How to Handle Rejection as a Entrepreneur
- Coralis Nieves Bravo

- Nov 17, 2025
- 3 min read
Updated: Mar 15
Sometimes Growth Looks Like an Unopened Loom
At the beginning of the month, I received my monthly stats email from Loom showing my October activity: views, interactions, and engagement.
When I opened it, something immediately made me pause.
Some of my videos had never been viewed.
Not once...

That stung!!!!!
I spend time preparing those Looms. I research, record, and try to speak from the heart so potential clients can understand who I am and how I work. Seeing a video sit there with zero views felt discouraging at first.
But then I realized something unexpected.
One of the things I actually love about Loom is that it shows the truth.
It doesn’t hide what’s happening. It shows exactly what was viewed, what wasn’t, and what I can learn from it. If you are new to my blog - Welcome! My name is Cora, and I am your bilingual virtual assistant.
What Rejection in Entrepreneur Really Means
That realization made me think about something else.
I had been treating my job applications and proposals the same way.
Whenever I received the familiar email saying,
"We’ve decided to move forward with another candidate,"
I would quietly archive it and move on.
Mentally, I labeled it as a simple “no.”
But recently, inside the Virtual Assistant Leadership Academy (VALA), a mentorship community created by Breanna Cain, one of our coaches shared something that completely shifted my perspective:
“A rejection is just redirection. Ask for feedback. Don’t assume. Learn from the process.”
That advice changed everything.
The Simple Habit That Changed My Mindset
Now when I receive a rejection email, I don’t just archive it.
Instead, I reply.
I thank them for the opportunity and ask if they would be willing to share any feedback that could help me improve for future roles.
Sometimes they respond.
Sometimes they don’t.
But the act of asking shifts my mindset.
Instead of feeling like someone waiting to be chosen, I become someone actively refining my craft.
And honestly, if you ever feel stuck writing a polite follow-up email, don’t overthink it.
Ask ChatGPT.
Consider it your personal assistant.
Not Being Chosen Doesn’t Mean You Weren’t Seen
One thing I’ve started reminding myself is this:
Not being chosen doesn’t mean you weren’t seen.
Sometimes it simply means you’re still shaping into the person that client, project, or season needs.
Just like those unopened Loom videos.
The effort still counts.
The work you put out into the world still carries energy, even if you don’t immediately see the result.
Every “no” might simply be feedback waiting to be uncovered.
Tools That Helped Me Grow as a Virtual Assistant
If you're building your own virtual assistant journey, a few tools and programs have helped me along the way.
One tool I use often is Loom, which allows me to record quick video introductions or walkthroughs for potential clients.
Even on the free plan, Loom allows up to 25 videos (each up to five minutes long), which is perfect for quick client communication.
👉 If you'd like to try it, you can join using my referral link and receive 25 additional free videos.
I also learned many of the systems I use today through the Virtual Assistant Leadership Academy (VALA) certification program.
👉 If you're interested in developing your skills as a VA, you can explore the same 90-day certification program here.
Affiliate disclosure: If you join through my link, I may receive a small commission at no extra cost to you. I only share programs I personally use and believe in.
What Rejection Eventually Taught Me
Looking back at this blog now, I realize something interesting.
At the time, I thought the lesson was simply about learning from rejection and asking for feedback. And while that still matters, over time I discovered something else that made a big difference.
There was actually a small shift in the way I approached my Loom videos and proposals that started bringing in more discovery calls.
It wasn’t about sending more applications or working harder. It was about changing how I was presenting myself.
Since then, I’ve turned that realization into a simple guide for virtual assistants who want to start getting more responses and discovery calls from their proposals.
If you're curious about the exact approach I use now, you can explore it here.
Your Bilingual VA,




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