About Us
The Paper Genie is a small paper “hack” that helps you do the thing you keep avoiding.
I created it after spending 30 years building sales organizations and teaching thousands of people how to succeed in direct sales, affiliate marketing, and network marketing. Over and over, I saw the same pattern: people could learn the steps, want the result, and still freeze at the moment they had to do the daily reach out.
I want my Genie!
That’s when it clicked. The problem was not information or motivation. The problem was the moment of action.

My solution: a “Genie” moment
The Paper Genie is designed to create a tiny win, right when you need it. A small dopamine hit, the brain’s reward signal, when you do the thing you could not make yourself do.
People use it privately, with no one watching, no pressure, and no judgment. Those small wins build momentum and confidence over time.
Who it’s for
The Paper Genie is for anyone who has been stuck on something for a long time, even if you know exactly what to do.
It can help with:
- Exercise and health habits
- Morning routines and screen boundaries
- Organizing, decluttering, and finishing projects
- Sales outreach, follow ups, and the scary “ask”
- Any one small daily action that adds up
A quick note from me

I cannot do your pushups for you. But I can give you a simple tool that makes starting feel easier, and helps you build trust in yourself again.
I want my Genie!
If you have questions, reach out anytime through the contact page.
Real life Genie wins
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Jessica had not worked out in 7 years after a serious car crash. She started with 3 minute squats to one song. After 9 days in a row, she did a full hour workout. “I thought I would never work out again. I will never be without my Genie.”
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Leslie says, “I love my Genie. I have been exercising and saying my prayers daily since I returned from the war. I feel like I am living again.”
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Shelagh is lifting weights before work, 29 days in a row, after 78 years of not exercising at all.
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Brooke broke a nearly 10 year phone first habit. She now walks and reads first thing. No screen. Her teens told her, “Mornings are nice with you now.”
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Erica started organizing her workspace after years of putting it off. Fifteen minutes a day. She is on day 30 and says she is ready to dream and write her book.