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Conversations with Olivia Moore

Today we’d like to introduce you to Olivia Moore.

Hi Olivia, can you start by introducing yourself? We’d love to learn more about how you got to where you are today?
I honestly don’t know where to begin . My life has been full of highs and lows and detours but I’m a firm believer that everything happens for a reason, so even the low moment are for our good too. I’ve always been a writer, poet and music lover, but also pretty tech savvy and a bit nerdy lol. I alwyas thought i’d be a lawyer or a dancer as a little girl… but eventually I had a passion for being a natural hairstylist. While in college studying Computer Science, I became the campus loctition/hairstylist and I would often have music sessions where I would blast my favorite songs in the dorm and vie out with my friends. I spent a few years in corporate as a programmer, then eventually became a full time hair stylist . Fast forward a few years, I walked away from hair and went back into the tech world as a web developer/webmaster etc. I’m the type of person whoi loves learning so I dove into the world of AI sp I could train others on how to use AI in their everyday lives. Last August….my job suddenly came to an end. As a way to channel that angr and frustration into something good, I created a YOutube channel where I began to share stories and lessons that would help others. I found Suno.AI and started playing around with. I was blown away by the results and just kept creating. That moment has now led to a full time career of not only creating content but also creating music and messages that uplift and aspire….with AI as my teammate.

Can you talk to us a bit about the challenges and lessons you’ve learned along the way. Looking back would you say it’s been easy or smooth in retrospect?
Absolutely not! Lol I’m a single mom and so I have other humans depending on me. I think the biggest battles hae been my battles with myself and facing my inner critic. Having to face shadows, shame, guilt, grief, and all types of things while trying to take care of yourself and family isn’t the easiest thing to do . Also there is quite a lot of backlash about the use of AI and music, so putting myself out there leaves me wide open to opinions. It hurts sometimes because I love creating and I legit mind my business. But I’m learning that it’s all a part of the journey

Alright, so let’s switch gears a bit and talk business. What should we know about your work?
I’m an artist, songwriter, and creative technologist who uses music, poetry, and storytelling to explore healing, self-awareness, and emotional honesty. My work lives at the intersection of lived experience and innovation…I specialize in blending traditional songwriting and spoken word with AI-assisted music tools to create emotionally resonant, human-centered art.

I’m known for work that feels raw but intentional, reflective without being abstract. Much of my creative output centers on themes like grief, love, accountability, faith, and growth, often drawing from my experiences as a mother, entrepreneur, and woman navigating real life in real time. I create music, poetry projects, short-form and long-form video content, and digital experiences that invite people to slow down, feel, and reconnect with themselves.

What I’m most proud of is my ability to stay authentic while evolving. I didn’t abandon my voice to use new tools…I used technology to amplify it. That balance is what sets me apart. I approach AI as a collaborator, not a shortcut, and I’m intentional about preserving emotional depth, narrative integrity, and human truth in everything I make. My work is less about chasing trends and more about building meaningful, lasting connections through art.

We’d be interested to hear your thoughts on luck and what role, if any, you feel it’s played for you?
Luck has shown up in my life, but never without asking something of me.

I’ve had moments that looked like good luck from the outside…right connections, unexpected opportunities, doors opening at the exact moment I was exhausted. And I’ve had seasons of loss, delays, and disappointments that felt like bad luck until time slowed things down enough for me to see what they were shaping.

In business and in life, luck has mostly acted as a mirror. It’s revealed whether I was prepared, whether I trusted myself, and whether I was willing to receive what I said I wanted. Some opportunities only mattered because I had done the inner work to hold them. Some setbacks forced me to build discipline, clarity, and resilience I wouldn’t have chosen voluntarily.

I don’t think luck created my path. It tested it. What stayed wasn’t luck…it was consistency, faith, and the willingness to keep showing up even when nothing looked certain. Over time, what once felt random began to feel purposeful, like alignment catching up to effort.

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