Business RadioX ®

  • Home
  • Business RadioX ® Communities
    • Southeast
      • Alabama
        • Birmingham
      • Florida
        • Orlando
        • Pensacola
        • South Florida
        • Tampa
        • Tallahassee
      • Georgia
        • Atlanta
        • Cherokee
        • Forsyth
        • Greater Perimeter
        • Gwinnett
        • North Fulton
        • North Georgia
        • Northeast Georgia
        • Rome
        • Savannah
      • Louisiana
        • New Orleans
      • North Carolina
        • Charlotte
        • Raleigh
      • Tennessee
        • Chattanooga
        • Nashville
      • Virginia
        • Richmond
    • South Central
      • Arkansas
        • Northwest Arkansas
    • Midwest
      • Illinois
        • Chicago
      • Michigan
        • Detroit
      • Minnesota
        • Minneapolis St. Paul
      • Missouri
        • St. Louis
      • Ohio
        • Cleveland
        • Columbus
        • Dayton
    • Southwest
      • Arizona
        • Phoenix
        • Tucson
        • Valley
      • Texas
        • Austin
        • Dallas
        • Houston
    • West
      • California
        • Bay Area
        • LA
        • Pasadena
      • Colorado
        • Denver
      • Hawaii
        • Oahu
  • FAQs
  • About Us
    • Our Mission
    • Our Audience
    • Why It Works
    • What People Are Saying
    • BRX in the News
  • Resources
    • BRX Pro Tips
    • B2B Marketing: The 4Rs
    • High Velocity Selling Habits
    • Why Most B2B Media Strategies Fail
    • 9 Reasons To Sponsor A Business RadioX ® Show
  • Partner With Us
  • Veteran Business RadioX ®

From Insurance to Karaoke: Chuck Burge’s Journey to Fundraising Success

July 17, 2025 by angishields

CBRX-Airaoke-Feature
Cherokee Business Radio
From Insurance to Karaoke: Chuck Burge's Journey to Fundraising Success
Loading
00:00 /
RSS Feed
Share
Link
Embed

Download file

CBRX-Airaoke-Banner

In this episode of Cherokee Business Radio, Joshua Kornitsky is joined by Chuck Burge, creator of the Airaoke karaoke fundraiser benefiting the 9/11 Fallen Hero Project in Metro Atlanta. Chuck shares his journey from insurance to entertainment, his experiences as a karaoke host and corporate DJ, and the growth of Airaoke from a small airport hangar event to a major annual fundraiser. The episode highlights Chuck’s dedication to community causes, details about the upcoming event, and the positive impact of supporting local firefighters and honoring 9/11 heroes.

Brought to you by Diesel David and Main Street Warriors

CherokeeSponsorImageDieselDavidMSW

Chuck-Burge-bwChuck Burge has been in the marketing industry for over 30 years. He became one of the hosts/emcees for the Diet Pepsi “You Got The Right One, Baby” Uh-Huh Girls…. transitioned into a corporate DJ.

He was invited back into the marketing world to create marketing campaigns for Fortune 500 companies…GM, Dunkin Donuts, Pepsi and many others. After the downfall in economy in ’08, he started doing everything locally that he was doing nationally… helping companies with branding and sales.

Today, he still creates events for non-profits selling sponsorship for and producing them. Airaoke.org is the website for his biggest event. He hosts two sports podcasts to raise money for a cancer support group and NIL money for the 2nd largest college in GA, Kennesaw State University.

He is very involved in his community through Chamber of Commerce, business associations and volunteering for MUST Ministries.

Connect with Chuck on LinkedIn and follow Airaoke on Facebook

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix.

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios in Woodstock, Georgia. It’s time for Cherokee Business Radio. Now, here’s your host.

Joshua Kornitsky: Hey, welcome back to another episode of Cherokee Business Radio. I’m Joshua Kornitsky, professional EOS implementer and your host today. And today’s episode is brought to you in part by the Community Partner program, the Business RadioX Main Street Warriors defending capitalism, promoting small business and supporting our local community. For more information, go to Main Street Warriors and a special note of thanks to our title sponsor for the Cherokee chapter of Main Street Warriors Diesel David, Inc.. Please go check them out at diesel. Com. Well, in the studio with me today is is really an incredible guy. I’d like to introduce Chuck Burge, the creator of Airaoke. Hey, Chuck, how are you?

Chuck Burge: I’m very well. Josh, how are you doing?

Joshua Kornitsky: Oh, it’s, uh. It’s been an exciting day today. If not a little bit too warm.

Chuck Burge: It’s a long day already. Yeah.

Joshua Kornitsky: But, uh, tell us a little bit about yourself before we talk about karaoke.

Chuck Burge: Well, uh, native of Marietta, uh, went to McEachern High School back when schools were the same first through 12th grade. So I went 11 years to the same school, but grew up, never lived further than five miles from the Marietta Square. Uh, very endeared to the city of Marietta. I love it very much. Um, went to Kennesaw Junior College, which was a two year school then.

Joshua Kornitsky: Now for Kennesaw.

Chuck Burge: State before Kennesaw State now it’s the second largest school in the state and got my associate degree, uh, business degree there, and then went to Georgia Southern and got my marketing degree at Georgia Southern. Uh, got married, got divorced, got two fabulous sons, uh, 36 and 28. Chip and Kevin and Boston and Nashville. And love them like they’re here every day. But they’re not. Yeah.

Joshua Kornitsky: Sure, sure. Well, thank you for giving us a little bit about your background. And before we get into air hockey, I feel like it gives a lot of perspective. Do you explain what you spent your career doing before area hockey, so that we can then talk more about that?

