Subscribe
The Carousel
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Wellness & Health
  • Travel & Leisure
  • Food & Drink
  • Lifestyle & Homes
  • About Us
  • News
  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Wellness & Health
  • Travel & Leisure
  • Food & Drink
  • Lifestyle & Homes
  • About Us
No Result
View All Result
The Carousel
No Result
View All Result
Home Lifestyle & Homes Careers

How I Went From Welfare To Running An International Business

The Carousel by The Carousel
01/08/2016
in Careers, Finance, Lifestyle & Homes, Parenting
0
Business Mentor Paul Farmer On The True Power Of Resilience
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Just four short years ago she was crying in the supermarket because she couldn’t afford the groceries she needed to feed her children.

Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!
Michelle Dixon
Michelle Dixon

Today, as founder and CEO of Kindred Global Mentorship and a successful holistic life coach, Michelle is rich in ways she never imagined.

We caught up with the inspiring mum as part of our Aussie mumpreneur series to glean a few secrets to her amazing success.

Related articles

The Low Tox Home Has Grown Up … And Australians Are Expecting More Than Green Marketing

Capricorn Full Moon and Mercury Retrograde Collide to Create Confusion

How did you get started in business?

I came to entrepreneurship from necessity, rather than life-long ambition. I earned a Ph.D. in Economics when I was 26, and shortly after that had three children and was home with them for many years.

When my marriage ended in my late 30s, due to a combination of factors, I was left with nothing. In the early stages, I was on welfare, and to furnish my home was taking furniture off the road from Council Cleanup, selling clothes my children had outgrown, and making crazy choices between buying all the food we needed versus shoes for fast-growing kids’ feet.

This was the lowest point of my life: not knowing how I could provide for my children or make my rent each month. It led to chronic anxiety, panic attacks, depression, and yet, underneath all of that, a very hungry determination to create something amazing. I wanted, most of all, to show my children that you could go from nothing to something.

Michelle Dixon and her kids
Michelle Dixon and her kids

Was there a light-bulb moment that set you on this path?

As I’d not been employed when my children were small, I decided the best way to support myself was to create a business which allowed me to still be with them after school, so I became a life coach, qualified in hypnotherapy, NLP, and more – all training funded by credit cards!

Within two years I had built a business with a regular client base in Sydney and in North America via Skype, which has included me giving workshops and running personal development retreats.

What I have found most gratifying is being able to help my clients believe in themselves, as self-love is the foundation of all tangible success. I have had a mentor for my coaching work who has been key to helping me understand who I am in that space, and how to build my business accordingly.

Two years ago I decided to create a tech startup, Kindred Global Mentorship. Kindred is an online marketplace for mentorship where you can search, find, and connect with people in your industry who can either help you, or whom you can help.

Working at Fishburners, a co-working space for tech startups, is another highlight. I have a small team in the Phillippines doing promotion, and now two interns working for me as well.

It goes without saying that my kids are crazy proud of me. But I want to add that they are the best assets in my life—fun, smart, helpful, and they have absolute belief in me. We’ve been on a huge journey together and I’m excited, finally, about the future.

What are you best tips for mums thinking of following your example?

It can feel isolating to be the only separated 40-something mother in an entrepreneurial space that feels younger and free of all the responsibilities and financial pressures I have.

So I’d like to share three bits of advice for all women, but perhaps especially for women in my situation who are considering taking a leap of faith and committing to big achievements in business:

1. Fear should never stop you

 It’s just a personal reaction and is neither a commentary on your ability nor on the viability of your business. Step through it one foot after the other, because it can only prevent your success if you let it.

2. Don’t listen to naysayers

Criticism is only constructive when it comes from a place of absolute belief in you and absolute belief in your business as an emanation of your fabulous self.

3. Insulate yourself from comparison

If you ever feel the onset of the impostor syndrome, then insulate yourself from the comparison culture of social media, the peer group, and so on, in order to work on yourself and your projects. There are always people ahead of you and behind you, and you can only construct great things from where you are at right now.

Previous Post

Sally Obermeder Celebrates Birthday, Anniversary and Miracle Baby!

Next Post

Radio Star Andy Lee Splits With Rebecca Harding

The Carousel

The Carousel

For over a decade, The Carousel has been at the forefront of digital lifestyle publishing. We are dedicated to empowering women to live intentionally—championing holistic wellness, sustainable practices, and emotional intelligence through premium, award-winning storytelling.

Related Posts

low tox home
Lifestyle & Homes

The Low Tox Home Has Grown Up … And Australians Are Expecting More Than Green Marketing

01/07/2026
Strawberry Moon
Astrology

Capricorn Full Moon and Mercury Retrograde Collide to Create Confusion

30/06/2026
15 Things Bosses Hate About Employees
Careers

Young Entrepreneur’s Guide To Being a Girl Boss

30/06/2026
How To Turn Your Teenagers Into Future Leaders1
Lifestyle & Homes

How To Raise Teenagers Into Future Leaders

30/06/2026
Pet Care: How to Reduce Your Environmental Paw Print
Pets

Why Australians Spend More On Their Pets Even During A Cost Of Living Crisis

26/06/2026
Mum using Haakaa product
Parenting

Haakaa Unveils The Gen 2 Plus: A Gentler Approach To Expressing Milk

23/06/2026

Recommended

How To Make The Perfect Wedding Cookie1

How To Make Melt In Your Mouth Wedding Cookies

03/08/2016
Are Kate Middleton And Prince William Expecting Baby No.3?1

Are Kate Middleton And Prince William Expecting Baby No.3?

04/10/2016

Recent Posts

Celebrating Sea Country cookbook Mindy Woods NAIDOC
Food & Drink

Celebrate NAIDOC Week with a Taste of Sea Country by Mindy Woods

by Marie-Antoinette Issa
06/07/2026
0

There are few things more uniquely Australian than gathering around seafood. But this NAIDOC Week, that familiar ritual becomes an...

Read moreDetails
Pilates for abs

These Pilates Moves Are a Core Game Changer For Abs … If Crunches Aren’t Your Thing

06/07/2026
Back In The Game: Samsung and Netball Australia's Newest Fitness Series

Why Mindful Eating Can Help You Run Faster

05/07/2026
Seafood Recipe Uni Don: Sea Urchin With Japanese Rice & Pickled Beetroot

Uni Don: Sea Urchin With Japanese Rice & Pickled Beetroot

05/07/2026
Anouk Colantoni

The Aussie Illustrator Turning Emotion Into Art for Tiffany & Co, Alemais and Paspaley

03/07/2026

Subscribe to Newsletter

Be the first to get daily fitness news & tips from JNews Fitness.

[mc4wp_form]
  • News
  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Wellness & Health
  • Travel & Leisure
  • Food & Drink
  • Lifestyle & Homes
  • About Us
Foyster Media Pty Ltd Copyright 2026
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Wellness & Health
  • Travel & Leisure
  • Food & Drink
  • Lifestyle & Homes
  • About Us

© 2025 Foyster Media Pty Ltd. All rights reserved