Yulia: So as we wrap up the season and as we wrap up 2021 and other it's mochas uncertain year, here's what I want you to think. Have you been focusing on the gap between where you are today and where you want to be? And if so, I wanted to look back and recognize, oh, the amazing progress you've already made, recognize the distance between where you are today and where you were a month, three months or a year.

[00:22:34] And I also want to ask you what small steps can you say today this week, this month to start building those structures of support. We talked about so much in the season, who can you reach out to? How can you boost your own belief in yourself and what can you do right now to help you take action on what you want?

[00:22:53] And finally, I wanted to take a moment to thank yourself for coming this far. You're listening to this podcast. You're surrounding yourself with moments of inspiration. You are well on their way already. You are exactly where you need to be at this moment in time. Trust in your timing, trust in your intuition trust that you are making the best decisions for your creative life.

[00:23:15] Right now, this trust is a crucial component of building our creative visions. 

[00:23:21] I hope you have a wonderful time for the rest of this year. We're going to take a little break and I look forward to welcoming you back here for season five in 2022. But that doesn't mean we're going completely dark stay tuned because all throughout this break, we will be issuing out short bonus episodes to keep you inspired as we move into the next.

[00:23:43] These bonus episodes are based on the discussions and the work we do in the circle. The circle is our membership for women and their supporters who wants to get their travel stories published. We have weekly check-ins monthly idea, brainstorm sessions. He raises opportunities in the trouble media space.

[00:24:01] Pitch reviews, where I give you feedback on your pitches and much, much more enrollment, and the circle is open and you can join us at three different tiers. That gives you the flexibility to decide how little or how much you'd like to engage with us in the circle. You can visit geniuswomxn.co/circle to get started onwards and upwards.

[00:24:22] Thank you again for listening to our show today. And always, I hope you had just as much fun as I did revisiting some of our favorite episodes from the season. If you enjoyed listening to this season of the genius women podcast, please consider leaving us a review on apple podcasts. It means the world to me, and it helps us get discovered by more women on the creative path.

[00:24:44] Thank you so much and stay tuned for our bonus episodes coming out all throughout this holiday break from inside our circle membership.