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In this episode of Make Space for Growth, I speak with Joana Trigueiros, CEO of Maray—a Portuguese shoe brand rooted in heritage, purpose, and bold design. Joana is not only a remarkable entrepreneur but also my business partner and lifelong friend, which made this conversation even more meaningful. We cover: ✅ How Joana balanced a full-time executive role at Danone while launching Maray ✅ What it really means to be a "Chief Everything Officer" ✅ Her people-first approach to business and leadership ✅ The brand's origin in her family's shoe shop ✅ Her word of the year: Brave Whether you're launching a business or redefining what success looks like, this is a must-listen.
In Episode 93 of the Vivre Podcast, Leïla Lahbabi explores the journey from grinding through hard work to finding flow in your business. Learn how to shift from being the "Chief Everything Officer" to focusing on your zone of genius, aligning with strategic partners, and scaling with intention. Listen now to discover actionable insights on building a business that thrives without burnout. #PurposeDrivenLeadership #BusinessFlow #ScalingStrategies---If this episode resonates, subscribe to my channel to get notified of the next episode.If you would like a written summarized version of it, look at my linkedin newsletter number 4.If you want to reach out to me directly and explore how we can scale your business your way, feel free to contact me on linkedin here: www.linkedin.com/in/leilalahbabiimpactstrategy
In this inspiring episode of the FinTech Hunting Podcast, host Michael Hammond sits down with two powerhouse women in financial services — Brooke Lapides, Director of Business Partner Development at MeridianLink, and Dana Georgiou, Chief Everything Officer and passionate financial literacy advocate.Together, they co-authored "Rethink Everything You Know About Financial Literacy: Teen Edition", a collaborative book written by 14 incredible women. From personal stories of financial missteps to practical lessons designed to empower teens and young adults, this episode is packed with insight, heart, and hope for the next generation.
Want to SCALE your business and audience? Go here: http://www.founderos.com/applyWant to LEARN proven systems to grow your personal brand? Go here: http://www.founderos.com/newsletterIn this video, I share the transformational advice that changed everything: "Freedom isn't about doing more. It's about doing less, but better." I'll break down the frameworks and systems I used to transform my relationship with freedom, business, and life - going from CEO (Chief Everything Officer) to building a life of true freedom.Get my free Time Audit System: https://www.founderos.com/discover/time-audit-systemGet my free Personal Board Meeting Template: https://www.founderos.com/discover/board-meetingVideo title ideas (for the algo):The Founder System That Saved My LifeThe Freedom System Every Successful Founder NeedsIf You're Successful But Don't Feel Free, Please Watch This…Burnout to Freedom: The Systems That Changed EverythingConnect with me:Twitter: https://twitter.com/matt_gray_LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mattgray1TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@realmattgrayInstagram: https://instagram.com/matthgrayMy website: https://www.founderos.com#onepersonbusiness #creatoreconomy #entrepreneurship
07 Mar 2025. We find out with Chief Everything Officer of Contractors.direct, David Cook on what they are seeing. Plus, we speak to Salmaan Jaffery, Chief Business Development Officer at DIFC Authority, about the space they're retrofitting to attract fledgling hedge funds. And, Majra is set to launch the Sustainable Impact Challenge for the companies in the UAE: Sarah Shaw, Director of the National CSR Fund break down all the details.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Rare condition research is evolving, and patient communities are driving the breakthrough. In this special Rare Disease Day episode, we explore the challenges and opportunities shaping the future of rare condition therapies. From groundbreaking gene therapy trials to the power of patient-driven research, our guests discuss how collaboration between families, clinicians, researchers, and regulators is paving the way for faster diagnoses, equitable access to treatments, and innovative approaches like nucleic acid therapies and CRISPR gene editing. With insights from Myotubular Trust, we follow the journey of family-led patient communities and their impact on advancing gene therapy for myotubular myopathy - showcasing how lived experience is shaping the future of medicine. However, while patient-driven initiatives have led to incredible progress, not every family has the time, resources, or networks to lead these research efforts. Our guests discuss initiatives like the UK Platform for Nucleic Acid Therapies (UPNAT), which aims to streamline the development of innovative treatments and ensure equitable access for everyone impacted by rare conditions. Our host Dr Ana Lisa Tavares, Clinical lead for rare disease at Genomics England, is joined by Meriel McEntagart, Clinical lead for rare disease technologies at Genomics England, Anne Lennox, Founder and CEO of Myotubular Trust and Dr Carlo Rinaldi, Professor of Molecular and Translational Neuroscience at University of Oxford. "My dream is in 5 to 10 years time, an individual with a rare disease is identified in the clinic, perhaps even before symptoms have manifested. And at that exact time, the day of the diagnosis becomes also a day of hope, in a way, where immediately the researcher that sent the genetics lab flags that specific variant or specific mutations. We know exactly which is the best genetic therapy to go after." You can download the transcript, or read it below. Ana Lisa: Welcome to Behind the Genes. [Music plays] Anne: What we've understood is that the knowledge and experience of families and patients is even more vital than we've all been going on about for a long time. Because the issue of there being a liver complication in myotubular myopathy has been hiding in plain sight all this time, because if you asked any family, they would tell you, “Yes, my son has had the odd liver result.” There were some very serious liver complications but everybody thought that was a minor issue, but if we are able to engage the people who live with the disease and the people who observe the disease at a much more fundamental level we may be able to see more about what these rare genes are doing. [Music plays] Ana Lisa: My name is Ana Lisa Tavares, I'm Clinical Lead for Rare Disease research at Genomics England and your host for this episode of Behind the Genes. Today I'm joined by Anne Lennox, Founder and CEO of the Myotubular Trust, Dr Meriel McEntagart, an NHS consultant and Clinical Lead for Rare Disease Technologies at Genomics England, and Dr Carlo Rinaldi, Professor of Molecular and Translational Neuroscience at the University of Oxford. Today we'll be hearing about the importance of involving the patient community, particularly as new rare therapies are developed, and discussing the forward-facing work that's happening that could have potential to unlock novel treatments for many rare conditions. If you enjoy today's episode we'd love your support. Please like, share and rate us on wherever you listen to your podcasts. Thank you so much for joining me today. Please could you introduce yourselves. Anne: I'm Anne Lennox, I'm one of the founders of the Myotubular Trust, a charity that raises research funds for and supports families affected by the rare genetic neuromuscular disorder myotubular myopathy. Meriel: I'm Meriel McEntagart, I'm a consultant in clinical genetics in the NHS and I have a special interest in neurogenic and neuromuscular conditions. Carlo: Hi, I'm Carlo Rinaldi, I'm Professor of Molecular and Translational Neuroscience at the University of Oxford. I'm a clinician scientist juggling my time between the clinic and the lab where we try to understand mechanisms of diseases to develop treatments for these conditions. And I'm also here as a representative of the UK Platform for Nucleic Acid Therapies, UPNAT. Thanks for your invitation, I'm very pleased to be here. Ana Lisa: Thank you. Meriel, I'd love you to tell us a bit about your work and how you met Anne, how did this story start? Meriel: Thank you. Well prior to being a consultant in clinical genetics, I spent 2 years as a clinical research fellow in neuromuscular conditions, and as part of that training I worked on a project where the gene for myotubular myopathy had just been identified, and so there was a big international effort to try and come up with sort of a registry of all the genetic variants that had been found as well as all the clinical symptoms that the affected patients had, and then do kind of a correlation of the particular variant mutation with symptoms. I worked when I was training to be a clinical geneticist because of my interest in neuromuscular conditions so when I eventually became a consultant at St George's Hospital I was actually interviewed by the Professor of Paediatrics and he knew Anne and her son, when Anne was looking for more information about the condition he suggested that perhaps I might be a good person for Anne to talk to. Ana Lisa: Thank you. Interesting connections. Anne, can you tell us your story and how this led you to found the Myotubular Trust? Anne: Yes, thanks Ana-Lisa. Well, as many families will tell you when they're newly diagnosed with a rare disease, you go from knowing nothing about a condition to being one of the few deep experts in that condition because there are so few deep experts. So this happened to us in 2003 when our son, Tom, was born, and when he was born he was floppy and his Apgar scores, the scores they do on new-born babies, were pretty poor, and before long we knew that it was more than just momentary issues at birth. And, cutting a very long story short, 5 weeks later he was diagnosed with this very rare neuromuscular genetic disorder that we didn't know we had in the family. We were told that this was a very serious diagnosis. At that time – more than 20 years ago – over 80% of those boys didn't make it to their first birthday and the stark statistic we had in our head a lot was that only 1% made it past the age of 10. And that has changed due to better ventilator and breathing equipment, etc, but at the time we expected that he might not make it to his first birthday. We were very lucky, we had Tom longer than one year, we had him for nearly 4 years, 4 very lovely years where it was tough, but he was a really lovely member of our family. Despite being really weak he managed to be incredibly cheeky and bossy, and he was a great little brother for his big sister. We were also very lucky that he was being looked after by Professor Francesco Muntoni, who is Head of the Paediatric Neuromuscular Service at Great Ormond Street. And, like Carlo, he is a clinical researcher and actually that I found to be amazing as a family member because you knew what was happening out there and Professor Muntoni, other than living with the reality day to day you want to know where things are going. We began to realise that back then 20 years ago the more common rare neuromuscular diseases were finally beginning to get some fundamental research funds, like Duchenne, spinal muscular atrophy, and Professor Muntoni was very good at explaining to lay non-scientific parents like us that one day the technologies that would lead to a cure, that would re-engage proteins for other conditions and would translate down eventually into the possibility of replacing myotubularin, which is the protein not being produced or not being produced enough in myotubular myopathy. And then we began to understand actually what the barriers to that would be, that translating developments in more common, or let's say more prevalent conditions, would be hard to do without some translation research being done; you could not just not lag years behind, you could lag decades behind if you haven't done some other work. So, I met Wendy Hughes, another mother, of a boy called Zak who was a few years older than Tom, and these were the days before social media, and it was amazing to be in contact with another family going through something similar and we had great conversations. But then they were also looked after by Professor Muntoni and we particularly began to develop the idea as 2 families that we might be able to raise some research funds towards this concept of keeping pace with the scientific developments. And then we discovered there was no charity we could channel those funds through. Even the umbrella body for neuromuscular diseases who were covering 30 to 40 conditions, frankly, they just couldn't trickle their funding down into investing in every neuromuscular disease, and slowly but surely it dawned on us that if we did want to make that difference we were going to have to set up our own charity. So that's what we eventually did and back in 2006, we founded what was actually the first charity in Europe dedicated to myotubular myopathy – luckily, more have come along since – and we were dedicated to raising research funding. In fact, it wasn't our goal to set up another charity but around that time, about a year in, we happened to go to a meeting where the Head of the MRC, the Medical Research Council, was giving a talk and he said that in the last few years the MRC had begun to really realise that they couldn't cure everything, that they couldn't cure the diseases that would be cured in the next millennium from a top down perspective. There had to be a trick, there had to be a bottom up as well, because that was the only way this was going to happen. And I have to say that that was a really reassuring moment in time for us to realise that we weren't just chasing pipe dreams and trying to do something impossible, that there was a role for us. Ana Lisa: I think it would be really interesting for people to hear your story and the amazing set-up and fundraising that you've done, and at the same time it would be really good for us to reflect on how this isn't feasible for every patient and every family and how we're going to need to work cooperatively to move forwards with rare therapies. Anne: When we explored the idea with Professor Muntoni and Meriel and others about setting up a charity one of the really reassuring things that Professor Muntoni got across to us was that this wasn't about raising the millions and millions it would take to fund clinical trials but the issue in the rare disease space was funding the proof of principle work, the work where you take a scientist's hypothesis and take it over the line, and the rarer the disease, the less places there are for a scientist to take those ideas. And the example he gave us was a piece of research like that might cost a hundred to a couple of hundred thousand, if you fund a piece of work like that and if it is successful, if the scientist's principle gets proven, then behind you it's much easier for the bigger muscle disease charities to also invest in it. It's harder for them to spread their money across all the very rare diseases hypothesis out there, but if you've helped a scientist get over the line they'll come in behind you and then they won't be the ones who fund the tens of millions that it takes to run a clinical trial. If it's got potential, then that's where the commercial world comes in, and that's where the biotechs come in. So he'd given the example of if you spent £ten0,000 on a piece of research and it actually is proven, in behind you will come the bigger charities that would put in the million that takes it to the next phase, and in behind them will come the bio-checks that'll provide biotechs that'll provide the tens of millions. And then, you know, a lot of what happens relies on serendipity as well, we know that, and you could easily run away with the idea that you made everything happen but you don't, you stand on the shoulders of others. And our very first grant application in our first grant round, which received extraordinary peer review for how excellent the application was, was a £100,000 project for a 3-year project that had gene therapy at the core of it by a researcher called Dr Ana Buj Bello at Généthon in Paris. This piece of research was so promising that 18 months in she and another researcher were able to raise $780,000 and, as Professor Muntoni predicted, from the French muscle disease charity AFM and the American muscle diseases charity MDA. And 18 months into that 3 years it was so promising that a biotech company was started up with $30 million funding, literally just on her work. So that doesn't always happen but, as Professor Muntoni explained, our job was not that $30 million, our job was that first £100,000, and our job was also to make ourselves known to the people in the neuromuscular field. If you have lab time, if you have research time and you have a choice where you're putting it there is a place you can go to for a myotubular myopathy related grant application, so it's not just that this will come to us out of the blue, people will have done prior work, and our existence makes it worth their while, hopefully, to have done that prior work. Ana Lisa: That's an amazing story how you've set up this charity and how successful that first application for gene therapy was. I'd love to hear more about that gene therapy and did it get to the clinic and to hear that story from you. Because I think there are a lot of learnings and it's really important that the first patients who are treated, the first families that are involved, the researchers who start researching in this area, the first treatments lead the way and we learn for all the other treatments for all the other rare conditions that we hope and that together as a community we can share these learnings. Anne: Yeah. I sometimes describe it a bit like going out into space. When you see a rocket going off look at how many people are behind and the amount of work that's been done, the degree of detail that's managed, and then you go out into space and there are a whole load of unknowns, and you can't account for all of them. Who knows what's out there in this sphere. But the amount of preparation, it feels similar to me now, looking back. We were so idealistic at the beginning. Our grant to Dr Buj Bello was 2008 and actually it is a really fast time in, the first child was dosed in the gene therapy trial in September 2017. Ana Lisa: So, we're talking less than 1 years. Anne: Yeah. And in the meantime obviously as a charity we're also funding other proof of principle research. One of the founding principles of the charity was to have a really excellent peer review process and scientific advisory board so that we wouldn't get carried away with excitement about one lab, one research team, that everything would always come back to peer review and would be looked at coldly, objectively. I don't know how many times I've sat in a scientific advisory board meeting with my fingers crossed hoping that a certain application would get through because it looked wonderful to me, and then the peer review comes back and there are things you just don't know as a patient organisation. So, yes, in those 9 years we were also funding other work. Ana Lisa: You've just given an interesting perspective on sharing the learnings between the scientists, clinicians, the experts in a particular condition, if you like, and the families, and I'd be really interested to hear your views on what's been learnt about how families and the patient community can also teach the clinical and scientific community. Anne: So, the first child was dosed in September 2017 and by the World Muscle Society Conference 2 years later in October 2019 the biotech had some fantastic results to show. Children who had been 24-hour ventilated were now ventilator-free, which, unless you know what it's like to have somebody in front of you who's ventilator-dependent, the idea that they could become ventilator-free is just extraordinary. However, one of the things we've learnt about gene therapy is that we are going out into space so there are extraordinary things to be found, and extraordinary results are possible, as is evidenced here, but there is so much that we don't know once we are dealing with gene therapy. So unfortunately, in May, June and August of 2020, 3 little boys died on the clinical trial. So we have a clinical trial where the most extraordinary results are possible, and the worst results are possible, and both of those things are down to the gene… What we discovered and what is still being uncovered and discovered is that myotubular myopathy is not just a neuromuscular disorder, it is a disorder of the liver too, and these children didn't die of an immune response, which is what everybody assumes is going to happen in these trials, they died of liver complications. And one of the things that has come out of that, well, 2 sides to that. Number one is that it is extraordinary that we have found a treatment that makes every single muscle cell in the body pick up the protein that was missing and produce that protein, but also what we've understood is that the knowledge and experience of families and patients is even more vital than we've all been going on about for a long time. Because the issue of there being a liver complication in myotubular myopathy has been hiding in plain sight all this time, because if you asked any family they would tell you, “Yes, my son has had the odd liver result, yes.” We could see something that looked like it was not that relevant because it was outside the big picture of the disease, which was about breathing and walking and muscles, but actually there was this thing going on at the same time where the children had liver complications. There were some very serious liver complications but everybody thought that was a minor issue but if we are able to engage the people who live with the disease and the people who observe the disease at a much more fundamental level we may be able to see more about what these rare genes are doing. Ana Lisa: Yeah, thank you very much for sharing such a moving story and with such powerful lessons for the whole community about how we listen to the expertise that families have about their condition, and also I think the really important point about how we tackle the research funding so that we're including and sharing learnings from the conditions that are initially studied in greater depth, and we hope that many more conditions will be better understood and more treatments found and that actually the learnings from these first gene therapy trials will really help inform future trials, not just for gene therapies but also for many other novel therapies that are being developed. [Music plays] If you're enjoying what you've heard today, and you'd like to hear some more great tales from the genomics coalface, why don't you join us on The Road to Genome podcast. Where our host Helen Bethel, chats to the professionals, experts and patients involved in genomics today. In our new series, Helen talks to a fantastic array of guests, including the rapping consultant, clinical geneticist, Professor Julian Barwell, about Fragile X syndrome, cancer genomics and a holistic approach to his