Chuck Burge: Well, my career was really kind of odd. Um, my first job out of college was working at Life Insurance Company of Georgia as a claims examiner and got promoted to internal audit, which I just still can’t believe I did that job. But it was great company, great benefits. We got off at noon on Friday and, uh, floated down the river every Friday afternoon during the summer. So it was a great job for a single guy. And then I got married and, uh, and in 89, when my oldest son was born, I said, well, I need to do something different to make some money because I know I got a kid to raise. And, uh, so I went to work for Mass Mutual Insurance Company and was rookie of the year agent in 1990, sold more Fisher policies than any agent ever had nationwide for MassMutual. Wow. And, uh, they put me into management, going out, recruiting and hiring and training new agents. Um, and then from that, I was having dinner one night at the Marriott Marquis Downtown Champion Sports bar with a guy named David Ponzio. And I’ll never forget that name, because that night literally changed my life. And, uh, we were sitting there having dinner with this guy Chuck Lorre. And what’s the guy’s name? Comes around and throws this book on the table and said, what is that? He said, it’s karaoke. I said, what is a karaoke? Because it was brand new to the States. Nobody knew what it was. He said, it’s this music system where we play the background music.

Chuck Burge: You get to provide the lead vocals. I said, no kidding. I start flipping through the book. I said, well, I got to do this. He said, we’ll pick out a song. I said, no, I gotta do what you’re doing. I said, how much fun would that be, right? And he said, well, as a matter of fact, we’re looking for someone. If you’d like to meet the owner, I’ll introduce you to him. So the next day I went met Greg Smith, and, uh, Greg said, yeah, as long as you don’t try to sell insurance, everybody comes up and sings, we’ll give you a shot. So he did. And 3 or 4 years later, Greg calls me and says, hey, Chuck, there’s this new karaoke company coming to town Thursday for a group interview, and I’m going to be in Vegas at the electronic show. Would you be willing to go for me and see what it’s all about? I said, yeah, I’d be glad to, uh, might meet somebody I can hire as an agent. This is what I basically said. Sure, absolutely. So I got out there, and what it was was Rent-A-Center, the Rent to own company, had started an entertainment division called Race Entertainment and had signed a $3 million contract with Diet Pepsi to put. You got the right one, baby. Uh huh. On karaoke and go all over the country and have people come up and sing it and get a cassette promotional gift of them singing you got the right one, baby, huh? And they hadn’t hired a soul.

Chuck Burge: I said, well, that’s pretty cool. I think you think about it. Yeah. So I went home that night and they called me back and said, hey, Chuck, we’ve got this narrowed down to ten people. Could you come back tomorrow? And I said, yeah, why not? So I went back and then the next night’s phone call was, hey, Chuck, are you working in here this weekend where you can watch you perform? I said, yeah, as a matter of fact, write it down at Marriott. Um, northwest at Interstate North Parkway. So a guy came from Manchester, England, Indianapolis and Wichita, Kansas, and introduced themselves. They said, hey, you know, we’re looking forward to seeing you. I said, great. And I had got a regular crowd by then, and I had friends coming in and saying, and I knew it was going to be a good show. So about halfway through the show, one of them walks up and says, hey, Chuck, he’s I said, what do you want to sing? And he said, no, flip it over. And yeah, it sounds like they said, we want you. That’s great. And that changed my whole life. Double my salary for when I was at the insurance company. And for the next two and a half years, I was number two karaoke office in the country. And, uh, was singing you got the right one, maybe Uh-Uh with the Uh-Uh girls for two and a half years.

Joshua Kornitsky: Listen, there’s got to be something special about a myriad of boy that can make a living off of Pepsi.

Chuck Burge: Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. So it was a very, very fun contract. And when the contract ended, I had take. I took all my, uh, marketing material or my, uh, karaoke equipment and sold it to a guy that owned a company called Monte Carlo Productions is a private casino company. And he said, I’ve always wanted my own DJ. He said, I’ve always subcontracted out. Would you be interested in coming in and running my DJ business? I said, sure, yeah. So I went in there and sold parties and I mean, I had such a great time. I, um, I did Evander Holyfield, 4th of July party three years in a row. Wow. Saying Under the boardwalk with Lenny Wilkins at the opening of Philips Arena. Uh, did Braves opening night parties in the parking lot at O. Atlanta-fulton County Stadium. I mean, I had a really pretty good name in the in the DJ industry for six years as a corporate disc jockey. Not on the air? Sure. And then, um, in 2000, January of 2000, the guy calls me from Boston who was the number one karaoke company in the country when we were doing the, uh. You got the right one, baby on promotion. He said, hey, Chuck, I’ve taken this Pepsi business and turned it into a national mobile marketing company and I need somebody to run Atlanta. Coincidentally enough for the All-Star game that summer and to 2000. And I said, you know, Mike, I really want to come home and spend more time with my kids. If you’ll promise me X and tell me this is the last job I’ll ever have. I’m all yours. So I did that, and I ran the All-Star game for Pepsi down in the Turner Field, then for 2000, and then got into creating grassroots marketing campaigns for large companies general Motors, Cingular Wireless, um, ran the Mall of America for five days for Diet Mountain Dew, hung out with Dick Vitale and John Wooden for five days. Wow. Wasn’t a bad day. Wasn’t a bad.

Joshua Kornitsky: Week. No no no no.

Chuck Burge: So and in 2008, when the economy kind of started tanking, I just started doing everything locally that I was doing nationally and, um, kind of once a fun time, I became my own boss and I wasn’t I was on the plane every week for 6 or 7 years and, uh, meeting somebody.

Joshua Kornitsky: I think you’d be hard pressed to find somebody who has more experience in a field that you wouldn’t think experience matters. Karaoke where it clearly does matter.

