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In this episode we explore the inspiring journey of Georgia Williams, the professional singer and content creator who rose to fame on the BBC's The Voice. Georgia shares her experiences of overcoming public scrutiny and severe online trolling, her tools for building resilience and how she has built an awesome career.
We get into strategies for balancing professionalism and personality on social media, including the benefits of content batching and leveraging of personal passions.
In my opinion there are some real insights for anyone looking to build confidence and create authentic, engaging content online.
If you enjoyed this episode then please feel free to go and share it on your social media or head over to
Apple podcasts
or
Spotify
and give me a review, I would be so very grateful.
Connect with Georgia on
Website
,
,
,
,
TikTok
,
Threads
Spotify
Freebies about
create content with more confidence
and
how to batch
Connect with Teresa on
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,
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Teresa:
If you're a personal brand, then you know the importance of putting yourself out there on social media. But one of the things I think lots of people get nervous about is what people are going to say about us and what if people say something mean. Well, today on the podcast, I interviewed the amazing Georgia Williams.
Georgia:
Yey. Hello. Hello.
Teresa:
I am so excited to have you here. This is, you are podcast interview number four of seven. And I feel like I couldn't have had it more perfectly timed with you in the middle to kind of, reinvigorate me, wake me up and go for the afternoon. I realized that obviously I call you G because that's what you want to be.
Georgia:
So I used to work in social media for a marketing agency, employed, also being a singer, also being a blogger, like a cat who has nine lives, did a bit of everything, basically a creative person.
Teresa:
Love it. And it wasn't just Like, one of the things that we want to talk about because one of the things that you share on social media and helping [00:07:00] people with content and show up on social media is the whole confidence and if you were to go and look at G's social media, so if you were to find Ray of Social, you will see someone who on the surface has bags of confidence, like no end of confidence.
Georgia:
Absolutely not. It's weird now to see like this present G because when I think about past G, speaking of myself in the past tense there.
Teresa:
I love it.
Georgia:
I'm kind of a completely different person and I would, I wouldn't have ever had the audacity to speak to somebody like yourself or even come on a podcast, like at all, let alone have my own podcast. Like that just wasn't in the mix. Yes, I've been a singer, [00:08:00] but I wasn't actually a public singer for quite a lot of my life. Even though I've grown up as a musical family, it took me a long time, a lot of self work, a lot of therapy, a lot of other good stuff in the background, to be able to be that front face of my brand. And it blows my own mind, never mind people who look at my social because I think, how are you the same person?
Teresa:
So you said that you weren't a front facing. One of the things that we're going to talk about and we're bringing up is the fact that you went on a BBC TV program called The Voice, which if you're in other countries, I'm fairly confident they have The Voice in other countries, they do definitely have it in the States.
Georgia:
I've kind of done a lot of studio work under another alias, and it wasn't, I wasn't the face of that.
Teresa:
What made you sign up for The Voice?
Georgia:
The real reason, it's because my sister actually signed up to it and I found out and I was like wait a minute, I'm the singer in the family, like, why are you getting on it?
Teresa:
I love that. Nothing like sibling rivalry.
Georgia:
Really much. I thought, what if she goes on this programme and gets further and I sit there on my sofa watching it every week thinking, why didn't I apply for that because I'm the singer of the family.
Teresa:
That is hilarious. So not only did you apply, not only did you get on the actual show, but you got picked by the one and only Tom Jones.
Georgia:
Indeed.
Teresa:
How was that?
Georgia:
I actually didn't know he turned. I was completely just in the experience on stage looking at the crowd. The crowd's about 300 people in the audience at that time. That was the biggest audience I've ever sung to in that, in that audition.
Teresa:
You must have been absolutely petrified.
Georgia:
Yeah. Pretty much. I mean, yeah, I was quite scared. Couldn't really breathe. Didn't really know what was going on. I just thought, let's get on the stage. Let's maybe get off, you know, live. And I was just in the element. The audience was reacting to the way that I was singing and I didn't realize that anybody had turned and he turned [00:11:00] right at the last split second.
Teresa:
It's Tom Jones.
Georgia:
Do you know, I always say that he reminds me of Aslan. Do you remember the Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, Aslan? Yes. He just has this presence about him that you can't, help, but he's just immersed in it. He has, and then maybe that's the star quality that people talk about, but when he is with you in that room, it's not a, I'm so scared, you know, he's Aslan.
Teresa:
I've read the book, and I've talked about it before on the podcast, and I know I've definitely talked about it with you, The Gap in the Game. And I, I can't remember what I was watching. Like, I was watching some competition type program, which sounds very odd, because I wouldn't really watch that sort of thing.
Georgia:
I lost count. It was that many. I think it was about a year worth of auditioning, backstage bits and pieces. Yeah, it was, it was a long time before it was shown on television.
Teresa:
And what happens is when people then don't win, or they get voted out in whatever round, the gap must feel humongous.
Georgia:
It had some incredible highs but then [00:14:00] some really dark lows and some places that I went to that I was not prepared for. The show, they do have psychologists and they have people on board to kind of help me through that process and they are there every step of the way to make sure you're not going to lose it, you know.
Teresa:
That is something...
