We’re looking forward to introducing you to Valeria Saldana. Check out our conversation below.
Valeria, it’s always a pleasure to learn from you and your journey. Let’s start with a bit of a warmup: What are you most proud of building — that nobody sees?
What I’m most proud of is the part of my success that isn’t flashy or loud — the part nobody claps for.
I’ve built a level of self-discipline, emotional resilience, and internal leadership that allows me to win privately long before I win publicly.
People see the results: the brand, the team, the growth.
But what they don’t see is the woman who rebuilt herself from the inside out — the one who learned how to think bigger, move with intention, and show up powerfully even when no one was watching.
That inner work is what allows me to lead others today.
And I’m proud of it because it’s the foundation of everything I create… including the opportunities I now build for the people who work with me.
Can you briefly introduce yourself and share what makes you or your brand unique?
My name is Valeria. I’m a Sales Coach specializing in High Ticket offers, a Remote Closer, an entrepreneur, and an investor. My path began in Mexico, where I studied at the UNAM, continued in Los Angeles at UCLA, and later expanded my strategic and leadership education at Harvard University in Massachusetts.
Those experiences shaped the global mindset and disciplined structure behind everything I teach today.
I help people transform their lives financially by teaching them the skills, mindset, and discipline required to sell at the highest level — from anywhere in the world. What makes my brand unique is that everything I share comes from real, earned experience. I didn’t just build a business — I rebuilt myself first. I developed the discipline, emotional resilience, and internal leadership that allowed me to win privately long before anyone saw me win publicly.
My mission is simple: to prove that anyone can transform their financial destiny once they master how to sell powerfully, think strategically, and trust their own potential.
That’s the work I’m committed to — and the movement I’m building.
Amazing, so let’s take a moment to go back in time. What was your earliest memory of feeling powerful?
My earliest memory of feeling powerful takes me back to when I was about five years old. I was in school, and I remember looking down at my notebook — every page covered in golden stars. At that age, I didn’t understand achievement the way adults do, but I understood one thing clearly: my effort created results.
That moment stayed with me.
It was the first time I realized that when I commit, I win.
Those golden stars were more than stickers — they were the first proof that discipline, focus, and intention could open doors.
And my most recent memory of feeling powerful carries that same energy — but on a completely different level.
It was the moment I graduated my first generation of High Ticket Closers… individuals who started with zero experience and, in less than two months, were closing like experts. Watching them rise, transform, and step into a version of themselves they didn’t even know existed reminded me of what power truly is: the ability to elevate others.
From gold stars in a notebook to transforming lives through skill and mastery — that’s the evolution of my power.
What did suffering teach you that success never could?
Suffering taught me lessons that success could never.
It showed me that no matter how impossible things feel, the exit is often just around the corner — and that push, that persistence, is what separates winners from everyone else.
It forces you to dig deeper than you thought possible, to trust yourself when no one else does, and to keep moving forward when everything inside you wants to quit.
It also teaches you the most important truth: only you can lift yourself up or let yourself sink. Power is personal — no one else is responsible for rescuing you.
Success can give you recognition and rewards, but pain gives you unshakable strength.
It’s the fire that shapes leaders, builds empires, and creates the kind of people who don’t just play the game — they redefine it.
I think our readers would appreciate hearing more about your values and what you think matters in life and career, etc. So our next question is along those lines. Is the public version of you the real you?
Absolutely — 100%.
I don’t have the time or the desire to hide my real self and bring her out only on special occasions. I genuinely believe that being your true, unfiltered, authentic self is the only way to win long‑term.
Some people will love you for it.
Others won’t.
And that’s perfectly fine.
We’re not meant to connect with everyone — we’re meant to connect with the people who are truly aligned with who we are. Being myself has been my greatest advantage, because authenticity creates clarity: it attracts the right people and repels the wrong ones.
So yes, the public version of me is the real me.
It’s the only version I know how to be — and the only one I need to succeed.
Okay, so let’s keep going with one more question that means a lot to us: When do you feel most at peace?
I feel most at peace when my people are good — when the people I lead, mentor, or care for are growing, stable, and expanding into the best version of themselves.
Knowing that they are safe, thriving, and aligned brings me a level of calm that nothing else can match.
My peace comes from seeing others win.
From watching my team evolve.
From knowing the people around me are standing stronger today than they were yesterday.
That’s when my heart settles.
That’s when everything feels aligned.
That’s when I’m at peace.
Contact Info:
- Website: https://sites.google.com/view/highticket-sales/inicio
- Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/valeria.saldanaaa/
- Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@valeria.saldanaa
- Other: PoderosaMente training: https://sites.google.com/view/valeriasaldana/inicio



Image Credits
Valeria Saldaña