Chuck Burge: I learned a lot.

Joshua Kornitsky: Yeah, and the marketing aspect that served you well coming from, uh, from the the time in college ended up becoming your whole life. So. So what how did we get to ROI from all of that? Thank you for giving us the background, because that helps us understand why and who you are.

Chuck Burge: Well, karaoke came about, uh, I had not DJ or MC or anything other than like, friends, birthday parties or their wedding receptions or stuff since 2000. And then, um, in 20. Well, when in 2001. When, um, when the towers fell on nine over 11. Um, my best friend was supposed to be in the towers, but he missed his flight out of Atlanta the night before he would have been killed, thank goodness. So, uh, God thing know that he knows that. And, uh, and then when 2020, when Covid hit and they couldn’t do the stair climb anymore to raise money for the firefighters.

Joshua Kornitsky: Oh, from okay from the Fallen Hero project.

Chuck Burge: Yeah, from the non Heroes project. Uh, I, I went to, uh, the chief of Cop County fire. Who was Mr. Kreider, who I’d known since he was 4 or 5 years old and said, hey, I want to do something to help raise money. And that’s where I came up with the area. Okay. I was out at the aviation museum in Marietta, and I looked at the big C-130 out there and said, how cool would it be to wrap a stage around the nose of that plane? Sure. And do aerial in front of an airplane.

Joshua Kornitsky: And that’s where it was born.

Chuck Burge: That’s where the idea was born. Okay. We couldn’t do it there because right across the street from the Aviation museum is a railroad track that has 72 tracks, 72 trains a day coming by.

Joshua Kornitsky: Yeah. So let’s see how that gets in the way.

Chuck Burge: So it didn’t make sense. So we moved up to Cobb International Airport. Uh, and Jim Cook with Atlanta Air Charter was nice enough to give us the hangar for a couple of years. And all we did was have an airplane face the hangar, wrap the stage around the nose of the plane, and people would come up and sing Airy Okie. It was really cool. Had the planes taken taking off in the background and all that. Very, very neat venue. But unfortunately, we outgrew the hangar in a couple of years. Uh, I mean, 250 was a max that would hold, and we were we were getting ready to bust out. Yeah. So we took it to the Strand Theater, and we’ll be having it there for the third year and our fifth year overall on August 30th of this year.

Joshua Kornitsky: Oh, fantastic. All right. So if people want to want to see the event, do they go to the strand website. Do they go to your website.

Chuck Burge: They go to Eric. That’s I a okay. Dot org. You can buy tickets. You can buy. You can sign up saying we still have six singer spots left, which is very unusual at this time because usually we have a lot more. So the word’s getting out about this event and we’ve been running it well, and now we’re getting where people have been signed up since February to sing. And now we’ve got, we’ve got six slots left and it’s 25 people saying, uh, and somebody wants $1,500 in cash.

Joshua Kornitsky: Does it all happen that night?

Chuck Burge: Everything happens that night.

Joshua Kornitsky: That sounds like a lot of fun, too.

Chuck Burge: It is a.

Joshua Kornitsky: Lot of fun. So if somebody can’t attend. Is there a way they can still show support?

Chuck Burge: Uh, you can always support by sponsoring. Also, if you’ll go to archive.org and hit sponsorships up at the top, it’ll give you a list. It’s basically $250 an up. And, you know, the most important thing. I mean, it’s a really, really fun event, but it is for a nonprofit called the nine over 11 Fallen Aero Project. A guy named Mike Kirsch and Susan Kirsch and their kids, Wesley and Lauren, uh, are the ones that run this event. I run it for them. Sure. And I raised all the funds. But Mike was actually a, um, uh, captain detective, New York City captain and detective. And, uh, he was not on site when it happened, but he spent nine months there after it happened, recovering the bodies of his friends and identifying them and all. And now Mike is riddled with cancer. And from all the asbestos and stuff he got. So it’s a lot of me and Susan putting this together. But all the funds go to metro Atlanta. It’s not tunnels to towers. It’s a nine over 11 fallen hero project. So all the all the proceeds go to metro Atlanta.

Joshua Kornitsky: That’s I’m glad you shared that because that makes it much more personal, much closer to home. Yeah. And it’s not that there aren’t people that need help everywhere. With regards to nine over 11, but it’s nice that we’re able to help the folks that are here. Yeah. That’s fantastic. So now how many years have you been doing here?

Chuck Burge: Here. This will be the fifth year.

Joshua Kornitsky: This will be the fifth.

Chuck Burge: Year, and next year will be the 25th anniversary of nine over 11. So hopefully we’re going to do something grander. Uh, it’s just hard to believe that it’s been 25 years. And we every year we have artifacts from ground zero at the event where people can come have their pictures made with it, which is really, really cool. And obviously.

Joshua Kornitsky: It’s cool and it’s somber too, but it’s.

Chuck Burge: Cool and somber. That’s a good way to put it. Yeah.

Joshua Kornitsky: Um, so over the the preceding years, have you had any really exciting or interesting events happen, you know, with the singers, with the crowd?

Chuck Burge: Oh yeah, Some of both. Uh, uh, the singers have been really good, and the whole premise is, like I said, we we look for singers, we look for sponsors, and we look for items that are donated to raise money. Because if you sign up to sing, there are five live judges there. And I want to thank Sarah for getting them from the Atlanta Orchestra this year. So our judges are going to be coming from Atlanta Orchestra. But the whole premise is bring all your friends to vote for you. It’s half audience vote and half judge vote, because we have about $25,000 worth of raffle items that we’ll raffle off. So the girl that won last year, Little Girl and Elise Lightner from Kennesaw State, sang Jolene, but she brought her family, she brought her track team, she brought everybody from KSU. And she was like, I think second in the judging, but she was first in the audience. So the whole.

