How to Make a Young Living Favorites Page (One Link for Everything You Recommend)
If you help people live well, you spend a real part of every week answering the same handful of questions. What is that you diffuse at night. Which one do you reach for when the kids start coming down with something. What do you clean your counters with. Where did you get that. The questions are a good sign. They mean people trust what you use and want in on it. But answering them one message at a time, digging through old threads for a link you have already pasted a hundred times, gets old fast.

Most of us never build the one thing that would make all of this easier: a single page that holds the products you actually use and love, ready to share the second someone asks. Instead, your recommendations live scattered everywhere. A screenshot here. A link buried in an old comment there. A list in your phone you can never find when you actually need it. The answers exist. They are just not in any one place you can hand to a person in a single click.

This post is about fixing that with a favorites page, and about a way to build one in minutes instead of losing an afternoon to it. If you want to set yours up while it is fresh, you can start a $1 trial of GetOiling and have a page in place this week, or join us live on an upcoming Weekly Work Session where we build pages exactly like this one together.

The Same Question, Over and Over

Pay attention to your messages for a week and you will notice a pattern. The same few questions come up again and again, from different people, in slightly different words. Someone saw your story and wants to know what is in your diffuser. A friend of a friend is asking what you used to get through cold season. A woman from your class months ago finally wants the name of that cleaner. Every one of those is a person leaning in. They are not skeptics you have to win over. They already watched you, decided they trust your taste, and worked up the nerve to ask.

And then what happens. You stop what you are doing, scroll back through your camera roll for the right screenshot, or hunt down the link, or type out the same paragraph you have typed a dozen times before. Sometimes you mean to follow up later and the message slips down the thread and you both forget. The interest was real, and the friction let it slip away. The questions are the warmest leads you will ever get, and most of them die in your inbox waiting on an answer that takes you too long to assemble.

Sharing Is Not Selling

A lot of Brand Partners hesitate at anything that sounds like putting their recommendations out in public, because it feels like a sales pitch, and pitching is exhausting and a little embarrassing. Here is the reframe that changes everything: a favorites page is an answer, not an ad. The person is already asking. You are simply handing them what they wanted, in one tidy place, instead of making them wait on you.

That distinction is the whole heart of attraction marketing. You do not grow by chasing people down and talking them into things. You grow by being genuinely useful and easy to learn from, so the people who are curious can find their way in on their own steam. You get to be the helpful friend instead of the salesperson. A page of what you actually use and trust is about as warm and low-pressure as sharing gets. You are not interrupting anyone. You are leaving the porch light on for the people who already came knocking.

What a Favorites Page Actually Is

A favorites page is one simple web page that gathers the things you reach for and recommend, each one with its own link, so you have a single place to send anyone who asks. Think of it as the answer to the question you get asked most. Instead of describing the diffuser, you send the page. Instead of promising to dig up that cleaner later, you send the page. Instead of retyping the same list for the fifth new person this month, you send the page.

Picture how this plays out. A neighbor stops you at pickup and says her family keeps passing the same cold around, and what is that thing you use. Today that is a ten-minute conversation you half-remember to finish later. With a page, you pull out your phone right there, text her one link, and she is looking at exactly what you wanted to tell her before she has buckled the kids in. The moment she was curious, you met her with an answer instead of a maybe. That is the difference a single page makes, multiplied across every week of questions you already get.

What goes on it is entirely your call. It holds the things you genuinely use and would happily tell a friend about, organized however makes sense to you, written in your own voice. The point is not to build a sprawling catalog of everything under the sun. The point is to make the handful of recommendations you give all the time effortless to share. A short, honest page of the things you love beats a giant list nobody finishes reading, every single time.

Why One Page Beats Posting Product After Product

Most Brand Partners are told that the way to share is to post more. Post the product. Post the testimonial. Post the before and after. There is nothing wrong with showing up in the feed, but a post has a shelf life of about a day before the algorithm buries it, and then it is gone. The woman who would have asked about it next Tuesday never sees the thing you posted last Thursday.

