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Gemma Beylouny with Rejoice Maids, Andrea Johanson with Hidden Acres and Alicia Todisco with Ace Handyman Services

October 14, 2022 by angishields

Cherokee Business Radio
Cherokee Business Radio
Gemma Beylouny with Rejoice Maids, Andrea Johanson with Hidden Acres and Alicia Todisco with Ace Handyman Services
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This Episode is brought to you byAlpha & Omega AutomotiveAlpha and Omega

Rejoice-Maids-logo

Gemma-BeylounyGemma Beylouny is the CMO with Rejoice Maids. She graduated from Kennesaw State in 2016 and established Rejoice Maids in 2010.

Rejoice Maids is a locally owned house cleaning service based in Woodstock GA. They are licensed, Bonded, Insured, with liability insurance and Workers Comp.

They service Cherokee County; Woodstock, Towne Lake, Canton, Holly Springs as well as surrounding cities like Acworth, Kennesaw, Marietta, East Cobb, Roswell; Jasper, and Big Canoe.

Follow Rejoice Maids on Facebook.

Andrea-JohansonAndrea Johanson is a classic “Good Doer” who stepped in to help at Hidden Acres Animal Sanctuary as a kindness to a neighbor in need.

Little did she expect to also be stepping into a role that would include making the Sanctuary a non-profit, becoming Board President, growing the volunteers from 3 to well over 100, and touching the lives of over 2,000 Cherokee County residents through free animal therapy as together, HAAS has continued to rescue animals and human hearts in a “Go Do Good” mission. Hidden-Acres-logo

As a wife and mom of four adult children, as well as mom-in-love to a bonus daughter and son, Andrea’s family has championed this incredible organization alongside her with several family members also volunteering.

Andrea’s FAVORITE animals on the farm are the goats, who have utterly stolen her heart!

Follow Hidden Acres on Facebook.

Alicia-TodiscoAlicia Todisco is a Georgia Native. She recently opened an ACE Handyman Services business serving Acworth, Kennesaw and Powder Springs area. Her path has twisted and turned, as most do, but she is unbelievably thrilled it has lead to this new season of life that comes along community and love.

Before ACE Handyman Services Alicia was involved in the technology world for 12 years. As a sales leader in the HR and Payroll space for 9 of the12 years she worked with sales professionals to teach them to sell with the need of the client as the priority.

She spent the last 3 of 12 years working as the Director of Learning and Development creating programs to teach and train on processes that she finds to be the most productive and ethical way to sell any product.

Her transition was not an easy decision, however, made with three very important factors. Grayson and William, her 8 and 5 year old sons being the most important aspect of her transion.

Traveling to New Orleans LA every month and being away from home takes a toll. Now she coaches soccer, at Legacy Park and running club, at Swift Cantrell and is seeing a major change in the way her boys are developing and responding to her work life balance. Ace-Handyman-logo

The third reason is to be more engrained in a local community. Ace Hardware and Ace Handyman Services are both companies that encourage and support their owners to make and impact in the community and that is exactly what Alicia is here to do.

Connect with Alicia on LinkedIn and follow Ace Handyman Services on Facebook.

This transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:07] Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios In Woodstock, Georgia. Welcome to Women in Business, where we celebrate influential women making a difference in our community. Now, here’s your host.

Lori Kennedy: [00:00:30] Hello, this is Lori Kennedy, and I’m your host today for Women in Business, powered by Business RadioX. Stone Payton, our producer is also in the studio with us today and we are grateful to have you tuned in. Today. We are interviewing three amazing ladies. We are interviewing Alicia Todisco and she is with Ace Handyman Services Acworth. We are interviewing Andrea Johanson and she is with Hidden Acres Animal Sanctuary Therapy and Rescue. And we are interviewing Gemma Beylouny. I’ve never I don’t know how to say your last name.

Gemma Beylouny: [00:01:13] It’s Beylouny.

Lori Kennedy: [00:01:17] Beylouny, Beylouny. And she is with Rejoice Maids and has several side hustles as well. And we may hear a little more about at least one of those today. Welcome, ladies. We are so glad to have you here. Alicia, I’m going to start with you. Tell us about your business, how long you’ve been a business, how you started it and what it does.

Alicia Todisco: [00:01:36] Okay. So Alicia Tedesco, thank you so much for your time. So my business is Ace Handyman Services. We’re a franchise. We are part of the Ace Hardware family. And so when we have craftsmen that come on board, they’re our employees, so they’re not subcontractors. It means that we get an opportunity to really hold a certain value proposition in the community. We’re on time. We answer the phones. As simple as that is to be a value proposition. It’s kind of a big deal. I started the business in March of this year. I had been in corporate America for 12 years previous and a business owner before that. I purchased a.S.A.P and services in November of last year and we went live in March. So.

Lori Kennedy: [00:02:20] Oh, wow, That’s still new.

Alicia Todisco: [00:02:22] Still very.

Lori Kennedy: [00:02:22] New. That’s awesome.

Alicia Todisco: [00:02:24] Yep. Fresh out of the gates. Very, very exciting.

Lori Kennedy: [00:02:26] Yeah, that’s great. That’s great. Andrea, tell us about what your company is and what you guys do and how that fits into our community.

Andrea Johanson: [00:02:34] So I’m a little bit of an anomaly at this table because we aren’t necessarily a business. We are a nonprofit. We became a nonprofit last year in 2021. We launched in 2018 when our founder, Sara Carney, began with two horses in rescue and in the process. And over time, especially through 2020, she began to notice as the world shut down and loved ones couldn’t get to their resident loved ones in assisted living places, that she had an opportunity to be able to provide a service, to offer love and hope, and spread joy and healing in a very unique way by allowing directors at the time to come get an animal or two and have them for the day and spread that joy to their residents. And that has then morphed into we are now in several assisted living locations, bringing our animals and spreading that same love and joy. We have therapy teams who bring those animals. We have onsite farm therapy as well, particularly to those in our community who are our super heroes, those with special needs. So this year alone, we have touched the lives of over 300 individuals.

Lori Kennedy: [00:03:46] Wow. That’s awesome. Gemma.

Gemma Beylouny: [00:03:49] I don’t have therapy, but we can be therapy sometimes.

Lori Kennedy: [00:03:54] Yes, You do like cleaning therapy? I mean, I think. I think when people come home to a clean house, that’s kind of a therapy.

Gemma Beylouny: [00:04:00] Yes, that. And we are really actually some kind of warm up therapy because we have a lot of clients that expect us every other week who have never seen people for months because of the COVID scare of COVID. And also the relatives are far away. These are we’re talking about elderly. So we kind of become their therapists. My name is Gemma Bellone. I’m the owner chief marketing officer of Rejoice Maids. We’ve been in business for more than ten years serving the Cherokee County community. Part of my business as the owner is you’ll see me make fun of me because I’m the cheapest model out there for myself or my business. I do a lot of cleaning TikTok reels and I love what I do. I am now the marketing model of my own business.

Lori Kennedy: [00:04:56] Gotcha. Okay. And then why did you choose that name? These maids.

Gemma Beylouny: [00:05:00] Rejoice. Maids actually came as a surprise because it wasn’t in the plan. I initially baloney cleaning service, but no one can pronounce my last name. I can’t even pronounce my last name.

Lori Kennedy: [00:05:14] That’s so funny, considering that was the first question I asked you. And I’ve known you longer than anybody else at this table, and I did not know that.

Gemma Beylouny: [00:05:24] People would call how to spell your name. I didn’t say your name. Okay, time to change. Yeah. So I hired a lady who gave me a name, Royal Maids. Right. And I’m from the Philippines. And what the heck? It’s really like when things doesn’t happen, it’s not meant to be, right? So anyway, it didn’t work again, because there’s some things that are beyond my control. So when the last thing in your life is going south, who do you think after that? You know, and everything going into a hole, bad hole. You start thinking, Oh, my God, God, There you go. So looking at the Bible, look at books. And I found it in the Bible. There you go. Rejoice. Maids.

Lori Kennedy: [00:06:12] I love that. Yeah, well, that makes me think of something that you told me. Andrea, don’t you have a book that you want to tell us about?

Andrea Johanson: [00:06:20] I do have a book. Thank you for asking. The book is called The One Who Moves Mountains. And it is a faith based book, and it is by design, written as if we were sitting across from the kitchen table with each other and having conversations maybe about some of the questions that you’ve had about faith, about God, and you really haven’t felt the freedom to ask those. And so it’s a conversation, and the end of each chapter has three conversations starters that will ignite that conversation between you and God and take it to the next step. So it’s guided.

Lori Kennedy: [00:06:56] I love that we’re. How do you get that easy peasy?

Andrea Johanson: [00:06:59] You can get it actually on Amazon or Barnes and Noble.

Lori Kennedy: [00:07:03] Okay, great. You know, that reminds me of you, Stone. You have a book, and I’d love you to tell us the name and how and what it’s about and how to get it.

Speaker5: [00:07:11] Well, it’s about personal and organizational speed, but the title of it, which did end up having some marketing legs, I got to say, is Never fried Bacon in the Nude.

Gemma Beylouny: [00:07:22] I love it.

Speaker5: [00:07:22] And other lessons from the Quick and the Dead.

Gemma Beylouny: [00:07:26] I love it.

Lori Kennedy: [00:07:28] All right. Back to you, Miss Alisha. I. I want to know about your encouragement and mentors and why. Ace.

Alicia Todisco: [00:07:42] My my mentors. People that I connect with. I have a slew of mentors, people that I really look up to. And as I was vetting out, going from a corporate job to entrepreneurship out on my own, I’m not a risk taker. So it was really important for me to lean into them, ask a ton of questions I’ve vetted out for a very long time, and eventually your mentors don’t tell you this is what you should do. They guide you, right? Yeah. All three of them kicked me in out of the nest, and they were like, Just go do this already. This is a great fit for you. You know what you’re doing? You’re going to be successful by having good mentors in front of me. It encourages me to also be a mentor to other people, and I think that becomes part of maybe what your actual question was.

Lori Kennedy: [00:08:29] Yes, sorry.

Alicia Todisco: [00:08:30] That’s okay. So I think it’s really important to me to be able to make a difference for people, whether it’s in our community, whether it is in my office, within our four walls and the team that we have established. I have a great young lady who just started with me. She is coachable, she is open, she’s excited, she is confident. And now I get a chance to really get in and develop her sales processes and help her think bigger because this is her first job where she’s calling it her big girl job. But she’s it’s not true. She’s already way more elevated than she gives herself credit for. So I get to go in and identify those strengths and help her, just like my coach has helped me to grow into the woman that she wants to be.

Lori Kennedy: [00:09:12] I love that. I love that. Andrea Tell us about role models and about mentors and mentoring in your life. How does that look?

Andrea Johanson: [00:09:25] I think it’s taken a lot of different forms in my life. It’s happened in the church world. It’s happened in the business world, It’s happened in education. I think one of my biggest mentors actually was when I was a student teacher and she was an educator for fifth graders at elementary school, Atlanta women. And I will tell you that she has influenced countless lives. And I was one of them. And I just loved her way of drawing gold out of people. And I think that that’s what’s so important when you’re mentoring is to be able to identify the goals in them, draw out those nuggets and help them to become even better versions of themselves. As you walk alongside of them not telling them you should do X, Y, Z, but just drawing all the goodness, all the things that you see in them that are gold.

Lori Kennedy: [00:10:17] Wow, I love that. I love that. Gemma What about a role model for you and mentoring and how are you mentoring others? I know you’re starting a group and tell us about that.

Gemma Beylouny: [00:10:27] I have a different way of I, I, I don’t have a mentor when I was growing up, so I have my mom, but it’s. It’s a different story. So I the mentor that I had in my mind is when I saw I saw this one lady. She’s dressed up nicely, you know, like a business owner with with a case like that. That’s how I saw myself. But in terms of mentoring, I didn’t have one. So I created my own. I started reading books, you know, Jim Rohn, I called him my dad mentors, but I do talk to them. I talk to them in my head. You know, I taught myself how to find things that would empower me because I don’t have that role model in my life. So I learn. I learn on my own. And then once I get to know, like when I entered in this business, I chase the people that I know that are successful. My new Some people don’t see that as a positive aspect. I chase them my first convention in Las Vegas. Before I go there, I hit enter the internet and figure out by reading who is who in that industry. Got my notebook, wrote all their names and chased them around until one of them sat with me and said this, this, this, this, this, this, this. That’s how I started getting a mentor, but not really a mentor. Because when nobody knows you, you don’t really get anything. Then when they start getting to know you, sort of like the bank, they don’t give you any money when you don’t have money right now, When you have the money, when when you have the money, everybody’s like, Hey, you want a loan.

Alicia Todisco: [00:12:12] Right?

Gemma Beylouny: [00:12:13] Right. So yeah, the mentoring, right? So yeah, I try to mentor people now because I’ve learned so much from the years in being in business and I’m a 50 year old woman now. So I think I learned a little do anything. And my business is running on its own now, which I’m very proud. So, you know, you learn and you want to share it to people. And I do. I am sharing it now with a couple of people that I’m sort of guiding, not mentoring, but guiding because I still learn from them. I, I always say that when I have a conversation with you, I will learn from you. You know, I’m not just going to you know, I’m not going to say I know everything because I don’t. I’m still learning for sure.

Lori Kennedy: [00:12:59] So do you have a modern day role model?

Andrea Johanson: [00:13:01] Yes.

Lori Kennedy: [00:13:04] Elon Musk.

Gemma Beylouny: [00:13:07] Oh my God. I’m like, Oh my God, this dude is so smart. Even though he has like 10,000 children from different women. I’m sorry about that. But hey, you know what? I like that dude.

Alicia Todisco: [00:13:18] Can I ask a question really quickly? Yeah. Just based on what you were saying and the fact that he is like your modern day mentor in business, are you an early adopter?

Gemma Beylouny: [00:13:28] I’m actually not really. I’m a logger when it comes to like that. But then once I get my hold on that, I’m like, my husband calls me a bulldog. I will not let go. I learned something. I will implement that. If you tell me something and I see that in my head, it’s going to work. It’s going to get going.

Alicia Todisco: [00:13:47] That’s awesome. I was curious because if you are self driven with your like finding your mentors in your books, it feels different than the way that I was involved in upbringing, but it seems like you have the same process. And then for Elon Musk to be the guy that you’re leaned into, he’s the early adopter, right? He’s like, run and then ask questions later.

Gemma Beylouny: [00:14:05] That’s me. I shoot first.

Lori Kennedy: [00:14:08] So she says that, but she’s very intentional. I mean, the conversations that I’ve had with Jemma, she’s very intentional. So yeah, she will jump out to do something. But she’s already done some figuring out.

Gemma Beylouny: [00:14:23] Calculating in my head.

Alicia Todisco: [00:14:24] Thought through it first. Yeah, exactly. That’s great.

Lori Kennedy: [00:14:27] Andrea, why don’t you tell us how you got involved with the nonprofit that you’re involved with and and tell us about the difference that you’re making in Cherokee County.

Andrea Johanson: [00:14:38] So I love the story, honestly, and it just happened. And it really is a fulfillment of our mission to go do good. And that happened by accident, kind of. I actually live directly behind the sanctuary. It’s in my backyard on the other side of my fence. And so my neighbor next door to us said, Hey, any time you want to come down and feed the goats or the donkeys, you can go ahead and come through the gate in my back yard and go get access. And so I would go down and do that. And I texted Sarah who Sarah Carney, as I said, is our founder. And she when I texted her that day, my neighbor had texted her the same day my neighbor was texting saying, there are these two cows that need rescuing. Are you interested? And I’m texting saying, I have a friend coming whose daughters are coming over. Can we come give the goats some treats to both of us? She said yes and yes. And I’m in the hospital. Oh, and we both said, oh my gosh, what can we do? And so the two of us jumped in alongside of another gentleman, Lawson, who had started the week before we did using old feed feed sheet instructions in the feed room and text messages from Sarah from the hospital and just started running the farm. And so she came home and because of what she had walked through, she couldn’t do any kind of heavy lifting or anything for six weeks.

Andrea Johanson: [00:16:03] And so we just ran it all. And with her guidance, of course, and the two cows came to us and we continued to grow and we would have someone occasionally come with us as a friend, Hey, I’ll come help you to feed team. I want to go play with the goats. What you’re really going to do is I’m going to give you a muck rake and you’re going to help me muck after those cows. And so in September, I had said to Sarah, Hey, would it be okay if I put a post on next door? Just seeing if anybody might be interested in helping volunteer. Our daughter’s having her wedding celebration. October. It’s getting a little busy. We could use a little additional help. We’ve got more animals coming, she said. Sure, go ahead. 300 comments Later, when I thought we would get five or six, we were opening up a group on next door. We suddenly had our first two volunteer orientations. We had our farm community day, the first one in October of last year. Meanwhile, my husband says to me, Oh, y’all need to be a nonprofit. And we all agreed. And he said, Oh, it’s easy to set up. You just fill out a couple of things online. No problem. It’ll be.