Joshua Kornitsky: Premise, folks with her.

Chuck Burge: Whole premise, whole premise is come sing, bring your friends to vote for you and to buy raffle tickets to support the firefighters.

Joshua Kornitsky: That’s amazing. And what does the ticket cost?

Chuck Burge: 25 bucks.

Joshua Kornitsky: Okay, So it’s pretty reasonable really, particularly these days. Yeah. And for that much entertainment, it seems like it’s something that’ll keep you alive.

Chuck Burge: It’s a lot of fun. And I’ll give a little credit to Joe Turner, who is our emcee. And Joe is an international magician. And he fell in love with the event. I think you said, you know Joe, right?

Joshua Kornitsky: I’ve met Joe a number of times, and he’s also a great speaker.

Chuck Burge: Oh, very, very good speaker. So, Joe, I connected with him last week. I said, hey, I know you’re in, but I, I just need confirmation that you’re still in. And he said, I’m looking forward to coming back. So he he’s recently moved to Tennessee, but I appreciate him making the trip down to come to the show.

Joshua Kornitsky: Joe’s a good man. I’m glad he is coming down, too. He’s awesome. He’ll he’ll absolutely make.

Chuck Burge: The good singer too. I don’t know if you ever heard.

Joshua Kornitsky: Him sing, not know that. And I’m a terrible singer, so I’m going to do my best.

Chuck Burge: He can’t. He can’t compete. But he is. He is good. But the people that have won. And you asked earlier. Uh, Josh, uh, the guy that won the first year was invited to sing with the Trans-Siberian orchestra. Uh, the girl that won the second year is now singing opera in New York. Uh, the girl that won the third year is just some rock n roll singer around town here. Like I said, the girl that won last year just sang Jolene, and I said she was telling her about it at Kennesaw State, a show that I do a podcast. And she said, oh, I’d love to sing. I said, well, come on and sing. And so you just never know who’s going to win. Uh, we I don’t think we’ve ever had a really bad act. I’ve been doing this five years, from the time that I’ve been doing karaoke since 1992. I’ve seen a lot of bad acts.

Joshua Kornitsky: I, I, I have to pray for your ears. I can’t imagine what you’ve heard.

Chuck Burge: Most of the people that come to this really can’t sing or really think they can sing well.

Joshua Kornitsky: And the strand holds a.

Chuck Burge: 530.

Joshua Kornitsky: People. Yeah. So that’s a lot of people say if if you’re going to get up there and try to be funny, that’s a lot of people that try to be in front of you, in front of when you’re if you’re a terrible singer. So, yeah. Uh, I can’t thank you enough, Chuck. This is really great stuff that you’re doing. Such a wonderful, wonderful tribute to the nine over 11. Follow here Fallen Heroes Project. And to make it local and to make it resonate, that’s really incredible stuff.

Chuck Burge: Yeah, I’ve been given so much by this community and this is just what I can give back. It’s not much, but it’s what I can give. So as long as we do our all. Everybody does our own part. Everybody’s got their own charities. I mean, I also work for Mushroom Ministries. I volunteer at There Gobble Jog every year. I drove the Pink Pig at the at the, uh, Festival of Trees last year to help bring awareness for, uh, the sex trafficking in Atlanta. I want to give back as much as I can, but this is my heart. This is. This is where my passion is.

Joshua Kornitsky: Well, I can’t thank you enough for sharing it with us, Chuck. Remind us again when? Where they buy the tickets. What is the date and the time?

Chuck Burge: The man is 6:00 on August 30th. Doors open at six. Singing starts at seven. But come and enjoy all the raffle items. And like I said, the artifacts from Ground Zero have your picture made. But it is Saturday, August the 30th. Um, and we just can’t wait to see who’s going to show up. An area key Karaoke. Karaoke? If, like I said, if you want tickets, if you want to sponsor or if you want to sing, or you can call me directly at (770) 428-9930. I’ll take phone calls. I’ll take text. Anybody want to reach out to me? Feel free to do so.

Joshua Kornitsky: Perfect. Well, uh, you know, Chuck Birch, honestly, the creator of karaoke. What an exciting event this is going to be. Uh, I will do my very best to be there. And I will absolutely not be singing. So that should 100% make more people come. As long as I’m not.

Chuck Burge: Well, if you fill up a seat, that’s all I can ask. There you go. There you.

Joshua Kornitsky: Go. Well, thank you again. And please make sure next year you come back when we’re talking about the 25th, we’ll we’ll do everything we can to help promote that.

Chuck Burge: Well, I appreciate you, Josh. All right, well, thanks for the invitation.

Joshua Kornitsky: Thanks, everybody, for joining. Thank you again, Chuck, for coming. This is Joshua Kornitsky, professional iOS implementer and host of Cherokee Business Radio.

 

Tagged With: Airaoke

Empowering Communities: The Role of Investigative Services and Global Talent in Local Business Growth

July 17, 2025 by angishields

CBRX-715am-Feature
Cherokee Business Radio
Empowering Communities: The Role of Investigative Services and Global Talent in Local Business Growth
Loading
00:00 /
RSS Feed
Share
Link
Embed

Download file

CBRX-715am-banner

Brought to you by Diesel David and Main Street Warriors

CherokeeSponsorImageDieselDavidMSW

In this episode of Cherokee Business Radio, Joshua Kornistsky interviews Sheila McPhilamy, owner of Complete Investigations and Security, and Pablo Gonzalez of Global Talent Direct. Sheila discusses her experience running a private detective agency, the challenges of being a woman in her field, and her nonprofit supporting missing children cases. Pablo shares how Global Talent Direct connects businesses with skilled remote professionals and highlights his involvement with veteran support and local organizations. Both guests offer insights into their industries and community impact, providing listeners with valuable perspectives on business and service.