practice - a genuine mic-drop of an interview. The Road to Genome is available wherever you get your podcasts. [Music plays] Ana Lisa: Carlo, I would really like to come to you about some of the initiatives that are happening in the UK, and particularly it would be really interesting to hear about the UK Platform for Nucleic Acid Therapies as a sort of shining example of trying to do something at a national scale across potentially many different rare conditions. Carlo: Thanks, Ana-Lisa. Thanks very much, Anne, for sharing your fantastic story. I mean, I just want to iterate that as clinician scientists we do constantly learn from experiences and constantly learn from you, from the patient community, and this is absolutely valuable to push the boundary. And I really liked your vision of a rocket being launched in space and I would imagine that this is a similar situation here. So, we are facing a major challenge. So, there is over 7,000 rare diseases in the world and with improvements of genetic diagnosis this is only increasing. So, in a way rare diseases is the ultimate frontier of personalised medicine and this poses incredible challenges. So, you mentioned the bottom-up approach and the top-down approach and in a way, both are absolutely necessary. So your story is a fantastic story but also makes me think of all the other families where they don't share perhaps the same spirit, you know, they are in areas of the world that are not as well connected or informed, where patient community simply cannot be ‘nucleated', let's say, around the family. So, there is definitely an issue of inclusivity and fair access. So, what we're trying to do at UPNAT, which is the UK Platform for Nucleic Acid Therapy, is to try to streamline the development both at preclinical and clinical level of nucleic acid therapies. So, we'll start with antisense oligonucleotides just because those are the molecules of the class of drugs that are most ‘mature', let's say, in clinic. So, there are several antisense oligonucleotides already approved in the clinic, we know that they are reasonably safe, we understand them quite well, but of course the aspiration is to then progress into other forms of gene therapy, including gene editing approaches, for example. And one of the activities that I'm involved, together with Professor Muntoni, is to try to streamline the regulatory process of such therapies and in particular curate a registry of, for example, side effects associated with nucleic acid therapy in the real world, and you would be surprised that this is something that is not yet available. And the point is exactly that, it's trying to understand and learn from previous mistakes perhaps or previous experiences more in general. And this is very much in synergy with other activities in the UK in the rare disease domain. I'm thinking of the Rare Disease Therapy Launchpad, I'm thinking of the Oxford Harrington Centre, I am thinking of the recently funded MRC CoRE in Therapeutic Genomics. These are all very synergistic. Our point is we want to try to amplify the voice of the patient, the voice of the clinicians working on rare disease, and we want to systematise. Because of course one of the risks of rare disease therapies is the fragmentation that we do all these things in isolation. And I would argue that the UK at the moment leveraging on the relatively flexible and independent regulatory agencies, such as the MHRA, on the enormous amount of genetics data available through Genomics England, and of course the centralised healthcare system, such as the NHS, is really probably the best place in the world to do research in the rare disease area, and probably I'm allowed to say it because I'm a non-UK native. Ana Lisa: Thank you, that's a brilliant perspective, Carlo, and across all the different therapeutic initiatives that you're involved with. And, Carlo, presumably - we're all hoping - these different initiatives will actually lead to ultimately a bigger scaling as more and more novel therapies that target both our RNA and DNA and actually are working, I guess further upstream in the pathway. So classically in the past it's been necessary to work out all the underlying biology, find a druggable target somewhere in that pathway and then get a larger enough clinical trial, which can be nearly impossible with many of the rare and ultra-rare conditions or even, as you've said, the sub-setting down of more common condition into rarer subtypes that perhaps can be treated in different ways. And with the many new different treatments on the horizon, ASO therapies, as you've said, is a place that's rapidly expanding, and also crisper gene editing. I'd be really interested to hear your reflections on how this might scale and also how it might extend to other new treatments. Carlo: Yeah, that's exactly the right word, ‘scaling up'. I mean, there will be of course very unique challenges to every single rare disease but I would argue that with genetic therapies, such as ASOs or crisper gene editing, the amount of functional work that you need to do in a lab to prove yourself and the scientific community that this is the right approach to go for can be certainly very important but can be less just because you're addressing very directly because of the disease. And then there are commonalities to all these approaches and possibly, you know, a platform approach type of regulatory approval might serve in that regard. You know, if you are using the same chemistry of these antisense oligonucleotides and, you know, similar doses, in a way the amount of work that you need to produce to again make sure that the approach is indeed a safe approach and an effective approach might be also reduced. I would say that there are also challenges on other aspects of course, as you were saying, Ana-Lisa. Certainly the typical or standard randomised placebo control trial that is the standard and ultimate trial that we use in a clinical setting to prove that a molecule is better than a placebo is many times in the context of rare diseases simply not possible, so we need to think of other ways to prove that a drug is safe and is effective. This is something that we all collectively as a scientific community are trying to address, and the alliance with the regulatory agencies, such as the MHRA, and you said that you have found your interaction with the MHRA very positive, and I can tell you exactly the same. So we are all trying to go for the same goal, effectively, so trying to find a way to systematise, platformise these sort of approaches. And I guess starting with antisense oligonucleotides is really the right place to go because it's a class of drugs that we have known for a long time, and we know it can work. Ana Lisa: Meriel, can you tell us a little about the National Genomic Research Library at Genomics England and how this could link with initiatives to find many more patients as new treatments become available for rare and ultra-rare conditions? Meriel: Yes, I think what's wonderful now is actually that what we're really trying to do is give everybody the opportunity to have their rare condition specifically diagnosed at the molecular level, and the way in which that is being done is by offering whole genome sequencing in the NHS currently in England but to all patients with rare diseases. And so, it's about trying to establish their diagnosis. And as well as that, even if the diagnosis isn't definitely made at the first pass when the clinical scientists look at the data, because the whole genome has been sequenced, actually all that information about their genome, if they consent, can then be put into the National Genomics Research Library. And that is a fantastic resource for national and international researchers who get approved to work in this trusted research environment to make new disease gene discoveries and identify these diagnoses for patients. What's also offered by Genomics England as well is when the National Genomics Library data results in a new publication, the discovery of a new gene or perhaps a new molecular mechanism that causes a disease we already know about, that feeds back into the diagnostic discovery pathway within Genomics England back onto the diagnostic side of all the data. So, patients who may have had genetic testing previously using whole genome sequencing where they've, if you like, had their sequencing done before the diagnosis was sort of known about, will also be picked up. And so, what this is really doing is trying to kind of give this really equal platform for everybody having testing to all have the same opportunity to have their diagnosis made, either on the diagnostic side or with research. Ana Lisa: So, sort of on a cohort-wide scale as new discoveries are made and published you can go back and find those patients that may actually have that diagnosis and get it back to them, which is brilliant. Meriel: Exactly. And this speeds up the whole process of getting these diagnoses back to people. So on a regular basis in the NHS, we will get feedback from the Diagnostic Discovery Pathway about “Here's some patients who you requested whole genome sequencing from a number of years ago and actually now we think we know what the particular molecular condition is.” And so, it's key of course for our patients with rare conditions to make that molecular diagnosis because then we're able to have them identified for our colleagues who are doing this ground-breaking research trying to bring therapies for these rare conditions. Ana Lisa: Thank you. And I hope that, as currently, if a novel genetic mechanism, as you've just described, is identified that could explain a rare condition that those patients can be found and they can receive that diagnosis, even many years later, and hopefully as novel treatments become available and say there's a chance to individualise ASO therapies, for example, to start with, that one could also go and look for patients with particular variants that could be amenable potentially to that treatment. And that's really sort of exciting that one could look for those patients across England, irrespective of which clinic they're under, which specialist they're under, and I think that could be really powerful as new treatments develop. I suppose, Meriel, if somebody comes to see you now in clinic are things different? Meriel: Well, I think one of the things for me when patients come to clinic now is we might have an idea about what we think their condition is, maybe even we think it's a specific gene. And we can offer whole genome sequencing and so it's not just the way we used to do things before by looking just at the coding regions of the gene, we can find more unusual ways in which the gene can be perturbed using whole genome sequencing. But let's say we don't make the diagnosis. I encourage my patients, if they're comfortable with it, to join the National Genomics Research Library, because really it's been incredibly productive seeing the new genetic discoveries that are coming out of that, but as well I say to them, even if we don't get the diagnosis the first time round when we look at the data, actually this is a constant cycle of relooking at their data, either if they're in the NGRL or as well on the Diagnostic Discovery Pathway side of the service that's run by Genomics England. So yeah, I feel like it's a very big difference; they don't have to keep coming every year and saying, “Is there a new test?” because actually they've had an excellent test, it's just developing our skills to really analyse it well. Ana Lisa: Yes, and our knowledge, the technology and the skills keep evolving, certainly. And I think one of the things that I'm sort of hearing from this conversation is that balance of hope and realism, Carlo we were talking about earlier how you need all the pieces of the puzzle to be lined up - so the regulatory agency, the clinicians, all the preclinical work has to have been done, monitoring afterwards for side effects - every piece of the puzzle has to be lined up for a new treatment to make it to a patient. And, Anne, I'd like to come back to you because we've talked about this before, how one balances these messages of optimism and hope which are needed for bringing everybody together as a community to crack some of these very difficult challenges highlighted by treatments for rare and ultra-rare conditions and at the same time the need for realism, a balance conversation. Anne: Yeah, that was one of our big learnings through the gene therapy trial and other trials we've had in the condition. As a rare disease charity, you do everything. You know, my title is CEO, but I tell people that's Chief Everything Officer because there's only a few of you and you do everything. So, you go and you lead the London Hope Walk and you also are a layperson on the Scientific Advisory Board and you also send out the emails about grants... And so, you could easily as a small rare disease charity conflate different communication messages because you're in a certain mode. And so we have been from the early days in the mode of raising hope for people to say, “Look, we can make a difference as a patient community, we could raise funds, we might be able to move things forward, you've got the power to make a difference if you want to.” That's one set of hope. And it's not dreamlike hope, we're linked to the reality of there are great breakthroughs. So, you know, in the world of spinal muscular atrophy these clinical trials have led somewhere very quickly, so we're not selling false hope, we're talking about the difference we can make. But then as soon as you flip into “There's a clinical trial being run” that's a completely different type of communication and you cannot conflate that message with the previous message. And we always say to everybody, “We're your team, we're a family, we're a team, we all help each other. When you are considering joining a clinical trial your team is the clinical trial team. The other team does other things for you but the people you need to work with and ask hard questions of and listen hard to, that's your clinical trial team led by the principal investigator because then you're in that with them. And, you know, the reality of the fact that many, many clinical trials don't work as we wish they would be and the decision you make for your child, your baby, your little one, to join a clinical trial… because that's what it comes down to in our disease, has to be made with that team, not the team that's selling you a fundraising event. It's worth reminding rare disease patient organisations we're wearing different hats and the hope and the realism are different tracks you have to go down. But at the same time as being realistic you also have to keep remembering that there is still grounds for hope, we are moving forward. And 21 years ago, when Tom was born the idea that you would be able to get all of the muscles in the body to switch back on – putting it in lay terms – seemed like a bit dream. Well, that is what has happened in the gene therapy clinical trial, we just have to now make it safer and understand more about what we're dealing with. So, the 2 things, the hope and the realism, do exist side by side. Ana Lisa: I think that perfectly encapsulates a lot of the messages around rare disease therapies where there's such hope that novel treatments will really target directly the DNA or RNA to potentially correct the problem across many different rare conditions and therefore actually making treatments one day suddenly available to a much, much bigger population of people with rare conditions than we could've dreamt of 20 years ago or perhaps now, and at the same time this massive need to work cooperatively to all make this as fair, as equitable. Not everybody is going to have the opportunity to fundraise massively to be an expert about their condition, and the importance of sharing these learnings and also really, really listening to the patient community and really, as Carlo was saying, keeping track of side effects, having registries/databases to share these is going to be incredibly important. [Music plays] Ana Lisa: Anne, can you tell us a little about your reflections on equity from the patient community perspective? Anne: Well I mentioned serendipity early and one of the aspects of serendipity that played into our favour for setting up the Myotubular Trust was that by hook or by crook Wendy Hughes, who set up the charity with me, and I were both able to devote time at that period of our lives to setting up a charity. When my husband, Andrew, and I were told that Tom would more than likely die before his first birthday, one of the decisions we made as a family was that he would never not be with a parent, we would always have someone around, and that kind of meant someone had to give up a full-time job and that was me. We thought, “If Tom has a few scarce months on the planet, we'll be with him.” And then when Tom lived to be nearly 4, as a family we got used to living on one salary and we were very lucky that we could pay the mortgage that way and run our family that way and eventually that meant I had the time to run the charity. That doesn't happen that easily, that's a tall order, particularly when you have somebody in the family who has such high needs. And one of the things that I have often thought about is that in the rare disease space we could do with a different funding model for rare disease charities, we could, in an ideal world I have this nirvana that I imagine where there's a fund that you can apply to that is contributed to by the people who make profits out of finding rare disease cures - so the pharmaceutical companies and the biotechs - and there's a fund that they contribute to and that if you have a rare disease and you are willing to set up an organisation that supports families, that raises research funds, that provides a way of hearing the patient voice, then you could apply to that for running cost funds and then you'd be able to run this charity. And then you wouldn't have to rely on whether you live in an area where people will raise money for you or… We were very lucky that we came across a few great benefactors who would give us money for running the charity, which is actually how we fund it. All the research money we raise goes 100% into research, not a penny of it goes towards running costs because we have serendipitously found people who will be benefactors for the charity, but we're relying on a lot of good luck for that kind of model to work. And when you look at how much profit is made from developing rare disease treatments and cures – which is fine because that's what puts the passion and that gets people working on it – then why not have an advance fund to run rare disease charities? One of my nirvana dreams. Ana Lisa: It's good to dream. Indeed, my hope is that there will be some amazing shining examples that lead the way that open doors, make things possible, prove that something can work and how and that then that will enable many other treatments for many additional rare conditions to be added in so that if you've learnt how this particular treatment modality works for this rare condition and there was funding behind it and everything else that's needed that then you can, the learning from that, I'm going to use the word ‘tweak', which sounds minor and could be very major but actually the concept that you can then tweak all those learnings and findings so that that same type of treatment modality could be adapted to treat somebody else with a different rare condition in a different location would be absolutely incredible and really powerful, given that if something like 85% of rare conditions affect less than one in a million people it's not going to be feasible to use the same strategies that have been used in the past for very common conditions. One of the other big barriers is the cost of developing treatment for ultra-rare conditions. Where it's a small number of patients that you have and therefore all the challenges that come with monitoring, checking for efficacy, monitoring safety and ultimately funding the challenges are much greater, however if some of these treatment modalities are also going to be used to treat common conditions it might be that actually there's a lot more cross-talk between the nano-rare, ultra-rare, rare and common conditions and that we can share a lot of that learning. I'd love to hear from each of you where you hope we will be for rare disease and rare therapies. Carlo: Well my dream is that in 5 to 10 years' time an individual with a rare disease is identified in the clinic, perhaps even before symptoms have manifested, and at that exact time the day of the diagnosis becomes also a day of hope in a way where immediately the researcher, the centre, genetics lab, flags that there are the specific mutations, we know exactly which is the best genetic therapy to go after, antisense oligonucleotides as opposed to CRISPR editing, and a path forward, both at the preclinical and clinical level, to demonstrate and to cure these patients eventually is already laid out in front of the patient. So, transforming the day of their diagnosis as a day of hope, this is my dream with the next ten years. Ana Lisa: Thank you, that's a wonderful dream. Meriel, can I come to you? Meriel: Yes, I think I just want to echo Carlo. We've had great developments and progress with getting whole genome sequencing into the NHS for testing but what we really need is for it to be fast and efficient and getting those diagnoses established quickly. And we have had that set up now and we're really getting there in terms of speed, but then what we need is exactly what's the next step and actually structure like UPNAT that are developing these processes that we can then say to the patient, “And from there, now that we've established your diagnosis, this is what we have options to offer.” Ana Lisa: Brilliant. And presumably that if the diagnosis isn't achieved now there is a hope that it will be achieved in the future as well. Anne... Anne: Well, stepping one hundred per cent into the patient's shoes rather than the scientific side that we don't so much influence.... stepping in the patient's shoes, in 5 years' time I would absolutely love it if we were in a situation where all the parties that have come to the table looking at a therapy or in the earlier research genuinely want to bring the patient voice into the room. As Carlo talked about, there's even going to be more and more and more of these rare diseases, then those voices, those few people who have experience of it, they may be able to shed light on something. Maybe even sometimes don't even know it's a fact that they know but that were brought to the table as passionately as everything else is brought to the table. [Music plays] Ana Lisa: We'll wrap up there. Thank you so much to our guests, Anne Lennox, Carlo Rinaldi and Meriel McEntagart, for joining me today as we discuss the collaborative power of working together and look to the future of rare therapies that could have the potential to unlock treatments for many rare conditions. If you'd like to hear more like this, please subscribe to Behind the Genes on your favourite podcast app. Thank you for listening. I've been your host, Ana-Lisa Tavares. This podcast was edited by Bill Griffin at Ventoux Digital and produced by Naimah Callachand.