Gemma Beylouny: [00:17:08] Quick.

Andrea Johanson: [00:17:10] As everyone in this room is laughing. Oh, well, over 100 hours later, we became a nonprofit in November and I learned a lot along the way. I had never set up a nonprofit, and that day I was working with a score mentor. Highly, highly, highly recommend. When we’re talking about membership or mentorship, Score is a phenomenal organization to work with for mentoring. And he walked me through the process of setting up the nonprofit, and I was going through the slate of directors or board board members with him because he was going to help me run the first meeting that night. And I said, Sarah is going to be the president and this. And he said, Andrew, do you remember very beginning I told you Sarah couldn’t be the president as founder of the organization? No, Yeah, she can’t be president. So I ran from my house to Sarah’s within hours before the very first board meeting. I said, What is your plan B? She looked at me and she said, You’re board president. Okay, so here I am. Board President. We have now, as I mentioned, put in, we have well over 100 active volunteers. We have multiple therapy groups that are going to different locations. We have feed team volunteers, We have animal rehabilitation and training and project team volunteers. We have families who volunteer together. We have people who bring those with special needs and they volunteer together. We have our on and off farm therapy. For instance, we had a mom and her son who were at one of our recent superheroes therapy nights on the farm. She and her son now volunteer, and they are there every single time they can possibly be there. And she said, You don’t understand. When we go home, he’s different and I’m different. And all I know is that not only are there massive differences in the lives of those we bring our animals to for therapy. Yeah, every single volunteer who’s been there, we each have our own stories of transformation and impact that this farm, this mission, these animals our founder have all had in our lives.

Lori Kennedy: [00:19:18] Wow, I. I love that.

Andrea Johanson: [00:19:20] Thank you.

Lori Kennedy: [00:19:22] I have to go ahead and ask this now. Go ahead. You know what I’m going to ask, right? Can you tell us about goat yoga?

Alicia Todisco: [00:19:31] Yeah.

Andrea Johanson: [00:19:32] You’re asking the right person because I am the self-professed goat girl. I am just silly about goats. And I could show you I have more pictures of goats on my phone than my children at this point. But when you have baby goats on the farm, there’s nothing like baby goats. They are just the cutest ever. And if you get down, they’re going to jump right up on you. Well, that is a perfect invitation for a partnership between goats and yoga, because any time you are in a plank or on table or whatever the moves are, the the baby goats will just automatically jump up on you. And it’s hilarious and they will paw at you. And it’s just it’s an experience like none other. So as they get older, we help it along a little bit. We’ll pick them up and put them on participants, but everyone loves it, so they’re in there. Goat yoga poses with goats on their backs. Some people are saying, Oh, it feels so good. And some people are like, Oh my goodness. But we do have a a little piece of, you know, like a badge almost, where it says goat on goat off when you come participate.

Andrea Johanson: [00:20:43] So if you would prefer not having a goat put on you, they don’t have to get put on you. They can go walk around next to you. We have our goat yoga on farm in our sanctuary, which is unlike anything else, because as you’re doing yoga, you’re looking up through the leaves above you and it’s just you’re in this very peaceful, amazing sanctuary. We’ve also done goat yoga at the great lawn in Bridgeville, and right now we have goat yoga happening at the mill in Etawah. And so this Saturday, a couple of days from now, we are having goat yoga at the mill on Etawah at 10:00. And then on October 29th we are doing on farm goat yoga at 11. And our last goat yoga of this season is November 5th, back at the mill at 11:00. So this Saturday is the only one that’s at ten. But you can get those links on our website to sign up. We are WW Dot Hidden Acres Animal Sanctuary dot org. Click on goat yoga and the link will take you there.

Lori Kennedy: [00:21:46] That is awesome. All right. Since you talked about kids on your phone, tell us who’s in your in your household.

Andrea Johanson: [00:21:55] That’s not fully who’s in my family? Who’s in.

Lori Kennedy: [00:21:59] Your family.

Andrea Johanson: [00:22:00] So my youngest is still at home Nehemiah He’s 20. He is a sophomore at Kennesaw State University. Our two middle children, Abigail and Noah, are each married. They both got married in 2020 by my husband, believe it or not. So I have bonus daughter Haley, who’s married to Noah and bonus son Thomas, who’s married to Abigail.

Lori Kennedy: [00:22:20] And so they’re twins, I assume.

Andrea Johanson: [00:22:22] They are not.

Lori Kennedy: [00:22:23] They’re not twins.

Andrea Johanson: [00:22:24] They’re not They? My first three are age 17 months apart, so I had three and 34 months. Oh, wow. Yeah. Two miscarriages before having our fourth. And so very grateful to have our fourth as well. Our oldest is living in California. He has been attending Bethel School of Supernatural Ministry. He is with an organization working out there as well as on staff with Bethel now as well in their children’s ministry department. So I’m very blessed. Just celebrated my 31st wedding anniversary too.

Lori Kennedy: [00:22:56] So congratulations. That’s awesome. And no goats for pets.

Andrea Johanson: [00:23:02] I have them all behind, but I told Sarah if I ever move, I know who I’m taking with me.

Gemma Beylouny: [00:23:09] Favoritism.

Andrea Johanson: [00:23:11] Absolutely. They know it too.

Alicia Todisco: [00:23:13] I feel like you need to go to the farm or you need to bring her a goat. Like this is a thing. You know.

Andrea Johanson: [00:23:17] I. I came this close to bringing a goat with me today, and I kind of thought it might be a little disruptive, so I decided not to. But it was. It was a consideration.

Lori Kennedy: [00:23:25] I think I’m going to need to come visit.

Andrea Johanson: [00:23:27] I think you.

Lori Kennedy: [00:23:27] Do. I truly need to. Alisha, who is in your family.

Alicia Todisco: [00:23:32] So not to spend too far away from the conversation and draw me in if you need to. But this is really interesting how it overlaps. So yeah, in my household I have myself and my two boys. One is Greyson, he’s eight, and then William just turned six yesterday. They are all fire. I have a daughter that is an angel, baby. She is in heaven. And then we have. We had a miscarriage in between our daughter and our son as well, which we opened a nonprofit. And so we can talk about that later. So I laughed when you said, Oh, yeah, you just go online and you just press a couple of buttons. Not how it works at all. Right? And so our nonprofit is dormant, but it’s one of the main purposes of me building the franchise the way that I am now so that we can get reactive and re acclimated in the community to support family.

Lori Kennedy: [00:24:20] Yeah. Go ahead and tell us about that.

Alicia Todisco: [00:24:21] Yeah, sure. So in 2008, my children’s father and I had a little girl. She was very sick and she passed away. And so she’s in her week life. She changed more humans than most of us get to do in a lifetime. And so I grieved and grieved and grieved as a mother would. And about a week before her first birthday, her father said, You have got to start changing your mindset, like you have to celebrate the time that we did get with her. So we did. And instead of having, you know, this year of we just lost our child a year ago, we had a birthday party for her. So we had friends and family around the gravesite. We did a balloon release, we had a birthday cake, the whole nine. So if you ask my boys, Hey, tell me, do you have brothers and sisters? They say, Yeah, I have a brother and a sister. And so they talk about that very openly. We’re very open about it. We’ve got pictures of them in my phone that are next to the gravesite, which I know seems a little strange. But to them, it’s normalcy. Well, a couple of years into every year, celebrating her birthday and doing balloon releases by the grave site, one of my friends said, hey, listen, you need to turn this into something because I’m hearing more and more about families who have lost children.

Alicia Todisco: [00:25:34] So we did. We created a business plan, sat on it for a year, kept doing the, you know, the balloon releases. And then we moved back to Georgia and I got pregnant, had a miscarriage. I tried to bury it. Oh, it’s not as dramatic. Yes, it is. Every person’s tragedy is their tragedy and everyone stands alone. So what you learn in grief is you don’t you don’t compare grief. Right? Everybody’s story is their personal story. And by trying to minimize that for myself, I realized that very intimately. Like I’d heard people talk about it. But and so it manifested into we got pregnant again with Greyson, and we while I was on maternity leave, I was high risk, so I was benched. And so I went through all the process of creating this nonprofit and getting everything started. We had our first big event where we had 50 people show up at the park down the road from, you know, where we lived at the time. And Dunwoody, there were people that came up to me.

Alicia Todisco: [00:26:30] They celebrated the life of their 50 year old child had passed away five years ago. And we’re talking, you know, 70, 80 year old humans. Right? We had people at the park that came over just to see what was going on, that stood in our circle and got to hear stories of other families who had experienced the same thing. So it’s pretty powerful. I’ll say the other side of it, though, when we do get reengaged, I think where we help the most people is when you know someone who has lost a child, you don’t know what to say. And so I get phone calls even today saying, hey, my friend is in the hospital. They just lost their baby. She just had to deliver a stillborn or had a miscarriage or five year old, you know, passed away from cancer. What do I say? And I’m like, I can’t tell you what to say, but I can definitely tell you what not to say, Right? Yeah. So those have been really powerful conversations. So I just wanted to draw that parallel because I understand and and that desire to give back and serve the community is huge.

Lori Kennedy: [00:27:25] Yeah. Thank you for sharing that. I appreciate.

Alicia Todisco: [00:27:27] That. Yeah, Thank you.

Lori Kennedy: [00:27:28] Gemma. Who’s in your family?

Gemma Beylouny: [00:27:31] George and I, I have two kids there. Well, we’re empty Nester. My two kids, one. I think she’s never going to get married, so we’re already okay with that. The younger one, Nicole. She have two kids. It’s just, you know, like you’re doing really well and then bam, something hit you. So in a way, we’re still grateful. Very, very grateful. She’s named after me. Her name is Leah Gemma. But she just got diagnosed with autism. She’s two, but it’s a blessing, you know, because. She’s there. She makes us happy. The only thing that I don’t like is she doesn’t know us. Like you look at your granddaughter. No, no. Nothing. It’s like she’s looking past you. Oh, yeah. You know, like, Sorry. She cannot recognize you. You know, I was like I say to myself, I said to my husband, George, I’ll give anything, anything so she can recognize me, you know? So one day she just touched me. Like, normally you’re my first granddaughter, Isabel. She’s nine now. We had a great time together. I mean, I said it was a blast. So just like grandma, you’re expecting that, right? But it was just different. Totally different. But you know what we’re learning? We’re learning to deal with it. We’re learning to grow with her. We’re learning to appreciate life more because of that. You know, it’s things that the challenge you makes you better understanding human being.

Alicia Todisco: [00:29:10] Absolutely.

Gemma Beylouny: [00:29:11] Yeah. But George and I, we enjoy each other. We like each other. We’ve been together 33 years, so we better like each other, right? For sure. It’s a blessing. We do love each other. And we like I always say, like, you have to like somebody. I mean, you can love somebody, not like them, right? So we both we have it both. So we’re blessed.

Alicia Todisco: [00:29:32] There’s a song about that.

Gemma Beylouny: [00:29:33] Oh, yeah?

Alicia Todisco: [00:29:34] Yeah. I don’t like you, but I love you.

Lori Kennedy: [00:29:36] I remember that old song. I remember that.

Gemma Beylouny: [00:29:39] Yeah, well, that’s good. I want to hear that.

Alicia Todisco: [00:29:42] I’ll send it to you later.

Gemma Beylouny: [00:29:42] Okay.

Lori Kennedy: [00:29:44] What are some great. What are the greatest challenges you are facing now as a business or an industry, Gemma?

Gemma Beylouny: [00:29:51] Just like. Like the restaurant industry or in the service industry. When you’re in the service industry, you need people. So it’s human, right? We need like five employees yesterday, you know, because we’re growing. I’m a little TikTok making fun of me, doing a lot of how to clean this, how to do this. It’s generating a lot of calls. Our phone is ringing. Like Google will say, Hey, you have like 1500 visitors in your website alone this week or this month. You’ll have a lot of these people. It’s it’s helping. But the problem is you cannot sustain your growth if you don’t have employees because who is? I’m in the cleaning industry, so I can’t clean everybody’s houses. I would love to, but I can’t that my employees that we have, we have 8 to 9 teams depending on the day we can’t do it all. So especially now that the holidays are coming, we need ten people. We just can’t find them. Yeah. Biggest challenge.

Lori Kennedy: [00:30:56] Wow. Tell us, Andrea, what are the biggest challenges that you’re facing right now in the industry that you’re in?

Andrea Johanson: [00:31:03] So again, I’m a little bit of an anomaly from the rest of you sitting at the table. And as I thought about how to answer that question myself, if you were going to ask that of me, I think it is a matter of the right people in the right seats. And so it’s similar to what you were saying, but for us, we are 100% volunteer driven and you can easily see that 8020 rule of 80% of the work done by 20% of the people. And so making sure that we’re not burning anyone out, making sure that they feel appreciated, we are so grateful for every single person that steps foot on that farm and all that they do and the millions of ways that they give. And also making sure, you know, when we started the nonprofit, it was like, okay, so we have these committees and we need directors. And it was almost like pulling names out of a hat. So, hey, you’re going to do X, Y, Z, All right. Okay. So this has been a year also of really making sure that we we have had changes and, you know, life happens for people. And so you have people who’ve committed to a role, but things happen in life and for very real, valid and even great reasons, they can’t continue in that role. And so what does that look like for longevity, for transition, for, you know, I have worn a million hats on the farm and I’m really grateful because recently I’ve been able to delegate out a lot of those core responsibilities because we’ve had the right people link arms with us and, you know, they’re taking over as director volunteers, they’ve taken over as director of special events, you know, different aspects. And then, you know, just making sure that we continue to identify who’s going to best fill that role and not fill it too fast just because we have a need. But wait until we’ve got the right person to fill that need.

Lori Kennedy: [00:33:10] So how does that I’m going to go ahead and go into a second question and then I’ll ask you, Alicia, how does that go into what is a mistake that you’ve made and how did you correct it? Because it feels like maybe that’s a learning process and how to make that run as smoothly as you as it as you would want it to.

Andrea Johanson: [00:33:33] Well, again, I think part of it was we have people with such willing hearts and so there’s a need. I’ll do that. And I think I can share this story and it’ll be totally fine. But it was so, so sweet because the other the gentleman who was the original volunteer besides my neighbor and myself, when he first said, Hey, I’ll help, he said, I’ll help with social media. Thanks. And we were thrilled. And I mean, it was an offer from his heart. He’s not even on Facebook.

Lori Kennedy: [00:34:09] Yeah.

Andrea Johanson: [00:34:09] You know, so that that wasn’t a right fit for him. And yet the role that he’s in now, he’s director of operations and he knocks it out of the park. Everywhere you look on our farm, you’re going to see his touch of what he’s done in the difference that he’s made and how he’s caused the sanctuary to thrive. And so it’s just a reorganization of, Hey, we are so grateful that you offered to do that and here’s the responsibilities. How do you feel about that? Oh, yeah, not me. Okay, no problem. Let’s get you into the right fit for you, because we want people to feel comfortable, to feel passionate, to feel like they’re making a difference in in a way that they feel confident that they really can.

Gemma Beylouny: [00:34:55] That’s good.

Lori Kennedy: [00:34:55] I love that. All right, Alicia, why don’t you tell us some of the greatest challenges you’re facing as a business or an industry?

Alicia Todisco: [00:35:03] So I think the biggest challenge in my industry is service base, right? We either have too much business and not enough craftsmen or too many craftsmen and not enough business. So it’s a yeah, it’s a balance of I have five guys on my team right now. They’re all standing humans to me. They’ve been fairly easy to find, but I’m very specific about what we’re looking for and so I’m terrified to lose them, right? And so making sure that when we have a craftsman that is I’ve got a military gentleman who’s a chief in the army, he’s getting ready to probably take a full month out. So I need to adjust marketing a little bit, write down or bring somebody else on board and then adjust it up a little bit so we can have more business coming in the doors. So it really is just that balance of making sure that we have enough work to keep them busy and also not burn them out, but to sustain them and make them not want to go anywhere else.

Lori Kennedy: [00:36:00] Same. Yeah, Same for automotive repair, y’all. Tell me about a mistake that you’ve made in your business and what you learned from it.

Alicia Todisco: [00:36:09] This is actually fairly recent, so scab is still a little fresh.

Lori Kennedy: [00:36:14] So I. Band-aids down the hall, I think. Okay, good. Just in case it starts cleaning again.