By Teresa Heath-Wareing5
4646 ratings
In this episode we explore the inspiring journey of Georgia Williams, the professional singer and content creator who rose to fame on the BBC's The Voice. Georgia shares her experiences of overcoming public scrutiny and severe online trolling, her tools for building resilience and how she has built an awesome career.
We get into strategies for balancing professionalism and personality on social media, including the benefits of content batching and leveraging of personal passions.
In my opinion there are some real insights for anyone looking to build confidence and create authentic, engaging content online.
If you enjoyed this episode then please feel free to go and share it on your social media or head over to
Apple podcasts
or
Spotify
and give me a review, I would be so very grateful.
Connect with Georgia on
Website
,
,
,
,
TikTok
,
Threads
Spotify
Freebies about
create content with more confidence
and
how to batch
Connect with Teresa on
Website
,
The Club
,
Sign up to Teresa's email list
,
,
,
or
Teresa:
If you're a personal brand, then you know the importance of putting yourself out there on social media. But one of the things I think lots of people get nervous about is what people are going to say about us and what if people say something mean. Well, today on the podcast, I interviewed the amazing Georgia Williams.
Georgia:
Yey. Hello. Hello.
Teresa:
I am so excited to have you here. This is, you are podcast interview number four of seven. And I feel like I couldn't have had it more perfectly timed with you in the middle to kind of, reinvigorate me, wake me up and go for the afternoon. I realized that obviously I call you G because that's what you want to be.
Georgia:
So I used to work in social media for a marketing agency, employed, also being a singer, also being a blogger, like a cat who has nine lives, did a bit of everything, basically a creative person.
Teresa:
Love it. And it wasn't just Like, one of the things that we want to talk about because one of the things that you share on social media and helping [00:07:00] people with content and show up on social media is the whole confidence and if you were to go and look at G's social media, so if you were to find Ray of Social, you will see someone who on the surface has bags of confidence, like no end of confidence.
Georgia:
Absolutely not. It's weird now to see like this present G because when I think about past G, speaking of myself in the past tense there.
Teresa:
I love it.
Georgia:
I'm kind of a completely different person and I would, I wouldn't have ever had the audacity to speak to somebody like yourself or even come on a podcast, like at all, let alone have my own podcast. Like that just wasn't in the mix. Yes, I've been a singer, [00:08:00] but I wasn't actually a public singer for quite a lot of my life. Even though I've grown up as a musical family, it took me a long time, a lot of self work, a lot of therapy, a lot of other good stuff in the background, to be able to be that front face of my brand. And it blows my own mind, never mind people who look at my social because I think, how are you the same person?
Teresa:
So you said that you weren't a front facing. One of the things that we're going to talk about and we're bringing up is the fact that you went on a BBC TV program called The Voice, which if you're in other countries, I'm fairly confident they have The Voice in other countries, they do definitely have it in the States.
Georgia:
I've kind of done a lot of studio work under another alias, and it wasn't, I wasn't the face of that.
Teresa:
What made you sign up for The Voice?
Georgia:
The real reason, it's because my sister actually signed up to it and I found out and I was like wait a minute, I'm the singer in the family, like, why are you getting on it?
Teresa:
I love that. Nothing like sibling rivalry.
Georgia:
Really much. I thought, what if she goes on this programme and gets further and I sit there on my sofa watching it every week thinking, why didn't I apply for that because I'm the singer of the family.
Teresa:
That is hilarious. So not only did you apply, not only did you get on the actual show, but you got picked by the one and only Tom Jones.
Georgia:
Indeed.
Teresa:
How was that?
Georgia:
I actually didn't know he turned. I was completely just in the experience on stage looking at the crowd. The crowd's about 300 people in the audience at that time. That was the biggest audience I've ever sung to in that, in that audition.
Teresa:
You must have been absolutely petrified.
Georgia:
Yeah. Pretty much. I mean, yeah, I was quite scared. Couldn't really breathe. Didn't really know what was going on. I just thought, let's get on the stage. Let's maybe get off, you know, live. And I was just in the element. The audience was reacting to the way that I was singing and I didn't realize that anybody had turned and he turned [00:11:00] right at the last split second.
Teresa:
It's Tom Jones.
Georgia:
Do you know, I always say that he reminds me of Aslan. Do you remember the Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, Aslan? Yes. He just has this presence about him that you can't, help, but he's just immersed in it. He has, and then maybe that's the star quality that people talk about, but when he is with you in that room, it's not a, I'm so scared, you know, he's Aslan.
Teresa:
I've read the book, and I've talked about it before on the podcast, and I know I've definitely talked about it with you, The Gap in the Game. And I, I can't remember what I was watching. Like, I was watching some competition type program, which sounds very odd, because I wouldn't really watch that sort of thing.
Georgia:
I lost count. It was that many. I think it was about a year worth of auditioning, backstage bits and pieces. Yeah, it was, it was a long time before it was shown on television.
Teresa:
And what happens is when people then don't win, or they get voted out in whatever round, the gap must feel humongous.
Georgia:
It had some incredible highs but then [00:14:00] some really dark lows and some places that I went to that I was not prepared for. The show, they do have psychologists and they have people on board to kind of help me through that process and they are there every step of the way to make sure you're not going to lose it, you know.
Teresa:
That is something...

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