Complete-Investigations-and-Security-logo

Sheila-bwSheila McPhilamy started her journey as a private investigator 16 years ago.

She worked domestic, insurance fraud and criminal cases before obtaining her company license and then her classroom instructor license after that.

Complete Investigations and Security has been featured in the media. Several of Sheila’s children work with her.

Their main focus is criminal cases for both attorneys and individuals. They also run a non-profit.

Follow Complete Investigations and Security on Facebook.

Pablo-Gonzalez-bwPablo Gonzalez, Head of Broker Relations, Global Talent Direct

Global Talent Direct (GTD) was born from a mission to help American businesses thrive, not struggle. Founded by Air Force veteran and former dog handler who traveled the world in service, GTD emerged from years of business consulting where one challenge surfaced repeatedly: “I need help but can’t afford it.”

Our Foundation: Service-Driven Solutions After transitioning from military service—where global perspective was essential—I recognized that businesses were trapped by geographical hiring limitations.

The constant payroll pressure was preventing growth, stifling innovation, and keeping entrepreneurs from achieving their dreams. This insight sparked Global Talent Direct’s core mission: leverage global talent for local impact.

The GTD Philosophy We’re not about taking American jobs—we’re about creating them and helping those who have them. By helping businesses access world-class talent at sustainable costs, we enable companies to reach profitability faster, extend their runway, and reinvest in local growth.

When a startup saves 65% on payroll costs or reclaims twelve months of runway, they’re not just surviving—they’re positioned to hire locally, contribute to their communities, and build the next generation of American innovation. Global-Talent-Direct-logo

Proven Impact Our clients consistently report transformative results: controllers in Colombia identifying $80K in first-month savings, customer success teams achieving 4.9/5 satisfaction ratings, and support operations running 24/5 while U.S. teams focus on strategic growth. These aren’t just cost savings—they’re competitive advantages that fuel local job creation.

Our Commitment Global Talent Direct believes in profitable businesses that give back to their communities. When companies thrive through strategic global hiring, they create local opportunities, support local causes, and strengthen the American economy.

We’re helping businesses get profitable faster so they can make a meaningful impact at home while also helping create jobs all over the world.

Follow Global Talent Direct on LinkedIn.

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix.

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios in Woodstock, Georgia. It’s time for Cherokee Business Radio. Now, here’s your host.

Joshua Kornitsky: Welcome back to Cherokee Business Radio. This is Joshua Kornitsky professional EOS implementer and your host on today’s exciting episode. Today’s episode is brought to you in part by the Community Partner program, the Business RadioX Main Street Warriors defending capitalism, promoting small business, and supporting our local community. For more information, go to Main Street Warriors and a special note of thanks to our title sponsor for the Cherokee chapter of Main Street Warriors Diesel David, Inc.. Please go to Diesel Com to learn more. Well, welcome back. We’ve got some great guests in the studio with us today and I’m really excited to get started. So my first guest is Sheila McPhilamy with Complete Investigations and Security. Good morning Sheila. How are you?

Sheila McPhilamy: Good morning. Doing great.

Joshua Kornitsky: I’m so happy to have you here. I appreciate you being patient with me. I’ve got a little bit of a sore throat, so I’m sipping on some tea today, so I’ll try not to to stress my voice too much. Well, tell us a little bit about Complete Investigations and Security. What is it you do and who do you help?

Sheila McPhilamy: So we are a private detective and security agency. We’re located up on the Marietta Square. We’ve been in business for 13 years now. We do criminal insurance fraud and domestic cases.

Joshua Kornitsky: Wow. That’s a crazy avenue for you to find yourselves in. How did you get here?

Sheila McPhilamy: I had people ask me that all the time. It. There’s nothing in particular, to be honest with you. Um, I worked for a company doing some video editing. And, uh, it actually was a lot of undercover. Audio files.

Joshua Kornitsky: Okay.

Sheila McPhilamy: Um, in in reviewing those files, um, there were a lot of comments made about, you know, hey, you’d make a great investigator. It wasn’t something I’d ever thought about doing, uh, before, but that kind of, I guess if I was going to say something sparked it, then that’s what sparked it and started going down the path and getting all of my training and, uh, opened my company, uh, 13 years ago.

Joshua Kornitsky: Wow. And you’ve actually, from what you shared with me, you’ve had some pretty interesting experiences as far as, as a company, you’ve not exactly been out of the spotlight.

Sheila McPhilamy: Uh, we’ve done, uh, we’ve been in a book. We’ve done, uh, some TV shows and documentaries and things like that where we’ve worked on cases.

Joshua Kornitsky: That’s, that’s going to, of what I promise. I won’t ask any of the details about any of the cases, but certainly having that that opportunity and that exposure must have been kind of a departure from the day to day for you.

Sheila McPhilamy: It is, but it made it fun. Sure. Yeah.

Joshua Kornitsky: So let’s dive in a little bit and talk more about it. So you had said that you’re doing all types of normal, all types of investigations. And, and I know from our discussion with it how unusual is it to be a woman in this space.

Sheila McPhilamy: Very unusual. There there are a few out there, but they usually don’t last very long. Um, it it truly is pretty much a man’s world. Um, so it’s having to navigate that and people automatically, you know, assuming when you answer the phone that you’re the receptionist and not not the actual owner and investigator.