Alicia Todisco: [00:36:19] Oh, well, So when I first started the business, I met this amazing office manager. And this is a story that every new business owner knows probably intimately. And you’re like, okay, well, it wasn’t going to happen to me. I’m not going to do it. I’m not going to do it. But she’s so good and she served an incredible purpose in my business, and I will forever be grateful for her. But she took on so much confidently that I let go of a lot. And so when she started to kind of step back and detach from the business a little bit, she still had power over everything. And so she’s been gone for a couple of weeks. It’s been some of the best time that I’ve had in my business. I’ve sat down behind the desk, I’m answering the phones, I’m dealing with the craftsmen firsthand in every scenario. And so I’m regaining that traction. And I’ll tell you, while it’s been a little jolting, a little bit of heartbreak, a little bit of Adora, Right. A little little acid reflux over it, it really is one of the most powerful things. And I’m so grateful that it happened early in my business and not two, three years down the road where processes had been abandoned or mistakes had really been made and a lot of money had been lost. So we’re recovering in a great way.

Lori Kennedy: [00:37:32] That’s great. That’s great. What about you, Gemma? Tell us about a mistake that you’ve made in your business and how you corrected it.

Gemma Beylouny: [00:37:39] Oh, I have a lot of that. I can write a book.

Lori Kennedy: [00:37:43] Right? Anybody who this? Why I ask this like I ask everything in here because I leave with a bunch of notes for me. That’s why I’m here. But no, I feel like any time that you. You have to fail several times before you succeed. So there are always mistakes?

Gemma Beylouny: [00:37:57] Yes. Yes. Similar to what Alicia have been through. I’ve been through that one. Because you’re confident that they can do the job and you can give them the time to improve and give them the reign of your business. Totally empower. That’s the word that they use. And power don’t like that anymore. Yeah, we, we did that. I, I almost lost control a while. You lost control for a while? A little while. And then you wake up and you’re like, No, I’m not going down because it’s my fault. Anyway. Yeah, we did. I, I had my first first two years. Actually, my first five years was the most horrible time in my business. I was crying tears, blood because, you know, I had a manager that wanted to stall my business two times, actually. But, you know, like, I didn’t even know that their birthing business already in their own business. And I had that between the manager and the supervisor. They’re ready to take my business. Like I would get a call and they’ll put it in their own business because I was not there. And so it was tough. But then, you know, you learn. I learned to do everything in my business. Like if you’re my manager now and you tell me I’m leaving you today, I’m like, There’s the door now, now don’t give me two weeks notice. There’s the door. Go.

Alicia Todisco: [00:39:24] Those two weeks are dangerous.

Gemma Beylouny: [00:39:25] I learned that lesson because of my experiences. I know everything in my business and I duplicate myself. My two daughters knows how to do it. My husband knows how to do it. So. Yep, I covered my.

Andrea Johanson: [00:39:41] Yeah.

Lori Kennedy: [00:39:42] Well, so that what is your role right now in the business and what is the future of Rejoice Mates.

Gemma Beylouny: [00:39:48] I’m actually because you become really like when, when, when you see your business is running smoothly, you’re like, Oh my God, I can do everything right. I’m going to try this. I’m going to succeed to this. So I tried a different one. I opened my my own eCommerce business. I still I have a moisturizer, a cosmetic business, which I didn’t really do anything. I spent a grant of $10,000 with nothing if I learned my lesson. Okay, But I said, I am back. I’m going to be doing more of my my advertising. But my future plan is really to duplicate my business so we can have our rejoice maids. Alpharetta rejoice maids. Braswell Someday that’s what I’m doing right now. I’m currently working on my bottles so I can put my name on it. And when I leave it to your house, you’ll see my name. A lot of things. It’s the sky’s the limit. That’s how I see it.

Lori Kennedy: [00:40:43] Are you going to franchise?

Gemma Beylouny: [00:40:45] Well, we have a lot of talks, a couple of people asking for a franchise already, But I like control. I’m a control freak.

Lori Kennedy: [00:40:52] Glad you can admit that.

Gemma Beylouny: [00:40:55] Yeah. So I think I’m just. I like to own it. I like. I like to own it. Yeah.

Lori Kennedy: [00:41:00] All right. Andrea, did you tell us or can you tell us about a therapy story or an animal story?

Andrea Johanson: [00:41:08] We have so many.

Lori Kennedy: [00:41:09] Yes.

Andrea Johanson: [00:41:10] And I would love to share two, actually, maybe three. So going into the assisted living facilities, it’s amazing because some of them are memory care facilities. And we’ve had instances where you’ve had a nonverbal patient who is then singing to the kittens that we’ve brought in, or another nonverbal patient who we brought PGR lovebird in a backpack with a clear front to it. It’s the coolest thing, and just began whistling to the bird and residents who, you know, might not be the most joyful residents to work with. And we bring the animals and they are grinning from ear to ear. But I think one of the most heartwarming stories was written. It’s on our social media. It was written by a mom who came for one of our superheroes nights with her daughter. They came with their daughter in a modified stroller kind of wheelchair type thing, and they would carry her in. And they talked about how tight all of her muscles were when she came into the farm and when she left the farm after being helped to touch the animals, her muscles had relaxed tremendously. And, you know, she’s one who uses her feet. And so she was feeding bread to our 20 £500 Bessie, the wonder cow. She’s a Chick-Fil-A type cow. She’s feeding Bessie bread with her toes and, you know, feeling Bessie’s big rough tongue on her feet. And just the grins, the grins, the joy has just been spectacular.

Lori Kennedy: [00:42:56] I love that. Wow.

Gemma Beylouny: [00:42:58] So you have a lot of different kind of animals.

Andrea Johanson: [00:43:00] We do. We have 75 animals on the farm. Wow.

Gemma Beylouny: [00:43:05] And so you were just doing goats?

Andrea Johanson: [00:43:07] No. So we we. I just happened to be crazy about the goats, that’s all.

Lori Kennedy: [00:43:12] I’m a little crazy about the goods, too, and I haven’t met them.

Andrea Johanson: [00:43:17] We actually have goats and donkeys and pigs and cows and chickens and ducks, cats, parakeets, lovebird, dog, all different things. I probably forgot an animal or two in that list, but yeah. And all of them are amazing for therapy. Even the ducks.

Lori Kennedy: [00:43:36] Okay. Good. Alicia?

Alicia Todisco: [00:43:38] Yes, ma’am.

Lori Kennedy: [00:43:39] Tell us about some misconceptions of your industry.

Alicia Todisco: [00:43:43] I was thinking about this one on the way here this morning, and I would say that they’re probably all intertwined. The first would be that when people present themselves as handymen, a lot of times they really are remodeling. Right? And so there’s a major gap in in I think our community where when people go in to get something simple, like we were cleaning out two garages and reorganizing them, for example, and hanging 20 sets of blinds. And, you know, if you call a contractor that does remodel work, he’s not going to take that job. Right. It’s probably part of the reason that I got into it in the first place, because we fill a gap that’s not out there. So when people call us, a lot of times they’re calling us to rebuild a bathroom or rebuild a deck or rebuild. And we have great partners in the community that we send that business to that are people that I trust, but we do smaller projects. I would suggest one that’s even a little more intimate is that people in the trades industries, blue collar folks, are typically treated really poorly. So when they come to me and I say, I had a hard time finding people, they’ll all come and interview.

Alicia Todisco: [00:44:49] But they fall in love with their culture and they fall in love with the way that we’re speaking with them and the fact that we admire and honor the blood, sweat and tears that they put into the homes that they’re working in. And our guys are they’re smart, they’re intelligent, they’re kind, they’re thoughtful. They’re following a very consistent process. And so when people treat them really well in the community, it’s so interesting to me when they come back and they’re like, Gosh, Mr. Smith was so nice and like, everybody should be nice to you, right? You’re an amazing human. I love having you as part of this team. So I think that people look at them and they think that because they are young and they’re blue collar, you know, that they’re that’s all they can do. No, I’ve got a guy on my crew that’s a fireman, and I’ve got a guy that’s a chief in the military. I’ve got a guy that wants to open a school one day. So just amazing humans that I get an opportunity to work with every day.

Lori Kennedy: [00:45:41] I love that you know so much about them. I think that that’s important and I think that that shows your care for your employees to know, like what they’re wanting to do long term.

Alicia Todisco: [00:45:53] Thank you. I appreciate that. They do mean they mean a lot. I mean, without them, we’re literally closed. Yes.

Gemma Beylouny: [00:46:00] Yeah, for sure.

Lori Kennedy: [00:46:02] What is a do you have a message for women specifically?

Alicia Todisco: [00:46:06] Yes. It’s really funny because I’ve been tied to my office so incredibly, like open to clothes for the past couple of weeks, training a new office manager and I’m a gym rat. If I don’t get into the gym, bad things happen. You know, it’s a stress release for me. And that’s that’s like my go to if I can’t do anything else for myself, that’s it. I coach soccer, I coach a running club, I run a business. I’m trying to get really involved with the kids in the community. But if I don’t make time for myself, everything else seems to be affected by it. So I would just say as women, we always tend to put other people in front of our needs. So that desire to try to take care of yourself is only going to make us that much better to take care of other people as well.

Gemma Beylouny: [00:46:50] I agree.

Lori Kennedy: [00:46:51] Gemma, why don’t you tell us what your message for women is?

Gemma Beylouny: [00:46:58] Hmm? That’s kind of it’s a tough question for me because I have a lot of messages, but I do like that I am. I know that I’m 50. I don’t know why I didn’t think about it before, but I prioritize myself because if I’m dead excuse me, and I know a lot of people don’t want to talk about that, Who is going to take care of George? My husband and my kids. So I got to be strong. I got to be healthy in my head, in my heart, in my everything. That’s the thing with I say to my employees all the time, better be prioritize yourself first before anybody else. It’s like, you know, you’re in the airplane, put your oxygen first before you land or you crash, Right? Because everything depends on you. In my household, in my family, I’m the light. When mama is sick, everybody is sick. So. Yes. You first before anyone else.

Lori Kennedy: [00:47:59] Andrea, do you have a message for women specifically?

Andrea Johanson: [00:48:02] I think it’s twofold. For me. I actually am kind of flipped in what? You just shared my philosophy. I have a mission statement on my signature line, and it’s what I live by. Love others well and empower them to do the same. And so if you are loving others well and you’re drawing that gold out of them and you’re empowering them, not codependency, but you are empowering them in their own rights to have the confidence and know their own value and the leadership skills that they possess themselves, what they bring to the table. You are empowering them to love others well themselves. And so with that, I had a recent thing that happened in my life where I just felt the nudge. I have my own business, I’m doing the farm, I’ve written a book. I just felt like I was supposed to put my resume out there and I wrote my resume from the standpoint of I’ve got nothing to lose. And it was a powerful exercise. And even if I had not gotten a job through it to write your resume from the standpoint of I’ve got nothing to lose and put it out there. I looked at that afterwards and I was like, Oh my gosh, this is really good.

Andrea Johanson: [00:49:17] This is me. Wow. And to recognize who you are and confidently bring to others the gifts and the talents that you possess, you know, I’m 53, and so I’m in the same boat as you. I’ve got experience behind me. And when I put that together, I recognized just what I actually carry as an individual, as a leader, as a woman in business, as an entrepreneur, as all different roles in my life. My husband and I are very active in ministry as well. And so from this standpoint, to be able to offer that, I ended up just this week starting a brand new part time remote job from home that I am loving and it’s a blessing to us. But I walked into that position, number one, because I paid attention to the nudge to go ahead and put that together, put that out there and present myself in a way of I’ve got nothing to lose. So let me present myself in the truth of who I really am. And it was powerful. And I said to my husband, even if I never got a job through it, I’ve walked away with so much because of the exercise of doing that resume in the way that I did.

Lori Kennedy: [00:50:32] That is so awesome. I love that we are getting ready to close out, so I’m going to ask each of you for a tip or a last comment. I do want to know from you, Andrea, how people can help grow your mission and then let us know how to get in touch with you. So let’s start with you, Gemma, if you can give us either a tip, cleaning tip, business tip, life tip, whatever. Give us a tip and then let us know what you want us to leave with and tell us how to get in touch with your business.

Gemma Beylouny: [00:51:12] Well, it’s fall season, all right, So a lot of tip, just one. If you can see outside. It’s kind of gloomy where we are here in Woodstock, Cherokee County, you have dogs in and out, in and out the house. Please make sure if you have elderly in your home, make sure if it is raining, you have a towel in front of your back or in the front wherever the dog’s goes out, because slip and fall is very, very bad for elderly. So make sure you are taking care of the wet spot in your home or when there’s leaves. You know, those can be slippery too. So make sure you take care of that before it spreads in your house. Because the puppies, the dogs, they don’t know that. Don’t be blaming them. I’m Gemma. Rejoice Maids is our cleaning company here in Cherokee County. You can reach us on on the web. Rejoice maids dot com you can call at 6789053476. We are the cleaning expert of Cherokee County.

Lori Kennedy: [00:52:14] Thank you, Gemma.

Alicia Todisco: [00:52:15] Alicia Yes. So it’s interesting because I feel like everyone has a mechanic. If you have a car problem, you typically know where you’re going to go, right? Well, your home is something that should have a mechanic as well. And so we want to be the home mechanic for everyone. So the we call ourselves the ally. And so if you have little things that need to be done, if you have big things that need to be done, I would encourage give us a call, because I’ve worked really hard over the past seven months to vet out a good plumber, to vet out a good electrician, to vet out a good general contractor who can do those things. We’ll point you in the right direction or we’ll put our arms around you and take care of you ourselves is a huge piece of our purpose to serve our community well. We say we are AC handyman services. We do all the things that you or your honey can’t want or should not do. And so you can find us. Our our office number is 7706277770. We’re on social media. You can find us on Facebook or LinkedIn at eight H. Hackworth. That’s our handle and our our website is long it’s ace handyman services dot com for slash offices Ford slash Acworth and you can find us there as well we’re excited to help take care of the community.

Lori Kennedy: [00:53:33] Thank you, Andrea.

Andrea Johanson: [00:53:36] So I would say that our slogan at Hidden Acres Animal Sanctuary Therapy and Rescue is Go do good. So find a way in your community to go do good, whatever that looks like for you. Maybe you’re not a goat girl like I am, but there are things that you can do to make a difference in your community. And even the smallest things can have a huge impact. And so believe that you are capable and go do it. So ways that you can help us grow our mission, follow like, and share our social media. Hidden Acres, Animal Sanctuary, Therapy and Rescue. We’ve got the cute little goat logo. You’ll find us black and white. Come join us at our goat yoga. Come do a farm. Stay because we have two Airbnb properties on the farm and one is a two bedroom. One is a one bedroom and 100% of the income from those Airbnb properties goes to fund our mission. And so that’s another great way you can go to Hidden Acres Animal Sanctuary dot org. You can learn more about us, you can give on our website and yeah, just continue to share our message and we’re very grateful and grateful to have this opportunity to join you today as well. So thank you for this.

Lori Kennedy: [00:54:51] Thanks. It’s been so much fun as far as Alpha and Omega Automotive, It’s that time of year to just go get your car looked at and do a winterize on it to make sure that you are all set for the cold season and that your car will start even when it’s cold outside. And we would love to see you there at either our Woodstock location on Bell’s Ferry by the lake or our Marietta location, which is on Highway five over by Hawk and Store Road. And our our website is Alpha Omega Dash Auto. We’re so glad you joined us today. Thank you.

 

Rome Floyd Chamber Small Business Spotlight – Heather Hapner with Heather’s Outdoor Power, Austin Baker with Coosa Valley Financial Group, and Pam Powers-Smith and Amber West with the Chamber preview the upcoming Business Expo

October 14, 2022 by angishields

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Rome Business Radio
Rome Floyd Chamber Small Business Spotlight - Heather Hapner with Heather's Outdoor Power, Austin Baker with Coosa Valley Financial Group, and Pam Powers-Smith and Amber West with the Chamber preview the upcoming Business Expo
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Tagged With: Amber West, Austin Baker, Broad Street, Coosa Valley Financial Group, Hardy on Broad, Hardy Realty, Hardy Realty Studio, Heather Hapner, Heather's Outdoor Power, Pam Powers-Smith, Rome Business Expo, Rome Floyd Business Expo, Rome Floyd Chamber, Rome Floyd Chamber of Commerce, Rome Floyd County Business, Rome Floyd Small Business Spotlight, Rome News Tribune

BRX Pro Tip: Search Engines Other Than Google

October 14, 2022 by angishields

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BRX Pro Tips
BRX Pro Tip: Search Engines Other Than Google
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BRX Pro Tip: Search Engines Other Than Google

Stone Payton: [00:00:00] And we are back with Business RadioX Pro Tips. Lee Kantor and Stone Payton here with you. Lee, we are so blessed in so many ways here at the Business RadioX network, one of which is we get a great deal of traffic. There’s so much in the way of search results from our guests, our hosts, but there are other search engines than Google.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:23] Yeah. I think it’s important – for anybody that’s doing any work on the Internet or using search engines to find things that they’re looking for to know some other resources other than Google. Obviously, Google is a great search engine and YouTube is, you know, a close second when it comes to the most popular search engines.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:40] But an underutilized search engine is also Reddit, and that’s R-E-D-D-I-T, .com. If you put a search term in Google in quotes and then you add the word Reddit, what you’ll get is a Reddit result. And Reddit is a place where more human beings go and argue about things. And it’s a great way to get kind of a human perspective. And obviously, you’re going to get whenever there are humans involved, there’s going to be some people that are going to be, you know, obnoxious and rude and things like that. So, it is kind of the Wild West when it comes to that. But you’re going to get more unfiltered opinions about things.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:15] So, it’s a great way to identify, like if you’re thinking of buying a new product, you put it in the name of that product in Reddit and you’re going to get a bunch of people arguing about the pros and cons of that, or a new restaurant, or a new expert you’re thinking about listening to or hiring. You’re going to get a real person’s opinion about all these things. And obviously, you don’t have to take their advice. But it’s interesting to hear a human being’s opinion rather than that website’s sales content.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:44] And, another search engine for young people that they’re relying on more than Google or YouTube right now is TikTok. So, a lot of young people are going to TikTok for information about what to buy or where to go and things like that. So, if you have a product or service that is geared to young people, then you better be showing up on TikTok.

