Today we’d like to introduce you to Nancy Diamond.
Hi Nancy , it’s an honor to have you on the platform. Thanks for taking the time to share your story with us – to start maybe you can share some of your backstory with our readers?
My work has always lived at the intersection of beauty, intention, and meaning.
Six years ago, I founded GLO Styles, a fashion and bridal styling business created to help women show up confidently during some of the most meaningful moments of their lives. What started as styling quickly became deeper than clothing — it was about helping women feel seen, aligned, and grounded in who they were becoming. Weddings, in particular, taught me how emotional and sacred those moments are, and how much intention matters when people are marking transitions in their lives.
As my styling work grew, so did my presence as a lifestyle content creator. I began sharing reflections on personal growth, relationships, faith, womanhood, and everyday life — not from a place of perfection, but from lived experience. My content centers honesty, self-awareness, and discernment, and I collaborate with brands that align with those values, whether in beauty, fashion, home, or lifestyle. Everything I share is rooted in intention and authenticity, not trends.
Through years of working closely with clients, I also recognized a gap — particularly within cultural weddings — where logistics, communication, and coordination around attire created unnecessary stress. That insight led to the creation of Asoebi Assist, a platform designed to simplify and organize the aso-ebi process, allowing hosts and guests to focus more on celebration and less on confusion. It was born directly from experience, problem-solving, and listening.
Alongside my businesses, I’ve always been deeply reflective. That inner work eventually became Mirror Talks — short-form speaking moments where I challenge people to look honestly at patterns, responsibility, healing, and growth. From there, I began writing GLO Notes, a weekly reflection series on Substack that combines personal insight, faith, and journaling prompts. It’s a space for people who want depth, not noise — and who are committed to doing the inner work that leads to lasting change.
At this stage of my life, I’m in a season of transition — one I believe God is intentionally guiding. I’m being led toward more speaking, writing, and teaching centered on discernment, self-development, faith, and emotional maturity, while still honoring the creative and entrepreneurial foundations that built my platform. Rather than separating my work into boxes, I see it as one evolving assignment — expressed through fashion, business, content, and now, deeper conversations.
Everything I do points back to the same purpose: helping people move through life with clarity, intention, and alignment — both outwardly and inwardly.
Would you say it’s been a smooth road, and if not what are some of the biggest challenges you’ve faced along the way?
t hasn’t been a smooth road — largely because my work and my life have continued to evolve at the same time.
One of the ongoing challenges has been being placed in a box. When you work across fashion, content, writing, and business, people often want to simplify your identity into one lane. Allowing myself to evolve without over-explaining — and trusting that not everyone needs to understand every season — has been a learning process.
Another major shift came with becoming a wife and then a mother. That transition required me to slow down, pivot, and reevaluate how I move. Motherhood especially reshaped my relationship with time and capacity. There were moments where it felt like I was missing out — on opportunities, momentum, or visibility — but I’ve had to learn how to trust the season I’m in rather than rush past it.
Balancing full-time work, creative projects, and family life also brought its own challenges. I had to release unrealistic expectations and the pressure to constantly produce, and instead focus on building sustainably and intentionally.
What these challenges taught me is that growth doesn’t always look like expansion. Sometimes it looks like restraint, refinement, and obedience to timing. Learning to honor my current season — without comparison or guilt — has been one of the most meaningful lessons along the way, and it continues to shape how I approach my work and purpose today.
Alright, so let’s switch gears a bit and talk business. What should we know?
GLO Styles is a fashion and bridal styling brand I founded six years ago, rooted in the belief that personal style is an extension of identity, confidence, and intention. What began as styling for special occasions — particularly weddings — evolved into helping women show up fully during meaningful life moments, not just look good for them.
Over time, GLO Styles became the foundation for a broader body of work. Through my experience in bridal and cultural weddings, I saw firsthand how much stress and confusion surrounded attire coordination, especially within aso-ebi traditions. That insight led to the creation of Asoebi Assist, a platform designed to simplify and organize the aso-ebi process for hosts and guests, making the experience more seamless and enjoyable.
Alongside my styling work, I am also a lifestyle content creator, where I share reflections on fashion, faith, relationships, womanhood, and intentional living. I collaborate with brands that align with those values, focusing on authenticity and trust rather than trends. My content is rooted in lived experience and encourages depth, self-awareness, and discernment.
That reflective side of my work also lives through Mirror Talks — short-form speaking moments that invite honest self-examination — and GLO Notes, a weekly Substack publication where I write about growth, faith, emotional maturity, and alignment. Readers subscribe not for surface inspiration, but for thoughtful reflection and practical introspection.
What sets my work apart is that everything I do — from fashion to writing — comes from the same place. It’s not about doing many things; it’s about expressing one purpose through different forms. I’m most proud of building work that allows people to feel seen, grounded, and intentional — both outwardly and inwardly — while remaining true to the season of life I’m in.
What does success mean to you?
I define success as alignment.
Success, to me, is the ability to move through life with clarity — knowing who I am, honoring the season I’m in, and stewarding what I’ve been given well. It’s building meaningful work without sacrificing peace, family, or integrity, and allowing growth to be sustainable rather than rushed.
Success also looks like obedience to timing. There are seasons to expand and seasons to refine, and I’ve learned that not every season is meant for visibility or momentum. Being able to trust that — even when it feels quieter — is a form of success in itself.
Ultimately, success is knowing that my work leaves people better than it found them, that my life is rooted in faith and intention, and that I’m present for the roles that matter most to me. If those things are intact, everything else becomes a bonus.
Contact Info:
- Website: https://Www.nancyglo.com
- Instagram: @mrsnancyglo

Image Credits
Photo taken by- @ohhhade
