![]() She has speaking gigs lined up in Australia, the Philippines and Thailand during the coming year, along with some closer to home in Austin, Texas, where her family moved from Maine in 2014 (in part to take advantage of the city's start-up culture). With a typical rate of $10,000 per speech, she talks to groups about business strategies and the lessons she has gleaned from interviewing more than 300 millionaires (five of whom now serve as her board of mentors). In 2014, Masters published The Eventual Millionaire, a guide for entrepreneurs building a start-up, and she credits the book with boosting her speaking career. That philosophy carries into her role as a coach helping clients to launch businesses. ![]() ![]() "It's still about life first, then money," she says. A personal assistant cooks and cleans-"Having somebody clear out that brain space for me is so valuable," says Masters-and three other employees work on marketing, programming and other aspects of the business. Though she intends to keep expanding the business, which she runs from home, she limits her time on the job to 30 to 40 hours a week so she has time for her two children, Finley, 9, and Jet, 7. Masters's coaching and speaking business has blossomed, drawing in nearly $500,000 in revenue in 2015, with a target of $600,000 this year.
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