Yarden Carroll isn’t focused on being visible; she’s focused on being aligned.
As the founder of Crowned Creative™ and creator of the R.E.G.A.L. Offer Framework™, Carroll has guided over 50 women entrepreneurs in clarifying their value, crafting high-ticket offers, and selling with confidence and integrity. Known as a business strategist and offer architect, Carroll delivers more than strategy. She helps women lead with structure and self-worth. From one-on-one coaching to packed workshops, she equips underestimated women with the tools to stop shrinking, start charging their worth, and show up with conviction.
You’re known for naming offers powerfully. If you had to name this current season of your life, what would it be called — and why?
Yarden: Crowned & Collected
Because I’m no longer chasing visibility. I’m curating alignment. I don’t need to prove I belong in the room. I am in the room. This season is calm, not because life is quiet, but because I’ve made peace with my pace. No more negotiating my value. No more bending into versions of success that don’t feel sacred. The crown is secure. And everything I touch flows from that knowledge.
You’ve helped women move from “underpriced to in-demand.” But what’s one piece of inner work that money can’t replace in that transformation?
Yarden: Saying no without guilt.
A six-figure offer means nothing if you are still shrinking behind the scenes. Too many women build premium brands on the outside but feel powerless on the inside. That is not success. That is survival in disguise. This is why I teach the T.A.P. mindset. Because your mind is either a launchpad or a landmine. One thought can move you forward. Another can blow your confidence and delay your purpose.
T is for Thoughts. Fear-based thinking builds a fear-based business.
A is for Authority. Stop asking for permission. Move like you belong.
P is for Power. Decide like your future self is already in the room.
You cannot charge like a leader if you still think like a placeholder. Mindset is not extra. It is everything.
You once said, “I don’t just stand tall — I lead tall.” What’s one area of your life where you’re still learning to take up space unapologetically?
Yarden: Receiving
I used to think leadership was about how much I could carry. How much could I give? How well could I perform under pressure? But I’ve learned that real power isn’t just in the doing. It’s in allowing. Allowing softness. Allowing support. Allowing ease. Now, I lead tall, yes. But I also rest royally. And I’m still learning that I don’t have to apologize for needing help or creating space to breathe. That, too, is leadership.
Your R.E.G.A.L. Offer Framework™ has helped women clarify their value. What’s the moment when you had to re-clarify your value — and how did it change your trajectory?
Yarden: I walked away from a five-figure contract because they refused to respect my boundaries around scheduling, strategy, or planning. The money was cute. The disrespect wasn’t. They wanted me just to be flexible. They didn’t say it, but the message was clear: shrink, smile, stay agreeable. However, I’ve learned that when your boundaries are treated like suggestions, your power is already being eroded. So, I said no.
That wasn’t just a business decision. That was a spiritual one.
And that now became a divine filter. The right clients started coming with clarity. The wrong rooms closed themselves. My brand matured because I stopped branding for validation and started aligning with my full self.
You can’t raise your rates if your peace is still negotiable.
Legacy is a theme that threads through all your work. When you think of the women who will come behind you, what do you want them to remember most about your leadership?
Yarden: That I didn’t let a certification or degree define me. I defined me.
I want every woman reading this to know you don’t need someone else’s stamp to lead. You don’t need a degree to walk in your divine authority. I didn’t get here because I checked all the boxes. I
got here because I refused to stay boxed in. My real education was watching my single mother raise four kids, work two jobs, and go back to school for her master’s. Surviving grief after losing my father.
Mothering a child with autism while finishing my degree and running a business. Waking up every day when I had every excuse to quit and choose purpose anyway. Legacy isn’t what you leave behind. It’s what you live out loud. And I hope I’m remembered not for being polished, but for being real.
What would you like to gain personally and professionally from being featured in SHEEN Magazine?
Yarden: I hope this story reaches the woman who has poured so much into everyone else, she forgot what her dream even sounds like. The one in the messy middle. Who paused school? Shelved her goals. Barely recognizes herself. I want her to flip this page, see my face, and feel a spark. Not because I had it all figured out, but because I kept showing up. Even when the how was unclear, I clung to my why.
Because my why was never about building a business. It was about building a bridge. So other women do not have to hustle their way into healing. So, they can lead from alignment, not exhaustion. And build a legacy without losing themselves.
Professionally, I want this feature to be a signal. Women like me who lead with alignment and lived experience belong in the big rooms, too. This is not a flex. It is a call to reimagine power. I am not here to fit the mold. I am here to expand it.
If this opens doors to speak, teach, or collaborate, great. But the goal is bigger than bookings. It is to remind women they do not have to shrink to be seen. We are not waiting for permission. We are the infrastructure.
SHEEN Magazine exists to remind women of their worth. What would you love readers of this article to walk away believing more deeply about themselves?
Yarden: Your worth was never up for negotiation. You are not too loud. Not too late. Not behind. And definitely not broken. But here is what no one tells you. Playing small is expensive. Every time you say yes to what drains you, you say no to what could grow you. That is the real cost of opportunity. Lost time. Lost peace. A delayed version of the woman you are becoming.
Say no, even when it is hard. Set the boundary, even if it rattles the room. Choose alignment over approval. That is the investment your future self needs. You do not need fixing. You need to be reminded. You’ve waited long enough. The version of you who no longer explains, shrinks, or negotiates is already within reach.
Now walk like it.
How can readers connect online?
Yarden: Connect online via the website: https://www.instagram.com/yardencarroll/
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