29: How to Stop Being Afraid of Money as a Creative with Hannah Cole
MAR 18, 202669 MIN
29: How to Stop Being Afraid of Money as a Creative with Hannah Cole
MAR 18, 202669 MIN
Description
What if understanding money was the thing that finally set your creative work free?That’s the quiet truth running through my conversation with Hannah Cole. She’s a tax educator, an artist with over 20 years of experience, and the founder of Sunlight Tax.We talk about why there’s no standard path for creatives, how the story you tell about your worth shapes everything, and why financial literacy might be the most underrated superpower in your business toolkit.HighlightsThere is no standard path. And that’s actually the point.Creative careers don’t come with a rulebook and for a long time, that felt like a disadvantage.But Hannah reframes it completely.“Believing there should be a standard route stifles innovation and self-direction; embracing the openness enables more organic growth and resilience.”When you stop waiting for someone to hand you the map, you start drawing your own. And that map tends to be more honest, more durable, and more you.The story you tell about your work changes everything.Marketing is hard for a lot of creatives. Not because they don’t have something valuable to offer. But because they haven’t fully claimed the value of what they do.Hannah connects this directly to how we price, pitch, and show up.“Valuing your authenticity and the unique perspective you bring makes marketing more genuine and attracts aligned clients.”When you believe in what you bring to the table, you stop underselling and hedging. And you start speaking to the people who actually need what you have.Money is just value wearing a different name.So many creatives carry a complicated relationship with money. It feels awkward to charge and uncomfortable to negotiate. It’s like asking for money means somehow caring less about the art.Hannah flips that story.“By reframing the way we perceive money in relation to our creative work, we begin to see it not as a barrier but as a reflection of the value we provide. This mental shift cultivates confidence and legitimacy, making it easier to set fair prices and negotiate contracts.”Money isn’t the opposite of meaning. It’s what happens when your work matters to someone else enough for them to exchange something for it.Financial literacy is a creative superpower.Most of us weren’t taught this. We got great art education, maybe. But no one sat us down and walked us through estimated taxes, deductions, or what self-employment actually costs.And that gap creates unnecessary stress.“Financial literacy empowers creative professionals to maximize deductions, reduce anxiety, and reinvest in their craft.”The less time you spend in financial fog, the more you can put into the work.Simple systems beat complicated intentions.Hannah is a big advocate of this one. You don’t need a complicated accounting setup. You need something easy enough that you’ll actually do it.“People are more likely to sustain beneficial habits that are effortless to maintain, leading to better long-term financial health.”Things like creating a dedicated account for business expenses or building a habit of tracking can go a long way. Small sustainable things compound into real clarity over time.You don’t have to do this alone.One of the most powerful things Hannah talks about is collective action. The tax laws that have protected artists and creatives didn’t happen by accident. They happened because people organized, showed up, and made noise together.“Building civic engagement and belonging to professional groups magnifies influence and creates systemic change.”Your individual voice matters. But when you join it with others, the impact multiplies in ways that go far beyond your own studio or business.The creative brain is built for entrepreneurship.Hannah makes a case I think a lot of us need to hear.Pattern recognition, lateral thinking, and standing out in a crowded room all make us good artists and writers. And those same skills can make for a remarkable entrepreneur.“Recognizing their own superpowers can help artists and creators craft authentic, compelling brands and find underserved markets.”You’ve been business skills your whole life. You just might not have called them that.Closing ReflectionHannah’s work is about more than tax tips.It’s about helping creatives step into the full picture of what they’ve built. To stop treating money like a foreign language and start seeing it as part of the creative practice itself.Because when you understand the financial side of your work, you protect it. You grow it. You give it staying power.If you’re a creative entrepreneur figuring out the money side of your work, leave a comment and tell us where you’re at. Because this conversation is worth continuing.