Joshua Kornitsky: So there’s a lot you have to overcome with that. But I gather from 13 years in business, you’ve you’ve more than proven that, that it’s a space that you are excelling in. Hope so. Must be so. So what are some of the common things people assume you spend your time on that may or may not be correct?

Sheila McPhilamy: Hmm. Well, people automatically make an assumption because TV shows, you know, they kind of portray. If you’re a private investigator, you investigate cheating spouses. And, uh, you know that we do do that. Uh, but that’s not the main part of our business. We handle a lot of criminal cases. So, um, we deal with some pretty heavy stuff.

Joshua Kornitsky: So let’s talk about that a little bit, because obviously you’re doing investigations, you say into criminal matters. Who are you? Who are you investigating for?

Sheila McPhilamy: It can be an attorney’s office or it can be an individual. So a lot of times families will come to us. Um, maybe there’s there’s been a something criminal that has occurred, and they come to us because they feel like they’re not getting answers. And it’s not because police aren’t doing their job, it’s just that sometimes agencies are overwhelmed. Um, and, uh, families, you know, they need closure. And so they’ll come to us. Uh, we have attorneys that come to us as well. Um, so. Yeah.

Joshua Kornitsky: Okay, so so you’re doing that type of work for families, for attorneys, and, and when you’re doing that type of work, you’re functioning in a capacity where you’ve got to learn as much information as you can. I gather right. So when it comes to things like questioning people, and this is of particular interest to me. What are some of the things? And again, not looking for any secrets out of your universe. What are some of the things that you have to do when you engage with people in order to get them to open up?

Sheila McPhilamy: So it really depends on the case. Um, you know, it’s not a, um, one, one tool is going to work for everyone and every, every situation that you’re in. It may be that we just go directly to them for an interview, you know, as a witness or something like that, or it may be something where we have to come to them, you know, pretending to be someone else. And of course, there are guidelines that we have to follow, just like, you know, police have got investigators have guidelines they have to follow. Right. Um, but, uh, we just really have to base it on the case and what what we’re trying to retrieve. And it’s not always the same type of person that is, is going out to talk to them or calling them on the phone. We may base whoever’s going out based on who we think is going to be able to get more information.

Joshua Kornitsky: Okay.

Sheila McPhilamy: So depending depending on the case.

Joshua Kornitsky: So you’re going to find the right, uh, individual to, to slot in the right tool for the job as it were. Okay. And and again not I, I I’ll stop saying I’m not trying to ask anything confidential. Do you have a fairly good number of tools to choose from in that regard, that you’re able to find different folks to come in. Okay. Um, so when it comes to your your team and your staff, are you in the lead of everything or do you have other folks that are able to go out and lead investigations as well?

Sheila McPhilamy: So I oversee everything. Okay. Um, it’s, you know, it’s my company. So I want to make sure that everything’s done correctly. So, um, I do oversee it. They do have some flexibility in what they do because, you know, they are trained as well. Uh, sure. But, yeah. So I oversee the end product, and then they’ll come to me if they have any questions.

Joshua Kornitsky: Okay. And I assume they check in along the way. Make sure everything stays on track. Correct. Okay. So with the types of investigations, we talked a little bit about the criminal stuff. Um, we don’t need to talk about the spousal stuff because everybody’s got a TV. And most of that I’m sure is wrong, in any event. But let’s talk a little bit about the accident stuff. And I feel like if a defense attorney is asking for you to investigate, there’s a reason, right? And in what? Again, no one’s maligning the police. What might that reason be? Why do the defense attorneys reach out to get a third party?

Sheila McPhilamy: Yeah. So they there. They may come out because, um, where there’s a case where there may possibly be video footage that was not retrieved or couldn’t have been retrieved at the time. So we’ll go out and try to do that. Um, we will try to come up with more witnesses, because it may be that someone talked to the next door neighbor when the event occurred, but they didn’t talk to someone who was two doors down. And that person, two doors down, had video. Their child was outside playing when it happened, so they were outside. So you never know. Um, we do a lot of we’ll take measurements, uh, photographs, uh, document anything that is still there from the incident that occurred. Uh, so it’s we can retrieve a lot of information that the attorney may not have had prior.

Joshua Kornitsky: And just out of curiosity, because I’ve got a technical background to to a small degree. How much have things like home cameras and doorbell cameras and things like that? Has that been a factor in as as you’ve grown as an organization? Do those factor in?

Sheila McPhilamy: Oh, yes. It’s huge. Uh, you do have to get the video pretty quickly. So, um, you know, you can’t you can’t call an attorney, can’t call me two months down the road and say, hey, you know, we had this incident occurred that we need the video for because most of the time it’s gone by then. Um, sometimes you get lucky. Somebody, you know took a video on their cell phone, and and you can retrieve it there, but, uh, yeah. So it’s the advancement with with phones, with ring cameras and things like that. Those are huge.

Joshua Kornitsky: Yeah. It’s funny, I read somewhere that if Bigfoot or the aliens were around half a billion or, billion. Excuse me? 4 billion people walk around with a cell phone. Somebody would have captured it by now. Yes. And I can’t imagine how many things that you see that get captured by those types of cameras. Um, you also had shared with me that you do missing persons. We do. And hopefully there’s, uh, there’s some happy stories there. In addition, what I assume are some less than happy stories. Uh, without giving away anybody’s information, or are there any happy stories you can share with us?

Sheila McPhilamy: We we work a lot with helping locate, uh, missing teenagers. If, uh, a child is met someone online. Um, sometimes they end up in a different state. Um, and we will have to go out and retrieve them. Bring them back. Those. Those are good stories. When we’re able to get a happy ending from that. Sure. Um, I had a situation where a woman, her mom, had been missing for 40 years. Wow. She went missing in California, and we ended up locating her in Florida. And so that was a feel good moment. So you do have those and those are great.