Barter Black: How Nicole Murphy is Reshaping Business Growth Without Cash Scaling a business is hard enough—doing it alone makes it even harder. Enter Nicole Murphy, founder of Barter Black, a platform designed to help Black entrepreneurs exchange services, build networks, and grow without financial strain. In this episode, Nicole shares: How the pandemic led to the creation of Barter Black The game-changing role of customer discovery in refining her platform Why "Stop trying to be the Chief Everything Officer" is the advice every founder needs How bartering can help you preserve cash flow while getting what you need Nicole's insights are a wake-up call for solopreneurs trying to do it all alone. If you're serious about scaling, building wealth, and creating a support system, this episode is a must-listen. #growyourbusiness #barter Next Steps: See Nicole in Strategic Edge: media.feliciafordandco.com/power-moves Connect with Felicia: www.threads.net/@friendscallmefe Get Year End Power Moves: https://bit.ly/yearendpowermoves Get Your Free Resources: www.feliciafordandco.com/resources
This is part four in a continuing series about slow fashion and inclusivity. Amanda is joined by some rad people doing great work making slow fashion more inclusive:Itohan Asemota is the founder of HNI Collective, a Philadelphia-based fashion service agency with a focus on size inclusivity and sustainability. Find Itohan on Instagram: @itsitohanheyMarlee Rosen is a slow fashion personal style coach and the host of Style Me Slowly Podcast, where she features size inclusive, slow fashion brands and designers. Find Marlee on Instagram: @stylemeslowlyNico Herzetty is the founder and CEO of Phoria, " a platform to help people find what fits their bodies, their style, and their priorities—and how we can support each other in that journey." Find Phoria on Instagram: @phoriafitsDonnelle Jageman is the founder of The Plus Swap and a cofounder of Philly FatCon. Find Philly FatCon on Instagram: @phillyfatconMaggie Greene (aka the Halloween Queen) is the Chief Everything Officer of Self Magnitude, an ethical microbusiness on a mission to transform how you see yourself by putting the personal in brand and style. Maggie helps leaders, entrepreneurs, and individual contributors of all gender expressions show up as their radically authentic selves, at work and in life, with confidence and without compromising their core values and ethics. In this episode we will discuss the following:Why so many new fast fashion brands have adopted the SHEIN model specifically to target plus size American women…and why that's not a good thing...Why a lot of slow fashion marketing can feel a lot like regular old fast fashion marketingWhat we can learn from big brands that have totally blown their foray into extended sizingHow understanding our own personal style can help us slow down our shoppingAnd of course, how we can support slow fashion brands that are truly trying to be as inclusive as possible.Join the conversation on the Clotheshorse Slack! Sign up here!Get your Clotheshorse merch here: https://clotheshorsepodcast.com/shop/If you want to share your opinion/additional thoughts on the subjects we cover in each episode, feel free to email, whether it's a typed out message or an audio recording: amanda@clotheshorse.worldDid you enjoy this episode? Consider "buying me a coffee" via Ko-fi: ko-fi.com/clotheshorseFind this episode's transcript (and so much more) at clotheshorsepodcast.comClotheshorse is brought to you with support from the following sustainable small businesses:The Pewter Thimble Is there a little bit of Italy in your soul? Are you an enthusiast of pre-loved decor and accessories? Bring vintage Italian style — and history — into your space with The Pewter Thimble (@thepewterthimble). We source useful and beautiful things, and mend them where needed. We also find gorgeous illustrations, and make them print-worthy. Tarot cards, tea towels and handpicked treasures, available to you from the comfort of your own home. Responsibly sourced from across Rome, lovingly renewed by fairly paid artists and artisans, with something for every budget. Discover more at thepewterthimble.comSt. Evens is an NYC-based vintage shop that is dedicated to bringing you those special pieces you'll reach for again and again. More than just a store, St. Evens is dedicated to sharing the stories and history behind the garments. 10% of all sales are donated to a different charitable organization each month. New vintage is released every Thursday at wearStEvens.com, with previews of new pieces and more brought to you on Instagram at @wear_st.evens.Deco Denim is a startup based out of San Francisco, selling clothing and accessories that are sustainable, gender fluid, size inclusive and high quality--made to last for years to come. Deco Denim is trying to change the way you think about buying clothes. Founder Sarah Mattes wants to empower people to ask important questions like, “Where was this made? Was this garment made ethically? Is this fabric made of plastic? Can this garment be upcycled and if not, can it be recycled?” Signup at decodenim.com to receive $20 off your first purchase. They promise not to spam you and send out no more than 3 emails a month, with 2 of them surrounding education or a personal note from the Founder. Find them on Instagram as @deco.denim.Vagabond Vintage DTLV is a vintage clothing, accessories & decor reselling business based in Downtown Las Vegas. Not only do we sell in Las Vegas, but we are also located throughout resale markets in San Francisco as well as at a curated boutique called Lux and Ivy located in Indianapolis, Indiana. Jessica, the founder & owner of Vagabond Vintage DTLV, recently opened the first IRL location located in the Arts District of Downtown Las Vegas on August 5th. The shop has a strong emphasis on 60s & 70s garments, single stitch tee shirts & dreamy loungewear. Follow them on instagram, @vagabondvintage.dtlv and keep an eye out for their website coming fall of 2022.Country Feedback is a mom & pop record shop in Tarboro, North Carolina. They specialize in used rock, country, and soul and offer affordable vintage clothing and housewares. Do you have used records you want to sell? Country Feedback wants to buy them! Find us on Instagram @countryfeedbackvintageandvinyl or head downeast and visit our brick and mortar. All are welcome at this inclusive and family-friendly record shop in the country!Located in Whistler, Canada, Velvet Underground is a "velvet jungle" full of vintage and second-hand clothes, plants, a vegan cafe and lots of rad products from other small sustainable businesses. Our mission is to create a brand and community dedicated to promoting self-expression, as well as educating and inspiring a more sustainable and conscious lifestyle both for the people and the planet.Find us on Instagram @shop_velvetunderground or online at www.shopvelvetunderground.comSelina Sanders, a social ...
On today's episode of the podcast we're talking about the importance of leaning into the CEO role of your business. The doors are officially open to Unf*ck Your Biz: Your step-by-step framework to get your legal and tax shit legit. The program will help you get your 2024 taxes and bookkeeping wrapped up, make sure your business entity is properly formed going into 2025, getting your legal protections in order including contracts and trademarks and more. It's our signature program that's only available a few times a year and you can join now until December 16th at notavglaw.com/uyb. To announce the launch of Unf*ck Your Biz, I hosted two workshops today to help you at your stage of business. If you missed our workshops, check them out at notavglaw.com/masterclass Legally Launched: The Absolute Legal and Tax Essentials for New Business Owners The 6 Figure Tax Blueprint: The Roadmap to Money in Your Pocket At and Beyond Six Figures When you run a business, it's important to have an understanding of everything that goes on in your business. CEO may stand for Chief Executive Officer, but I often say it also stands for Chief Everything Officer, which is very accurate as a small business owner, especially before we hire anyone. As CEO, we need to know all the core aspects of business. Would a CEO ever get handed a P&L statement from the accounting team and not know how to read it? They have to have basic knowledge because they can't make business decisions if they don't know the numbers. As CEO, it's important to consider that you're building a business as an asset that's ideally going to provide you, family members, team members, etc. a livable income. You may also decide you want to sell your business one day, even if that doesn't seem possible or of interest right now. What legal structures do you need in order for this to happen? You need layers of legal protection to protect your business. These are the foundations we grow our business on. Even if you hire other professionals to manage things bookkeeping or tax strategy, you need to know enough to have savvy conversations with them. When do you go to your lawyer and ask for a new trademark? When do you need to tell your accountant about changes to your business or your personal life that may impact your taxes? No one is keeping track of your business 24/7, you need to proactively be talking to your professionals in order for them to be able to help you. If you want to put on your CEO hat, check out Unf*ck Your Biz at notavglaw.com/uyb
Businesses suffer when their owners do not prioritize their health.Ellen Goldman, M.Ed., NBC-HWC, PCC, is a wellness coach, healthy lifestyle and weight loss coach, speaker, and author. She is passionate about serving others and helping them achieve their health and wellness goals.Ellen explains that the real challenge lies in behavior change. Many people attempt to overhaul their lifestyles, but this approach often leads to burnout and failure. The key is mindset and motivation, which serve as the foundation for lasting change.Ellen introduces her MAP framework—Mindset, Awareness, and Preparation—as the blueprint for sustainable health habits. The first step is shifting your mindset from "I don't have time for self-care" to "I make time for self-care."Ellen also explains success in weight loss differently. It is a result of correcting overall lifestyle imbalances—such as stress, sleep, and exercise—rather than simply restricting food intake.Start with small, manageable changes and embrace a mindset of long-term health; this will lead to both personal fulfillment and business success.Show notes:
Over and over again, business founders find themselves in a trap! A growth trap where they feel trapped by their business – not only is it running their life; it's consuming almost every waking hour; they are working as much as they can; and YET... they have this feeling that something could be better; something could be different.In this episode, I'll talk about the growth trap; the difference between scaling and growth and how to avoid the most common mistakes business owners make when they want to stop being Chief Everything Officer and are ready to scale! Just a note – in episode 136, I outlined 7 scaling mistakes to avoid….. so in this episode I'm talking about additional challenges that you might face as you scale your micro business! ACTION PLAN Identify where you are in your business growth (emerging, growing or scaling) and decide if you truly want to scale. Are you facing any of these scaling challenges? If so which ones? Download my Business Self-Assessment tool to identify your strengths and possible gaps so you know your next best step Book a Growth Strategy Session so we can strategize how you can best grow or scale your business. ABOUT ME: Hi friends, Want to escape the chaos of the day to day running of your business? Then I'm your gal. I'm a champagne lover and a sought-after business coach for small business leaders who want to grow, and scale their business without the hustle or burn out. I'm also a best-selling author, award-winning speaker and podcast host. After almost 40 years as an entrepreneur, I'm best known for my straight-talk, no BS and the simple business and marketing strategies that bring my clients more joy, profit and freedom. My podcast, Work Less PROFIT More business podcast offers tips and strategies for small business owners who are tired of working too hard for too little profit, and having little or no free time. You can do this! Connect with me here: diana@dianalidstone.com www.dianalidstone.com https://www.facebook.com/diana.lidstone https://www.linkedin.com/in/hiredianalidstone/ Work with me: Currently, there are 2 ways you can work with me: I am only accepting private clients in my 12-month Business Accelerator program (here) or By booking a VIP Grow Day which is intensive session designed to give you my undivided attention and acceleration to accomplish something extremely fast. More information here. Share your feedback with me by clicking here and leaving a short voice message!
S5, EP 173Special guest - Dani StatesDani's Links - https://danistates.com/https://voiceoverview.com/Dani StatesVoice Actor and Founder & CEO (Chief Everything Officer) of VOICEOVERVIEW In addition to being a full time voice actor, Dani runs the day-to-day operations of VOICEOVERVIEW with the help of an amazing team of (very patient) developers who work with her to bring subscribers suggestions and her grand vision to life. When she's not behind the mic or working with the VOV team, she loves walking on the beach near her home in Seattle, Washington, baking sourdough bread and “fair weather kayaking” on the Puget Sound.Special Guest Co-Host - Jane AquinoJane's Website - https://www.thejaneaquino.com/Support the showThis is a shareable podcast, with a group of creatives, documenting their creative voice over & on-camera journeys to inspire all of us as we navigate our own paths! This pod may bring some amazing moments of inspiration, ah-ha break throughs or a feeling you're not the only one...but it is for entertainment and not educational purposes! Enjoy and thank you for listening to our Creative Chaos! *Have a creative story or journey to share, we'd love to hear it - email us at chaoskeepers411@gmail.com or jozlynrocki@gmail.com Follow all the Chaos - Website - https://www.keepingupwithchaos.net/ FB - https://www.facebook.com/keepingupwithchaospodcastIG - https://www.instagram.com/keeping_up_with_chaos/
Dori and Jennie Baird talk about resilience, grief, and the role of timing in their lives. Jennie works as the Chief Product Officer at BBC Studios and is also a certified mental health first aid and volunteer suicide bereavement support facilitator, among her many professional and personal roles and pursuits. They reflect on their childhoods and the influence their parents played, particularly their fathers. And Dori updates listeners about what happened to her father after this interview with Jennie was recorded. They talk about their time at Aol, when Jennie hired Dori in 2006 for her first job after a decade as a stay-at-home mom, producing a branded contest sponsored by Dove called Chief Everything Officer. She shares the five words she looks for in all job candidates. Jennie also reminds Dori what she learned from our host about cooking. In admitting that she is not much for looking back and evaluating the past, Jennie reveals much about herself, yes, but also about resilience itself. This is an episode you won't want to miss. From Dori:This episode is dedicated to the too many fathers my family and friends lost in 2024, many in this year's very challenging summer. I name some but, in my community alone, there were more. Too many. Much love and care to those in the complex, life-changing process of grief and mourning. TW: This episode contains a discussion of suicide. If you or someone you know is struggling, please listen with care or consider skipping this episode. In the United States, the suicide help line to call is the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline. You can reach them by dialing 988 Text Me!Connect with me!Instagram: @dorifernLinkedIn: Dori FernEmail me: lifechangingwithdorifern@gmail.comVisit dorifern.com for more about Dori's coaching services and to sign up for a complimentary session.
Research shows that of the time given to a workday, 80% is spent doing tasks with little to no value and only 20% is spent doing something important. That's a BIG scary stat!And yet when Google sends me my website report, one of the MOST looked at pages – is a blog I wrote in 2018 – how to increase your odds of success by 95% ... it seems people WANT to be more productive.So today – Day 4 of my free masterclass, The Ultimate Focus & Freedom Masterclass, I've cobbled together not just 5 productivity tips to save you time and your sanity but more like 5 concepts to apply in your business that will make you more productive.Don't forget to grab your workbook here so you can create how you'll best apply these concepts. One thing I know for sure is that when I listen to podcasts like these – great ideas pop into my head and I need a place to record them – rather than little bits of paper scattered all over the place.If you missed the earlier part of this workshop series, you can find them here:Ep 155 – Get Focused: Build your business with purposeEp 156 – Which activities move the needle?Ep 157 – Free up time: Why it's Systems BEFORE Team Ep 158 – Save Time & Sanity: 5 Productivity Strategies Next week – the exact sequence to implement big changes in your business:Ep 159 – How to Reduce Your Workload: A 7-Step Sequence.Want to really save some time? Make more $$$? Have more freedom?If you're feeling like the Chief Everything Officer of your business or feeling overwhelmed and frustrated because you just can't seem to get stuff done – then I invite you to attend my upcoming QBFPD – it's one of the best solutions toGetting back on trackStaying focused on the right activities for your business right nowEliminate what's not workingMake a plan for the upcoming 90 days!And have me right alongside you to guide you!Check out https://dianalidstone.com/shop/quarterly-retreat/RESOURCES MENTIONED:CEO WEEKLY Checklist: 5 tips to make your week more productive– download herehttps://trafft.com/time-management-statistics/5 Easy Ways to Increase Your Productivity – read here9 Productivity Tips to Work Smarter, not harder! – read hereShonda Rhimes – Year of Yes (book)My typical Model Agenda – view here9 Activators of Your Well-Oiled Business Machine – view hereShare your feedback with me by clicking here and leaving a short voice message!
Welcome to 'Peri Menopause Power,' the podcast where we dive deep into the transformative journey of menopause, sharing real stories from real women. In this enlightening episode, we welcome Tanya Rutherford, a menopausal mum, a coach, facilitator and Chief Everything Officer from Central Queensland. Tanya is passionate about supporting other women through and beyond their Menopause experience. Based in the Rockhampton Region, Tanya provides firsthand insight into the unique challenges regional women face during perimenopause and beyond, contrasting their experiences with those in urban areas. Tanya also highlights common concerns and emerging trends among the women she works with, offering a deeper understanding of their specific challenges. Finally, she shares practical strategies and approaches that have proven effective in helping regional women embrace empowerment and live their best lives during menopause. Main Discussion Points: Tanya's background and inspiration for starting Learn Grow Become and Queen Be. Unique challenges faced by regional women in perimenopause and beyond. Common concerns and emerging trends among menopausal women. Effective strategies and approaches for empowering women during menopause. FOLLOW OWN YOUR HEALTH COLLECTIVE
Mallory Ottariano is the founder and Chief Everything Officer at Youer Apparel. She started her brand as a creative side project making one-of-a-kind apparel and has grown it into a full line of active lifestyle apparel for women.Today, Mallory owns her own factory in Missoula, Montana where they produce thousands of pieces of apparel every year. Mallory has been a vocal advocate for domestic manufacturing and has grown her loyal customer base by being transparent about what it takes to run an apparel business and the costs associated with producing apparel in America.In this episode, we talk about what it takes to get a brand started, her struggle to find reliable factories, and how her loyal customers funded her expansion to start her own factory. She tells the story of how she turned a horrible experience pitching her products to REI into a viral social media video and how she has grown her brand without spending a dollar on advertising.Mallory has utilized social media to organically grow her business. You can find her on Instagram and learn more about Youer on their website.
