blog

The Mindset To Create Financial Abundance

Published · 10 min read · Jeremiah Krakowski

Featured image for article: The Mindset To Create Financial Abundance by Jeremiah Krakowski

Financial abundance does not start with pretending everything is easy. It starts with learning how to think, choose, and act like a person who is willing to build a profitable life on purpose. For coaches, course creators, mentors, and service-based business owners, the mindset to create financial abundance is not about chasing money for its own sake. It is about becoming the kind of person who can steward value, make clear decisions, serve people well, and keep going when the process feels uncomfortable.

A lot of business owners want more money, but they are not always honest about what they believe money means. Some people see money as pressure. Some see it as proof they are good enough. Some see it as something other people get to have, but not them. Those beliefs matter because they quietly shape what you ask for, what you charge, what you avoid, and how quickly you give up when the next step feels uncertain.

If you want to create financial abundance, you need more than positive thinking. You need an inner framework that can hold bigger goals without collapsing into fear, procrastination, or vague wishing. You need a plan that connects your desired life to daily action. You also need the courage to look at the places where your current patterns are not producing the result you say you want.

Why financial abundance feels unreachable

For many people, the first barrier is fear of the unknown. It is easier to stay where you are, even if where you are is frustrating, than to step into a new level of responsibility. Growth asks you to make decisions without having total certainty. It asks you to publish the offer, have the conversation, raise the price, follow up with the client, learn the skill, and take action before you feel completely ready.

Fear is not always loud. Sometimes it looks like research. Sometimes it looks like waiting for the perfect idea. Sometimes it looks like telling yourself, “I just need one more course before I can sell this.” If you keep postponing the move that would create momentum, fear may be running the process more than wisdom is.

Negative emotions and thoughts can also keep abundance at a distance. When you let discouragement become your identity, every challenge becomes evidence that you cannot succeed. One slow launch turns into “my business will never work.” One failed conversation turns into “people do not want what I have.” One difficult month turns into “I am not cut out for this.” That kind of thinking trains your nervous system to expect failure before you have even finished the work.

This is why mindset matters. Your thoughts are not magic spells, but they do become instructions. They influence what you notice, what you attempt, what you avoid, and how long you stay in the game. If your internal story is always scarcity, rejection, and impossibility, you will make different decisions than someone who believes they can learn, adjust, and create value.

Abundance requires clear goals, not vague wishes

One of the biggest reasons people never reach financial abundance is that they do not define what they actually want. They say they want “more money,” but they have not decided how much, by when, through what offer, for which audience, and at what cost to their time and energy. Vague goals create vague action. Clear goals create better questions.

Abundance also needs rhythm. If your goals only live in your head, they will usually lose to whatever feels urgent today. Read why your routine will decide how much money you make and turn the money goal into repeatable weekly behavior.

Instead of asking, “Why am I not farther along?” ask, “What would need to be true for my business to produce consistent revenue?” Maybe you need a stronger offer. Maybe you need to become more visible. Maybe you need a simpler sales process. Maybe you need to stop undercharging. If pricing is part of the problem, Jeremiah has another helpful resource on how to charge what your coaching is worth without making your value depend on people pleasing.

A clear goal also helps you stop measuring progress by emotion alone. Some days you will feel motivated. Some days you will not. If your plan only works when you feel inspired, it will not carry you very far. Financial abundance is built through aligned repetition: the right offer, the right audience, the right conversations, the right follow-through, and the willingness to keep improving.

Imagine the life you are building

Imagining the life you want is not escapism when it leads to action. It is a way of giving your mind a target. Take time to define what abundance actually looks like for you. Is it debt freedom? Is it hiring help? Is it paying yourself consistently? Is it having margin in your calendar? Is it giving more generously? Is it having a business that supports your family instead of consuming every waking hour?

When you picture the life you are building, do not only picture the outcome. Picture the version of you who can hold that outcome. How does that person make decisions? What do they stop tolerating? What do they practice daily? What do they do when they feel uncertain? This matters because abundance is not only a destination. It is also a capacity.

Visualization becomes useful when it helps you set goals, stay motivated, and overcome fear. If you can see the direction, you can break it into steps. If you can break it into steps, you can act. And once you act, your confidence starts being built by evidence instead of fantasy. For a practical companion to this idea, read Jeremiah’s post on how to manifest financial abundance without magical thinking, because the goal is not to wish harder; it is to align belief and behavior.

Replace procrastination with smaller commitments

Procrastination often gets labeled as laziness, but many times it is an emotional protection strategy. The task feels too big, so you avoid it. The outcome feels uncertain, so you delay. The decision feels risky, so you distract yourself with something easier. Then time passes, pressure increases, and the task feels even heavier than before.

The way out is not to shame yourself. The way out is to make the next commitment small enough to keep. If writing the full sales page feels overwhelming, write the promise first. If launching the full program feels too big, validate the offer with five conversations. If creating a new routine feels impossible, choose one daily action that points toward revenue and do it before anything else pulls your attention away.

Abundance grows when you honor your commitments to yourself. Every completed action tells your brain, “I am a person who follows through.” That identity is powerful. It turns goals from intimidating concepts into repeatable behavior. If time and focus are part of the struggle, Jeremiah’s guide to eliminating distractions and getting more done in your business connects directly to this work.