A favorites page works the opposite way. It does not expire. It sits there being useful, ready every single time someone asks, whether that is today or six months from now. You build it once and it keeps answering for you. A feed post interrupts people who were not asking; a favorites page waits for the people who are. One is push, and it is tiring. The other is pull, and it builds on itself. The more you point people to one steady place instead of scattering answers across a hundred disappearing posts, the more that place becomes the thing people remember you for.

Let GetOiling Build the Page for You

If the reason you have never made a page like this is that building a web page sounds like a project you do not have time for, this is the part that matters most. You do not have to design anything. GetOiling has an AI page builder, the Build it for me tool, that creates the whole page for you from a few quick answers. You tell it what the page is for and what you want on it, and it builds the layout, writes the first draft of the copy, and even fills in the behind-the-scenes details like the page title and web address so the thing is genuinely ready to share.

That means the page that has been sitting on your someday list for a year can be done before lunch. You are not staring at a blank screen wondering where to start, and you are not paying someone to design it for you. You answer a few prompts, look over what it made, change anything that does not sound like you, and you have a real page. The hard part was never the idea. It was the building, and now the building is handled. If you have ever abandoned a tool because the setup defeated you before you got anywhere, this is the opposite of that experience.

And because the page is so easy to make, it is just as easy to change, which takes all the pressure off. You do not have to get it perfect on the first try. Start with the five things people ask you about most, publish it, and add to it as you go. A page you actually put up today, with a few honest recommendations on it, will do more for you than the perfect page you keep meaning to build someday. Done and shared beats polished and put off forever. You can always refine it the next time you have ten spare minutes, and the version that already exists is working for you while you do.

Where Your Favorites Page Lives

Your favorites page lives on your own GetOiling site, which means you own it instead of renting space on a link tool you cannot really control or make your own. That matters more than it sounds like it should. A page on your own site looks like a real resource a real business made, it carries your name and your style, and it is yours to keep and grow. If you do not have a site set up yet, that is not a roadblock either. GetOiling’s Quick Setup tool can stand up your starter site in minutes, and your favorites page becomes one more piece of it.

Once the page exists, it works hardest when you put it where people already are. You can link it from your blog posts, so a reader who just finished an article can go straight to what you use. You can drop it into your emails. You can send it the instant a question lands in your messages. The page is the destination, and every place you mention it is another door into it. The whole idea is that the answer is always one link away, no matter where the question comes from.

The reason this stays simple is that it all lives in one place. Your site, your pages, your blog, your emails, and your favorites page are in the same account, under one login. You are not stitching a link tool to a website builder to an email service and praying they keep talking to each other. When everything lives together, there is nothing to wire up and nothing to break when one app updates and the others do not. One account, one login, one bill, and the favorites page is just one more thing it does for you. You spend your energy on the part that actually grows your Young Living business, which is showing up for the people on the other side of the screen, instead of on being the duct tape holding five tools together.

Watch the Replay: Building Your Favorites Page in GetOiling

In this Weekly Work Session we built one live, start to finish. You will see how the AI page builder turns a few quick answers into a finished page, how to make it sound like you, and where to share it once it is done. If you have been meaning to make something like this for ages and never found the afternoon, the replay is the thing to watch, because watching it built in real time is what makes it feel doable. You will walk away knowing you could have your own page up by the end of the day.

 

Want to use the prompt I used on today's live call to create your own? Download the text file here, edit its contents to fit your own favorites, and then either copy and paste those edited contents into the Build it for me tool or upload the edited file to build your favorites page.

Make Sharing Easy

The questions are going to keep coming. People are going to keep asking what you use, because they trust you, and that trust is the most valuable thing you have. The only question is whether answering them stays a small chore you do one message at a time, or becomes a single link you built once and share in a second. A favorites page is how you stop losing warm interest to friction and start meeting it with an answer that is always ready.

You can have yours up this week. Start your $1 trial of GetOiling and let the page builder do the heavy lifting, or join us live at an upcoming Weekly Work Session and build yours alongside us. Either way, the next time someone asks what you use, the answer can already be waiting.

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