Retail will never be the same. Amazon changed the game. The pandemic changed the game. Venture capital changed the game. We can't go back to yesterday. So how do we thrive today and build for tomorrow? Stay agile and be clear on your Core Values. If you don't know where you want to go, you won't ever get there. The Finale of The Longer Game Season 2 brings back three incredible guests to walk through this changing retail landscape: Ryan Burgess, Head of Growth at Intentwise, Chad Rubin, CEO & Founder of Profasee, and Carol Shih, Chief Everything Officer of Qode Space. These e-commerce legends bring their takes on everything from pricing to creating the right operating processes. As brands face challenging times, it's important to be decisive about where your brand will show up and how. You also have to continue to experiment and test. Stay curious and focus on operating within your Core Values. Closing out Season 2 was a blast. Stay tuned for Season 3! TBD. The Longer Game is a podcast focused on leaning into the trends and advancements in retail so brands see a clearer path to success across ALL channels. We're looking at retail in a whole new way, looking to better understand the future of retail. It's Retail Reimagined. Sharing hope about the future. No one channel can a business sustain. Go omni-channel. Like what you're hearing? Subscribe to our channel and make sure to click or tap the bell so you get notified whenever new episodes drop. Want to learn more about The Longer Game? Head over to https://thelongergame.com to read show notes, watch more episodes, or contact us. Follow us on LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/company/thelongergame Follow us on Instagram: https://instagram.com/thelongergame Follow us on Facebook: https://facebook.com/thelongergame Michael Maher, the host, would love to connect with you. Reach out to him at… Email: michael@thinkcartology.com LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/immichaelmaher This podcast is sponsored by Cartology and Podcastify Me. Cartology is a customized done-for-you service agency that helps brands accelerate growth and get profitable on the Amazon marketplace. They work directly with brands to create strategy and then go right out and execute it. Want to find out more? Website: https://thinkcartology.com Find Cartology on LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/company/cartology Find Cartology on Instagram: https://instagram.com/thinkcartology Find Cartology on Facebook: https://facebook.com/thinkcartology Podcastify Me is designed to help coaches of all kinds enter the podcasting space with minimal lift for them. And, inviting past, current and future clients to your show as part of your marketing and sales process sets you apart from your competition, in a time where podcasting is really gaining popularity. Website: https://podcastify.me Find Podcastify Me on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/podcastify-me/ Find Podcastify Me on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/podcastify.me/ Find Podcastify Me on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCf2biqOTN2UbZ5aaM4Sx6NQ --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thelongergame/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thelongergame/support
When starting your own business, you have to do everything. You are the customer service team, the marketing department, the product development team, and the leadership team. You are the Chief Everything Officer—or the business gopher. If it's got to be done, it's you doing it. However, as your business starts to grow, you will find that you just can't operate at that level anymore, and you will increasingly start to ‘drop the ball', feel resentful toward your business, and toe the line with burnout. If you feel like one more task or responsibility might make you implode, today's episode is for you. Stepping into a leadership position in your business, though, takes new skills. Skills that can feel super uncomfortable, like managing people, increasing your monthly expenses, handing over control… If you and your business are ready to step up and start playing bigger, then today's episode is for you. Today, I will show you how you can start stepping into the CEO role of your business and stop doing absolutely everything. If you are ready to fully step into the CEO role of your business now that sales have grown and would like support in doing so with me in your corner, I'm excited to let you know that applications for my mastermind are now open. The 7 Figure Scale Collective is my Boutique Mastermind For Lifestyle e-commerce Brands To Scale to 7 Figures.This 6-month program guides you through my signature framework, ‘The Lifestyle eCommerce Method' where I coach you through the steps and strategies required to scale your online sales. This high-touch coaching program includes 1:1 calls with me, weekly small group calls, a supportive community, and so much more. My Masterminders get access to ALL my online courses and an invitation to my VIP face-to-face retreats (we have one booked for the Gold Coast, Qld, in September)! If you are already earning $100k in revenue a year in your fashion or lifestyle online store, I invite you to apply. I'd love to help you scale your sales and step into your role as CEO.Click here to learn more, see our members' case studies, and apply. Don't forget to leave me a review and rating on Apple Podcasts or Shopify. It would mean the world to me! Links: Apply for the Mastermind program: Mastermind program, Visit the full podcast page here: https://jodieminto.com/podcast/ Visit my full website: https://jodieminto.com/ Let's connect on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/iamjodieminto/
In this episode of Startup Hustle, Matt Watson interviews Robby Yates, co-founder and Chief Everything Officer of FollowApp, a networking software company. They discuss Robbie's journey from being a salesperson to becoming an IT guy and starting his own company. They also talk about the importance of networking, the challenges of being a non-technical founder, and the benefits of white labeling. Robby shares tips for effective networking and emphasizes building a strong team and listening to others. He also highlights the importance of perseverance and believing in oneself as an entrepreneur. Important Takeaways Networking is a valuable tool for entrepreneurs and should be approached with intention and a focus on helping others. Building a strong team and listening to advisors are crucial for success as a non-technical founder. White labeling can be a game changer for a business, allowing for easier promotion and increased revenue. Effective networking requires being yourself, not wearing a mask, and following up with contacts. Raising funds can be challenging, but networking events can lead to unexpected opportunities. It's important to embrace rejection and keep going, believing in oneself and the value of the product or service being offered. Don't miss this insightful conversation about becoming a non-tech founder in the tech world. Find Startup Hustle Everywhere: https://gigb.co/l/YEh5 This episode is sponsored by Full Scale: https://fullscale.io Visit the Follow App website: https://thefollowapp.co Learn more about Robby Yates: https://www.linkedin.com/in/robert-yates-130105 Sign up for the Startup Hustle newsletter: https://newsletter.startuphustle.xyz Highlighted Discussion Points Creating a software company, challenges and lessons learned. 0:31 Entrepreneurship, trust, and business growth. 6:03 Pricing sensitivity and value-based pricing, with a focus on B2B vs. B2C. 10:53 White labeling software, networking, and app deployment. 12:43 Networking strategies for introverts and extroverts. 17:49 Using software to manage networking at events. 22:33 Entrepreneurship, networking, and fundraising challenges. 25:41 Building a tech company, overcoming challenges, and staying motivated. 30:44 See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This episode is part one of two about laundry and clothing care. You can find the other episode as episode 153 in your feed!It's the year of Earth Logic here at Clotheshorse, where we are planning to reduce our consumption of brand new clothing by 75%!It's essential that we get as much wear as possible out of clothes. And how we wash, dry, and deal with those stains is a big part of making our clothing last longer. Amanda is joined by Maggie and Traci to solve your laundry quandaries. In this episode, we will be sharing our own laundry trauma, and then we will get into some of the biggest questions you had: detergent and detergent pods, line drying, shrinking, dealing with pills, and water temperature. We'll also share our advice (some of it from Maggie's laundry magician mom Peggy) about the essentials you should keep on hand to solve your own laundry quandaries!"Does the film around detergent pods really biodegrade? A debate is raging," Allyson Chiu, Washington Post.ABOUT MAGGIEMaggie (she, her) is a cisgender, pansexual woman, a recovering marketing professional, and a trauma and abuse survivor. Maggie is also the Chief Everything Officer of Maggie Greene Style, an ethical microbusiness on a mission to transform how you see yourself by putting the personal in brand and style. Maggie helps leaders, entrepreneurs, and individual contributors of all gender expressions show up as their radically authentic selves, at work and in life, with confidence and without compromising their core values and ethics. You can learn more by visiting her 100% DIY website here: https://maggiegreenestyle.com.Sign up for Maggie's weekly newsletter: https://maggiegreenestyle.hubspotpagebuilder.com/welcome ABOUT TRACITraci was a special education teacher for more than 20 years. Then, in 2022, she decided to take the leap into full-time entrepreneurship. She believes loved clothes last and that every garment deserves a chance to shine. She's on a mission to #MakeMendingMainstream.As the visionary behind Pryde Hantverk, she seeks to extend the life of your beloved garments so you can enjoy them for years to come. She shares many of Maggie's philosophies about doing more with less and saving clothing from landfill. That makes her the perfect partner for a creative collaboration. Maggie regularly entrusts Traci with her own beloved garments when things need mending or adjusting, so you can rest assured yours are in good hands!Visit Traci's website: https://prydehantverk.comSign up for Traci's newsletter: https://preview.mailerlite.com/webforms/landing/h0i9p1Learn more about Small Biz Big Pic here: smallbizbigpic.comHave questions/comments/cute animal photos? Reach out via email: amanda@clotheshorse.worldFind the transcript at clotheshorsepodcast.comWant to support Amanda's work on Clotheshorse? Learn more at patreon.com/clotheshorsepodcastClotheshorse is brought to you with support from the following sustainable small businesses:Gentle Vibes: We are purveyors of polyester and psychedelic relics! We encourage experimentation and play not only in your wardrobe, but in your home, too. We have thousands of killer vintage pieces ready for their next adventure! Picnicwear: a slow fashion brand, ethically made by hand from vintage and deadstock materials - most notably, vintage towels! Founder, Dani, has worked in the industry as a fashion designer for over 10 years, but started Picnicwear in response to her dissatisfaction with the industry's shortcomings. Picnicwear recently moved to rural North Carolina where all their clothing and accessories are now designed and cut, but the majority of their sewing is done by skilled garment workers in NYC. Their customers take comfort in knowing that all their sewists are paid well above NYC minimum wage. Picnicwear offers minimal waste and maximum authenticity: Future Vintage over future garbage.Shift Clothing, out of beautiful Astoria, Oregon, with a focus on natural fibers, simple hardworking designs, and putting fat people first. Discover more at shiftwheeler.comHigh Energy Vintage is a fun and funky vintage shop located in Somerville, MA, just a few minutes away from downtown Boston. They offer a highly curated selection of bright and colorful clothing and accessories from the 1940s-1990s for people of all genders. Husband-and-wife duo Wiley & Jessamy handpick each piece for quality and style, with a focus on pieces that transcend trends and will find a home in your closet for many years to come! In addition to clothing, the shop also features a large selection of vintage vinyl and old school video games. Find them on instagram @ highenergyvintage, online at highenergyvintage.com, and at markets in and around Boston.Blank Cass, or Blanket Coats by Cass, is focused on restoring, renewing, and reviving the history held within vintage and heirloom textiles. By embodying and transferring the love, craft, and energy that is original to each vintage textile into a new garment, I hope we can reteach ourselves to care for and mend what we have and make it last. Blank Cass lives on Instagram @blank_cass and a website will be launched soon at blankcass.com.St. Evens is an NYC-based vintage shop that is dedicated to bringing you those special pieces you'll reach for again and again. More than just a store, St. Evens is dedicated to sharing the stories and history behind the garments. 10% of all sales are donated to a different charitable organization each month. New vintage is released every Thursday at wearStEvens.com, with previews of new pieces and more brought to you on Instagram at @wear_st.evens.The Pewter Thimble Is there a little bit of Italy in your soul? Are you an enthusiast of pre-loved decor and accessories? Bring vintage Italian style — and history — into your space with The Pewter Thimble (@thepewterthimble). We source useful and beautiful things, and mend them where needed. We also find gorgeous illustrations, and make them print-worthy. Tarot cards, tea towels and handpicked treasures, ...
Small Business Quick WINS w/ Jay Schwedelson l Presented By Thryv
In this episode of Small Business Quick Wins, host Jay Schwedelson interviews Kenny Lang, a business coach who helps small business owners turn their purpose into performance. You'll learn NEW strategies for business owners to delegate tasks and responsibilities in order to focus on higher level vision and GROWTH!STEAL Kenny's BEST ideas for laying out org charts, designing roles and setting CLEAR KPIs, having REGULAR check-ins with team members, and the importance of psychological SAFETY for discretionary effort.Best Moments:(02:03) A CEO often acts as the "Chief Everything Officer" by handling many roles and tasks in a small business(03:57) Lay out an organizational chart to visualize all roles and where the business owner currently sits in multiple seats(05:46) Design roles by articulating the mission/outcome, main responsibilities, and key metrics for success(08:12) Have weekly syncs to check on KPIs and address any misses early(09:34) Meet every other week for 15-30 minutes to provide support and build psychological safety(10:42) Review alignment with values and role fit quarterlyGuest Bios:Kenny Lang is a business coach who helps small business owners turn their purpose into performance. He empathizes with the realities small business owners face and aims to help them win. He hosts the "How Leaders Think" podcast and has recently released a free workshop to help small businesses find focus.Try Thryv For $1?!?Click HERE to get this $1 offer for 1 month using Thryv's Business Center!
Are you ready to become the true CEO of your business?You're ready for more freedom but:You find your calendar is always full You can't seem to find time to build the systems & structures that would streamline your businessYou've been struggling to set boundaries with your teamYou can't seem to take even a couple of days away without feeling stressed or guiltyWell, my friend – then welcome to this week's podcast series GET OUT OF THE WEEDS & back into the driver's seat where each day I'll share with you how to stop being Chief Everything Officer and instead build a self-running engine.We kicked the week off withMon, Ep. 134 – The Growth Trap: How to Take the Pain Out of Growing Your Biz (listen here)Tues, Ep. 135 – The M-Myth: Why Doing More Isn't the Answer (listen here)Wed, Ep. 136 – 7 Scaling Mistakes to AvoidThurs, Ep. 137 – Scale Sustainably: How to Build Your Self-Running EngineFriday – No episode but I'm hosting a LinkedIn Live where you get to come on live with me and ask your questions – on the spot!!!LINKEDIN Live Link - https://www.linkedin.com/events/7179136325520961540While today I cover the 7 most common and most costly scaling mistakes, remember that building a sustainably profitable business is about always up-levelling your mindset and learning new skills.To scale a business, it's about shifting from the doer in your business to the leader of your company!Entrepreneurs who earn 10x more don't work 10x harder!ACTION PLAN:Scaling your company will require you to:Slow down before you scaleSimplify, starting with your offersStabilize & optimize to create cash flow reservesInvest in your businessRinse & repeatCTAABOUT ME:I'm a best-selling author, award-winning speaker and podcast host. After almost 40 years as an entrepreneur, I'm best known for my straight-talk, no BS and the simple business and marketing strategies that bring my clients more joy, profit and freedom. This podcast offers tips and strategies for small business owners who are tired of working too hard for too little profit, and having little or no free time.Connect with me here:diana@dianalidstone.comwww.dianalidstone.comhttps://www.facebook.com/diana.lidstonehttps://www.linkedin.com/in/hiredianalidstone/Work with me:I am only accepting private clients in my 12-month Business Accelerator program (here) orBy booking a VIP Grow Day which is an intensive session designed to give you my undivided attention and acceleration to accomplish something extremely fast. More information here.Share your feedback with me by clicking here and leaving a short voice message!
Are you tired of being the CEO of your business?You've seen some success but…You find yourself hustling to keep clients and cash flow coming in.You feel like you're stuck on a revenue plateau and don't know how to get past it.You're already feeling maxed out and not sure how it's possible to grow without working more hours.Well, my friend – then welcome to this week's podcast series GET OUT OF THE WEEDS & back into the driver's seat where each day. I'll share with you how to stop being Chief Everything Officer and instead build a self-running engine.Each day this week, I'll release a new episode and share with you:Mon, Ep. 134 – The Growth Trap: How to Take the Pain Out of Growing Your Biz (listen here)Tues, Ep. 135 – The M-Myth: Why Doing More Isn't the AnswerWed, Ep. 136 – 7 Scaling Mistakes to AvoidThurs, Ep. 137 – Scale Sustainably: How to Build Your Self-Running EngineFriday – No episode but I'm hosting a LinkedIn Live where you get to come on live with me and ask your questions – on the spot!!!Today, I'll share:What is the M-myth and it's illusionWhat buying into the m-myth leads to and how it keeps you from achieving the freedom you desireAre you hiring cowboys to herd kittens?The principle of Do less, only betterLINKS MENTIONEDGet Out of the Weeds & Get Back in the Driver's Seat Workbook – download hereEp. 130 – The phone call that changed everything (listen here)Ep 56 – Attracting clients without social media, is it possible? (listen here)ACTION PLAN:Check in with yourself – are you buying into the M-myth?Listen and watch how you talk about your work.Look at your agenda – is it filled to the brim with appointments?Is your to-do list growing by leaps & bounds?Re-evaluate both your agenda & your to-do list – DO LESS only better.For more on Do Less Better – read the book Essentialism: The Disciplined Pursuit of Less by Greg McKeown.Connect with me here:diana@dianalidstone.comwww.dianalidstone.comhttps://www.facebook.com/diana.lidstonehttps://www.linkedin.com/in/hiredianalidstone/Work with me:I am only accepting private clients in my 12-month Business Accelerator program (here) orBy booking a VIP Grow Day which is an intensive session designed to give you my undivided attention and acceleration to accomplish something extremely fast. More information here.Share your feedback with me by clicking here and leaving a short voice message!
Have you ever been told to fall in line by your boss because you didn't line up with their expectations of you? Many of us are familiar with not showing up as our true selves at work and Carol Shih, Chief Everything Officer of Qode Space, along with our host, are no stranger to this phenomenon. Too funny? Not what people expect from a woman? Buckle up because the world is a tough place. Agency life is no different. And those tough experiences are what mold and shape us to actually be even more impactful in our communities. When it comes down to it, we're all humans and when we start to operate our businesses like our employees and customers are robots, we lose. Carol tells us about her experiences as a web development agency owner, what finding a good partners takes, and how she fully leans into authenticity to build trust with clients, which leads to longer relationships and better quality of work. We're here, we're going deep, and want you to join us on the journey. The Longer Game is a podcast focused on leaning into the trends and advancements in retail so brands see a clearer path to success across ALL channels. We're looking at retail in a whole new way, looking to better understand the future of retail. It's Retail Reimagined. Sharing hope about the future. No one channel can a business sustain. Go omni-channel. Like what you're hearing? Subscribe to our channel and make sure to click or tap the bell so you get notified whenever new episodes drop. Want to learn more about The Longer Game? Head over to https://thelongergame.com to read show notes, watch more episodes, or contact us. Follow us on LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/company/thelongergame Follow us on Instagram: https://instagram.com/thelongergame Follow us on Facebook: https://facebook.com/thelongergame Our Guest's Name is Carol Shih. Carol is a third-culture kid who grew up in Taiwan, was raised in Australia, and moved to Los Angeles for university when she turned 19. She has been in the eCommerce industry for over a decade; an expert in fashion, beauty, and CPG eCommerce life cycle. Carol started Qode Space, one of the few female & minority-owned tech agency in the United States; with the mission to put quality first in eCom web development, and focus in community, transparency, and being purposeful. You can find her at... Website: http://qodespace.com LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/shihcarol/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/karolz/ Michael Maher, the host, would love to connect with you. Reach out to him at… Email: michael@thinkcartology.com LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/immichaelmaher This podcast is sponsored by Cartology and Podcastify Me. Cartology is a customized done-for-you service agency that helps brands accelerate growth and get profitable on the Amazon marketplace. They work directly with brands to create a strategy and then go right out and execute it. Want to find out more? Website: https://thinkcartology.com Find Cartology on LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/company/cartology Find Cartology on Instagram: https://instagram.com/thinkcartology Find Cartology on Facebook: https://facebook.com/thinkcartology Podcastify Me is designed to help coaches of all kinds enter the podcasting space with minimal lift for them. And, inviting past, current, and future clients to your show as part of your marketing and sales process sets you apart from your competition, in a time where podcasting is really gaining popularity. Website: https://podcastify.me Find Podcastify Me on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/podcastify-me/ Find Podcastify Me on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/podcastify.me/ Find Podcastify Me on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCf2biqOTN2UbZ5aaM4Sx6NQ --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thelongergame/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thelongergame/support
This is the 3rd in the series, Love Your brand. ACTION PLAN:Fill out this mad libs formula…..My brand is the ONLY _____________ (business growth strategist).That helps _______________ (overworked business leaders stop being Chief Everything Officer and step into the role the true leadership role of CEO) .So they can __________________ (live the life they love).Share your feedback with me by clicking here and leaving a short voice message!Discover the #1 problem that's holding your business back!Take my FREE quiz - Business Freedom Calculator (here)In 5 minutes, you'll answer 22 questions that identify where you fall in one of the four stages of business growth. The calculator will lay out specific action steps you need to take now to ultimately achieve the freedom you desire.ABOUT ME:I'm a sought-after business coach for small business leaders who want to grow, and scale their business.I'm also a best-selling author, award-winning speaker and podcast host. After almost 40 years as an entrepreneur, I'm best known for my straight-talk, no BS and the simple business and marketing strategies that bring my clients more joy, profit and freedom. My podcast, Work Less PROFIT More business podcast offers tips and strategies for small business owners who are tired of working too hard for too little profit, and having little or no free time. You can do this!Connect with me here:diana@dianalidstone.comwww.dianalidstone.comhttps://www.facebook.com/diana.lidstonehttps://www.linkedin.com/in/hiredianalidstone/Work with me:I am only accepting private clients in my 12-month Business Accelerator program (here) orBy booking a VIP Grow Day which is an intensive session designed to give you my undivided attention and acceleration to accomplish something extremely fast. More information here.MOST POPULAR 2023 EPISODES:Ep. 61 – What do an 11-year old entrepreneur, cookies & Tesla have in common? (here)Ep. 112 – How to plan your week effectively like a small business CEO (here)Ep. 71 – 99% of Small Firms don't do this! (here)Ep. 111 – Grow & Run your business effectively like a CEO (here)Ep. 99 – Elevate your brand & grow your online presence: 5 Actionable Marketing Strategies with Genevieve Rochon (here)Share your feedback with me by clicking here and leaving a short voice message!
