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7 contributions to Virtual Assistant
2.2 — Calendar Management | Newbie VA Course (Free)
Your client’s calendar is more than dates — it’s the backbone of their productivity.As a VA, managing that calendar means controlling time, not just blocking slots. - Create event templates (calls, reviews, buffer time). - Sync apps (Zoom, Google Meet, Calendly) so it all connects. - Always triple-check time zones before confirming. 💡 A well-managed calendar saves hours of confusion and double-booking. Let’s Talk What’s one trick you use (or would like to use) to protect your client’s calendar from chaos? Drop your idea below 👇 🔗 Classroom Lesson: Go to Lesson 2.2 — Calendar Management ⏭️ Next Lesson: 2.3 — Communication Basics
1 like • Oct 30
Communicate how much time the client wants between: work, focus and rest. So I know how to organize. Like how many hours a day the client would like to have meetings. So I know and they aren't overwhelmed.
2.1 — Inbox Management | Newbie VA Course (Free)
A clean inbox is peace of mind — for you and for your client.As a Virtual Assistant, email management is one of your highest-trust responsibilities. Most founders drown in messages. Your job is to build calm through systems: - Create folders or labels for categories like Clients, Receipts, Projects, or Travel. - Use filters so that routine notifications skip the inbox. - Flag only what truly needs the client’s attention. 💡 The goal isn’t “zero inbox.” It’s zero confusion. When a client opens their inbox and instantly understands what’s urgent, what’s done, and what’s delegated — you’ve already delivered value. Pro tip: make a daily 10-minute habit to archive, tag, or follow up. Tiny consistency beats big clean-ups. 💬 Let’s Talk How do you like to organize your own inbox?Folders? Labels? Color-coded stars? Drop your best tip below 👇 you might inspire another VA to steal your system. 🔗 Classroom Lesson: Go to Lesson 2.1 — Inbox Management ⏭️ Next Lesson: 2.2 — Calendar Management
1 like • Oct 29
Created the 4 different folders, cleaned up some unwanted or spam, and learned how to find archived emails. Wrote my 3 sentence email to myself for what I have done.
1.4 — Your First Week as a VA | Newbie VA Course (Free)
Your first week as a Virtual Assistant sets the tone for your entire career. It’s not about being perfect — it’s about being present, responsive, and dependable.Clients rarely expect you to know everything. What they care about most is that you communicate clearly and take ownership. In your first week, focus on three simple goals: 1. Clarity: Ask questions early instead of guessing. 2. Consistency: Respond to messages within a few hours during work time. 3. Confidence: Track what you learn, even small wins — this builds momentum. 💡 The goal of week one isn’t to impress. It’s to build rhythm — your pace, your routine, and your client’s trust. By the end of that first week, you should know: - Where everything lives (files, logins, processes). - How your client communicates (email, Slack, voice notes). - What success looks like for them this week. You’re not just “starting work.” You’re stepping into someone’s system — and bringing calm to the chaos. 💬 Let’s Talk If you were starting with a new client tomorrow, what would you do in your first week to make a great impression? Drop your answer below 👇 (Example: “I’d set up a shared Notion tracker so my client always sees progress.”) 🔗 Classroom Lesson: Go to Lesson 1.4 — Your First Week as a VA ⏭️ Next Module: Module 2 — Inbox & Email Tasks
0 likes • Oct 29
A friendly hello, look at the tasks they want me to do and communicate I will start on this...
1.3 — Professional Mindset | Newbie VA Course (Free)
A Virtual Assistant’s biggest asset isn’t a tool or a task list — it’s their mindset. You’re not “just helping”; you’re managing small pieces of someone’s business that must work right, every day.That means showing up on time, communicating clearly, and treating every task — no matter how small — like it matters. Professionalism as a VA means: - Owning your work even when clients forget to say thank you. - Protecting your time like a business owner, not an employee. - Staying proactive — fixing issues before they become problems. Clients remember consistency more than brilliance.When you show up reliable, organized, and solution-oriented, you become the person they can’t work without. 💡 Professional mindset = quiet authority. You don’t need to announce you’re dependable — people feel it through every message and deliverable you send. 💬 Let’s Talk What does “being professional” mean to you in your daily work habits? Drop one example below 👇 (Example: “I always confirm meeting times in advance so my client never needs to remind me.”) 🔗 Classroom Lesson: Go to Lesson 1.3 — Professional Mindset ⏭️ Next Lesson: Lesson 1.4 — Your First Week as a VA
1 like • Oct 29
I always communicate with what is happening-the client is always informed.
1.2 — Hourly vs Project Work | Newbie VA Course (Free)
If you’re just starting out, one of the first choices you’ll face as a Virtual Assistant is how to charge — hourly or per project. Hourly work is steady and transparent.Clients pay for your time, which means they can start small, and you can get consistent experience. You track hours, deliver tasks, and build trust week by week. Project work, on the other hand, pays for results.It can offer higher payouts, but also higher pressure — deadlines, revisions, and defined scopes. Newbie VAs usually start hourly because it’s simpler to manage while you’re still learning client systems, tools, and pacing.As your confidence grows, you’ll naturally blend both: base hourly support + project-based upgrades. 💡 Think of hourly work as your foundation — it gives you proof, testimonials, and rhythm before you level up to full-package services. 💬 Let’s Talk If you had to choose right now — would you rather charge hourly or per project? Why? Drop your answer below 👇 There’s no wrong choice — your reasons might help someone else see the bigger picture. 🔗 Classroom Lesson: Go to Lesson 1.2 — Hourly vs Project Work ⏭️ Next Lesson: Lesson 1.3 — Professional Mindset
2 likes • Oct 29
Hourly because it is where I am at, as I'm just starting out.
1-7 of 7
Severine Johnson
2
11points to level up
@severine-johnson-5405
A Christian. Have a college certificate in Life Coaching. I volunteer for an emotional pre crisis support chatline. I really enjoy it.

Active 13d ago
Joined Oct 25, 2025
Toronto, Ontario