Joshua Kornitsky: That’s awesome. And I imagine that, uh, with some of the other things you see, it probably is a little bit of, of a lightning to your mood. Yes.

Sheila McPhilamy: Definitely.

Joshua Kornitsky: Okay. Well, I mean, it’s really incredible to me the, the, the breadth and the depth of, of what you’re able to do, who you’re able to help. And it’s not just the attorneys, it’s also the individuals. And when it comes to individuals, they can reach out to you. What’s the best way for them to get Ahold of you?

Sheila McPhilamy: They can give me a call on my cell, which is actually the office number. I don’t have an office number. It’s just call me on my cell. Send me a text. Uh, that number is (404) 379-1125. And then they can also locate us on the web at Complete Investigations net. And then we’re also on all the social media platforms under complete investigation.

Joshua Kornitsky: That’s wonderful. And we’ll also have all of that information shared on our site. And I appreciate you sharing with us what you’ve shared. But I want to ask you about one more thing that you had told me about, which was your nonprofit.

Sheila McPhilamy: Yes, I have a nonprofit. It’s called Serving to Protect. And a lot of the times where children go missing. It’s there’s a lot involved as far as getting them back to the parent. Um, they there may be costs for hotel rooms, for air travel, for travel to the location. Uh, so, um, the nonprofit helps cover some of those costs. Uh.

Joshua Kornitsky: Yeah. Okay. So is that something that that anybody can reach out and make a donation for?

Sheila McPhilamy: They can. If you go to complete investigations and go to the page for serving to protect, uh, there should be a link there where they can make a payment.

Joshua Kornitsky: That’s fantastic. Well, Sheila, I can’t thank you enough for coming on and sharing your experience. And and, uh, the incredibly real true life as opposed to, as seen on TV version of of what you do with your investigation and with your investigators. And thank you so much for being here. I hope you have time to stick around. But once again, this has been Sheila McPhilamy with Complete Investigations and Security. Thank you.

Sheila McPhilamy: Thank you so much.

Joshua Kornitsky: Thank you. And my next guest is Pablo Gonzalez. Pablo is one of the founders of a company called Global Talent Direct. Good morning. Pablo, how are you?

Pablo Gonzalez : Hey, Josh. I’m good. Thank you so much for having me.

Joshua Kornitsky: Thank you so much for being here today. We really appreciate it. So let me start by asking you what do you do?

Pablo Gonzalez : Yeah. So Global Talent Direct is a company, uh, that was founded, um, with the goal of helping business owners, uh, use global talent for local impact. Uh, and that’s our mission statement. Um, Essentially, we’re not just, you know, people always going into the. People are always going into thinking, oh, you’re taking American jobs this and what have you. Um, when in reality, you’re you’re not only giving someone. A job, uh, overseas, but you’re helping a business owner stateside become profitable faster, um, by being able to find someone who has their masters ten years of experience asking 1300 bucks a month.

Joshua Kornitsky: Wow. So what types of roles do you help fill?

Pablo Gonzalez : Yeah. So we we, uh, right now have a solid baseline of customer service reps. Uh, executive assistants, those I, I would say are our most popular offerings. Um, but then we also have marketing, uh, any accounting and finance, um, operations salespeople. It’s it’s really we’re also working on finding a legal assistance and paralegals as well. Um, but it’s really anything that can be done remote where the founder did not get into their business, their nonprofit, their the organization to be doing these things? Sure. And be able to actually remove one of those hats.

Joshua Kornitsky: Okay, well, that sounds like it makes a pretty big impact in in in more than one place, right? Yeah. So so let’s back up a little bit. Tell me a little bit about your background. How did where did you start that you ended up here.

Pablo Gonzalez : Yeah. So, uh, I’ll keep it short because it can be I can’t take that detour, but, uh, I’m a Air Force veteran as an explosive detection dog handler. Uh, for six years. Um, and when I separated, my wife asked me to do something where she could get some sleep at night.

Joshua Kornitsky: Well, first, thank you for your service.

Pablo Gonzalez : Thank you, thank you. So, uh, I still wanted to, uh, you know, make an impact on on my community, uh, wherever it is, and society as a whole. So I went into, uh, into business consulting. I found that a small.

Joshua Kornitsky: Business.

Pablo Gonzalez : Profession. Yeah, I found that small business owners and just business owners in general always have a really amazing story as to what got them there. And they’re they’re the ones helping the economy. Uh, get back to where it needs to be. Um, and I, I found during those years of business consulting that the main problem was always, I wish I could afford more help. You know, I need it. I can’t, I can’t get it. Um. That would be great. And payroll. And, you know, nowadays you’re having some college kids coming out expecting $95,000 salaries with no experience. Um, so it’s it’s it’s really helpful to to the business owner that thinks there are several years away. Sure. And even the serial entrepreneurs that, uh, want to scale and sell, scale and sell.

Joshua Kornitsky: So it really helps them sort of be able to do things that they otherwise wouldn’t be able to touch.

Pablo Gonzalez : Precisely.

Joshua Kornitsky: Okay. And where do you make the connections with folks? Uh, obviously we’ll talk about where you find your customers, but where do you find the talent?

Pablo Gonzalez : Yeah. So we have them really all over the world. Uh, specifically where the cost of living is going to make the most sense for the business owner. Uh, in the sense of ROI. So it depends. We have most of Latin America, Asia, um, uh, Middle East. Uh, Trinidad and Tobago. I mean, really any with Jamaica, even anywhere where the cost of living is going to just make that the most sense.