Uncomplicate Your Business | Small Business Strategy for Women Entrepreneurs
CEO doesn't mean Chief Everything Officer!When we start our businesses, it's a one-woman show. We are the marketing team, the sales department, and the bookkeeper. We are used to rolling up our sleeves and just figuring it all out!But as the saying goes “What got you here won't get you there!” Continuing to be the Chief Everything Officer will not only make you the bottleneck in your business but will create a ceiling that limits your growth potential.In this live training, we'll share the top mindset shifts and CEO habits that our CEOs embraced as they said yes to building a more sustainable business, 90 days at a time.Watch the video version on-demand.Apply to The CEO Collective.The CEO Collective is a 12-month immersive mentorship meets mastermind experience for women entrepreneurs who are ready to sustainably scale and step into the role of CEO. Applications are currently open for the next cohort until Friday February 23rd, 2024!>>> Click Here to Apply
Wouldn't you just love to ditch the tech and get on with the things you really love to do? You know, the tasks you could do all day without them feeling like a chore. Freeing up more time for you in the process, whilst allowing you to show up in your business and brand the way you want to! In this episode, Carly chats with Kirsty Holden all about how implementing systems and processes into your business can be a game changer in terms of mindset, time management and so much more.This is also yet again the perfect example of repurposing great content which Carly talks through in the extended intro.Please do go and connect with Kirsty if you would like to give the wonder of automation (and more) a go! About Kirsty:Kirsty Holden is a Certified ADHD Practitioner and Systems & Process Strategist helping ADHD coaches and service-based solopreneurs go from Chief Everything Officer to visionary CEO by delivering brain-aligned strategies and stick-to-it implementation!In a nutshell she can help you make strategic decisions, shape your business's direction, master your time and boost your productivity using ADHD aligned automation, organisation & strategic processes. If you're looking to scale your business on your terms, and put more joy and ‘you' time into your life by doing less and achieving more, then Kirsty is your woman! Instagram: kirsty.obmFacebook: Kirsty Holden – Online Business ManagerFree Fb Group: Business Made SimpleWebsite: www.kirstyholden.comAbout Carly:Carly is a Personal Brand Strategist, Messaging Mentor, Event Host/ Strategist, and Mum of 3 based in the North West of England, Uk.Carly believes in working in a soulful, yet intentional, way; inviting you to reflect on and/ or shut out any marketing tactics that aren't for you, to focus on brand energetics and attracting soul aligned clients instead. It's always handy to have a notebook and pen at the ready in case of any journalling prompts and/ or moments of clarity you might have!Carly is a huge supporter and advocate of neurodiverse entrepreneurs- experiencing a late diagnosis of ADHD in 2022 and often talks through how it can effect how you show up and/ or how you can be consistent in your brand in a more aligned way.Working with Carly 1:1 is by application only, with the next opportunities opening in February 2024. You can however work with Carly as part of a small group, by joining her upcoming strategy & connection membership and/ or by attending upcoming workshop style events- details coming soon! If you'd love to find out more about any of the above then please connect with Carly as follows:Instagram: soulfulstrategywithcarlyFacebook: Soulful Strategy with Carly>>Join the free Facebook group HEREYouTube: Carly KeighleyNEW WEBSITE LINK: www.carlycowell.comSupport the showDon't forget to rate and review! :-)
About This EpisodeIn this episode, Erica Rankin, the dynamic founder behind Bro Dough, a health-focused cookie dough brand, shares her entrepreneurial journey, leaving behind a traditional career path to start something new. She reveals how her passion for healthy living and her knack for baking merged into Bro Dough, a classic tale of identifying a gap in the market and filling it with a product driven by passion and purpose. Erica provides a candid look at the hurdles and triumphs associated with starting a business from scratch, emphasizing the importance of mentorship, strategic networking, and financial savvy—skills that she honed to transform her startup into the thriving company it is today. Erica's story underscores the significance of living one's truth and the fulfillment that comes from following the life you want. This episode serves as a blueprint for those hungry for personal and professional growth. About Erica RankinErica Rankin is the founder and CEO (Chief Everything Officer) of Bro Dough, a functional & nostalgic snack brand. They recently just launched their new natural & gluten free protein cookie dough bites which will be hitting shelves across Canada. Erica has built a community of almost 300k followers across her social channels completely organically, and bootstrapped Bro Dough for the first 2 and a half years. Her mission is to showcase the reality of entrepreneurship through social media and take her community along for the journey. Additional ResourcesWebsite: https://eatbrodough.ca/LinkedIn: @EricaRankinInstagram: @eatbrodoughTikTok: @eatbrodough
You cannot achieve long term success in your business if you remain the Chief Everything Officer. You must transition from Chief Everything Officer to Chief Executive Officer. One of the ways you do this is to shift your focus from short-term firefighting to developing an eagle vision for your business. Where humans have a 20/20 vision on average, eagles have 20/5 vision. In real terms, what this means is that eagles can see things from 20 feet away that we can only see from 5 feet away. As a CEO, you need to cultivate a far-seeing vision. You may not be able to see it with the naked eye, but you can envision what you want to create and take steps to make it a reality, slowly bringing it into focus. Learn more on today's episode. Show notes: If you're struggling with seeing yourself as a CEO, go back and listen to episode 1, Adopting a CEO Mindset for Financial Success. It breaks down 5 key elements of the CEO mindset and is a great place to start identifying where your mindset blocks are. If you want to learn more about how we can work together to achieve your eagle vision, schedule your Cash Flow Strategy Call today. Your Virtual CFO Coach host: Lieah Torbert, CEO of Harrington Strategic Partners Incorporating 20 years' experience in the retail, oil & gas, automotive, and chemical manufacturing industries, I developed my proprietary growth system, the Cash Flow Ignition Method. My system helps you build & implement a fully customized roadmap to achieving your business goals without sacrificing more of your personal time. If you've ever found yourself wondering if there's a better way to: Have a financial strategy that drives profit, work/life harmony, expansion and retirement Transition from the owner/operator of your business to the strategic CEO Then it's time for you to learn more about how the Cash Flow Ignition Method can help get you there! Take the Wheel of Your Destiny: Shape the course of your business by adopting a Decisive CEO Mindset. Be the one confidently calling the shots, making choices that pave the way for growth and success. Run Your Operations Like a Well-Oiled Machine: Imagine your cash flow as a high-performance engine. Make sure it runs smoothly with every part working together seamlessly. This is your Cohesive Cash Flow System, ensuring that your business stays fueled and ready for action. Design your Cultivated Success Blueprint: Take charge of designing a roadmap that guides your journey to success. It's not a one-size-fits-all plan - it's a tailor-made strategy that aligns seamlessly with your business goals so you can transform your business into a high-powered machine, breaking through barriers and achieving what others say is impossible. Learn more about Harrington's services Schedule your Cash Flow Optimization (CFO) call Follow me: LinkedIn Facebook YouTube Subscribe to the podcast: Apple Spotify YouTube #virtualcfo #outsourcecfo #strategicplanning #ceomindset #cashflow #cashflowplanning #smallbusiness #servicebusiness #bookkeeping #bookkeepingservices #strategicgoals #businessgrowth #worklifebalance
Invited Mark Washo, Minority Owner and Chief Everything Officer at Flower City Union, onto the pod to talk about the club that went from idea in a briefcase to NISA champions in a few short years. After we talk Flower City, we take a look at Mark's unique Soccer journey. From having access to 1994 World Cup tickets through his job at Budget Rent-a-Car to DC United early days, to Washington Freedom's start in NWSL, and the lead up to the Flower City project. Fun listen!
In this week's episode of The Conference Room, we welcome Lauren Goldstein, a seasoned business consultant and trusted advisor to Fortune 500 companies including Apple, Nike, and AT&T and to a variety of fast growing early stage companies. Join us as we dive into the challenges faced by business leaders, and hear Lauren's insights into effective team building, the difference between growth and scaling, and how CEOs can evolve from being a "Chief Everything Officer" to a visionary leader. KEY TAKEAWAYS FROM THIS EPISODE Challenges in Leadership (00:08:42): Lauren discusses business owners' and CEOs' reluctance to delegate and the accompanying stress. Introduces "Chief Everything Officer" to describe overwhelmed CEOs. Reactivity vs. Proactivity (00:09:21): Lauren urges businesses to shift from a reactive to a proactive mode, emphasizing the value of proactive team members over mere "worker bees." Identity & Vision:(00.10.07): Lauren explaines that a CEO's main role is vision-setting, while pointing out that 80% of business owners have not considered their identity outside of business. Team & Systems (00:31:54): Lauren insists on the significance of having the right team and systems for the business to operate effectively without the owner. Effective Delegation & Scaling (00:37:15): Highlights the concept of "Who Not How" and distinguishes between growth and scaling. Advocates for the importance of delegation for business scalability. THIS WEEK'S GUEST- LAUREN GOLDSTEIN Lauren Goldstein is a distinguished business consultant focused on addressing the operational and leadership challenges that CEOs and business owners commonly face. Goldstein strongly believes in the role of the CEO as a 'North Star,' directing the company's long-term strategy while delegating daily tasks to a competent team. Her holistic approach encompasses various aspects of business management, from organizational structure to process automation. She introduces concepts like "Who Not How," encouraging CEOs to focus on task delegation rather than micromanagement. TO LEARN MORE ABOUT LAUREN GOLDSTEIN https://www.linkedin.com/in/laurenegoldstein/https://www.facebook.com/GoldenKeyPartnership/ https://www.instagram.com/itslaurengoldstein Lauren's Scorecard can be downloaded for free here Listen to her podcast here YOUR HOST - SIMON LADER Simon Lader is the host of The Conference Room, Co-Founder of global executive search firm Salisi Human Capital, and lead generation consultancy Flow and Scale. Since 1997, Simon has helped cybersecurity vendors to build highly effective teams, and since 2022 he has helped people create consistent revenue through consistent lead generation. Get to know more about Simon at: Website: https://simonlader.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/simonlader LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/headhuntersimonlader/ The Conference Room is available on Spotify Apple Podcasts Amazon Music iHeartRadio And everywhere else you listen to podcasts!
In this episode of Served Neat, Jen Hartmann, shares her personal journey of managing her mental health while running a successful agency. She discusses the importance of making schedule changes and building a strong team to alleviate the demands of being an entrepreneur. Jen emphasizes the need for self-care and creating a schedule that prioritizes mental well-being in order to be the best leader for your business. Tune in to gain insights on balancing work and mental health in the world of entrepreneurship. Today we discuss: Designing a schedule that accommodates breaks and self-care Make a schedule that works best for you. Why nightly routines are so important. How I avoid overworking. Plus more! How To Get Involved: Get ready to elevate your business game with Served Neat - the podcast that's all about taking your business to the next level! We serve up expert advice on sales, marketing, mindset, and business strategies to help you make six-figures and beyond. Your host, Jen Hartmann, is the mastermind behind Neat The Agency. She's a PR strategist, coach, and marketing expert who helps business owners and their brands grow, scale, and succeed. When Jen isn't busy leading her team, developing new strategies, or setting goals for her company, she can be found sipping on a glass of bourbon, exploring new places, and hanging out with her sweet pup, Bruin. So, pour yourself a glass of your favorite bourbon and get inspired! Tune in to Served Neat to gain insider knowledge and learn how to start and grow your business like a pro. With Served Neat, taking your business to the next level has never been more fun! Looking for more? Sign up for our weekly newsletter - Neat The Agency Connect with us on Instagram @neat_theagency Check out our blog If you're ready to start using PR for your own business, book a call with us!
It's that time again…time for Clotheshorse to SAVE Halloween! And for this very important mission, Amanda is joined by a Clotheshorse all-star, Maggie Greene, the Halloween Queen! You'll get to meet some fabulous guests while we talk about all of the ways we can save Halloween from the ghouls of capitalism, waste and overconsumption. You'll be haunted by all of the scary facts about Halloween waste, but hopefully you'll also be inspired to make this Halloween better than ever, putting the "we" back into Halloween. In this episode (part 2 of 2), we're going to talk about pumpkins, candy, makeup, haunted houses, and more more! Talisa talks with us about the impact of our costumes on those around us. And Anna tells us about Halloween in Europe and why she started a magazine dedicated to the holiday and its themes.Learn more about Talisa: Morale FirstLinkedInMaggie Greene (she/her), aka The Halloween Queen and Your Fairy Godthrifter, is a cisgender, pansexual woman, a recovering marketing professional, and a trauma and abuse survivor. But most people know her as the Chief Everything Officer and Weirdo-in-Residence at Maggie Greene Style, an ethical microbusiness on a mission to transform how people see themselves by amplifying the personal in personal brand and style. Maggie supports entrepreneurs, leaders, and individual contributors of all ages, body types, and gender expressions, on creating clarity and visibility for themselves in their career and beyond. Her superpower is zeroing in on what makes a person unique and showing them how to maximize those assets - in person and online - by supporting them on everything from their wardrobe to their LinkedIn profile. Her signature secondhand-first approach to sourcing helps counter consumption culture and reduces global fashion waste.Book costume consultation with Maggie (limited availability through October 20th): https://maggiegreenestyle.com/halloweenBrowse Maggie's personal Halloween costume portfolio on Facebook for ideas: https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.878582302743&type=3Check out her StyleOWeen series for even more costume ideas: https://www.maggiegreenestyle.com/blog/tag/StyleOWeen Sign up for Maggie's mailing list: https://maggiegreenestyle.hubspotpagebuilder.com/welcomeFrequently Asked Questions about Maggie's work: https://www.maggiegreenestyle.com/faqAttend one of Maggie's upcoming events: https://www.maggiegreenestyle.com/eventsThe CH Scary Vibes PlaylistIf you want to share your opinion/additional thoughts on the subjects we cover in each episode, feel free to email, whether it's a typed out message or an audio recording: amanda@clotheshorse.worldOr call the Clotheshorse hotline: 717.925.7417Find this episode's transcript (and so much more) at clotheshorsepodcast.comClotheshorse is brought to you with support from the following sustainable small businesses:High Energy Vintage is a fun and funky vintage shop located in Somerville, MA, just a few minutes away from downtown Boston. They offer a highly curated selection of bright and colorful clothing and accessories from the 1940s-1990s for people of all genders. Husband-and-wife duo Wiley & Jessamy handpick each piece for quality and style, with a focus on pieces that transcend trends and will find a home in your closet for many years to come! In addition to clothing, the shop also features a large selection of vintage vinyl and old school video games. Find them on instagram @ highenergyvintage, online at highenergyvintage.com, and at markets in and around Boston.The Pewter Thimble Is there a little bit of Italy in your soul? Are you an enthusiast of pre-loved decor and accessories? Bring vintage Italian style — and history — into your space with The Pewter Thimble (@thepewterthimble). We source useful and beautiful things, and mend them where needed. We also find gorgeous illustrations, and make them print-worthy. Tarot cards, tea towels and handpicked treasures, available to you from the comfort of your own home. Responsibly sourced from across Rome, lovingly renewed by fairly paid artists and artisans, with something for every budget. Discover more at thepewterthimble.comSt. Evens is an NYC-based vintage shop that is dedicated to bringing you those special pieces you'll reach for again and again. More than just a store, St. Evens is dedicated to sharing the stories and history behind the garments. 10% of all sales are donated to a different charitable organization each month. New vintage is released every Thursday at wearStEvens.com, with previews of new pieces and more brought to you on Instagram at @wear_st.evens.Deco Denim is a startup based out of San Francisco, selling clothing and accessories that are sustainable, gender fluid, size inclusive and high quality--made to last for years to come. Deco Denim is trying to change the way you think about buying clothes. Founder Sarah Mattes wants to empower people to ask important questions like, “Where was this made? Was this garment made ethically? Is this fabric made of plastic? Can this garment be upcycled and if not, can it be recycled?” Signup at decodenim.com to receive $20 off your first purchase. They promise not to spam you and send out no more than 3 emails a month, with 2 of them surrounding education or a personal note from the Founder. Find them on Instagram as @deco.denim.Gabriela Antonas is a visual artist, an upcycler, and a fashion designer, but Gabriela Antonas is also a feminist micro business with radical ideals. She's the one woman band, trying to help you understand, why slow fashion is what the earth needs. If you find your self in New Orleans, LA, you may buy her ready-to-wear upcycled garments in person at the store “Slow Down” (2855 Magazine St). Slow Down Nola only sells vintage and slow fashion from local designers. Gabriela's garments are guaranteed to be in stock in person, but they also have a website so you may support this women owned and run business from wherever you are! If you are interested in Gabriela making a one of a kind garment for you DM her on Instagram at @slowfashiongabriela to book a consultation.Vagabond Vintage DTLV is a vintage clothing, accessories & decor reselling business based in Downtown Las Vegas. Not only do we sell in Las Vegas, but we are also located throughout resale markets in San Francisco as well as at a curated boutique called Lux and Ivy located in Indianapolis, Indiana. Jessica, the founder & owner of Vagabond Vintage DTLV, recently opened the first IRL location located in the Arts District of Downtown Las Vegas on August 5th. The shop has a strong emphasis on 60s & 70s garments, single stitch tee shirts & dreamy loungewear. Follow them on instagram, @vagabondvintage.dtlv and keep an eye out for their website coming fall of 2022.Country Feedback is a mom & pop record shop in Tarboro, North Carolina. They specialize in used rock, country, and soul and offer affordable vintage clothing and housewares. Do you have used records you want to sell? Country Feedback wants to buy them! Find us on Instagram @countryfeedbackvintageandvinyl or head downeast and visit our brick and mortar. All are welcome at this inclusive and family-friendly record shop in the country!Located in Whistler, Canada, Velvet Underground is a "velvet jungle" full of vintage and second-hand clothes, plants, a vegan cafe and lots of rad products from other small sustainable businesses. Our mission is to create a brand and community dedicated to promoting self-expression, as well as educating and inspiring a more sustainable and conscious lifestyle both for the people and the planet.Find us on Instagram @shop_velvetunderground or online at www.shopvelvetunderground.comSelina Sanders, a social impact brand that specializes in up-cycled clothing, using only reclaimed, vintage or thrifted materials: from tea towels, linens, blankets and quilts. Sustainably crafted in Los Angeles, each piece is designed to last in one's closet for generations to come. Maximum Style; Minimal Carbon Footprint.Salt Hats: purveyors of truly sustainable hats. Hand blocked, sewn and embellished in Detroit, Michigan.Republica Unicornia Yarns: Hand-Dyed Yarn and notions for the color-obsessed. Made with love and some swearing in fabulous Atlanta, Georgia by Head Yarn Wench Kathleen. Get ready for rainbows with a side of Giving A Damn! Republica Unicornia is all about making your own magic using small-batch, responsibly sourced, hand-dyed yarns and thoughtfully made notions. Slow fashion all the way down and discover the joy of creating your very own beautiful hand knit, crocheted, or woven pieces. Find us on Instagram @republica_unicornia_yarns and at www.republicaunicornia.com.Cute Little Ruin is an online shop dedicated to providing quality vintage and secondhand clothing, vinyl, and home items in a wide range of styles and price points. If it's ethical and legal, we try to find a new home for it! Vintage style with progressive values. Find us on Instagram at @CuteLittleRuin.Thumbprint is Detroit's only fair trade marketplace, located in the historic Eastern Market. Our small business specializes in products handmade by empowered women in South Africa making a living wage creating things they love like hand painted candles and ceramics! We also carry a curated assortment of sustainable/natural locally made goods. Thumbprint is a great gift destination for both the special people in your life and for yourself! Browse our online store at thumbprintdetroit.com and find us on instagram @thumbprintdetroit.Picnicwear: a slow fashion brand, ethically made by hand from vintage and deadstock materials - most notably, vintage towels! Founder, Dani, has worked in the industry as a fashion designer for over 10 years, but started Picnicwear in response to her dissatisfaction with the industry's shortcomings. Picnicwear recently moved to rural North Carolina where all their clothing and accessories are now designed and cut, but the majority of their sewing is done by skilled garment workers in NYC. Their customers take comfort in knowing that all their sewists are paid well above NYC minimum wage. Picnicwear offers minimal waste and maximum authenticity: Future Vintage over future garbage.Shift Clothing, out of beautiful Astoria, Oregon, with a focus on natural fibers, simple hardworking designs, and putting fat people first. Discover more at shiftwheeler.comBlank Cass, or Blanket Coats by Cass, is focused on restoring, renewing, and reviving the history held within vintage and heirloom textiles. By embodying and transferring the love, craft, and energy that is original to each vintage textile into a new garment, I hope we can reteach ourselves to care for and mend what we have and make it last. Blank Cass lives on Instagram @blank_cass and a website will be launched soon at blankcass.com.