Build a money mindset around value and service

A healthy money mindset is not greedy. It is responsible. If your work helps people solve meaningful problems, then money is part of the exchange of value. Coaches and mentors sometimes struggle with this because they care deeply about helping people. But helping people and getting paid well are not enemies. In many cases, getting paid well allows you to serve with more stability, creativity, and longevity.

Scarcity says, “If I ask for more, people will reject me.” Abundance says, “I can create a clear offer, communicate the value, and let the right people decide.” Scarcity says, “There is not enough.” Abundance says, “I can learn how to create more value and reach more of the people I am called to help.” Scarcity says, “I failed, so I should stop.” Abundance says, “This feedback shows me what to improve next.”

That does not mean every offer will work or every sale will close. It means you stop using temporary results as permanent identity statements. You keep learning. You keep serving. You keep making cleaner decisions. Over time, this builds the kind of financial confidence that is rooted in stewardship, not hype.

Create a simple abundance plan

Start with the life you want, then work backward. What monthly revenue would support that life? What offer can create that revenue ethically? How many clients or customers would that require? How many conversations, pieces of content, or sales actions are needed to reach those people? What skills need to improve so the business can sustain the result?

Next, remove the actions that only make you feel busy. Many entrepreneurs are exhausted because they confuse motion with progress. They redesign the logo, tweak the website, consume more content, and reorganize their notes while avoiding the direct action that would create revenue. Abundance usually grows through directness: clearer offers, better communication, consistent visibility, stronger follow-up, and excellent delivery.

You may also need to decide what kind of business you are really building. Some people want financial freedom but keep creating business models that depend on constant burnout. If that tension is present, Jeremiah’s post on building financial freedom without burning out is a strong related next step.

Choose the identity before the evidence is perfect

The person who creates financial abundance does not wait until every fear disappears. They practice choosing differently while fear is still present. They become more honest about money. They take responsibility for their offers. They ask better questions. They build routines that support the future they say they want. They stop using confusion as a hiding place.

That identity is built one decision at a time. Decide to define your goal. Decide to simplify the next step. Decide to sell with integrity. Decide to stop rehearsing worst-case scenarios as if they are guaranteed. Decide to learn from feedback instead of making it mean you are finished. Decide to become the kind of person who can be trusted with more because you are faithful with what is already in front of you.

Financial abundance is not only about having more. It is about becoming more aligned, more courageous, more focused, and more willing to create value. When your mindset, plan, and daily actions point in the same direction, abundance stops being a distant fantasy and starts becoming a practical path you can walk.

FAQ

What is the mindset to create financial abundance?

The mindset to create financial abundance is the belief and behavior pattern that allows you to create, receive, and steward value. It includes clear goals, emotional resilience, responsibility, practical planning, and the willingness to take consistent action even before every fear is gone.

Is financial abundance only about positive thinking?

No. Positive thinking can help, but it is not enough by itself. Financial abundance requires aligned decisions, skill development, clear offers, sales conversations, follow-through, and a willingness to adjust when something is not working. Mindset matters because it shapes those actions.

How do I stop procrastinating on money goals?

Make the next step smaller and more specific. Instead of trying to fix the whole business, choose one action that can create momentum today: clarify your offer, contact a prospect, publish useful content, follow up, or review your pricing. Small completed commitments rebuild trust with yourself.

How can coaches build abundance without burning out?

Coaches can build abundance by choosing a focused offer, charging sustainable prices, creating repeatable sales systems, protecting delivery quality, and avoiding business models that require constant emergency effort. Abundance should increase capacity and stewardship, not create a more exhausting cage.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the mindset to create financial abundance?

The mindset to create financial abundance is the belief and behavior pattern that allows you to create, receive, and steward value. It includes clear goals, emotional resilience, responsibility, practical planning, and consistent action before every fear is gone.

Is financial abundance only about positive thinking?

No. Positive thinking can help, but financial abundance also requires aligned decisions, skill development, clear offers, sales conversations, follow-through, and the willingness to adjust when something is not working.

How do I stop procrastinating on money goals?

Make the next step smaller and more specific. Clarify your offer, contact one prospect, publish useful content, follow up, or review your pricing. Small completed commitments rebuild trust with yourself.

How can coaches build abundance without burning out?

Coaches can build abundance by choosing a focused offer, charging sustainable prices, creating repeatable sales systems, protecting delivery quality, and avoiding business models that require constant emergency effort.

Related Posts

How to Manifest Financial Abundance for Skeptics

Manifest financial abundance in a grounded way by combining mindset, surrender, practical action, and habits that help money grow.

The Blueprint for Financial Freedom Without the Burnout

Build financial freedom without burnout by packaging your expertise, creating scalable offers, setting firm boundaries, and selling with confidence as a coach.

Get Paid What You're Worth in Business

Get paid what you're worth in business by pricing for outcomes, setting stronger boundaries, and selling your value with confidence.

Eliminate Distractions and Get More Done In Your Business

Eliminate Distractions and Get More Done In Your Business. For coaches and course creators who want stronger sales, clearer strategy, and business growth.

Jeremiah Krakowski

About Jeremiah Krakowski

Jeremiah Krakowski is a coaching business mentor who helps coaches, course creators, and consultants scale from $3k/mo to $40k+/mo using direct response marketing, AI systems, and proven frameworks. He runs Wealthy Coach Academy and has 23+ years of experience in digital marketing. Learn more →

← Back to Blog
Mindset to Create Financial Abundance — Jeremiah Krakowski