Lee Kantor: [00:02:06] The bottom line to all of this is that people are looking for things in a lot of different places than they were even just a few years ago, so you have to adjust accordingly.

Speaker and Author Marty Strong

October 13, 2022 by angishields

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High Velocity Radio
Speaker and Author Marty Strong
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Marty-Strong-HeadshotMarty Strong is a retired Navy SEAL officer and combat veteran. He is a consultant, speaker, the author of nine novels, and a practicing CEO.

Marty is also the author of the business leadership books; Be Nimble: How the Creative Navy SEAL Mindset Wins on the Battlefield and in Business and Be Visionary: Strategic Leadership in the Age of Optimization, set for release in December 2022.

Marty’s spent a lifetime meeting challenges head on, succeeding in three professions, anticipating crisis, and leading through chaos.

Connect with Marty on LinkedIn, Facebook and Instagram.

This transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:04] Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios in Atlanta, Georgia. It’s time for High Velocity radio.

Stone Payton: [00:00:15] Welcome to the High Velocity Radio show where we celebrate top performers producing better results in less time. Stone Payton here with you this afternoon. This is going to be a fantastic conversation. Please join me in welcoming to the broadcast consultant, speaker, author and retired Navy SEAL. Mr. Marty Strong. How are you, man?

Marty Strong: [00:00:37] Doing good. How are you doing?

Stone Payton: [00:00:38] Stone? I am doing well. It is such a delight to get a chance to visit with you. I know you’re a prolific author. You’ve got a new book out Be Visionary Strategic Leadership in the Age of Optimization. Tell us about this thing, man. What compelled you to put this one out?

Marty Strong: [00:00:57] Well, I wrote the first book, Being Nimble came out the first of this year that focused on leadership mechanics, mostly in kind of chaotic crisis environments. Obviously, the pandemic created that for everybody, but in normal cases, it’s companies either struggling to survive or companies that are trying to figure out how to scale and grow because they’re extremely successful. So I’ve got a lot of experience in that kind of crucible of leadership. So the first book discussed that, talked about that, and a lot of people that read that book said one of the chapters that discussed strategy and vision and kind of a vision quest for leaders could be its own book. So that kind of turned the light bulb on my head. And so I wrote a book that completely focused on creating a vision and then taking that vision and structuring it, you know, building it into an actual workable business strategy.

Stone Payton: [00:01:49] So writing as many books as you have, do they come together pretty easily for you, or do you still sometimes have a challenge with certain chapters or certain aspects of a book when you’re getting it together?

Marty Strong: [00:02:03] The fiction books come very easy, I’d say up to the first one. I think there’s nine out there now. After the first one, the the flow. I’m a stream of consciousness writer, which essentially means I have kind of a general outline theme. I have characters kind of fleshed out, and then I start seeing the movie in my head and I just try to keep up with it as I’m typing. And the more you do it, the more you practice it, the more you trust your your instincts with all of that. And sometimes the characters take me in weird places that I didn’t plan, but it works out. So that’s cathartic and fun writing. But the the business books are a little bit different, as you might assume. It’s any business book is kind of like a fancy business card, but it doesn’t just have your name and your address on it. It has pretty much all your thoughts and ideas and instincts, stupid, noble or otherwise. So you’re really kind of laying it out there and you really start to understand that when you start to actually write the chapters, you say, okay, what do I think about this? Does that sound stupid to somebody? Should I write this? What’s what I think? But is it stupid to say, you know, there’s a lot of second guessing and and the whole the business book writing process.

Stone Payton: [00:03:10] So one of the topics that you approach is disruption and managing disruption under, you know, different situations, different environments. Can you speak to that a little bit?

Marty Strong: [00:03:21] Yeah, I think I go a little bit more. I think a bolder step. I try to get people to feel comfortable mastering chaos and disruption and taking advantage of it. You know, disruption is part of the universe. You know, I spent a couple of years in high school in Oahu. You know, that that island is beautiful, but that was created by the chaos of volcanic activity and all those islands, all the islands in the Pacific, pretty much. So nature tends to destroy before it creates. And that’s kind of the normal the normal order of things. And human beings and human endeavors really aren’t any different. So it’s kind of an anathema to to think that a business. We’re even an organization that’s not profit motive, so to speak. It’s just going to stay static year after year after year. That would assume that everything around the business, everything that that feeds into the business, the customers that that receive the output or the outcomes of the business are all going to stay exactly the same. Know, you say it’s 1962 forever or it’s 1978 forever. It’s 2014 forever. And you know, that doesn’t make any sense when I say it. But it’s incredible how business managers and business leaders come out of school or mentored and trained in organizations that try to keep the status quo in place. And anything that disrupts the status quo is kind of seen as a bad thing, an enemy, and has to be crushed and mitigated and put everything’s going to be put back in its box. But in reality, that’s just the way it’s going to go. So you better get good at figuring it, figuring out, anticipating it, and then dealing with it and kind of seizing the opportunities which when things get broken up, there’s also opportunities laying all over the place for four leaders.

Stone Payton: [00:05:00] So have you found that when it comes to to leading in crisis, that you really can apply some some structure, some some discipline, some rigor, a process for, okay, this thing is popping up. Here’s how we deal with it. And then here’s how we I don’t know. Course. Correct. If that’s the right phrase.

Marty Strong: [00:05:21] It’s absolutely something that you can apply. One of the things that does convey from leading SEALs is the SEALs and all special operators have a very quick turnaround when they do missions. And the mission is that they’re going to do are not well defined. That’s why they’re special. That’s why they’re called unconventional missions or special operations missions. So what you have to do is you have to constantly plan for the unexpected. You have to plan for Murphy to come in and disrupt whatever it is that your assumptions are. And the way you deal with that is you prepare your team and you prepare your leaders to lead a team in a way that’s very responsive and flexible and adaptable in the moment. Sure, you can put a plan together, but the weather changes. The information about where the bad guys are, changes, all kinds of things change and you have to be able to deal with that, adapt to that. And the way you do is you train everybody to have a mindset that’s comfortable with that, that adaptation, that flexible reaction. You can do the same thing in business, although it’s not done in my experience, I can count maybe one or two companies in the last 20 years that I’ve run into. They actually set the leaders down and essentially go through the equivalent of a business fire drill.

Marty Strong: [00:06:31] What do we do if this happened, what we do if our key vendor failed to supply us with materials or a key service? What do we do? If we lost our number one customer? They never even wargame this stuff out and figure out what the what the outcome would look like. And so they’re all basically. Frozen in time in their mind. So the shock of a change is even that more difficult to handle and deal with. So it’s a trainable, a trainable skill. We used to call it contingency planning. You have standard operating procedures that you teach everybody. If something bad happens, you get into a room, everybody knows what you’re going to do. You’re going to go through an assessment. What’s the information, not what you think it was, what you hope it to be. And then you start pulling all the minds together and you reinvent your reimagine. It may be one division, one product, or maybe the entire company. Same kind of thing that could have been applied at the beginning of the pandemic. But there’s a there’s some kind of a big change, like a pandemic that happens to businesses all over the United States all the time.

Stone Payton: [00:07:32] Okay. So it goes well beyond writing. You’re actually out there consulting. Talk a little bit about the work, because you are in the halls, you’re in the boardroom, you’re talking to these folks. What is that like?

Marty Strong: [00:07:45] It’s a it’s not so much therapy. It’s much, much more like medical practice, I would think. You know, the Hippocratic Oath of of organizational design. And I always kind of throw those together is, first, do no harm. And if you’re a consultant or you’re advisor, mentor, coach, whatever, whatever level of engagement you’re involved in, or in my case, I’m also the CEO of of an organization that has two operating businesses. You have to sit back and listen and gather information and assess whether the people that are telling you the information are using information that’s old, worn out. Steele challenged the source of that information input. Who are they being influenced by internally? There’s a lot of a lot of kind of diagnostic work that you do. You know, it’s not just cut measure twice, cut once. You basically sit there and really try to get your hands around. Do they understand where they are and where they’ve been and where they need to go? And once you figure all that out, the rest of it kind of shakes out based on experience and just, you know, repetitions of just like a doctor, repetitions of being in that situation. It may be a senior leadership issue or challenge. It may be a funding resources issue or challenge. It may be that what they’re doing is just not a good business model anymore. Maybe somebody has trumped them or leapfrogged them in some way and, you know, they go on to a complete gig approach and you’re still in brick and mortar with employees and and you can’t cut your your prices enough to be competitive in the market. And so people aren’t buying your products because they’re too expensive. So if you don’t completely reinvent yourself, you’re going under. So some of these things jump out when you’re talking to leaders and talking to management and companies. So it’s a lot more like being a doctor than anything.

Stone Payton: [00:09:34] Else, huh? So do you ever find that maybe executive leadership either intuitively or because of the discipline of applying their energy and effort to to learning and getting better at this kind of thing? They’re in pretty good shape. The rank and file will literally fall in line, but sometimes that those mid-levels can really, I don’t know a better way to say it, So slow it down, screw it up, misinterpret it. Do you ever find that in organizations that it’s it gets lost in the translation sometimes.

Marty Strong: [00:10:08] Yes. And, you know, I could be kind of flippant and say, well, in SEAL teams, you know, we always everybody has a say. Everybody has a voice. The lowest enlisted guy can input something that becomes one of the major, major drivers of the mission plan. And that’s great. But it’s a small organization. So in big organizations, that middle layer you’re talking about, it can either be a an accelerator for for communications and insights coming from the base of the organization, the people that are actually doing the work in the trenches. Or it can be a blocking force, it can be a filter. And unfortunately, most of the time they’re blocking force or a filter because they’re either have they have senior leaders that don’t really accept new ideas well coming from below. And so they’ve learned over time it’s best not to bring up ideas. So they just kind of stifle all of that or they themselves don’t feel philosophically that anybody below their pay grade has a brain cell that’s functioning when it comes to strategy or competitive insight. And quite frankly, that’s that’s really shortsighted, because if you have 80,000 employees or you have 80 employees, they probably know a heck of a lot of ground truth that they’re out there in the market as buyers.

Marty Strong: [00:11:20] They’re out there in the market listening to people’s opinions about their company. They’re watching people buy other people’s products, the competitors products, and they know where they’re falling down. And they know when people when they have a bad perception in the marketplace. So there’s a lot of input that could be shared, kind of like a hive mentality flowing up from below. It should be galvanized and packaged and then driven up to the senior leaders by the middle layer. But that’s a transformation in communications. And quite frankly, that’s a very mature approach to leading an organization, which isn’t necessarily the way the most senior leaders and middle managers were trained. It’s not their fault. They’re just they came out of the box, whether it’s business, school or their first couple of jobs as managers. And they’re just they’re just practicing and repeating what they saw and they’re emulating that. They don’t know any difference.

Stone Payton: [00:12:08] It just yeah, it just occurs to me that if you don’t crack that code and get that mid-level trained properly, even if you have a very responsive rank and file that mid-level one, train them quicker and you can train them.

Marty Strong: [00:12:21] Right. And if you don’t, then it depends on, you know, like in higher technology organizations, the lower rank and file are extremely valuable, talented people that could migrate to someplace else if they’re not listened to, especially if they think it’s a critical insight. You know, there’s something that they can do with the gee whiz, 5000 that would make it twice as fast or twice as late. And and they’re just being ignored. So they just they just migrate. They get up and they move. Middle management, you can have people that are also open minded, more visionary, more willing to take risks, or at least throw the risks up on a whiteboard and discuss it. And then they get frustrated because senior leadership doesn’t want to hear it. So then they migrate. So one way or the other, those kinds of organizations eventually start squirting out their top talent. What I mean by top talent, I don’t mean resume talent. I’m talking about the kind of talent that can really drive creativity and an explosive growth rate for an organization, you know, creative, visionary, innovative type of minds that are willing to collaborate and work on projects together as opposed to people that love the the the stovepiped kind of organization structure and positional power and authority that they thrive on that. So, yeah, it’s a it’s a rare thing than it should be. But you can change, you can change it. It just takes time when you try to do the entire organization.

Stone Payton: [00:13:40] This must be this got to be very rewarding work. Man. What are you enjoying the most?

Marty Strong: [00:13:49] I think any time you you benefit a client or any time even my my senior direct reports, any time that I come up with an insight that they didn’t think of or that connects the dots for them, then I feel like I’ve delivered something of value. And that’s kind of what drives me. It’s not the money, it’s it’s, it’s influencing in a positive way or positive direction. And I found that the more I’ve been. Alien to the processes that I’m I’m brought into, the better or the bigger the impact I make. Because if you’re objective, it’s an asymmetrical brain coming in to a group of people that are, you know, let’s say they’re sous chefs or something and you know nothing about, you know, being a sous chef, but maybe know a whole lot about what people like in a restaurant. And they aren’t thinking that way. They’re so focused on being chefs that they don’t realize that the rest of the equation is the restaurant ambiance, the size of the restaurant, the speed of the service, you know, all those kinds of things. So even somebody who doesn’t know anything about the high technical component of a business can be a great sounding board, because as a construction general contractor, they may see something or have some skill set or knowledge base that applies that you wouldn’t apply because you just don’t think that way. And I find that’s that’s where the most rewarding part of this is. The more I try to become a generalist and a little bit more objective and try not to become an expert or a student of everything I’m looking at, actually, the more the wisdom and judgment and the life experience as applicable.

Stone Payton: [00:15:27] So as the work with a specific client evolves and this this entire effort matures, is there any analogy at all that can be drawn to, I don’t know, like muscle building? Like, does it does it build up resilience and capacity to respond? And do they do they get better over time? I would think they would with a few wins.

Marty Strong: [00:15:50] It’s. The difficulty. And why it’s easier and say a special operations group or an elite say an elite athletics group. You. You keep the team together for a long enough time that the team gels and the team starts operating in the way that you’re trying to get them to operate, that they’ve optimized their skills and their communications and their their collective body of movement across whatever the playing field is or the business marketplace, etc.. But in most companies, especially bigger companies, there’s quite a revolving door, especially nowadays. So the the lament of people that focus on training internally in corporations is, you know, is it even worth putting any money into anybody? Because every year we’re losing 25% of the people and and we can monetize how much money we put into them and they just walk across the street to our competitor. And so now there’s a dampening of of focus on investing on people and companies across the country because they realize that people are leaving. Well, I already told you why. You know, one reason they leave is because training is nice and training is wonderful to get. But if nobody’s going to listen to your ideas, you’re going to you’re going you’re going to leave. So there’s a lot of things you got to do to make an organization coherent. It’s got to be fun to be a part of. It’s got to be exciting. People got to get sucked into the excitement in a forward looking way. Not just these are the rules. This is the way we’ve always done it, you know, traditions, etc.. And then you have to challenge all those brain cells. You’ve got to challenge middle management and all the technical support. What do you guys thinking? What are you guys seeing? What do you guys what do you guys suggest about this? It’s an engagement approach as opposed to issuing directives. Follow the OR chart and an email interaction which is impersonal and really, really tough to grow morale and culture through an email.

Stone Payton: [00:17:47] Yeah. Say a little more about the structure of this book and what I’m really headed with this is maybe some counsel from you on how we can get the most out of it.

Marty Strong: [00:18:00] So be visionary is set up in a way that kind of walks you through. First. An understanding of your own, I guess, the baggage that you’re carrying around. Some of the stuff that I’ve already alluded to, you are a creature of habit and you are a reflection of of the training or the exposure you’ve had to becoming a leader. And it may it may be flawed, it may not be flawed, it may be perfect based on that static risk mitigation kind of model like I outlined earlier. And and this is kind of holding the mirror up in the first part of the book. What do you do? How are you doing it? And why aren’t you opening your mind? Why are you why did you buy into this KPI approach to running running the world? Do you ever just look out over the horizon and wonder, What are we to look like in 24 months? I talk a lot about that. It’s kind of a self awareness, self evaluation. Steering them to a point where you can’t lead an organization creatively in a visionary way unless you fix yourself first as a leader and then the rest of the book kind of starts walking through. What do you do when you when you have an idea? How do you how do you look out to the horizon? What does it feel like? What are you looking for? What are you looking for? Threats.

