Ever Blanked

When Asked

About Salary

Expectations?

OR WORSE–BLURTED OUT A NUMBER THAT

MADE YOU WANT TO TIME TRAVEL BACK 30

SECONDS? (If only our ADHD superpowers

included that particular skill, right?)

I have. And I want to save you from this fate,

which is why I'm introducing…

"Salary Scripts That Stick: The ADHD Woman's

Guide to Getting Paid What You're Worth" –

because your brilliant brain deserves better than

panic-agreeing to a salary that makes you want

to cry into your ergonomic keyboard.

Download Your Free Copy Of…

Salary Scripts That Stick

The ADHD Woman's Guide to Getting

Paid What You're Worth

salary scripts that stick

This isn't your typical "just be confident!" career advice (because honestly, when has that ever helped?). 

Instead, you'll get real, ready-to-use scripts for every salary conversation that makes your brain go "ERROR 404: WORDS NOT FOUND."

From handling the dreaded "what's your current salary?" trap to negotiating benefits when your executive function has left the chat, these scripts are designed specifically for the way ADHD brains work.

Inside, you'll find…

Word-for-word scripts that stick in your brain (even when everything else falls out)

Actual strategies for those awkward silences when your time blindness makes three seconds feel like three years

Real-life examples from women who've been there, blanked that

How to advocate for yourself when rejection sensitivity is trying to make you settle for less

No more rehearsing conversations in the shower at 3 AM or agreeing to a lowball offer because your brain decided that was the perfect moment to hyperfocus on your interviewer's weird tie instead of your prepared talking points.

 

Because you deserve to be paid what you're worth—even if your brain sometimes forgets that fact.

 

Let's turn your salary negotiations from "oh no" into "oh YES."

Rachel Gaddis

FOUNDER

Rachel Gaddis gray sofa vertical

I help women like you to find careers that are fulfilling and fit their lives. As a career transition coach who was diagnosed with inattentive-type ADHD at age 44, I understand better than most people what it's like to be a square peg trying to blend in with all those round pegs out there.

I’ve got a lifetime of experience in procrastination, plus a ton of professional expertise in organizing work and getting it done (as a project manager, agile lead, scrum master, consultant, and tons of other jobs I won’t name here).

You deserve to start thinking beyond your current situation and move on to something bigger and better.