It's that time again…time for Clotheshorse to SAVE Halloween! And for this very important mission, Amanda is joined by a Clotheshorse all-star, Maggie Greene, the Halloween Queen! Over the next two episodes, you'll get to meet some fabulous guests while we talk about all of the ways we can save Halloween from the ghouls of capitalism, waste and overconsumption. You'll be haunted by all of the scary facts about Halloween waste, but hopefully you'll also be inspired to make this Halloween better than ever, putting the "we" back into Halloween. In this episode, we're going to talk a lot about costumes and decorations. And we'll be joined by two other Clotheshorse All-Stars (and major Halloween lovers) Ruby and Meredith.The CH Spooky Vibes PlaylistSpooky Sounds (just one of many videos on YouTube with the sounds from Hallmark's collection of spooky sounds tapes).Learn more about Ruby's business, Spokes and Stitches (and learn more about her workshops) here.Maggie Greene (she/her), aka The Halloween Queen and Your Fairy Godthrifter, is a cisgender, pansexual woman, a recovering marketing professional, and a trauma and abuse survivor. But most people know her as the Chief Everything Officer and Weirdo-in-Residence at Maggie Greene Style, an ethical microbusiness on a mission to transform how people see themselves by amplifying the personal in personal brand and style. Maggie supports entrepreneurs, leaders, and individual contributors of all ages, body types, and gender expressions, on creating clarity and visibility for themselves in their career and beyond. Her superpower is zeroing in on what makes a person unique and showing them how to maximize those assets - in person and online - by supporting them on everything from their wardrobe to their LinkedIn profile. Her signature secondhand-first approach to sourcing helps counter consumption culture and reduces global fashion waste.Book costume consultation with Maggie (limited availability through October 20th): https://maggiegreenestyle.com/halloweenBrowse Maggie's personal Halloween costume portfolio on Facebook for ideas: https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.878582302743&type=3Check out her StyleOWeen series for even more costume ideas: https://www.maggiegreenestyle.com/blog/tag/StyleOWeen Sign up for Maggie's mailing list: https://maggiegreenestyle.hubspotpagebuilder.com/welcomeFrequently Asked Questions about Maggie's work: https://www.maggiegreenestyle.com/faqAttend one of Maggie's upcoming events: https://www.maggiegreenestyle.com/events Special thanks to this episode's sponsor:Osei-Duro! Find them on Instagram as @oseiduro.Use promo code CLOTHESHORSE20 to get 20% off your order!If you want to share your opinion/additional thoughts on the subjects we cover in each episode, feel free to email, whether it's a typed out message or an audio recording: amanda@clotheshorse.worldOr call the Clotheshorse hotline: 717.925.7417Find this episode's transcript (and so much more) at clotheshorsepodcast.comClotheshorse is brought to you with support from the following sustainable small businesses:St. Evens is an NYC-based vintage shop that is dedicated to bringing you those special pieces you'll reach for again and again. More than just a store, St. Evens is dedicated to sharing the stories and history behind the garments. 10% of all sales are donated to a different charitable organization each month. New vintage is released every Thursday at wearStEvens.com, with previews of new pieces and more brought to you on Instagram at @wear_st.evens.Deco Denim is a startup based out of San Francisco, selling clothing and accessories that are sustainable, gender fluid, size inclusive and high quality--made to last for years to come. Deco Denim is trying to change the way you think about buying clothes. Founder Sarah Mattes wants to empower people to ask important questions like, “Where was this made? Was this garment made ethically? Is this fabric made of plastic? Can this garment be upcycled and if not, can it be recycled?” Signup at decodenim.com to receive $20 off your first purchase. They promise not to spam you and send out no more than 3 emails a month, with 2 of them surrounding education or a personal note from the Founder. Find them on Instagram as @deco.denim.Gabriela Antonas is a visual artist, an upcycler, and a fashion designer, but Gabriela Antonas is also a feminist micro business with radical ideals. She's the one woman band, trying to help you understand, why slow fashion is what the earth needs. If you find your self in New Orleans, LA, you may buy her ready-to-wear upcycled garments in person at the store “Slow Down” (2855 Magazine St). Slow Down Nola only sells vintage and slow fashion from local designers. Gabriela's garments are guaranteed to be in stock in person, but they also have a website so you may support this women owned and run business from wherever you are! If you are interested in Gabriela making a one of a kind garment for you DM her on Instagram at @slowfashiongabriela to book a consultation.Vagabond Vintage DTLV is a vintage clothing, accessories & decor reselling business based in Downtown Las Vegas. Not only do we sell in Las Vegas, but we are also located throughout resale markets in San Francisco as well as at a curated boutique called Lux and Ivy located in Indianapolis, Indiana. Jessica, the founder & owner of Vagabond Vintage DTLV, recently opened the first IRL location located in the Arts District of Downtown Las Vegas on August 5th. The shop has a strong emphasis on 60s & 70s garments, single stitch tee shirts & dreamy loungewear. Follow them on instagram, @vagabondvintage.dtlv and keep an eye out for their website coming fall of 2022.Country Feedback is a mom & pop record shop in Tarboro, North Carolina. They specialize in used rock, country, and soul and offer affordable vintage clothing and housewares. Do you have used records you want to sell? Country Feedback wants to buy them! Find us on Instagram @countryfeedbackvintageandvinyl or head downeast and visit our brick and mortar. All are welcome at this inclusive and family-friendly record shop in the country!Located in Whistler, Canada, Velvet Underground is a "velvet jungle" full of vintage and second-hand clothes, plants, a vegan cafe and lots of rad products from other small sustainable businesses. Our mission is to create a brand and community dedicated to promoting self-expression, as well as educating and inspiring a more sustainable and conscious lifestyle both for the people and the planet.Find us on Instagram @shop_velvetunderground or online at www.shopvelvetunderground.comSelina Sanders, a social impact brand that specializes in up-cycled clothing, using only reclaimed, vintage or thrifted materials: from tea towels, linens, blankets and quilts. Sustainably crafted in Los Angeles, each piece is designed to last in one's closet for generations to come. Maximum Style; Minimal Carbon Footprint.Salt Hats: purveyors of truly sustainable hats. Hand blocked, sewn and embellished in Detroit, Michigan.Republica Unicornia Yarns: Hand-Dyed Yarn and notions for the color-obsessed. Made with love and some swearing in fabulous Atlanta, Georgia by Head Yarn Wench Kathleen. Get ready for rainbows with a side of Giving A Damn! Republica Unicornia is all about making your own magic using small-batch, responsibly sourced, hand-dyed yarns and thoughtfully made notions. Slow fashion all the way down and discover the joy of creating your very own beautiful hand knit, crocheted, or woven pieces. Find us on Instagram @republica_unicornia_yarns and at www.republicaunicornia.com.Cute Little Ruin is an online shop dedicated to providing quality vintage and secondhand clothing, vinyl, and home items in a wide range of styles and price points. If it's ethical and legal, we try to find a new home for it! Vintage style with progressive values. Find us on Instagram at @CuteLittleRuin.Thumbprint is Detroit's only fair trade marketplace, located in the historic Eastern Market. Our small business specializes in products handmade by empowered women in South Africa making a living wage creating things they love like hand painted candles and ceramics! We also carry a curated assortment of sustainable/natural locally made goods. Thumbprint is a great gift destination for both the special people in your life and for yourself! Browse our online store at thumbprintdetroit.com and find us on instagram @thumbprintdetroit.Picnicwear: a slow fashion brand, ethically made by hand from vintage and deadstock materials - most notably, vintage towels! Founder, Dani, has worked in the industry as a fashion designer for over 10 years, but started Picnicwear in response to her dissatisfaction with the industry's shortcomings. Picnicwear recently moved to rural North Carolina where all their clothing and accessories are now designed and cut, but the majority of their sewing is done by skilled garment workers in NYC. Their customers take comfort in knowing that all their sewists are paid well above NYC minimum wage. Picnicwear offers minimal waste and maximum authenticity: Future Vintage over future garbage.Shift Clothing, out of beautiful Astoria, Oregon, with a focus on natural fibers, simple hardworking designs, and putting fat people first. Discover more at shiftwheeler.comHigh Energy Vintage is a fun and funky vintage shop located in Somerville, MA, just a few minutes away from downtown Boston. They offer a highly curated selection of bright and colorful clothing and accessories from the 1940s-1990s for people of all genders. Husband-and-wife duo Wiley & Jessamy handpick each piece for quality and style, with a focus on pieces that transcend trends and will find a home in your closet for many years to come! In addition to clothing, the shop also features a large selection of vintage vinyl and old school video games. Find them on instagram @ highenergyvintage, online at highenergyvintage.com, and at markets in and around Boston.The Pewter Thimble Is there a little bit of Italy in your soul? Are you an enthusiast of pre-loved decor and accessories? Bring vintage Italian style — and history — into your space with The Pewter Thimble (@thepewterthimble). We source useful and beautiful things, and mend them where needed. We also find gorgeous illustrations, and make them print-worthy. Tarot cards, tea towels and handpicked treasures, available to you from the comfort of your own home. Responsibly sourced from across Rome, lovingly renewed by fairly paid artists and artisans, with something for every budget. Discover more at thepewterthimble.comBlank Cass, or Blanket Coats by Cass, is focused on restoring, renewing, and reviving the history held within vintage and heirloom textiles. By embodying and transferring the love, craft, and energy that is original to each vintage textile into a new garment, I hope we can reteach ourselves to care for and mend what we have and make it last. Blank Cass lives on Instagram @blank_cass and a website will be launched soon at blankcass.com.
New Patient Group™ (Formally known as the Doctor Diamond Club Podcast)
Free On-Demand Workshop at www.NewPatientGroup.com/FreeCourseswww.WrightChat.com - Answering and Scheduling your New Patient Phone Calls so you can focus on the new patient experience when people enter your practice. Welcome to today's podcast with our Founder and CEO, Brian Wright. Have you ever wondered why your digital marketing strategies aren't delivering the results you so desperately desire? Prepare to unravel the mystery with us as we transcend the borders of conventional knowledge to give a refreshing perspective on digital marketing. Dive into the realm of customer focus and scalability, as we discuss our new patient group coaching program, a harmonious blend of business and life coaching, leadership training culture building and online marketing. We discuss the significance of fostering an environment that breathes customer focus and automating processes for time efficiency, the role of strategic planning, and investing in team training for an unmatched customer experience. Hear about the transformational journey from being a Chief Everything Officer to Chief Executive Officer, an insightful revelation for your digital marketing success.As we wrap up the episode, join us in exploring the powerful influence of culture on digital marketing success. We'll touch on why Pay-Per-Click advertising might not be the best strategy and how you can reap the most out of your digital marketing efforts. The significance of personalized content, regular meetings with your digital marketing company, and cultivating a culture that encourages your team's participation in social media content creation cannot be overstated. So gear up, tune in, and let's journey together towards unparalleled digital marketing success.