Marty Strong: [00:19:19] But you’re also looking for opportunities. Then how do you prepare for it? So the mechanics are in there. Eventually, you get to the point where you’re you have what I call the dream team in the book, the people that are very excited about, you know, crazy ideas and all that. Then you have the other group, kind of the naysayers. If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it group. And instead of saying, Well, they’re just not getting on board, you use them to actually be that hard stone that you that you sharpen the idea against. You basically let the creative people flesh out the vision into an actual strategic concept, and you let the other kind of naysayer people punch holes in it because that’s a good thing, right? It makes it stronger, it makes it more resilient. Then I talk to how you go and you pitch it to the senior people, the the the resource agents that have to fund the crazy idea and how that pitch session goes and all that. So it’s kind of like a primer walking you through. First self, self awareness, self assessment and what you have to kind of how you have to clear your mind to be intellectual and have intellectual humility, to get intellectual curiosity and then to achieve intellectual creativity. That’s kind of the three step process. Once you can do that, then how do you get an organization to do that?

Stone Payton: [00:20:30] All right, man, let’s make sure that we leave our listeners with some coordinates. I want them to be able to get their hands on this book if they’d like to reach out and have a conversation with you or someone on your team. I just want to make it easy for them to get connected. Whatever you feel like is appropriate. Website LinkedIn. I just want to make sure they can get connected and continue to to follow your work.

Marty Strong: [00:20:52] Sure. So Marty Strong Be Nimble is my author website. There’s links to both my novels and being able to my first business book and and be visionary. Be Visionary is available on Amazon right now and presale and then it comes out one January 23. And then you can also just Google Marty Strong. I think the first ten or 11 pages are all my books, articles, podcasts, all kinds of different things about me. So. Those are the ways.

Stone Payton: [00:21:22] All right. Well, Marty, it has been an absolute delight having you on the show this afternoon. It’s been informative, inspiring. I sincerely appreciate you investing the time to visit with us when you’re doing good and important work. And we we sure appreciate you.

Marty Strong: [00:21:40] Well, thanks for having me, Stone.

Stone Payton: [00:21:41] All right. Until next time, this is Stone Payton for our guest today, Marty Strong and everyone here at the Business Radio X family saying we’ll see you in the fast lane.

 

Tagged With: Marty Strong

The Wrap Podcast | Episode 056 | Natural Disasters: Tips for Recovery and How to Prepare for the Future | Warren Averett

October 13, 2022 by angishields

The-Wrap-Ep-27
Birmingham Business Radio
The Wrap Podcast | Episode 056 | Natural Disasters: Tips for Recovery and How to Prepare for the Future | Warren Averett
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Natural disasters happen. Oftentimes, they are sudden with no way to prepare.

After a disaster, business owners are not only faced with property damage but  also with business closures, damage to their employees’ properties and other aspects that make it hard for their business to stay afloat.

But what if you could put a plan in place to keep you and your business sailing smoothly?

If you don’t have a plan, are there steps that you can take to ease your recovery?

In this episode of The Wrap, Warren Averett’s own Mindy Rankin, CPA, CCD, and Tammy McGaughy, CPA/ABV, CFF, CFE, join our hosts to discuss how businesses are impacted by natural disasters, how they can recover and what steps can be taken to prepare and prevent future losses.

After listening to this episode, you’ll be able to:

  • Understand what a casualty loss is, as well as the requirements and who is excluded.
  • Know what a qualified disaster is, how it could benefit your business and the steps you need to take to rally for this special designation.
  • Better understand business interruption claims, and how you could get insurance to help prevent money loss.
  • Prepare for natural disasters by picking out the best insurance policy to help you through.
  • Test your disaster recovery plan to ensure everything is ready in case of another natural disaster.

Additional Resources:

  • Casualty Losses: What You Need to Know to Help Your Business Recover from a Natural Disaster
  • 5 Steps to Make a Business Interruption Claim
  • How to Prepare Your Business for a Natural Disaster
TRANSCRIPT

(00:00:00) Commentators: Hey, I’m Paul Perry. I’m Kim Hartsock, and you are listening to The Wrap, A Warren Averett podcast for business leaders, designed to help you access vital business information and trends when you need it, so you can listen, learn and then get on with your day. Now, let’s get down to business.

(00:00:21) Paul Perry: Hi, everyone, and welcome to The Wrap. Today, we are talking with two of our own experts on how you, as a business owner, can not only recover from a natural disaster, but also prepare for one.

Now, obviously, your first focus is checking on your people, making sure everyone is safe and have what they need to take care of themselves and their loved ones. But in this episode, we’re focusing more on the business side of a natural disaster and the approach you can take to both recover and prepare.

(00:00:45) Kim Hartsock: Yes, and while we record this, we are certainly thinking of our friends down in Florida who have been significantly impacted by Hurricane Ian. We have offices down along the coast in Florida, and we were certainly keeping an eye on that. We are grateful to be able to report that all of our teammates made it out of the hurricane without any significant damage.

We felt like it was time to talk again about what we need to do to recover from a natural disaster. But also, for those of us who haven’t experienced one, it doesn’t mean we won’t experience one. So, it’s always a good idea to revisit this and think about what are some lessons learned and what are some things that we can do to make sure that we’re prepared in the event that we do have to face a natural disaster.

(00:01:34) Paul Perry: Good information to be shared. Today we have two of our own that are going to be joining us. We are welcoming back Mindy Rankin, out of our Panama City office, and Tammy McGaughy. Welcome back and glad to have you with us today.

(00:01:49) Mindy Rankin: Hey, Paul. Hey, Kim. My name is Mindy Rankin, and I’m a Tax Member in the Panama City office. I have been with the firm technically since I started out of college. I started with O’Sullivan Creel, and we merged in with Warren Averett. Then I was with Jay & Moody, and we merged in with Warren Averett. I’m a Warren Averett lifer, technically.

(00:02:11) Tammy McGaughy: Hi everyone. My name is Tammy McGaughy. I am an Audit Member in the Fort Walton Beach office. Like Mindy, I’ve been with the firm for a long time. I work on forensic audits, litigation support, value businesses and a lot of consulting-type work. I’m really happy to be here today.

(00:02:31) Kim Hartsock: Mindy, you were on the podcast the last time that we recorded one of these. Unfortunately, you and your teammates down in our Panama City office had some real experience with this topic with Hurricane Michael, which as we know was about four years ago. We’re glad to have you back and look forward to hearing things that you’ve learned through that experience.

(00:02:53) Mindy Rankin: Yeah, Kim, it’s hard to believe. October 10, 2022, will be four years to the day that Hurricane Michael devastated us in Panama City. It’s crazy, but we are actually still working on rebuilds. We still have some clients that are in litigation over insurance claims. So, it’s really been a very eye-opening experience, and I’m so glad that we’re on the other side.

(00:03:18) Paul Perry: Glad to have both of y’all on the podcast, but at the firm as well. So, let’s talk about some of the first steps businesses should be taking. Let’s define, what is a casualty loss?

(00:03:27) Mindy Rankin: A casualty loss is damage, destruction or loss of property resulting from an event that is sudden, unexpected or unusual. In 2018, you could only take a casualty loss if it was in a Presidential Declared Disaster Area. So, it’s really important when you’ve experienced some kind of event like this, that you get the Presidential Declared Disaster Area. Most major hurricanes and even small hurricanes get this special designation.

So, the first thing is, if you’re not in a Presidential Declared Disaster Area from 2018 to 2025, then you can’t take a casualty loss. So that’s a little bit of a change in the tax law. But really it just has to be a sudden, unexpected event. It can’t be something that’s like built up over time.

Any kind of hurricane, natural disaster, wildfire or any of those activities would put you in a position to possibly claim a casualty loss on your tax return.

(00:04:30) Kim Hartsock: Now, is there any benefit, Mindy, to say you’re in the fringe area? Obviously, there’s direct impact places that would get that presidential declaration pretty immediately.

If you’re in the fringe area and you feel like you should have gotten that presidential declaration, but you haven’t, what should you do? Should you just sit at home and take that? Is there any benefit to writing a letter or making a phone call? What should you do?

(00:04:54) Mindy Rankin: Yeah, so not only do you need the Presidential Declared Disaster Area, but there’s also a special kind of loss that’s called a qualified disaster, and those provide you even bigger benefits.

If you’ll think back to Hurricane Harvey, Irma, some of the California wildfires and even Hurricane Michael, getting the qualified disaster designation…that is huge, because when you get that qualified disaster designation, it opens up employee retention credits for you. There’s a limit on normal casualty losses, that’s 10% of your adjusted gross income. The qualified disaster loss actually removes that limitation, so you don’t have to worry about putting subject to 10% of your income. So, you can just claim it. Then, it also lets you just add it to your standard deduction.

So, if you’re somebody that has a pretty simple tax return, and you just claim the standard deduction every year, you can actually add your casualty loss to the standard deduction.

It’s really a huge benefit to get that designated as a qualified disaster, and you have to wait for Congress to do that. Basically after Hurricane Michael hit, it took them quite a while to give us that designation. So, I would highly recommend that you go ahead and start contacting your local congressman now to rally for that special designation.

Usually, it’s done in December when they’re at the end of the year, and they’re working on the tax laws. They like to pass tax laws in in December. So, a lot of the negotiations and stuff happens in December. Start now. Reach out to your local congressman, state senators and everybody that you can, to try to get that designation.

(00:06:34) Paul Perry: So, Mindy, what kind of things are included in a casualty loss?

(00:06:38) Mindy Rankin: You have to be the owner of the property. You actually have to have some damage, so you have to be out of pocket. The first thing that you would do is: if you’re a homeowner or if you own a building or a business, you would want to contact your insurance company immediately and go ahead and file a claim.

What they do is, they’ll send out an adjuster and the adjuster will examine your property for damage and then make an initial payment to you. A lot of times, it’s really confusing because you get this really thick document that says, “Here’s all your losses.” Then, they take out recoverable depreciation; they take out nonrecoverable depreciation; they take out your deductible.

You end up with a net check, but you really have damage. What happens then is you have to get a contractor or someone to actually do the work. A lot of times, it ends up being more than what the insurance company initially provides you. So, then you would want to start negotiations between your contractor and your insurance company.

There are public adjusters available to people. You know, we had several clients that definitely hired a public adjuster. Now the problem with that is, is they get 10% off the top. If you can do it yourself, it’s always a good idea. But some people just don’t have time or energy to negotiate between the contractor and the insurance company.

I really, really think that the important part is making sure that you know your coverages. There’s coverage A; there’s coverage B; there’s all these different coverages. You have limits on them. Personal property has a limit. The structure itself has a limit. You know, your fences and stuff like that has a limit.

You really have to be familiar with what your insurance company is supposed to cover versus what you actually have damage for.

(00:08:24) Kim Hartsock: Now, Tammy, I know that in addition to the physical property loss and claiming for that, there’s also a loss to your business being closed, right? If there’s damage to your business, and you can’t open. If there’s damage to your employees’ homes, or there’s damage to the road, and no one can get there. No one can come visit.

You know where these places are (where the hurricanes come) are very big tourist destinations, right? If nobody can get there, and there’s no hotels for them to stay in, then there’s a loss of business. Talk to me about that. How does that process work?

(00:09:00) Tammy McGaughy: Absolutely, Kim. You’re absolutely right. People don’t realize that they can get covered for this type of loss. But essentially, it’s called a business interruption loss. What that means is a business is not able to have normal operations.

They’re not able to have sales. They’re not able to pay their employees. They actually lose money during the disaster that has occurred. They’re down for a period of time, but if you have business interruption coverage in your insurance, then it will help replace that lost income during the period that you are shut down.

A lot of people may not know that they have this in their policy, but it will be helpful to recover if you have that coverage.

(00:09:47) Paul Perry: How do you know if you’re covered or not? Are there some tips or quick things that we can let our listeners know that they need to be focusing on?

(00:09:53) Tammy McGaughy: Yeah, absolutely. First, you just want to make sure you review your insurance policy. You know, there is a provision that will say business interruption. There could be some extra expense provisions.

If you are incurring extra expenses during this to try and clean up debris or something like that, there’s provision in your policy for that debris removal. So, your policy is a good indicator of what is actually covered. That’s one thing. Policies are really big and sometimes are difficult to understand.

So, you might want to check with your insurance agent. They should be able to identify exactly what’s covered under part of the comprehensive package, whether it’s physical or a business interruption. Then sometimes, the last thing that people don’t realize is that insurance can penalize you if you are underinsured.

You may have a business interruption provision in your policy, but if you’re underinsured, they’re going to penalize you. If you’re overinsured, they’re going to penalize you. So, there is a co-insurance provision. The insurance agent should be able to guide you as to what you know and what coverage you have.

Sometimes, people want to lessen their premiums throughout the period of time, without really realizing the effect that that could have when you experience a disaster. You know, from that type of event.

(00:11:33) Mindy Rankin: Tammy, just to piggyback on that, we had several clients during Hurricane Michael that thought that they had wind coverage. It turns out that they had a lot of buildings in downtown Panama City, and it just turned out that they did not at all have wind coverage. So, they were devastated. I mean, there was so much damage. They were just under the impression all along and through all these years that they had the coverage and when they confronted the insurance company, they told them that several years back they’d dropped the wind coverage.

You have to be very careful when you’re reviewing those packets. I know that they come, and they’re huge packets that are hard to read, but you really just need to get an expert in to review that for you.

(00:12:18) Kim Hartsock: Yeah, it seems like that’s one of those things that we should do every year is just have someone review our policy.

Ask us if any situations have changed and make sure they understand what we need and that we’re covered with not only the right policy but at the right amounts. As Tammy mentioned, we could get penalized if we’re under or over. You wouldn’t expect things to stay the same year after year. So, if you haven’t done that in several years…now is probably a good time to meet with someone and have them review your policy.

(00:12:51) Commentators: Want to receive a monthly newsletter with The Wrap topics? Head on over to warrenaverett.com/thewrap and subscribe to our email list to have it delivered right to your inbox. Now back to the show.

(00:13:02) Mindy Rankin: If you’re listening to this, and you’ve just been through a hurricane, I just want to tell you that it is going to be a difficult process, like you will be passed on to so many adjusters.

Just for my personal claim, there were probably at least six or seven people that I talked to over time. You have to retell your story over and over again. You just have to stay on top of making sure that you’re getting reimbursed for what your coverage is. Tammy has a good story about a business interruption claim. One of our clients, the insurance company sent the estimate to them where they did the calculations and said, “Here’s what we think that you should be given.” It was a dentist. When Tammy reviewed the claim, it was out of whack. Tammy, do you want to tell that story?

(00:13:48) Tammy McGaughy: Well, yes. It was the insurance adjustor or the insurance company when they were evaluating production. So, one of the things that we look at is: when we’re trying to calculate what the business interruption is, we’re looking at what’s called a “But For” analysis.

They’re looking at what does the period look like before the storm, versus what does the period look like after the storm? In this specific case, their production was impacted by one of the dentists that was on maternity leave, and so they were making it seem like the production loss was a lot less than what it really was.

Once we pointed that out to them, they were able to claim more in the business interruption piece because of the correction of that production. So, it’s really important to understand the financial information that they’re looking for and to really analyze what they’re looking at.

(00:14:48) Because it is a “But For” analysis, we’re always looking at what position were you in prior to the disaster, and then compare that to the position you ended up in. So, the delta between that is really the business interruption piece that you get reimbursed for.

You know, if you are trying to figure out what information that you need for a business interruption calculation, I’ll just highlight some of those things. Financial information obviously is really, really important. Some reports that we looked at as we’re reviewing and/or calculating some business interruption claims are looking at production reports, monthly profit and loss reports, or it could be wage reports.

Depending on your policy and the length that you were down, you may need to look at that from a daily perspective. It could be a monthly perspective or even an annual perspective. So, the financial information is really important. As you’re going through anything that you can identify as far as extra expenses that you have above and beyond your normal operations, you may be covered under provision.

Making sure that you identify those expenses is good as well. One last thing is the insurance company will want to make sure that you identify any mitigating activities that you’re doing to try and minimize the loss. They will take that into consideration when you’re determining your loss if you have any mitigation.

Say you have some revenues that you normally wouldn’t have had to try and help mitigate that loss. That will go into consideration on the over amount that you’ll end up getting from your insurance claim.

If you think about a “But for”, what were you doing before? How were you doing operationally? What was your net income? What did that look like before the storm or disaster? What does that look like now? That’s pretty much what your business interruption piece would look like.

(00:17:02) Kim Hartsock: This is all really helpful to know. I think, you know, Mindy, you’ve dealt with so many business owners going through this with Hurricane Michael, and what should I know now as it relates to casualty loss.

