If you’re feeling nervous before your first paid coaching session, remember that your client is probably feeling it even more intensely. They’ve just taken a huge step: admitting they need help with money, paying for that help (when they might already be worried about money), and getting ready to share personal details with a stranger.

Your clients are likely walking in with mixed emotions—excited but terrified, hopeful but skeptical, brave but vulnerable. They might be worried about judgment or wondering if their situation is too far gone to help. I once had a client tell me they experienced PTSD symptoms just looking at their bank account while doing the prep work. That’s how deep these money emotions can go.

The First Few Minutes: Setting the Right Tone

The opening minutes of your session set the tone for everything that follows. Here’s how to create what I call the “warm welcome phase”:

Keep it brief (about 10 minutes) and show genuine, calm excitement. Take the lead right away and acknowledge their courage. A simple “I know this can be a big step” goes a long way. Ask how they’re feeling coming into the session. You’ll hear everything from “I’m fine” to “I couldn’t sleep last night.”

If there’s a mutual connection who referred them, mention it briefly, but be careful not to get pulled into a long story. Instead, share your connection to the person and assure them of confidentiality.

  • Want your clients to open up about money? Start by acknowledging their courage – it takes guts to share your finances with a stranger and pay them for help.
  • Trying to solve every financial problem in one session isn’t generous, it’s overwhelming. Pick their most exciting goal and solve it completely.
  • Your clients can sense when you’re in your head worrying about delivering value. Their emotional rollercoaster is 10 times bigger than yours.
  • Numbers tell a story, but you need to narrate it out loud. Walk clients through your thinking process so they can see how you got to the solution.
  • The magic isn’t in telling clients to spend less, it’s in finding their big goal that makes them excited enough to actually change their habits.
  • When a client shares multiple money goals, celebrate internally. They’re showing you they have a genuine need for ongoing coaching, so don’t try to tackle all those goals at once.
  • Your follow-up system is a safety net that catches clients before they fall off track. Make it systematic but personal, like checking in when reality and procrastination typically hit.

Setting Clear Expectations

One of my biggest early mistakes was trying to solve every problem a client brought up in that first session. Now, I structure expectations like this:

  1. State the session length upfront
  2. Acknowledge the time limit while emphasizing we can make significant progress
  3. Clarify their top priority
  4. Be honest about what we can realistically accomplish

I tell clients straight up that I don’t believe there’s one right way to manage money. My job is to help them find what works best for them, and I encourage them to speak up if they don’t love a suggestion or have their own ideas.

I approach the session in segments, so we don’t spend too much time caught up in any one phase. These are the Four Value Blocks.

The Four Value Blocks

Block 1: Current Picture

Help clients see their financial situation clearly, often for the first time. Don’t just throw numbers at them; help them understand the story their money is telling. Narrate your thinking process out loud. Start with the big picture (income, expenses, debt) and avoid getting caught up in small details like whether the cable bill is $92 or $99.

Block 2: The Possibility Phase

This is where the magic happens. Explore what led them to seek help, what stressors they want to eliminate, and what they want to gain. Help them see not just the financial benefits, but how their life could be different. This is about what money can do for them.

Block 3: Strategy Session (Largest time block)

First, show them what achieving their goals would look like with their current finances. Then explore potential changes to speed up progress or better guarantee success. Make this collaborative, using language like “Let’s see if we can find more money” or “Let’s explore ways to speed up your progress.”

Remember: you can’t solve every problem in one session. Focus on their biggest priority and remember that the biggest priority is whatever gets the client most excited to commit to changes. Is it always the best choice financially? Not always, but if it gets them motivated to save or budget, that’s where the magic happens.

Block 4: Implementation Plan

Finally, shift your discussion into real-world action by creating a clear roadmap. Recap where the client is now, what changes you discussed, and how these changes will help them reach their goals faster. Don’t overwhelm them with a huge to-do list. Three steps they’ll actually complete beats ten that will overwhelm them.

The Follow-Up System: Keeping Momentum Going

Same Day:

Send a detailed summary email including:

  • Recap of their current financial position
  • Specific steps discussed
  • Any spreadsheets or tools created together
  • Resources mentioned
  • Their personal action plan
  • A note reinforcing their potential

Next Day:

Provide technical support (checking access to resources) and emotional support (acknowledging that changes can feel overwhelming).

One Week Later:

Check in when reality has typically set in. Celebrate any progress, remind them that progress isn’t linear, and share how other clients have overcome similar challenges.

3-4 Weeks Later: The “On Track” Call

Schedule a 15-minute check-in to:

  • Provide closure to their initial session
  • Help them feel supported
  • Discuss ongoing coaching if they’re struggling
  • Create opportunities for testimonials and referrals

Creating Lasting Impact

Your first paid session isn’t just about the technical aspects of financial coaching. It’s also about making your client feel seen, heard, and capable of change. When you create an experience that combines practical value with emotional support, you’re giving them confidence in their financial future.

The goal is to have clients leave your session saying, “They get me. They see what I’ve been experiencing. They were honest about where I stand and what this will take. I’m excited about my goal and can see it clearly now. I know what I have to do, and I have someone in my corner who can guide me through this.”

This might seem like a challenge with many factors at play and constantly in flux, and it is. But our clients deserve this level of value from us. By focusing on both the practical and emotional aspects of money management, we can help our clients get great results while actually enjoying the journey.