Hear how Exit Strategy Brewing Co's co-owners went from homebrewers to brewery owners. Plus: a cold beer myth is busted. In this episode, you'll get to know hosts Brian Noonan, semi-professional beer drinker, and Katherine Valleau, co-owner and Chief Everything Officer at Exit Strategy Brewing Company in Forest Park, Illinois. They explain why you should listen to this podcast, how Katherine got involved with her brewery, and how Brian got into drinking. Then, they're joined by Chris Valleau, co-owner and head brewer of Exit Strategy Brewing Company, who explains how he went from a career in IT to law school to becoming a brewer. He and Katherine share nitty-gritty details about how they got started in brewing, including how they made early decisions like selecting beers and educating themselves about the industry. They also discuss the beer styles and trends currently shaping the industry, including how consumer and brewer preferences changed during and after the pandemic shutdown. To wrap up the show, Brian and Katherine bust a beer myth by answering the question: is it important for beer to always be served cold? Katherine also shares a hilarious story about bad customer behavior involving 24 cents. If you enjoyed this episode, then please tell at least one friend about the show! And if you're a brewer or know any brewers who would like to share their story on the podcast, then email craftybrewerspod@gmail.com. We're always happy to hear from you! Follow Crafty Brewers on Instagram at https://instagram.com/crafty_brewers_pod
Today we join Kirk as he has a conversation with the Chief Everything Officer of Teabeeshell Media, Travis Beeshell. Kirk and Travis chat about some high-level PPC tactics, PMAX and Discovery Campaigns. Discovery?? Yeah, Google recently announced they are transitioning Discovery into the newly created Demand Gen Campaigns and we recorded this episode before that announcement. We still thought there was some great information in this episode that you can bring over to the newly announced Demand-Gen Campaigns, so decided to include the conversation anyway. So go ahead and sit back, grab a cup of coffee and enjoy our conversation with Travis.Want to be a guest on the PPC Ponderings Podcast? Apply here!Interested in PPC help for your business? Check out ZATO (over $10K/mo in ad spend) Check out MAKROZ (under $10K/mo in ad spend) Check out ZATO's PPC consulting & setup service (get a team of smart PPCers, each with over a decade of PPC experience on the phone to ask us anything about your account)
From rocket scientist to real estate expert, Chad Sutton's leap from the corporate world isn't just a story of financial success but one of passion, resilience, and a commitment to leaving a lasting impact on the planet. In this episode, Chad shares how he invested in real estate and made millions of dollars. He discusses strategies for success, such as understanding supply and demand metrics, bootstrapping costs, due diligence processes, marketing, and cataloging. He also talks about how he and his partner doubled their asset's value within 18 months and exited cleanly from each deal. Get ready to learn more about Chad's inspiring story in this episode! [00:00 - 14:28] Breaking the Golden Handcuffs Introducing Chad to the show How Chad was able to make a lasting impact in people's lives through his investments The journey of Chad's Aunt and other family members in their family business [14:29 - 26:40] From Corporate to 10X Growth The importance of believing in yourself Chief Everything Officer experience - bootstrapped everything, did own marketing and due diligence Leverage experts and processes to scale the business Have systems in place to catalog data in a recognizable manner [26:41 - 44:46] Celebrating a Successful Exit How Chad employed a brokerage team to sell the deal A major plumbing issue came up during the sale but was handled by a good team Achieving validation and scratching the itch for greater significance Investing in the company is vital for corporate growth [44:47 - 51:57] Setting Goals to Break the Cycle of Generational Poverty Everyone has the potential to be charitable Generational poverty is a problem that needs to be addressed Quattro has set up the Quattro Giving Fund to raise charitable capital Exit strategy includes selling whole co or chunks of the portfolio depending on the portfolio makeup Quotes: "Sometimes what you need is a swift kick in the rear end to make a choice and make the jump." - Chad Sutton "If you add value to an asset, I don't care what it is, real estate, business, whatever. If you add value to an asset and there's a market for it, it will sell." - Chad Sutton "Everyone gets to a point when they're succeeding in business that they get to the point where they have enough. What gets you excited is making a lasting impact in people's lives." - Chad Sutton Connect with Chad! LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/chadhsutton/ Website: https://www.thequattroway.com LEAVE A REVIEW + help someone who wants to explode their business growth by sharing this episode or click here to listen to our previous episodes. Dreamcatchers is an inclusive organization that targets people's interest in being more instead of a certain demographic. We have people from all walks of life at many different ages. Find out more at www.itooktheredpill.co Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
CEO Podcasts: CEO Chat Podcast + I AM CEO Podcast Powered by Blue 16 Media & CBNation.co
Why it was selected for "CBNation Architects": In this episode of the I AM CEO Podcast, host Gresham Harkless interviews Kelvin Johnson, the CEO and co-founder of Brevity Pitch, an AI-powered software that helps professionals craft persuasive pitches. Kelvin shares his CEO story, explaining that he began his career as a CPA and management consultant, helping early-stage entrepreneurs with their finances, sales, and most importantly, their pitch. He then transitioned to working in a fast-growth tech startup in Denver, where he gained experience in executive leadership, sales, and fundraising. These experiences led him to co-found Brevity Pitch, a communications software as a service company that serves the market gap in creating clear, concise, and compelling stories. Brevity Pitch is an AI-powered tool that helps individuals create and deliver pitch decks that sell. It is relevant for fundraising, sales, interviewing for a job, or corporate presentations. The secret sauce of the company lies in its ability to help people refine their story, content, message, and delivery to ensure maximum impact. Kelvin shares his CEO hack of deep breathing exercises and journaling as a tool to recognize and accept emotions, investigate their root cause, and nourish oneself while staying consistent. His CEO nugget of wisdom is to hire based on methodology and stay consistent, especially in the early stages of a company. To Kelvin, being a CEO means being a Chief Energy Officer, Chief Everything Officer, and Chief Follow-Up Officer, and implementing time blocking. Listeners can find more information about Brevity Pitch at brevitypitch.com or connect with Kelvin on LinkedIn at Kelvin Johnson, CPA. Overall, this episode offers insights from Kelvin Johnson, a CEO and co-founder of Brevity Pitch, who helps professionals create persuasive pitches through an AI-powered software. Listeners can learn about the importance of clear and concise communication, entrepreneurship, and the tools and strategies that can help individuals create compelling stories and achieve their goals. Check out our CEO Hack Buzz Newsletter--our premium newsletter with hacks and nuggets to level up your organization. Sign up HERE. I AM CEO Handbook Volume 3 is HERE and it's FREE. Get your copy here: http://cbnation.co/iamceo3. Get the 100+ things that you can learn from 1600 business podcasts we recorded. Hear Gresh's story, learn the 16 business pillars from the podcast, find out about CBNation Architects and why you might be one and so much more. Did we mention it was FREE? Download it today! Previous Episode: https://iamceo.co/2022/11/26/iam1566-ceo-helps-professionals-create-persuasive-pitches/
Join us in this enlightening episode as we welcome the remarkable Danielle Levy, a sought-after business coach who helps six and seven-figure business owners expand with clarity and efficiency. Danielle is also the Founder and CEO of The Boardroom League.Delving into the transformation from wearing myriad operational hats to embracing the CEO role, Danielle provides a roadmap for entrepreneurs. Discover the art of regaining control, strategic delegation, and task prioritization. This transition empowers CEOs to craft visionary decisions, foster growth, and evade burnout. Uncover the invaluable insight of disassociating personal identity from the business and optimizing time management. Explore the journey of overcoming hurdles, becoming a visionary leader, and attaining equilibrium by shedding the "chief everything officer" mindset. Tune in for a transformative conversation.Danielle's Links:https://www.instagram.com/danielle_c_levy/ https://www.facebook.com/danielleclevy.coConnect with and learn more from:Alex Lianne Carter Website | Instagram | Facebook | LinkedIn | Join the Community Carol Register Twitter | Instagram | Facebook | LinkedIn | Join the Community And remember to... Grab Your Top Productivity Hacks for Female Leaders
“A business continuity plan sounds scary, but it allows you to do much more than just run a business—you have to come out of being the ‘Chief Everything Officer' and truly become the CEO.” – Adam Moore An emergency is bound to happen in any organization, whether it's a Fortune 500 company or a small, diverse business. For any business, preparation is better than cure. That's where the business continuity plan comes in; it's a wonderful document that helps you and your people navigate times of uncertainty. But did you know that a continuity plan goes far beyond just helping an organization continue its operations amid a crisis? In this episode, we discuss the “why” and the “how” of creating business continuity plans for small- to medium-sized businesses. We outline the key elements of building a continuity plan. We explore how business continuity plans can help transform business owners into excellent leaders. We explain what makes the US Army one of the most successful organizations in the world. We also highlight how a continuity plan can help business owners sell their businesses and underscore how continuity plans can help leaders communicate clearly amid disasters and crises. This week on Breaking Barriers: The role of business continuity in small- and medium-sized business The foundations of a business continuity plan Why business continuity plans should be three layers deep Training leaders and employees on the business continuity plan The difference between a business owner and a CEO Cultivating a company culture that could successfully execute a business continuity plan This podcast is brought to you by Hire Ground Hire Ground is a technology company whose mission is to bridge the wealth gap through access to procurement opportunities. Hire Ground is making the enterprise ecosystem more viable, profitable, and competitive by clearing the path for minority-led, women-led, LGBT-led, and veteran-led small businesses to contribute to the global economy as suppliers to enterprise organizations. For more information on getting started please visit us @ hireground.io today! If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe and leave a review wherever you get your podcasts. Apple Podcasts | TuneIn | GooglePlay | Stitcher | Spotify Be sure to share your favorite episodes on social media and join us on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn.
What's in this episode:- Importance of clarity- Having the RIGHT players- Being an operator vs. being an owner- Get uncomfortable- Creating effective systems and processes- Keys to delegationAbout Lauren:Lauren Goldstein is founder and CEO of the award-winning and globally recognized boutique business consulting firm, Golden Key Partnership. Her clients lovingly call her “The Business Doctor.” She helps business owners diagnose the REAL root cause of their team and operations challenges to bring the business back to a healthy flow and retain more revenue.As a trusted advisor to some of the fastest growing businesses for over 11 years, Lauren's greatest asset is helping business owners successfully transition through the gap of business operator to true business owner; from chief everything officer to powerful and effective CEO & leader. Contact Lauren:Website: goldenkeypartnership.com Podcast: The Biz Doctor Catch the full video of this conversation: https://youtu.be/tTjbfiK3UNoText BUZZ to (816) 727-7610 to connect directly with us and share your favorites from the episode or learn more about upcoming events and challenges happening in our industryJoin Weaver Sales Academy: https://www.weaversa.com/Follow Michael & Courtney on social media:Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mandcweaverInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/mandcweaver/Youtube: https://youtu.be/tTjbfiK3UNoMichael LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/michael-weaver-a2940095Courtney LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/courtney-weaver-4b8139a0/
Some people predict that by 2025 half of legal teams will be staffed by non-lawyers. Will that be perceived as a threat or an opportunity? Do lawyers need to learn legal tech, or can they just hire people who specialize in it but are not lawyers? Do you need to be a lawyer to effectively use legal tech? Questions moderator will ask speakers: - The term “non lawyer” is sometimes perceived as quite controversial. Many people who support the business of law feel it is used to marginalize expertise. With the development of legal technologies being a lawyer is not always a needed qualification to plan, implement and use the tools. In your experience how does it help to be a lawyer or not, when using legal technologies? - Where do you see non lawyers working cases, supporting transactions, being part of case teams, etc. today? - With more and more demand on expertise to “drive” legal technologies, or perform data analysis, do you think layers need to learn these skills? Or can they just hire non-lawyers to work side by side with lawyers? Or both? - Do you think the balance could even tip that within law firms more non-lawyers are leveraged to work and manage cases and lawyers solely focus on the parts that require analysis and practice of the law? - What does all this mean for the legal profession, will the job description of lawyers change over time? Why or why not? Moderator: @Christiane Matuch - Legal Innovation Manager, Greenberg Traurig, LLP Speakers: @Alyssa Cowley - Associate Director, Knowledge Management, Shearman & Sterling LLP @Harriet Joubert-Vaklyes - Senior Project Manager, Legal Operations, CBRE @Josh Lazar - Founder and Chief Everything Officer, TechThinkTank Recorded on 07-18-2023
Erica Rankin is the founder and Chief Everything Officer at Bro Dough; a functional cookie dough available in Canada soon to launch a new line in the USA. On this episode of ITS, Erica tells Ali how she built her massive (60k+) Linkedin community and TikTok following (200k+) and how vulnerability and honesty have helped her grow and pivot her business.In the Sauce is Powered by Simplecast.
In this episode, we talk to Jenny Blake, an award-winning author, and podcaster who loves helping people move from friction to flow through smarter systems powered by Delightfully Tiny Teams. This episode covers:
From the archive: This episode was originally recorded and published in 2020. Our interviews on Entrepreneurs On Fire are meant to be evergreen, and we do our best to confirm that all offers and URL's in these archive episodes are still relevant. When businesses are ready to scale, they call James Friel. He's the secret weapon helping many of today's well-known entrepreneurs become successful CEOs. Breaking complex problems into small actionable steps is his SUPERPOWER. Top 3 Value Bombs: 1. You get stuck in your business because you are good at something, you start doing more, and you create success out of that something. 2. A system is a combination of people, processes, and tools. It needs to be coordinated to achieve an outcome. 3. Get in the habit and the mindset of being an effective CEO; do not fall into the trap of being the aforementioned 4 types of bad bosses. Uncover the bottlenecks, money leaks and biggest opportunities for growth in your business with the 10 Minute Business Audit! - RYG Framework Sponsors: LMNT: An electrolyte drink mix with everything you need & nothing you don't. Try it totally risk-free today: visit DrinkLMNT.com/EOFire and get a free sample pack with any purchase - plus a no questions asked money back guarantee! HubSpot: HubSpot's all-in-one CRM helps you automate tedious tasks, keep track of all your deals in one place, and make sure your whole team has access to the same data. Get started for free at HubSpot.com!
Maggie Greene is back to help Amanda wrap up the laundry series, but this episode is way more than just a wash/dry cycle! We'll talk about clothing storage. And then after that, Maggie will share her expertise in “seasonal wardrobe management,” which sounds really intimidating but is actually a great way to organize your clothing and get maximum wear out of all of them! Before all of that we'll talk about the “romantic industrial complex” and Valentine's Day. And Amanda announces the theme for the next round of audio essays!Read Maggie's essay "Wear, What, When: Seasonal Wardrobe Management.”ABOUT MAGGIEMaggie (she, her) is a cisgender, pansexual woman, a recovering marketing professional, and a trauma and abuse survivor. Maggie is also the Chief Everything Officer of Maggie Greene Style, an ethical microbusiness on a mission to transform how you see yourself by putting the personal in brand and style. Maggie helps leaders, entrepreneurs, and individual contributors of all gender expressions show up as their radically authentic selves, at work and in life, with confidence and without compromising their core values and ethics. You can learn more by visiting her 100% DIY website here: https://maggiegreenestyle.com.Sign up for Maggie's weekly newsletter: https://maggiegreenestyle.hubspotpagebuilder.com/welcome The first audio essay series of 2023!!We're going to be talking about our relationship with shopping!As we began to talk about at the end of last year, we are practically trained to be consumers from birth. From sticker collections to toys to the commercials on the Saturday morning cartoons, we have been told that new stuff = a better life. More happiness. Popularity…and even in the case of the “romance industrial complex,” it means love and appreciation. Shopping is a social activity, the subject of copious amounts of magazine articles, blogs posts, and social media content. For some families shopping is the only way they can spend time together and get along!Here are some ideas of things you can cover in your audio essay: How did shopping fit into your childhood? Was it a part of your relationship with a family member? Did it change over time? Do you find yourself engaging in so-called “ retail therapy?” Does it help? Have you found something that helps more? Are you addicted to bargains and deals? Have you found a non-shopping way to scratch that itch? Does shopping make you happy? Sad? Angry? Why? Are there any specific shopping memories that have shaped how you approach clothing as an adult? Or maybe you have your own theme you would like to cover! That's fine, too! Write out what you want to say before you record it. Try to fit it into 5 minutes or less.If you want your contact info (name, instagram handle, business) to be included in the episode, please tell us in the recording. If you want to be anonymous, that's fine, too!It's okay if you make a mistake while recording, just say that part again and keep going. Amanda will edit it.Record in a quiet room away from fans, air conditioners, bus stops, and howling hound dogs.Be sure to double check your recording before sending. Yes, I have received fully silent recordings.When you email it, include your name, pronouns, and IG handle.The deadline for this project is March 15.Check out Amanda's other podcast, The Department.Have questions/comments/cute animal photos? Reach out via email: amanda@clotheshorse.worldFind the transcript at clotheshorsepodcast.comWant to support Amanda's work on Clotheshorse? Learn more at patreon.com/clotheshorsepodcastClotheshorse is brought to you with support from the following sustainable small businesses:Located in Whistler, Canada, Velvet Underground is a "velvet jungle" full of vintage and second-hand clothes, plants, a vegan cafe and lots of rad products from other small sustainable businesses. Our mission is to create a brand and community dedicated to promoting self-expression, as well as educating and inspiring a more sustainable and conscious lifestyle both for the people and the planet.Find us on Instagram @shop_velvetunderground or online at www.shopvelvetunderground.comSelina Sanders, a social impact brand that specializes in up-cycled clothing, using only reclaimed, vintage or thrifted materials: from tea towels, linens, blankets and quilts. Sustainably crafted in Los Angeles, each piece is designed to last in one's closet for generations to come. Maximum Style; Minimal Carbon Footprint.Salt Hats: purveyors of truly sustainable hats. Hand blocked, sewn and embellished in Detroit, Michigan.Republica Unicornia Yarns: Hand-Dyed Yarn and notions for the color-obsessed. Made with love and some swearing in fabulous Atlanta, Georgia by Head Yarn Wench Kathleen. Get ready for rainbows with a side of Giving A Damn! Republica Unicornia is all about making your own magic using small-batch, responsibly sourced, hand-dyed yarns and thoughtfully made notions. Slow fashion all the way down and discover the joy of creating your very own beautiful hand knit, crocheted, or woven pieces. Find us on Instagram @republica_unicornia_yarns and at www.republicaunicornia.com.Cute Little Ruin is an online shop dedicated to providing quality vintage and secondhand clothing, vinyl, and home items in a wide range of styles and price points. If it's ethical and legal, we try to find a new home for it! Vintage style with progressive values. Find us on Instagram at @CuteLittleRuin.Thumbprint is Detroit's only fair trade marketplace, located in the historic Eastern Market. Our small business specializes in products handmade by empowered women in South Africa making a living wage creating things they love like hand painted candles and ceramics! We also carry a curated assortment of sustainable/natural locally made goods. Thumbprint is a great gift destination for both the special people in your life and for yourself! Browse our online store at thumbprintdetroit.com and find us on instagram @thumbprintdetroit.Gentle Vibes: We are purveyors of polyester and psychedelic relics! We encourage experimentation and play not only in your wardrobe, but in your home, too. We have thousands of killer vintage pieces ready for their next adventure! Picnicwear: a slow fashion brand, ethically made by hand from vintage and deadstock materials - most notably, vintage towels! Founder, Dani, has worked in the industry as a fashion designer for over 10 years, but started Picnicwear in response to her dissatisfaction with the industry's shortcomings. Picnicwear recently moved to rural North Carolina where all their clothing and accessories are now designed and cut, but the majority of their sewing is done by skilled garment workers in NYC. Their customers take comfort in knowing that all their sewists are paid well above NYC minimum wage. Picnicwear offers minimal waste and maximum authenticity: Future Vintage over future garbage.Shift Clothing, out of beautiful Astoria, Oregon, with a focus on natural fibers, simple hardworking designs, and putting fat people first. Discover more at shiftwheeler.comHigh Energy Vintage is a fun and funky vintage shop located in Somerville, MA, just a few minutes away from downtown Boston. They offer a highly curated selection of bright and colorful clothing and accessories from the 1940s-1990s for people of all genders. Husband-and-wife duo Wiley & Jessamy handpick each piece for quality and style, with a focus on pieces that transcend trends and will find a home in your closet for many years to come! In addition to clothing, the shop also features a large selection of vintage vinyl and old school video games. Find them on instagram @ highenergyvintage, online at highenergyvintage.com, and at markets in and around Boston.Blank Cass, or Blanket Coats by Cass, is focused on restoring, renewing, and reviving the history held within vintage and heirloom textiles. By embodying and transferring the love, craft, and energy that is original to each vintage textile into a new garment, I hope we can reteach ourselves to care for and mend what we have and make it last. Blank Cass lives on Instagram @blank_cass and a website will be launched soon at blankcass.com.St. Evens is an NYC-based vintage shop that is dedicated to bringing you those special pieces you'll reach for again and again. More than just a store, St. Evens is dedicated to sharing the stories and history behind the garments. 10% of all sales are donated to a different charitable organization each month. New vintage is released every Thursday at wearStEvens.com, with previews of new pieces and more brought to you on Instagram at @wear_st.evens.Vagabond Vintage DTLV is a vintage clothing, accessories & decor reselling business based in Downtown Las Vegas. Not only do we sell in Las Vegas, but we are also located throughout resale markets in San Francisco as well as at a curated boutique called Lux and Ivy located in Indianapolis, Indiana. Jessica, the founder & owner of Vagabond Vintage DTLV, recently opened the first IRL location located in the Arts District of Downtown Las Vegas on August 5th. The shop has a strong emphasis on 60s & 70s garments, single stitch tee shirts & dreamy loungewear. Follow them on instagram, @vagabondvintage.dtlv and keep an eye out for their website coming fall of 2022.Country Feedback is a mom & pop record shop in Tarboro, North Carolina. They specialize in used rock, country, and soul and offer affordable vintage clothing and housewares. Do you have used records you want to sell? Country Feedback wants to buy them! Find us on Instagram @countryfeedbackvintageandvinyl or head downeast and visit our brick and mortar. All are welcome at this inclusive and family-friendly record shop in the country!