Are there any words of advice that you would give me? Is there anything that you would say, if I’m right in the thick of this, dealing with it? Or if I’m somebody that’s saying that I’m really grateful that I dodged a bullet, and I don’t have to deal with this, but it’s something that I need to know in the future. What would you say to the business owner that’s listening?

(00:17:34) Mindy Rankin: Yeah, I mean, we talked a lot about insurance, but just another thing is disaster recovery preparation. So, if you have computer systems, and your files are out there, and your building is damaged, and your servers are flooded, that’s one of the things that some of our clients were not prepared for.

One of the things that’s important is, and something that you don’t think about: Did I take a backup home? You know, when I left, when I’m preparing for a hurricane, did I make a backup and just take it home with me, put it in my pocket? You know, anything that you can do to make sure that if you get to your office, and it’s completely wrecked, you have got to be able to get back into your computer systems and get them back up pretty quickly.

There are actually insurance policies that help with that from a technology standpoint. We did have a client that had gone through all of those trainings and had done disaster backup plans. The one thing that got them was that that nobody thought about the location of their backups. It was expected to be run on a generator.

The generator actually required natural gas, and it was hooked up to the city’s natural gas line. Well, the city shut down the natural gas. So, they had no access for days to their data, and it was a pretty big place that really needed access to that data. That was just one small hiccup. I mean, they had done tons of planning, and you know, it’s just one thing you don’t think about.

(00:19:06) Paul Perry: That’s some good information, Mindy. What I really say to folks a lot in that space, when we talk to them, is you need a backup of the backup of the backup, right? You need to have two or three things that you’re prepared for. You talked about planning. I think that a lot of companies will put together a disaster recovery plan, and they’ll say, “This is how we’re going to do it.”

(00:19:27) But if you test that…if you don’t even do a tabletop exercise. Let’s sit around a table for three hours, let’s talk about and think of every possible issue that may come up, and let’s walk through it. Get everybody at the table. There may be people thinking about things that others aren’t.

You want to know, “Hey, what happens if natural gas is cut off? How would we handle that?” That may come up during that discussion that would’ve been documented somewhere. But yeah, definitely something important there.

Mindy, Tammy, this has been really good information for the folks listening to this. You know, here on The Wrap, we like to wrap it up in 60 seconds. What is it you want to leave the listeners with? Tammy, we’ll start with you.

(00:20:16) Tammy McGaughy: Oh, sure Paul. Thank you. If you’re unsure what to do, and you want to have someone calculate a business interruption claim, go reach out to an advisor. You know, someone can either help prepare a claim for you or even review a claim. As we mentioned before in reviewing a claim, you have a fresh set of eyes, and there may be something that somebody hasn’t considered.

Just reach out to an advisor. I know Warren Averett has done that type of work in the past, but just reach out to your advisor and try to get some input from them.

(00:20:49) Mindy Rankin: I think that the biggest thing from a tax perspective is documentation. There’s going to be a lot of work that is going to go into rebuilding property, rebuilding your house and stuff like that. There are a lot of people that show up in a disaster area that want to be paid in cash, and they don’t have proper documentation. I can assure you that when it’s time to claim your casualty loss or even to submit to your insurance company, you definitely are going to need documentation.

Even if you use someone that wants to be paid in cash, or they’re just random people that are helping you clean up, just get something from them like their business card or some kind of documentation so that you have proof. Because, you know, to be able to claim the loss on your tax return and get money back, you definitely have to have the actual repairs, receipts and everything to get reimbursed from your insurance company.

(00:21:45) Kim Hartsock: Just a couple of things before we wrap up… Mindy, I know that the IRS did just give an extension. Could you tell our listeners where to go to see if there are any extensions on any reporting that they need to do, or where should they check to make sure that they know the latest and greatest of filing deadlines and things like that?

(00:22:05) Mindy Rankin: Yeah, the IRS just recently released that all residents of Florida qualify for Hurricane Ian Tax Relief. I believe, yesterday they actually added North Carolina and South Carolina. So, basically if you had a tax deadline in Florida between September 23 and February 15, 2023, you are extended until February 15, 2023.

Any filing deadlines that were going to be due on October 17, all of that was postponed. You do have some time to gather your paperwork and get all that stuff together before you need to file.

(00:22:50) Kim Hartsock: They can always just check irs.gov for any latest announcements there and also our website. We typically post all of those things there as well, which is warrenaverett.com. So, Mindy and Tammy, thank you so much for being with us today. I know that you both are very busy right now, and we appreciate you taking time to talk to our listeners.

(00:23:11) Mindy Rankin and Tammy McGaughy: It’s great to talk with you again. We hope to see you soon. Thanks.

(00:23:15) Commentators: And that’s a wrap. If you’re enjoying the podcast, please leave a review on your streaming platform. To check out more episodes, subscribe to the podcast series or make a suggestion of other topics you want to hear, visit us at warrenaverett.com/thewrap.

Tagged With: Natural Disasters, Prepare for the Future

WBENC 2022: Anita Davis with Praxis Strategic Solutions

October 12, 2022 by angishields

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Intro: [00:00:04] Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios in Atlanta, Georgia, it’s time for GWBC Radio’s Open for Business. Now, here’s your host.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:18] Lee Kantor here, broadcasting live from WBENC National Conference 2022. And we’re inside the GWBC booth, booth 1812 if you want to stop by and see us. Right now, we have a great guest, Anita Davis, President, Chief Funding Matchmaker with Praxis Strategic Solutions. Welcome, Anita.

Anita Davis: [00:00:38] Thank you so much for having me. I’m excited to be here.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:40] So, how’d I do with the name? You challenged me.

Anita Davis: [00:00:43] I did. I did. Don’t get tongue-tied, so say it slow. You did excellent.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:47] Alright. Well, tell us a little bit about Praxis. How are you serving folks?

Anita Davis: [00:00:51] So, I serve clients that are ready to scale and grow their companies. I work with clients that need capital to be able to fund the growth of their business strategic growth.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:04] So, there’s one or two people out there that probably need capital. Does anybody say, no, I have enough capital, I don’t need anymore?

Anita Davis: [00:01:11] You’d be surprised, some people like to grow organically, and I think organic growth is fine if you want to grow slowly, but I believe that women business owners, in particular, need to consider rethinking growth and to think about growing through acquisitions or maybe growing through a expansion of territory, buying a competitor, doing things like that that make them accelerate their growth. And here at the conference, we’re focusing on corporate contracts. And so, they really do need to have some funding secured to be able to execute on those contracts.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:50] So, let’s think about this from a strategic standpoint. I’m a small business owner. I always thought, oh, I’m going to just grow organically. You’re saying think bigger than that, because maybe I’m aiming too low, maybe there’s a lot of opportunity out there if I just kind of open my eyes to what’s around me, talk about that conversation you’re having with that person who hadn’t even considered strategic growth and using capital to grow in that manner.

Anita Davis: [00:02:13] Those are great questions, and that conversation is my favorite conversation to have with clients. I want you to rethink the way you think about debt. In most cases, most companies think, oh, debt is bad, and debt can be a dirty word for some people if you’re not a smart business owner. But these women here at WBENC, they are brilliant business owners, and they have thought about how to scale their companies, and that’s why they’re looking at corporate contracts, but you do need to have resources available to you to fund that growth.

Anita Davis: [00:02:49] And so, sometimes, you may need to consider, what would it be like if I bought another company that can give me those complementary services or solutions that a corporate officer may be looking for, but I don’t have in-house right now, and that can allow you to accelerate your growth, versus someone who’s saying that, okay, this year, I’m going to grow 5% year over year, it may not enable you to execute on a corporate contract.

Anita Davis: [00:03:20] And some clients don’t really even think about, well, what would it be like if I strategically purchased another company and made an acquisition? What would it be like if my competitor is thinking about retiring, because they’re in that silver tsunami and they haven’t even thought about it, but they’re ready to exit. And then, if you position yourself with the right capital, then you might be able to make a strategic acquisition, buy a new territory, get into a new market. So, those are the solutions that Praxis will help a client work through.

Lee Kantor: [00:03:55] So, your clients, what could they be doing today to make them a perfect fit for you tomorrow? What are some of the activities they have to do to kind of clean up their books, maybe to show that, hey, you can trust me with this capital, I’ll use it wisely?

Anita Davis: [00:04:11] What a great segue, because at the conference, we have a solution called our financial funding assessment. And assessment basically walks the client through, are you ready for funding now? Are you close, but not quite there, or are you not ready for funding? And then, we will—through either one of those scenarios, we can walk a client through the process of positioning their company for funding. So, we help you either with some education, some financial literacy education, some strategies, some tools in our tool kit, so we offer a resource kit. So, if you come by booth 2312 here at the conference, then you can talk with our team about strategic growth.

Lee Kantor: [00:05:04] And talk about the show for a second. Is this the first WBENC show for you or you’ve been coming to these for a while?

Anita Davis: [00:05:10] So, I actually launched my business at WBENC in 2016, didn’t know what I was doing. I just used to be a banker, and I’m like, oh, these people must need money. Yeah, this must be my jackpot. Okay. Life doesn’t work that way. And so, I have come to—I think this is my fourth or fifth conference, and I’m on the host committee with Roz Lewis. And so, the host committee, we basically are here to help anybody who is from out of town and sponsoring this event, but also to make sure that they know what’s happening here in Atlanta.

Lee Kantor: [00:05:44] And then, for folks that are from out of town, how would you kind of attack the show? And maybe around town, what are some things you’d make sure to see?

Anita Davis: [00:05:55] I think at the show, you need to be prepared for who you want to meet. You can’t meet everybody, and everybody is not necessarily a fit for your company, even though they may have a big corporate name. So, you really need to decide, do you have the solutions that the corporations are looking for and have a strategic plan on how you’re going to convey that in a brief nanosecond, because that’s about all the time you’re going to get?

Anita Davis: [00:05:55] And when you do that, then that’s the best strategy for being prepared to be able to address what the conference is going to mean to you. And also, make a plan to meet all of these other brilliant business women owners around here. So, I tell people, it’s the 25th anniversary, make a plan to meet 25 people a day. If it’s not 25 people a day or that’s too aggressive for you, but make a plan for the whole conference to meet at least 25 people. Just go with the theme.

Lee Kantor: [00:06:55] Yeah, it’s right there for you. So, now, talk about GWBC. For women who haven’t joined yet, tell them why they should join.

Anita Davis: [00:07:04] I would tell you that this whole organization here, GWBC, from Roz, who is the president, all the way down to her team, the certifying team, they all want us to be successful. And I’ve had nothing but really great support from the organization and the people in it. They know me. I know them. And they want to see us grow. And if you’re in business here in Atlanta, you need to join GWBC. I just brought somebody over here with me just now to introduce her, because she wasn’t certified. I said, let’s go over here and let’s meet the team.

Lee Kantor: [00:07:40] That’s right. It’s one of those things. There are a lot of women businesses out there that haven’t taken the time to be certified. Talk to that. That’s an investment worth making. It is strategic solution.

Anita Davis: [00:07:52] It is a great investment. It was hard because I’m in the financing business, and I’m like, maybe these corporations don’t need me, but I’ve strategically figured out how to be able to provide solutions for them, for their suppliers that are in their supply chain that need—that might be creating some financial risk to the supply chain. So, you really just need to be able to think through, how can you serve the client? And it’s really about the client. With GWBC, they help you move along that track to be able to offer solutions for corporate, and then tell you how to make that strategy work for you.

Lee Kantor: [00:08:32] So, if somebody wants to get ahold of you, learn more about Praxis, what’s the website?

Anita Davis: [00:08:37] The website is, it’s a brand new fancy website, you guys, but it’s under Praxstra, P as in Paul-R as in Robert-A-X as in Sam-S-T-R-A. So, we, praxstra.com. If you go to praxstra.com, it’s a little bit unique, then you can have access to our site and see what we have to offer you as a business owner.

Lee Kantor: [00:09:05] Well, Anita, thank you so much for sharing your story, doing important work. We appreciate you.

Anita Davis: [00:09:09] Thank you very much for having me. It’s a pleasure to be here.

Lee Kantor: [00:09:12] Alright. This is Lee Kantor, broadcasting live from 2022 WBENC National Conference, live from the GWBC booth, booth 1812. We’ll be back in a few.


About WBENC

The Women’s Business Enterprise National Council (WBENC) is a leading non-profit organization dedicated to helping women-owned businesses thrive.WBENC-Logo

We believe diversity promotes innovation, opens doors, and creates partnerships that fuel the economy. That’s why we not only provide the most relied upon certification standard for women-owned businesses, but we also offer the tools to help them succeed.

About GWBC

The Greater Women’s Business Council (GWBC®) is at the forefront of redefining women business enterprises (WBEs). An increasing focus on supplier diversity means major corporations are viewing our WBEs as innovative, flexible and competitive solutions. The number of women-owned businesses is rising to reflect an increasingly diverse consumer base of women making a majority of buying decision for herself, her family and her business. GWBC-Logo

GWBC® has partnered with dozens of major companies who are committed to providing a sustainable foundation through our guiding principles to bring education, training and the standardization of national certification to women businesses in Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina.

Tagged With: Praxis Strategic Solutions

BRX Pro Tip: Are You a Jerk?

October 12, 2022 by angishields

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BRX Pro Tip: Are You a Jerk?
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BRX Pro Tip: Are You a Jerk?

Stone Payton: [00:00:00] Welcome back to Business RadioX Pro Tips. Stone Payton and Lee Kantor here with you. Lee, here’s a fun question, or you know what? Maybe it’s not so fun. But it’s one of those self-awareness exercises that perhaps we should all engage in. The question is, Are you a jerk?

Lee Kantor: [00:00:16] Yeah. Here’s the test. If you met a jerk today, you should ignore them because, you know, that’s just part of life. But if you find yourself meeting a jerk every single day, then guess what? You might be the jerk. It might be you that’s the problem.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:35] So, in life, I find that people don’t realize that it isn’t as hard as they make it seem. And sometimes you do meet somebody who’s a jerk. But if it’s happening every day or it’s happening lots and lots, and every day you’re telling somebody about some jerky thing that has happened, then it could be you. It could be the way that you’re approaching things.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:58] So, if things are frustrating you every single day, this might be a you problem, not a somebody else problem. So, start looking at yourself a little more introspectively to see where you might be sabotaging yourself. There aren’t jerks out there every day trying to mess with you and ruin your day. I promise you, most people are going about their business doing the best they can. So, if you’re meeting people every single day that are frustrating you, that are making you angry, the problem might be you.

Nisha Lehmann with Confidential Conversations

October 12, 2022 by angishields

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Confidential-Conversations-logoNisha Lehmann with Confidential Conversations does UX Design by day, and is a Mental Health advocate by night.

Helping people find communities around mental health issues by facilitating anonymous online peer led support groups.

Confidential Conversations is an app that offers peer led online support groups for a wide array of mental health issues that is anonymous, affordable and available.

Follow Confidential Conversations on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

This transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:04] Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios in Atlanta, Georgia. It’s time for High Velocity radio.

Stone Payton: [00:00:15] Welcome to the high velocity radio show where we celebrate top performers producing better results in less time. Stone Payton here with you. This is going to be a fantastic conversation. Please join me in welcoming to the broadcast with confidential conversations. Ms.. Nisha Lehmann How are you?

Nisha Lehmann: [00:00:37] I’m great, thanks for having me.

Stone Payton: [00:00:39] Stone Oh, I have really been looking forward to this discussion and I think the topic of the day, the broad stroke is, is mental health. But maybe share with our listeners a little bit about mission purpose. What are you out there trying to do for people.

Nisha Lehmann: [00:00:57] Trying to save the world? No. Well, kind of. Basically, this app stemmed from a very dark period in my own life. I think anyone that has struggled with mental health issues can relate to feeling alone, isolated, feeling like you have no place to turn. And and even if you do want to talk to someone about your problems, you know, the closest people to you, they can’t sympathize or understand you the right way or the same way because they’re not experiencing what you’re experiencing. And I think the realization, the kind of aha moment came for me when I really needed to connect with people who were going through the same thing, who are going through depression or anxiety or grief or whatever it is, right? Because those people, you already have a baseline for the conversation. You don’t have to explain or justify or try to wish your feelings away or something. I mean, when talking to people that are experiencing what you’re experiencing, you can be more raw, be more authentic, and I think get get more concrete steps in terms of help. And so what I really wanted to accomplish with this app was to be able to facilitate online support groups that are completely anonymous, because that for me was incredibly important. I still, unfortunately, really believe in the stigma around mental health. I think it’s there for a lot of mental health issues, although it’s it’s dying down for some.

