Most people think systems are about saving time.
Sara Loretta sees them differently.
For her, systems are how you create better experiences, stronger Relationships, and more confidence as a business owner. In this conversation, Sara shares how she moved from operations and compliance work into helping creators and teams build smarter systems, stronger communities, and more meaningful in-person experiences.
This episode is packed with practical examples. Sara walks through the CRM system she built to make networking follow-up actually useful, the client sign-off process that protects projects before they go off the rails, and the fake employee she created to automate admin work and help her step into a stronger CEO role.
If you’ve ever felt like your business is growing faster than your systems, this conversation will give you a better way to think about what to build next.
Systems are not about efficiency first
Sara makes a powerful point early in the conversation. Systems are not just there to help you work less or automate more. They are there to help you create better human experiences.
That shift matters.
Instead of asking, “How do I save time?” she asks, “How do I free up more space to build better relationships?” It is a small reframing, but it changes everything from follow-up to client communication to event design.
The networking follow-up system that actually keeps relationships alive
Networking usually dies the moment people leave the room.
The smartest part is what happens later.
Why personality is a better business asset than most people think
One of the strongest ideas in this episode is that people remember what makes you human.
Not just what software you use.
Not just what service you offer.
Not just your job title.
Sara believes that more people should build relationships around what genuinely lights them up. Coffee. Cooking. Books. Trivia. A strange obsession. A memorable hobby.
Those details help people remember you. They also make follow-up easier, more natural, and more relational. For leaders trying to stand out, that is a useful reminder. Personality is not fluff. It is part of the system.
The fake employee who helped her become a stronger CEO
One of the most memorable parts of this episode is Sara’s story about “Lizzie Benson,” the fake employee she created after chasing down an overdue invoice from her clients.
What began as an email alias turned into a fully built administrative persona that handles onboarding, invoicing, calendar coordination, project setup, and other repeatable tasks through Zapier automations and AI-assisted workflows.
Lizzie gave Sara more than operational support.
She gave her confidence.
By systematizing admin work behind a defined role, Sara was able to stop feeling like a solo freelancer doing everything manually and start operating like a true CEO. It is a smart example of how systems can reshape not only workflow, but identity.
Better client feedback prevents bigger problems later
Sara also shares one of the most practical systems in the episode: her client phase sign-off and “vibe check” process.
At each milestone, clients review the work, approve it with a signed form, and rate how they feel about the project’s progress. If they rate it low, the system immediately asks why and offers a link to book a call.
That means concerns show up early, not months later when frustration has built up.
It is a strong reminder that feedback systems do not need to be complicated. They just need to create the right moment for honesty.
Why in-person connection still matters
Sara’s work with Unmute is rooted in a simple belief: people still need real connection.
She is on a mission to help more people get off their computers, meet in person, and build communities that create momentum beyond the screen. Whether it is events, coworking, field trips, or retreats, she believes in designing experiences that make work feel more human again.