Maggie and Traci are back to help Amanda solve your laundry quandaries! In this episode, we will try to solve your very specific stain problems. We also give advice on smelly situations, pet hair removal, ironing, denim care, and how to successfully do some hand washing! We get to the bottom of dry cleaning and we answer the question "Do you have to dry clean everything with a 'dry clean only' label?" Amanda investigates Febreze. And they share their ten biggest laundry lessons.ABOUT MAGGIEMaggie (she, her) is a cisgender, pansexual woman, a recovering marketing professional, and a trauma and abuse survivor. Maggie is also the Chief Everything Officer of Maggie Greene Style, an ethical microbusiness on a mission to transform how you see yourself by putting the personal in brand and style. Maggie helps leaders, entrepreneurs, and individual contributors of all gender expressions show up as their radically authentic selves, at work and in life, with confidence and without compromising their core values and ethics. You can learn more by visiting her 100% DIY website here: https://maggiegreenestyle.com.Sign up for Maggie's weekly newsletter: https://maggiegreenestyle.hubspotpagebuilder.com/welcome ABOUT TRACITraci was a special education teacher for more than 20 years. Then, in 2022, she decided to take the leap into full-time entrepreneurship. She believes loved clothes last and that every garment deserves a chance to shine. She's on a mission to #MakeMendingMainstream.As the visionary behind Pryde Hantverk, she seeks to extend the life of your beloved garments so you can enjoy them for years to come. She shares many of Maggie's philosophies about doing more with less and saving clothing from landfill. That makes her the perfect partner for a creative collaboration. Maggie regularly entrusts Traci with her own beloved garments when things need mending or adjusting, so you can rest assured yours are in good hands!Visit Traci's website: https://prydehantverk.comSign up for Traci's newsletter: https://preview.mailerlite.com/webforms/landing/h0i9p1ABOUT THRIFT+FIT+FIX (MAGGIE + TRACI'S COLLABORATION)What happens when a stylist and a seamstress team up to help save the world, one person and one garment at a time? We're working on it, and we want you to join us on the adventure! This creative collaboration brings together Maggie's expertise in thrifting and personal style support and Tracis's expert skills in mending/repair, tailoring/alterations, and embellishment into a unique mix of packages designed to help solve all your wardrobe challenges. Think of it as Your Wardrobe Magic Wand and the key to immortalizing your style.Get updates on this collab, delivered to your inbox twice a month: https://share.hsforms.com/1Tz6f7gwuRI2eKhE1bk8xzw4hwee Learn more about Small Biz Big Pic here: smallbizbigpic.com. Registration ends 2/13!Have questions/comments/cute animal photos? Reach out via email: amanda@clotheshorse.worldFind the transcript at clotheshorsepodcast.comWant to support Amanda's work on Clotheshorse? Learn more at patreon.com/clotheshorsepodcastClotheshorse is brought to you with support from the following sustainable small businesses:Republica Unicornia Yarns: Hand-Dyed Yarn and notions for the color-obsessed. Made with love and some swearing in fabulous Atlanta, Georgia by Head Yarn Wench Kathleen. Get ready for rainbows with a side of Giving A Damn! Republica Unicornia is all about making your own magic using small-batch, responsibly sourced, hand-dyed yarns and thoughtfully made notions. Slow fashion all the way down and discover the joy of creating your very own beautiful hand knit, crocheted, or woven pieces. Find us on Instagram @republica_unicornia_yarns and at www.republicaunicornia.com.Cute Little Ruin is an online shop dedicated to providing quality vintage and secondhand clothing, vinyl, and home items in a wide range of styles and price points. If it's ethical and legal, we try to find a new home for it! Vintage style with progressive values. Find us on Instagram at @CuteLittleRuin.Thumbprint is Detroit's only fair trade marketplace, located in the historic Eastern Market. Our small business specializes in products handmade by empowered women in South Africa making a living wage creating things they love like hand painted candles and ceramics! We also carry a curated assortment of sustainable/natural locally made goods. Thumbprint is a great gift destination for both the special people in your life and for yourself! Browse our online store at thumbprintdetroit.com and find us on instagram @thumbprintdetroit.Gentle Vibes: We are purveyors of polyester and psychedelic relics! We encourage experimentation and play not only in your wardrobe, but in your home, too. We have thousands of killer vintage pieces ready for their next adventure! Picnicwear: a slow fashion brand, ethically made by hand from vintage and deadstock materials - most notably, vintage towels! Founder, Dani, has worked in the industry as a fashion designer for over 10 years, but started Picnicwear in response to her dissatisfaction with the industry's shortcomings. Picnicwear recently moved to rural North Carolina where all their clothing and accessories are now designed and cut, but the majority of their sewing is done by skilled garment workers in NYC. Their customers take comfort in knowing that all their sewists are paid well above NYC minimum wage. Picnicwear offers minimal waste and maximum authenticity: Future Vintage over future garbage.Shift Clothing, out of beautiful Astoria, Oregon, with a focus on natural fibers, simple hardworking designs, and putting fat people first. Discover more at shiftwheeler.comHigh Energy Vintage is a fun and funky vintage shop located in Somerville, MA, just a few minutes away from downtown Boston. They offer a highly curated selection of bright and colorful clothing and accessories from the 1940s-1990s for people of all genders. Husband-and-wife duo Wiley & Jessamy handpick each piece for quality and style, with a focus on pieces that transcend trends and will find a home in your closet for many years to come! In addition to clothing, the shop also features a large selection of vintage vinyl and old school video games. Find them on instagram @ highenergyvintage, online at highenergyvintage.com, and at markets in and around Boston.Blank Cass, or Blanket Coats by Cass, is focused on restoring, renewing, and reviving the history held within vintage and heirloom textiles. By embodying and transferring the love, craft, and energy that is original to each vintage textile into a new garment, I hope we can reteach ourselves to care for and mend what we have and make it last. Blank Cass lives on Instagram @blank_cass and a website will be launched soon at blankcass.com.St. Evens is an NYC-based vintage shop that is dedicated to bringing you those special pieces you'll reach for again and again. More than just a store, St. Evens is dedicated to sharing the stories and history behind the garments. 10% of all sales are donated to a different charitable organization each month. New vintage is released every Thursday at wearStEvens.com, with previews of new pieces and more brought to you on Instagram at @wear_st.evens.Vagabond Vintage DTLV is a vintage clothing, accessories & decor reselling business based in Downtown Las Vegas. Not only do we sell in Las Vegas, but we are also located throughout resale markets in San Francisco as well as at a curated boutique called Lux and Ivy located in Indianapolis, Indiana. Jessica, the founder & owner of Vagabond Vintage DTLV, recently opened the first IRL location located in the Arts District of Downtown Las Vegas on August 5th. The shop has a strong emphasis on 60s & 70s garments, single stitch tee shirts & dreamy loungewear. Follow them on instagram, @vagabondvintage.dtlv and keep an eye out for their website coming fall of 2022.Country Feedback is a mom & pop record shop in Tarboro, North Carolina. They specialize in used rock, country, and soul and offer affordable vintage clothing and housewares. Do you have used records you want to sell? Country Feedback wants to buy them! Find us on Instagram @countryfeedbackvintageandvinyl or head downeast and visit our brick and mortar. All are welcome at this inclusive and family-friendly record shop in the country!Located in Whistler, Canada, Velvet Underground is a "velvet jungle" full of vintage and second-hand clothes, plants, a vegan cafe and lots of rad products from other small sustainable businesses. Our mission is to create a brand and community dedicated to promoting self-expression, as well as educating and inspiring a more sustainable and conscious lifestyle both for the people and the planet.Find us on Instagram @shop_velvetunderground or online at www.shopvelvetunderground.comSelina Sanders, a social impact brand that specializes in up-cycled clothing, using only reclaimed, vintage or thrifted materials: from tea towels, linens, blankets and quilts. Sustainably crafted in Los Angeles, each piece is designed to last in one's closet for generations to come. Maximum Style; Minimal Carbon Footprint.Salt Hats: purveyors of truly sustainable hats. Hand blocked, sewn and embellished in Detroit, Michigan.
It's the year of Earth Logic here at Clotheshorse, where we are planning to reduce our consumption of brand new clothing by 75%! It's essential that we get as much wear as possible out of clothes. And how we wash, dry, and deal with those stains is a big part of making our clothing last longer. Amanda is joined by Maggie and Traci to solve your laundry quandaries. In this episode, we will be sharing our own laundry trauma, and then we will get into some of the biggest questions you had: detergent and detergent pods, line drying, shrinking, dealing with pills, and water temperature. We'll also share our advice (some of it from Maggie's laundry magician mom Peggy) about the essentials you should keep on hand to solve your own laundry quandaries!"Does the film around detergent pods really biodegrade? A debate is raging," Allyson Chiu, Washington Post.ABOUT MAGGIEMaggie (she, her) is a cisgender, pansexual woman, a recovering marketing professional, and a trauma and abuse survivor. Maggie is also the Chief Everything Officer of Maggie Greene Style, an ethical microbusiness on a mission to transform how you see yourself by putting the personal in brand and style. Maggie helps leaders, entrepreneurs, and individual contributors of all gender expressions show up as their radically authentic selves, at work and in life, with confidence and without compromising their core values and ethics. You can learn more by visiting her 100% DIY website here: https://maggiegreenestyle.com.Sign up for Maggie's weekly newsletter: https://maggiegreenestyle.hubspotpagebuilder.com/welcome ABOUT TRACITraci was a special education teacher for more than 20 years. Then, in 2022, she decided to take the leap into full-time entrepreneurship. She believes loved clothes last and that every garment deserves a chance to shine. She's on a mission to #MakeMendingMainstream.As the visionary behind Pryde Hantverk, she seeks to extend the life of your beloved garments so you can enjoy them for years to come. She shares many of Maggie's philosophies about doing more with less and saving clothing from landfill. That makes her the perfect partner for a creative collaboration. Maggie regularly entrusts Traci with her own beloved garments when things need mending or adjusting, so you can rest assured yours are in good hands!Visit Traci's website: https://prydehantverk.comSign up for Traci's newsletter: https://preview.mailerlite.com/webforms/landing/h0i9p1 Learn more about Small Biz Big Pic here: smallbizbigpic.comHave questions/comments/cute animal photos? Reach out via email: amanda@clotheshorse.worldFind the transcript at clotheshorsepodcast.comWant to support Amanda's work on Clotheshorse? Learn more at patreon.com/clotheshorsepodcastClotheshorse is brought to you with support from the following sustainable small businesses:Gentle Vibes: We are purveyors of polyester and psychedelic relics! We encourage experimentation and play not only in your wardrobe, but in your home, too. We have thousands of killer vintage pieces ready for their next adventure! Picnicwear: a slow fashion brand, ethically made by hand from vintage and deadstock materials - most notably, vintage towels! Founder, Dani, has worked in the industry as a fashion designer for over 10 years, but started Picnicwear in response to her dissatisfaction with the industry's shortcomings. Picnicwear recently moved to rural North Carolina where all their clothing and accessories are now designed and cut, but the majority of their sewing is done by skilled garment workers in NYC. Their customers take comfort in knowing that all their sewists are paid well above NYC minimum wage. Picnicwear offers minimal waste and maximum authenticity: Future Vintage over future garbage.Shift Clothing, out of beautiful Astoria, Oregon, with a focus on natural fibers, simple hardworking designs, and putting fat people first. Discover more at shiftwheeler.comHigh Energy Vintage is a fun and funky vintage shop located in Somerville, MA, just a few minutes away from downtown Boston. They offer a highly curated selection of bright and colorful clothing and accessories from the 1940s-1990s for people of all genders. Husband-and-wife duo Wiley & Jessamy handpick each piece for quality and style, with a focus on pieces that transcend trends and will find a home in your closet for many years to come! In addition to clothing, the shop also features a large selection of vintage vinyl and old school video games. Find them on instagram @ highenergyvintage, online at highenergyvintage.com, and at markets in and around Boston.Blank Cass, or Blanket Coats by Cass, is focused on restoring, renewing, and reviving the history held within vintage and heirloom textiles. By embodying and transferring the love, craft, and energy that is original to each vintage textile into a new garment, I hope we can reteach ourselves to care for and mend what we have and make it last. Blank Cass lives on Instagram @blank_cass and a website will be launched soon at blankcass.com.St. Evens is an NYC-based vintage shop that is dedicated to bringing you those special pieces you'll reach for again and again. More than just a store, St. Evens is dedicated to sharing the stories and history behind the garments. 10% of all sales are donated to a different charitable organization each month. New vintage is released every Thursday at wearStEvens.com, with previews of new pieces and more brought to you on Instagram at @wear_st.evens.Vagabond Vintage DTLV is a vintage clothing, accessories & decor reselling business based in Downtown Las Vegas. Not only do we sell in Las Vegas, but we are also located throughout resale markets in San Francisco as well as at a curated boutique called Lux and Ivy located in Indianapolis, Indiana. Jessica, the founder & owner of Vagabond Vintage DTLV, recently opened the first IRL location located in the Arts District of Downtown Las Vegas on August 5th. The shop has a strong emphasis on 60s & 70s garments, single stitch tee shirts & dreamy loungewear. Follow them on instagram, @vagabondvintage.dtlv and keep an eye out for their website coming fall of 2022.Country Feedback is a mom & pop record shop in Tarboro, North Carolina. They specialize in used rock, country, and soul and offer affordable vintage clothing and housewares. Do you have used records you want to sell? Country Feedback wants to buy them! Find us on Instagram @countryfeedbackvintageandvinyl or head downeast and visit our brick and mortar. All are welcome at this inclusive and family-friendly record shop in the country!Located in Whistler, Canada, Velvet Underground is a "velvet jungle" full of vintage and second-hand clothes, plants, a vegan cafe and lots of rad products from other small sustainable businesses. Our mission is to create a brand and community dedicated to promoting self-expression, as well as educating and inspiring a more sustainable and conscious lifestyle both for the people and the planet.Find us on Instagram @shop_velvetunderground or online at www.shopvelvetunderground.comSelina Sanders, a social impact brand that specializes in up-cycled clothing, using only reclaimed, vintage or thrifted materials: from tea towels, linens, blankets and quilts. Sustainably crafted in Los Angeles, each piece is designed to last in one's closet for generations to come. Maximum Style; Minimal Carbon Footprint.Salt Hats: purveyors of truly sustainable hats. Hand blocked, sewn and embellished in Detroit, Michigan.Republica Unicornia Yarns: Hand-Dyed Yarn and notions for the color-obsessed. Made with love and some swearing in fabulous Atlanta, Georgia by Head Yarn Wench Kathleen. Get ready for rainbows with a side of Giving A Damn! Republica Unicornia is all about making your own magic using small-batch, responsibly sourced, hand-dyed yarns and thoughtfully made notions. Slow fashion all the way down and discover the joy of creating your very own beautiful hand knit, crocheted, or woven pieces. Find us on Instagram @republica_unicornia_yarns and at www.republicaunicornia.com.Cute Little Ruin is an online shop dedicated to providing quality vintage and secondhand clothing, vinyl, and home items in a wide range of styles and price points. If it's ethical and legal, we try to find a new home for it! Vintage style with progressive values. Find us on Instagram at @CuteLittleRuin.Thumbprint is Detroit's only fair trade marketplace, located in the historic Eastern Market. Our small business specializes in products handmade by empowered women in South Africa making a living wage creating things they love like hand painted candles and ceramics! We also carry a curated assortment of sustainable/natural locally made goods. Thumbprint is a great gift destination for both the special people in your life and for yourself! Browse our online store at thumbprintdetroit.com and find us on instagram @thumbprintdetroit.
Damon Remy is the Chief Everything Officer of REI BlackBook. Before launching REI BlackBook, he painfully worked a J.O.B. where he'll readily admit he was a terrible employee who constantly thought, “I can do this so much better.” As the brains and heart behind REI BlackBook, his total focus is on doing it better, dreaming big, building for the future, listening to the REI BlackBook community needs, and ensuring the BlackBook team understands the company mission and purpose so their hearts, as well as their minds, are engaged every day. He's a self-taught tech enthusiast who got his start in computer technology from the Marine Corps when he was thrown into maintaining their network. He fell in love with technology then and there and broke everything in sight to figure out how it worked. An exuberant father to four kids, and one heck of a singer who landed his wife Jackie with a karaoke song, Damon believes that helping others succeed is the best way to spend your time. What you will learn in this episode: Why Damon moved from the mortgage banking business into real estate investing How Damon fosters a sense of community in the real estate investing world The lessons Damon learned from the 2008 market crash How Damon evolved his business within months to serve the real estate community in a new way How Damon was inspired by the Wicked Smart way of thinking, the community, and the support they provide The importance of having strategies to move your business forward Why is Damon so committed to empowering his tribe, from associates to homebuyers and sellers Resources: Follow Chris and Zach on Club House to learn even more about deal structures and how to get 3 paydays from your real estate investments. If you're looking to secure some lines of credit for your business, check out Fund and Grow – Visit the Resource page at https://smartrealestatecoach.com/resources Schedule a FREE Strategy Call: SmartRealEstateCoach.com/action Register for our free masterclass: www.SmartRealEstateCoach.com/mastersclass Real Estate on Your Terms by Chris Prefontaine SmartRealEstateCoach.com/webinar SmartRealRstateCoach.com/ebook SmartRealEstateCoach.com/QLS SmartRealestateCoach.com/tools SmartRealestateCoach.com/eaze SmartRealestateCoach.com/botfox www.smartrealestatecoach.com/summit50