Nisha Lehmann: [00:02:30] But I think it’s it’s it’s a big inhibitor in talking about mental health. And so having a place where you can go that, you know, is a safe space that is completely anonymous, that it’s private. Now, we cannot nor will we ever collect PII data about our customers or about our users, because this is this is your own it’s your own private issue. And we absolutely respect that. But being able to connect with others who are experiencing the same thing you are and hopefully be able to walk away a little bit more educated a little bit more, or at least having a bit of the pressure relieved on you that you’ve at least talked to someone, You’ve gotten some ideas, maybe some routines, things to try that a therapist would never be able to tell you, because it’s not as if every therapist has gone through what you’re going through as well. So I think I think there’s an incredible potential for success in this space. And honestly, the goal for me was to create it for others like me who were struggling at that time, who were struggling and continue to struggle, I would say, with with mental health related issues in a in a small effort or small steps toward recovery.

Stone Payton: [00:03:39] So have you observed any interesting dynamics or shifts with with regard to pre and post pandemic?

Nisha Lehmann: [00:03:50] For sure, I think the pandemic well, I don’t have to say this. Probably the pandemic did a number on all of us, right? Yeah, I think isolation and loneliness were never really classified as mental health issues until after the pandemic. But of course, if you can’t leave your house or you have to distance from people, that really impacts your ability to be social, your ability to really connect with others. So for sure, pre, pre and post pandemic, you saw a lot of issues related to work, specifically burnout, stress, panic attacks, high anxiety. I mean, but that was probably existing pre-pandemic as well. But you really saw it come to a head post-pandemic when people started leaving their jobs in the great resignation. They were not going to tolerate the work life balance. They were not going to go back to how things were, you know, and if it means making less money, but being able to shut off your computer at five and spend time with your family or spend time working on your passion projects, that became more important. And I think that’s an incredible step for people and for employers to also learn that actually mental health is is is a real issue when it comes to employees in the workforce. Beyond that, I think. There are a number of mental health issues that really came to the forefront. You know, grief. It’s it’s I mean, I never thought of it myself as a mental health issue. For me, it’s it’s something that you will experience at some point in your life.

Nisha Lehmann: [00:05:15] Everyone will experience grief because at some point you will lose someone close to you. And you know, what does that feel like and how can you cope with that and how differently people cope with That is what I found so interesting. But that’s a big one post-pandemic, because of course we all know someone who we either lost someone ourselves in the COVID pandemic or we know someone who experienced loss during the COVID pandemic. So, I mean, it wasn’t a small number of people that died during this pandemic. So, I mean, I think grief was a really big one as well. And also the ability to shut off the the ability to be able to have addictions that are completely unorthodox now in addiction to your screen, addiction to mobile phones, addiction to social media, and the kind of also the meanings and the stigma that comes around being attached to the number of followers you have, the number of likes you get on a particular post. I think all of these are only going to proliferate in the future. And so I think it’s just we have to be cognizant and mindful of the fact that social media is a platform, but it’s not an integral really part of our lives and we need to be able to turn it off and live our lives. And so I think maybe those would be some of the takeaways. Pre post.

Stone Payton: [00:06:30] Yeah, well said. You mentioned employers and awareness. Are there some actions employers, mid-level managers inside larger organizations can take or or things that they should be reading or keeping in in mind to to help this?

Nisha Lehmann: [00:06:51] I’m so glad you brought this up. It was it’s such a fantastic segway. So I actually just wrote a piece of thought leadership specifically about this, about what employers can do when it comes to mental health, what they should be doing. A lot of studies have been released specifically on the ROI of investing into your, investing into mental health, investing into resources for mental health. I think the biggest thing that managers or people in in, let’s say, positions of power can do is try to stem cultural cultural shift in the organization, because that actually has a very, very low monetary cost. But if you can make the workplace a safe place for people to be able to talk about what they’re feeling without feeling like there’s retribution to that action, I know I know a lot of people in large and large consulting firms, in large enterprises, they feel like they can’t talk about mental health because if their manager finds out that they have depression or if their manager finds out that they are struggling with something, then they think it will impact negatively their career. And so being able to really foster a work environment that is that where it’s okay to talk about these things and where managers can kind of recognize when when one of their employees or when one of their team members is is going through a mental health problem, I think is also a huge a huge step in the right direction. So if you want to know more information about this, please visit the website config convos and you’ll find some thought leadership there on some ideas about this.

Stone Payton: [00:08:25] So this app you were describing, I’m operating under the impression that it provides anonymity, but the structure in I’d like to get that validated, but the structure is like these peer led kind of it’s sort of a peer to peer thing isn’t it.

Nisha Lehmann: [00:08:41] Exactly. Yeah. It’s peer led online support groups. Exactly. And it’s an interesting point you bring up because, you know, these discussions are not really facilitated by any moderator or, you know, anyone else. One, because we want to protect the privacy of the people in the group for sure. I mean, it doesn’t make sense to have a moderator that isn’t experiencing the same things that you are just listening to the conversation. But we wanted it to be a bit more free flowing as well because it can be difficult to talk through these things. And I think if there’s a moderator pushing you to talk about these things, the conversation becomes kind of fake. It becomes a bit superficial. People have to be able to on their own terms as they become comfortable with the dynamic of the group, as they become comfortable within within their the frame of their own mental health issue, or as they become become more aware or they recognize and aware they are on the mental health spectrum, they need to be able to talk about these things on their own. And I know for sure being a bit more introverted myself, it was very hard for me to do this. And the first many in the first couple of sessions, I was just listening. I was just listening to what other people were experiencing, what other people were going through, smiling and nodding and trying to kind of be brave to talk about this myself, because it can be a huge step for people. Who really come in a way, come clean, write, admit that they have a problem and talk about it out loud with others. It’s it’s a big step and it can’t be pushed or forced in any way. And so we want people to get there on their own terms. And that’s why we kind of wanted the conversation to be a bit more free flowing and unstructured. And from there, you know, we take into consideration what we do with that in the next steps.

Stone Payton: [00:10:28] So it’s one thing to build an app, clearly another to get a critical mass of people utilizing it in returning their learning back to the organization so you can continue to improve and and enhance it. How did you crack that code?

Nisha Lehmann: [00:10:47] It’s a work in progress. It’s definitely not complete for sure, and I think we don’t really have that many users. And I will say very bluntly from the beginning, you know, the goal of launching this app was not to have 5 million users or even 500,000 users. This app is designed for the people who need it. It’s designed for people who want to explore on their own terms, their own mental health, or they can’t afford a therapist for whatever reason. And they want to still get proactive about doing something in terms of their mental health. And so I think it’s not for everyone to be sure, but the people that use it, I believe, find value in it because they’re using it for their own intents and purposes. And they’re they’re exchanging with each other. They’re trying to learn from each other. And whatever learnings we can get because we cannot be involved with every single group, right? So we can only take the learnings from the groups that we’re actually in because we designed this selfishly, we designed this app also for us for, for the like for, for me and my team. We, we needed this outlet ourselves too, because we, we all found ourselves kind of struggling with mental health issues around the same time. And so we can bring feedback about app performance and how to improve things and how to make this more fruitful for our users. And we’ve already gotten a lot of really good ideas and suggestions from users that just interact directly with us through the website or through through the app itself. But I think there’s a lot more to do.

Nisha Lehmann: [00:12:30] I mean, what I will say about the app is that it’s pretty barebones. It’s not very fancy. It’s much more substance over style, I would say. So the UX is it definitely can be improved. I would say it’s definitely not perfect, but the point of this app was to get it out there as soon as possible. So we had to do a lot of prioritization in terms of figuring out what functionality did we really like was must have in the app and what could wait. And so for us being able to facilitate the conversations, being able to do it in a way that’s private, being able to make the app accessible and affordable to those people who simply can’t afford a therapist or professional help, those are really the key drivers to get this out the door. And, you know, we take we take what we can and we definitely want to do a lot more with it. So be looking out for the next version of this where we integrate, we integrate some multimedia, There’s some incredible games that we’re that we’re thinking about, including into a like a digital library, because I think we I also truly believe that games are the future when it comes to mental health treatment and mental health sourcing. So being able to really experience an immersive and immersive multimedia content that where the avatar actually struggles with a mental health issue, but it’s not some kind of caricature of the mental health issue. That for me is really the next step in terms of trying to make this a bit more progressive and a bit more intuitive for our users.

Stone Payton: [00:14:04] Well, and I think you’re up to the task because you’re in UX design by your daydream, right?

Nisha Lehmann: [00:14:11] Yeah, Yeah, exactly. That’s that’s what I do every day. Yep. So, I mean, it’s, it’s definitely, I mean, shame on me that the UX is not brilliant on the first go around. But like I said, we were in a rush. And if you want the UK to be very, very, very good, then it takes a long time to get that right. And my, my clients and myself will tell you that it’s a it takes a while to do this and there’s always improvements and iterations that come later. So I think the beautiful thing about app development is that you can iterate on it so you can get out one kind of almost proof of concept out the door and then build on it and improve things and add features granularly rather than having to have a full blown new app that’s completely redesigned or something. So that’s, that’s the strategy that we’re using and hopefully you’ll see some changes coming up with it.

Stone Payton: [00:15:02] I’m an entrepreneur. So many of our listeners and our clients at Business RadioX are entrepreneurs. Do you find that there are mental health? I don’t know what the right word is issues, topics, dynamics that are unique or more prevalent in the entrepreneurial community. Can you speak to that a little bit?

Nisha Lehmann: [00:15:28] That’s an interesting question. I don’t know if it’s specific to entrepreneurs, but there’s definitely a subset of mental health issues that are specific to high stress jobs. What what people don’t often think about is having financial duress, which I think every entrepreneur has experienced at some point that has incredible ramifications on your mental health, you know, because you’re constantly having to deal with the pressures of. I want to follow this dream and I want to be able to give back something. But I also need to pay the bills. You know, I’ve got I’ve got financial obligations in my house to my family, to my kids, whatever. And that can cause a lot of stress, which, of course, is a well-established mental health issue. So there are definitely a few that I can think of that that definitely lean more toward the entrepreneurial space. You know, I mean, I don’t want to make light of this too much, but also, you know, VC funding and things like that typically goes more to men than it does to women in this space as well. And so I think there’s an inherent gender bias that exists in the entrepreneurial space as well, where where if you’re competing directly with a man and you have the same idea, it’s unlikely that you would get funded simply because of your your sex. And so there’s also these things to take into consideration as well. No, specifically for women entrepreneurs, I think that’s why there are so many organizations specifically devoted to promoting female entrepreneurship, because this is a recognized problem, and I hope it’s changing given all of the the movements we’ve had within, you know, female, you know, female rights and pay parity for women and things like this. But I hope it’s moving in the right direction and I hope this becomes a thing of the past soon.

Stone Payton: [00:17:20] Now, am I remembering my notes correctly that you have a radio show of your own, don’t you?

Nisha Lehmann: [00:17:27] I don’t know. That’s not me. Okay, I don’t. I don’t have time for a radio show and maintenance.

Stone Payton: [00:17:36] See me after class. We’ll get you set up.

Nisha Lehmann: [00:17:38] So. Fantastic. Yeah. You know, I mean, I think it would be an interesting. I mean, the number of people that have said, you know, you should do a podcast of your own. It’s more than a handful, but. What? What people don’t tell you is how time consuming it is. It is an incredible I mean, I think you, you and your team, they do an amazing job because the amount of research that goes into these episodes and being able to ask tailored questions specifically around particular topics, it’s not easy. And yeah, between between a full time job and the app and other things. No, there hasn’t been enough time to to add a podcast on top of that, but maybe one day in the future.

Stone Payton: [00:18:18] Yeah, maybe. And I will tell you, it’s a lot of fun. And for me personally, there’s there’s just so much I don’t know, the questions come pretty easily so maybe fun is the that’s okay.

Nisha Lehmann: [00:18:32] So maybe then it is right for me because I don’t know that much either. So maybe then it’s okay.

Stone Payton: [00:18:39] So in your career and in in this pursuit, have you had the benefit of a mentor or to to help you navigate some of this terrain, or is it pretty much been been you?

Nisha Lehmann: [00:18:55] Well, in terms of the app development itself and just generally in my career, yes, I think it’s incredibly important that women help other women, especially in the tech field, because there’s it’s sounds so cliche to say it, but it’s still true. There are so few of us actually working in the tech field and trying to do things in the digital space. That mentorship becomes incredibly important. And one of the things I actually am thinking about is to is, you know, what what impact does this have on your mental health, people who have mentors versus the people who don’t? Hmm. But in the mental health space, it’s hard it’s hard to find this. You know, it’s hard to find. I mean, I’m thinking about the equivalent of like a sponsor or something like this. I think it’s I think it’s hard to find it because so many people are just kind of unsure about where they sit when it comes to having good mental health versus poor mental health. And it’s what I think people need to realize is, is that it’s not binary. It’s a spectrum. You know, you can have you can be in the 3% of individuals that have absolutely no mental health problem. But that’s pretty rare. Everyone is struggling with something and it’s okay to struggle with something. The problem is when that struggle kind of overtakes you and then you can’t get the help that you need for whatever reason. Whether that help is a therapist or an online support group or whatever it might be. Right. And so honestly, the point of this app was really just to give people another option. I think in the mental health space specifically, it’s it’s really kind of binary. It’s like you have a mental health problem or you don’t.

Nisha Lehmann: [00:20:33] And if you do, you see a therapist and that’s really it. And if you can’t afford a therapist or you, there isn’t one you know that you like or it’s not the right thing for you. There aren’t really a lot of other options other than to ignore the mental health problem. And we all know what happens when you do that. So hopefully this app will just allow people another choice where they say, okay, well, maybe I’m fine now, but maybe one day, you know, I may need to talk to someone and not a professional, but just someone like me, someone struggling with with issues like me. And I think it’s particularly important when you talk about Gen Z and you talk about Gen Alpha and the next generation’s right, because they’re going to be struggling with mental health issues that we, you and me, cannot understand. You know, the cyberbullying, the cache, the gaslighting, the catfishing, you know, these things that are relatively new, I would say. I mean, to Gen Xers like myself, but they need to be able to have an outlet to speak with others like them, because if they if my kid comes to me one day and, you know, tells me that he’s struggling with this, I don’t know if I’m going to be able to help him properly, but I know if this app is on his phone, at least he’s talking to someone. It doesn’t have to be me necessarily, but I would take some comfort in knowing that, okay, he’s talking to other people who get him, who he can relate to, who’s going through the same thing. So, you know, maybe that’s already a step in the right direction.

Stone Payton: [00:21:58] All right. Let’s make sure that our listeners can get their hands on this app and leave them with any other coordinates that you would like to leave them with or want them to be able to follow your work, connect with you, and get access to to this app.

Nisha Lehmann: [00:22:11] Okay. Well, the app is called Confidential Conversations. You will find it on the App Store on Google Play. It does cost. A little something to download it. So at the moment it’s paid simply because we didn’t want ads in the app. That was really the big fear on our end, because you’re already talking about a vulnerable population. And then suddenly if you throw ads in there, it’s it’s not the model that we were looking for. So you do have to pay a little something for it. And I’m sorry, there is a small barrier to entry. Probably in the next version we’ll we’ll try to make it for free because the point of this app is that it really should be accessible and affordable for everyone. You can visit our website that was confit convos. There’s thought leadership there. There are a couple of other podcasts that have I had the privilege of doing as well, so feel free to check them out. And our social media handle is at config convos where on Twitter. We’re on Pinterest, we’re on Facebook, we’re on Instagram. You can pretty much find us on your favorite social media. Feel free to follow us. We’re always posting things that we think will be useful. Other podcasts that are talking about mental health or thought leadership within mental health, or no new research that’s coming out in particular areas. So please follow us and feel free to learn and reach out directly To me. It would be great to hear from from some of the people struggling with mental health issues if this app has helped you or not. Right? Both of them, it would be great to get some feedback just so we know whether we’re in the right direction or whether we really do need to do a complete overhaul.

Stone Payton: [00:23:43] Well, Nisha, it has been an absolute delight having you on the show today. Thank you so much for investing the time and the and the energy and thank you for the work. This is important work and we sincerely appreciate you.

Nisha Lehmann: [00:23:59] Well, thank you so much. And I really hope that the app is is going to help people that that was the whole purpose going in because it helped. It helped me. And if it helped me, maybe it can it can help others. And that’s really my contribution to humanity. I guess so. But thank you. Stone It was it was a great conversation.

Stone Payton: [00:24:20] My pleasure. All right. Until next time, this is Stone Payton for our guest today, Nisha Leamon with confidential conversations and everyone here at the business Radio X family saying we’ll see you in the fast lane.

 

Tagged With: Confidential Conversations

Speaker and Purpose Consultant Genevieve Piturro

October 12, 2022 by angishields

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Speaker and Purpose Consultant Genevieve Piturro
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Genevieve-PiturroGenevieve Piturro is all about Purpose and The Human Connection. She was a successful television marketing executive until she dramatically changed the direction of her life. She found her true purpose when a sudden inner voice challenged her life as she knew it.

