Insights on pricing, marketing, hospitality, and the business behind transformational retreats. By Leni Cavazos.

You do not need a 50,000-person email list to fill a retreat. You need a clear position, a short list of strategic partnerships, and the willingness to run direct outreach. The retreat leaders who sell out from zero use four levers: borrowed audiences (partnerships and podcast guesting), direct outreach (not mass marketing), a tight positioning, and a warm strategy call instead of a cold sales page. This is the playbook for filling a retreat when you do not yet have a crowd.
Retreat enrollment is a high-intent, high-trust decision. A guest spending $4,500 on a retreat needs credibility, specificity, and conversation, not volume. A small list of qualified buyers will always outperform a large list of passive subscribers.
This is why retreat leaders with 200-person email lists regularly sell out 10-seat cohorts, while leaders with 20,000-person lists sometimes cannot fill five seats.
The fastest path from zero. Find three to five people whose audience overlaps with your ideal retreat guest and build a specific, one-time collaboration: a podcast feature, a guest newsletter, a joint workshop, or a referral partnership.
The right partner has: an engaged audience (not just big), a complementary offer, and a reason to endorse you, usually because you have something their audience needs that they do not provide.
Every retreat business has a group of people who already belong in the first cohort, past clients, warm referrals, community members, colleagues. Most leaders skip them out of fear or awkwardness. The fix is simple: a personal, specific invitation.
Not a mass email. A real message that says "I built this for people like you, here is why I thought of you." Ten of those messages will outperform a 5,000-person list blast.
A small audience forces you to be specific. A retreat for "women entrepreneurs" will not fill with a small list. A retreat for "women entrepreneurs scaling a service business from $250K to $1M who need a bespoke pricing model" will fill fast. Specificity is the cheat code for small audiences.
High-price retreats fill faster through conversation than through a static page. A 30-minute strategy call with a qualified prospect converts at 40–70%. A sales page to a cold audience converts at 1–3%. The math is not close.
1. Define ruthlessly specific positioning (one afternoon)
2. Build the sales page and pricing (one week)
3. List 30–50 warm contacts by name (one afternoon)
4. Send personalized invitations to all 30–50 (one week)
5. Book strategy calls with interested contacts (ongoing)
6. Pitch 10 podcast features and 3 partnerships (two weeks)
7. Open enrollment to borrowed audiences (launch week)
8. Close the cohort 60–90 days later
This sequence has filled first retreats at price points from $2,800 to $12,000, without a pre-built audience.

The right answer is both, start with borrowed, build your own in parallel.
There is no minimum. Retreats have been filled with a 0-person list by leaders using direct outreach and partnerships exclusively.
No. Offer a "founding cohort" experience with extras, extended access, a follow-up session, a bonus; instead of a price cut. Discounts train buyers to wait.
Everyone has more than they think. List past colleagues, clients, workshop attendees, newsletter subscribers, LinkedIn connections, people you have coffee with. Thirty names is almost always achievable.
Three to five engaged partners is enough. One excellent partner can fill half a cohort by themselves.
Yes. Lead with your expertise, not your follower count. Podcasts book guests for the value of the conversation, not the size of the list.
Ready to architect your first profitable cohort without a big audience? Book a strategy call
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