In 2001, she founded the hugely successful national non-profit, Pajama Program, when a question from a six-year-old girl in an emergency shelter changed her life forever and she jumped off the corporate ladder. This year, the Program celebrates its 21st anniversary, having delivered more than 7 MILLION magical gifts of new pajamas and new books to children through its 43 chapters across the U.S.

Genevieve is now a professional speaker and purpose consultant inspiring individuals, groups and companies on The Transformative Power of Purpose & The Human Connection. She created the Purpose ACER business training program to help leaders create a shared culture by aligning the goals of the company and management with the goals of its employees.

Her first book, sharing life and leadership lessons she learned through her Pajama Program journey, is an Amazon best seller and the winner of five (5) awards. The book, Purpose, Passion and Pajamas: How to Transform Your Life, Embrace the Human Connection and Lead with Meaning, debuted during the Covid shutdown to rave reviews. The book’s message dovetails perfectly with our Nation’s growing interest in finding purpose.

Her TEDx talk: “1 Idea + The Human Connection = 7 Million Pajamas” debuted at the same time. Genevieve has been interviewed on and in many local and national media including Hallmark’s Home & Family, The Huckabee Show, OPRAH, TODAY, GMA, The Early Show, CNN, Fox & Friends, O Magazine, Forbes, The Wall Street Journal, and Parenting Magazine.

Genevieve rang the Nasdaq Stock Market Opening Bell in 2016. She has been the recipient of many local and national awards as she inspires others to listen to their heart-voice in pursuing their passions.

Genevieve is a graduate of Fordham University and lives in Irvington, N.Y. with her husband, Demo DiMartile. If you can’t find them, check the beach.

Connect with Genevieve on LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

This transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:04] Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios in Atlanta, Georgia. It’s time for High Velocity radio.

Stone Payton: [00:00:15] Welcome to the high velocity radio show where we celebrate top performers producing better results in less time. Stone Payton here with you this morning. You guys are in for such a real treat. Please join me in welcoming to the broadcast. Author, speaker, consultant and founder of Pajama Program. Ms. Genevieve Piturro. How are you?

Genevieve Piturro: [00:00:39] I’m great. Thank you for this invitation.

Stone Payton: [00:00:41] Stone Well, I am delighted to have you on the show. I got a ton of questions. We won’t get to them all, but I’m thinking maybe a good place to start is if you could share with our listeners. Mission. Purpose. What are you really out there trying to do for folks?

Genevieve Piturro: [00:00:58] Well, you know, I never no one ever asked me what my purpose was or no one ever suggested I might have one and consider it when I was thinking about a career. And I think that’s true for a lot of people who’ve entered who are in the business world now for ten or more years, 20 years even, You know, I thought lucky people found their purpose, you know, famous people I didn’t know we all had one. So when I sort of tripped on mine and it appeared out of nowhere, I thought this this is something that I want to share, that we all have a purpose because nothing felt more right for me to be doing than when I jumped off that corporate ladder because something stimulated me finding my purpose.

Stone Payton: [00:01:46] And what is the back story? How did you find yourself in this line of work? Was it a catalytic moment or did it sort of just evolve?

Genevieve Piturro: [00:01:56] I like that word. It was definitely catalytic. I was climbing the corporate ladder, always wanted to work in the world of television, and I did. I was behind the scenes in marketing and I started in radio and I loved it. It was a fast paced world. I for 12 years, I worked my way up to vice president of marketing for several television syndication companies. And it was my dream, or so I thought. And I really was not paying attention to my roots. I was an Italian first born daughter, first born here in the US, and family was very, very important to my family and I just didn’t have that get married and have children vibe. I had that businesswoman vibe, vibe. But one day, 12 years into this corporate career, I heard a voice in me, asked me a simple question, and it asked me if this is the next 30 years of your life, is this enough? And stone That stopped me cold because I never heard a voice from in me. I’d never considered anything else or really what I was missing. And the answer came just as quickly. You missed something really important. And I realized that although I didn’t want to get married and have kids right then and there, I needed children in my life. And I started reading in shelters and I never felt more grounded than at night after a crazy busy work day.

Genevieve Piturro: [00:03:28] To sit on the floor with these children who were brought in by police and social workers because of being hurt in so many ways. And I felt connected to them. And I felt connected to me. And I’d never felt that before. It took me a while to even use that word. I felt connected to them and to myself. And over time, reading to them, I got to know a little bit about the process. And when I saw them sleeping in their clothes for the first night, they were brought in and huddled together on futons and they had nothing. They were so afraid. I wanted to bring pajamas because I saw the bedtime I had flashed before me and when I did and I handed them out. Most of the children took them quietly, and one little girl was just afraid to take them. And in a moment or two, when I just gently prodded her to take them, she whispered to me, What are pajamas? And that changed everything. I nearly nearly fell over and I went right to the core of me. And I just realized I’ve been I’m the founder of Pajama Program. Now we’re celebrating 22 years. The experience of living. Your purpose has changed everything in my life. And I started talking and speaking on it, and that’s what I do now.

Stone Payton: [00:04:46] Yeah. So. So you’re out there, you’re speaking, you’re consulting. So who are you speaking to and consulting with?

Genevieve Piturro: [00:04:53] Well, it’s so funny because I was doing this while I was still executive director of Pajama Program, and I wanted that position to start to grow us. And after 20 years, I decided to go out on my own to speak about this experience and further it. And so I speak and I have always spoken to groups who are maybe looking for chapter two, who are unfulfilled in general about how to find your purpose and how it changes everything and how we have one. Every single one of us has one. It’s not just for the lucky few. And then in and after the pandemic was at its high, we all were reconsidering what we were doing. And even if you love your job, there’s a way there to communicate with your coworkers and the leaders of the company how to make it purposeful for everyone there to grow the company’s bottom line, to grow the companies camaraderie, to feel inspired. So even if you have a job, you can find your purpose.

Stone Payton: [00:05:56] It must be. It’s got to be incredibly rewarding work.

Genevieve Piturro: [00:06:03] You know. Yes. Rewarding. I don’t. There’s got to be a better word than rewarding because you feel like you belong exactly where you are. You feel like you are in the right skin. You feel like there are forces outside of you that are supporting you. The right people come. Now, when I started Pajama Program and I jumped and left my job, I had I had very little I was not a saver and it was very frightening. I had a lot of nights where I cried myself to sleep, afraid that what did I do and could I get all these children pajamas? And I didn’t even know what a 523 was. So I did it. I did it in a way that probably wasn’t easy. And I coached people on both. You know how I got through that and how to do it a little with a little less stress. But you still always feel like you are where you’re supposed to be and you will get through it. There’s just that knowing when you on your purpose.

Stone Payton: [00:07:03] So how does the whole and I recognize that that this is a nonprofit pursuit, but I still think this applies. How does the whole sales and marketing thing work for for an organization like yours? Like how do you get a chance to get to do the work?

Genevieve Piturro: [00:07:20] Well, you have to balance doing the emotional work because I think for the most part, founders of nonprofits are are doing it because of an emotional experience and emotional attachment to what they’re doing. Right? So there’s balancing the need to tell people how important it is. Share your story, because all founders have a story of why they’re doing this with growing the financial aspect. It is a business the IRS is watching. People want to know the financials. People want to know how they’re making a difference. So there’s a balancing there that takes place. And you need and I needed we all do professionals, professional attorneys, professional CPAs, professional fundraisers, people who know how to run the business part with you while you’re telling the story and really working the mission part of it. And of course, you can make a living working in nonprofit. It’s a little different. You know, it’s different in a lot of ways, but it is a business.

Stone Payton: [00:08:25] So what has it been like moving through the pandemic, coming out of the pandemic? Has that had an impact on the way that you and your clients go to market?

Genevieve Piturro: [00:08:39] Definitely. I think leadership is changing. I think that was a very big part of the pandemic’s effect on all of us. I think I would say it’s used to be more of a military. When I was in my beginnings of the career, very military, like in a boss, said what he wanted you did with the boss wanted. And that’s how I accepted it. And I think over the years and certainly my starting something brand new, I was developing different leadership styles. And I think in the pandemic we all reflected on is that what I want to do? Going to work every day. Is that how I want my day to go? Is that the relationship I want with the people I work with and work for? And I think we’re all looking for more compassion and leaders who inspire us. And I think that that’s a very big difference now today versus three years ago and certainly versus ten or 15 years ago, the different leadership styles for us all.

Stone Payton: [00:09:43] Well, yeah, I suspect some things that may have worked very well for us before pre-pandemic. Now, these are terms, right? Pre-pandemic, but before maybe don’t services as as well now are trying to go forward. Yeah.

Genevieve Piturro: [00:09:59] Yes. Yes. I think we’ve all we all have our stories and they’re very valuable and I don’t think that we were raised, many of us, to share those stories. They were private, but people are sharing now and I think that’s a good thing. We want to find where we connect with each other. I don’t think we want to be on two sides, You know, the leaders over there and everyone else over here. I think we want to connect and interconnect and and intermingle and share and find the commonality because leaders want their teams to rally for them. And the teams employees all want to feel that they’re seen, that they matter, that somebody knows about them and values what they want and includes them. So I think in order to feel included on both sides, the leaders feeling they’re included in their entire team base and the team, the employees feeling like people see them and that they matter. I think that communication and that sharing is key more than ever now.

Stone Payton: [00:11:03] So are you finding that that the client is also seeking something different or or more from the the sales person and those relationships as well?

Genevieve Piturro: [00:11:15] Yes, I think I think all of us are looking for more from each other. Any relationship, personal or business? I think it’s about connection. And I talk a lot in my book about the human connection and how that’s the key to our success. Once you find your purpose, that human connection is going to take you home.

Stone Payton: [00:11:34] So this book, Purpose, Passion and Pajamas, I got to ask, did it did it come together for you pretty easily or were there some parts of the book that were more of a struggle to get committed to paper and articulating things the way you wanted to? What was that experience like writing this book?

Genevieve Piturro: [00:11:54] Well, I tried over the years many times, but Pajama Program took my attention 100%. So I started and stopped a while. And that’s one of the reasons why I wanted to pass the baton of executive directorship and the salary to someone who could take it. So the next 20 years and I wanted to write the book. So that’s what I did. The hardest part, I knew the message. I knew that I wanted to tell everyone, You have a purpose. Promise me you will. Look, I know. I promise you, you have a purpose. And if they feel there’s something missing in your life, there is. And go find it. And I’m here if you want to brainstorm. But the hardest part was the particulars of Pajama program and the children. I wanted to. I wanted everyone to understand the plight of these children and why it brought me to my knees and why I cried and why I didn’t want to to I wanted to take them all home, but I didn’t want to fill it with all of the devastating stories I heard and learned about. So that was that was difficult because I wanted to share so much and I wanted to be really sensitive to to everyone.

Stone Payton: [00:13:02] And so let’s offer the listeners a little bit of counsel, if we can, when they get their hands on this book. Do you do you have some recommendations on how to get the most out of it, how to how to utilize the the book?

Genevieve Piturro: [00:13:17] Sure, it’s a chronological story, but at the end of every chapter are a heart of the matter lessons and in the chapter proceeds it. There are two, three or four key points I want the reader to really own, and I list them at the back of every chapter. So it’s the heart of a matter of lessons that I learned that I want to share at the end of each chapter.

Stone Payton: [00:13:43] So you’ve done something that I’ll confess has been on my bucket list. You’ve conducted a TEDx talk. Say a little bit about that, what it was like to prep for it, what the experience was like, and and what you’ve found to to unfold after doing that.

Genevieve Piturro: [00:14:01] Well, I did it during the pandemic, which was very odd. So I do want to do another one live. And I was set to do one live. And then the pandemic hit and Ted came around and said, okay, hold on all the Ted X. So everybody held. And then when the pandemic didn’t end in six months or even a year, they came back and said, okay, we need to continue. Ted, is there need to be inspiring do them on video? Get a cameraman, do the professionally. Here’s the logo or whatever. We’ll will approve them once you send them in and then we’ll run them. That’s how I did mine. So it was a very surreal experience. I had did what they said. I got a professional cameraman, but I only had that person and my husband cheering me on. And my story is emotional as most Ted is, I think are you you want that feedback from the audience. You want to feel connected because you have a very personal message. So that was strange that I only had my husband and a cameraman there, and I was used to and still love speaking in front of an audience because of that feedback. But but I did okay. They approved it. It’s out. It’s gotten a decent amount of views. And it dovetails with my book and my story and my messages.

Stone Payton: [00:15:17] You are so well accomplished in your in your passion for for the work. It just it really comes through. Did you have the benefit of one or more mentors in your corporate career and or as your entrepreneurial journey was unfolding? Did you get a chance to work with some mentors that helped you navigate some of that terrain?

Genevieve Piturro: [00:15:43] I did. I did. I had a couple of them, but and I had a very good one in constant one whenever I needed to hurt in the nonprofit world when I started that. But early on, somebody gave me the best piece of advice that I give people because we all struggle when we’re trying to grow ourselves and our careers. We’re all trying to do that for the most part. And in addition to one person telling me, get paid on time, no excuses from anybody. And it sounds funny, but I stuck to that and it’s always worked. So that was a very simple piece of advice that I don’t know. Most people hear that from their mentor, but he said that to me and I promised him I would. But a very important exercise that someone told me about. I use it to this day and I’m actually looking at it right now. Stone They said, you know, those days when you think you can’t do it, when you’re doubting yourself, take out a piece of paper and handwrite every accomplishment that is impressive to you that not everyone else has done.

Genevieve Piturro: [00:16:48] Well, If you do that, if any of your listeners do that, I promise you you will be amazed at the list of things you’ve done that you would never have thought a year before, two years before you could have or would have done. And you know what? Most of those things on your list other people don’t do, most people don’t do. And I add to that list. And when I get down and I doubt my next move and I get paralyzed because I’m afraid to take a step and look at that list. And it just it just gives me inner strength to say, Oh, my goodness, look at that. Look at that. I walked out on that job because of something, the way that they were running it or or look at this thing I did when I didn’t think I had any money. How in the world that I all of a sudden get the money to do that? And it’s just empowering, empowering, and I will forever be grateful for that person telling me that.

Stone Payton: [00:17:45] Well, I am so glad that I asked because.

Genevieve Piturro: [00:17:48] I know if you haven’t yet.

Stone Payton: [00:17:51] That is an absolute pearl. So as I understand it, in your work with companies, you’re helping leaders really get a get a handle on this idea of shared culture and and goal alignment. I’d love to leave our listeners with a with a few I’ll call them Pro Tips. The number one pro tip is reach out to Genevieve. But you know between now and then maybe a few actionable items things we should be thinking about, things we should be reading or just some things to be thinking about if we want to be serious and focused. In intentional. Those of us who do have responsibility for generating results with and through other people. Are there some things that we can begin kind of doing on our own before we get our hands on your book and listen to your talk and reach out to you?

Genevieve Piturro: [00:18:44] Well, I created the Purpose Acer program, which I facilitate for leaders and teams, and there are several exercises in there and suggestions and things that I facilitate with them. But I think the communication and the sharing has been missing. I think that there are there’s a group in every organization of the up and coming leaders. They’re in the middle and the top brass can identify them and that group. Honestly, I can tell you where your leader’s going right, and where the leaders might be going off course, because they’re in a great position to either continue and make that company successful or take everything they’ve done in that place where they’re riding high and take it somewhere else. If they don’t feel seen and that their ideas aren’t being considered. So I think. A really great place to start is with your up and coming leaders to make sure they’re on board, to listen to what they need to stay and what they think you’re doing right and wrong. And it’s a scary thing. And it has been for many years for the leader to take a chance and sit down and get that personal. But that is an incredibly powerful group in your organization, Those up and coming leaders and then those that are hired have been hired within six months or a year of report card. How are we doing together? And people are clearly demanding that they be considered. That we see it in the job market. We see it in the change, we see in everything we read about corporate America. And I put that now in quotes. So I think those two groups we really have to pay attention to.

Stone Payton: [00:20:37] Okay, let’s make sure that our listeners have an easy path to have a conversation with you or someone on your team where they can access that TED talk, get their hands on this book, whatever you feel like is appropriate, whether it’s a LinkedIn or a website or email. I just want to make sure that folks can can reach out and connect with you.

Genevieve Piturro: [00:20:58] Thank you. Stone Well, my website has everything Genevieve Pinterest.com and Short LinkedIn has everything to.

Stone Payton: [00:21:07] Well, Genevieve, it has been an absolute delight having you on the show. Thank you so much for for investing the time and energy to join us. And thank you for the work you’re doing. Incredibly important work, and we sincerely appreciate you.

Genevieve Piturro: [00:21:24] Oh, thank you. And thank you again for asking me to share share my story. I so appreciate it.

Stone Payton: [00:21:30] All right. Until next time, this is Stone Payton for our guest today, Genevieve Petro and everyone here at the Business Radio X family saying we’ll see you in the fast lane.

Tagged With: Genevieve Piturro

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