Joshua Kornitsky: Okay. And do you specifically bring, uh, bring to market talent that may be multilingual and not that that’s a focus, but.

Pablo Gonzalez : Yeah, no, absolutely. All of the candidates speak, uh, speak English are very fluent in it, not just in English, but we also test for fluency in their specific field. Oh that’s great. Obviously, you know, I speak fluent Spanish. I’m Colombian. Um, but I couldn’t tell you how to take a computer apart and put it together. Okay. Um, so we test specifically, like bookkeepers, knowing those financial terms and such things.

Joshua Kornitsky: Okay. And. And how would you say that you’ve got a specific vertical that you’re helping, or as far as the clients that you’re looking for, what? What’s a good fit other than somebody who’s too busy?

Pablo Gonzalez : Yeah. No. So that’s the cool part about this is, is when I was in business, consulting was almost a little restrictive. Um, where the medical came into play. And, uh, you have to get all of this information to their first born, and even then, they might still get denied. Um, whereas now it can be an individual that thinks they’re too busy. It can be a business owner that needs to, that wants to spend a few more hours with their family a week. Um, and it can be serial entrepreneurs that are, uh, just buying, scaling and selling, um, and wanting to help the, the local community.

Joshua Kornitsky: So can I ask you a tough question?

Pablo Gonzalez : I would hope so.

Joshua Kornitsky: Tough question. Aren’t these taking American jobs?

Pablo Gonzalez : Yeah. Um, that’s that’s really that comes in a lot. Uh, I think I mentioned a little bit earlier and it’s it’s tough because you can’t find an American with ten years of experience. Uh, and their degree and looking for 1300 bucks a month. Um. That’s true. And, you know, these aren’t just cost savings. They’re competitive. Competitive advantages that fuel, uh, local job creation. So that’s where our mission statement comes in. Um, it’s it’s when you have that money you’re able to donate to your causes. You’re able to hire more stateside. Um, one of our niches that we’ve actually found is blue collar. Um, which might sound ironic because obviously there’s a lot of hands on. Sure, sure. Um, but they where they find the most ROI in filling their back office with these remote roles so that they can focus on the big picture and strategy.

Joshua Kornitsky: So they’re not just temporary roles. It’s not just I need somebody to help me out for the week. They’ll they’ll actually permanently take the position.

Pablo Gonzalez : Yes. So we actually prefer that, uh, it’s we’re direct hires. Um, so we were able to place them and integrate them with your team. We have, uh, standard operating procedures that we’re able to provide for people who, uh, might have. Well, are going to have. The question is, how do I integrate a remote person with my physical team? Um, and we found ways to do it that make it have the least friction possible, uh, with having the business owners not really have to worry about, uh, several other things other than I just made an amazing hire for a fraction of the cost.

Joshua Kornitsky: Wow. So that really does make a pretty strong impact. Now, I know you are also involved in a number of other organizations. Uh, first, can you tell me a little bit about the Cobb chamber?

Pablo Gonzalez : Yeah, I love the Cobb chamber. So ever since I separated from the Air Force, uh, and moved back here, uh, to Georgia, I’ve been involved with them. Only this last year on the steering committee, uh, for the young professionals. Um, but it’s a an amazing Cobb County, as you guys are aware, is an amazing county. Um, and the chamber specifically does a lot of good, uh, for, for the local community. Um, one of my favorite events is the top golf tournament. Uh, it’s a fundraiser for, uh, Children’s of Atlanta.

Joshua Kornitsky: Sure. Yeah. The children’s healthcare is is, uh. If I ever have the money, it’s where it’s going to go, for sure. But you also are involved with savvy. Would you tell us tell us what it stands for?

Pablo Gonzalez : Yeah, absolutely. Uh, so as a veteran myself, it’s it stands for a strategic alliance for veteran integration, and it’s a nonprofit that helps veterans reintegrate into society, um, through a specific course. So it’s resources for all veterans, but specifically, it builds out a track for someone who’s either a year from separation or post separation, um, if they want to go entrepreneurship route, if they want to go into corporate, if they want to go back to school, get their benefits squared away. I mean, free Coursera membership, it’s um, it’s a lot of resources. And, uh, Taps does a lot for us, which is the transition assistance program that is mandated in the military. But, uh, there’s just so much that it misses.

Joshua Kornitsky: So do you function as an advisor for some of the men and women that are in that window of getting ready to transition out or having just transitioned.

Pablo Gonzalez : Out, not to them directly? Uh, I help with the programs. Um, so, uh, outreach, um, resource gathering, uh, just being able to get the organization, uh, as, as successful as possible and be able to reach as many veterans as we can.

Joshua Kornitsky: And I assume that’s a nonprofit as well. Yes, yes. If people wanted to make a donation there, how would they go about doing that?

Pablo Gonzalez : Yeah, absolutely. So just on the website and you can look up Strategic Alliance for Veteran Integration or Savvy. And it actually has at the very top make a donation.

Joshua Kornitsky: Oh fantastic. Okay. So let me circle back to to Global Talent Direct because I want to make sure that we give due diligence and the amount of time there. So what, if anything, uh, should I have asked that? I haven’t asked that. That you want to communicate about how you help your clients and how you help the people that you employ? What if someone’s listening right now and and forwards this, uh, when we publish out to somebody in a different country, how do they reach you? What are the types of things that you’re looking for?

Pablo Gonzalez : Yeah. So if it’s if it’s talent, uh, what we’re looking for is meant to senior level experience. It makes the transition a lot easier for actually placing these individuals with having their own setup already and proven experience working remotely. Um, if it’s companies and organizations and nonprofits, then we’re actually able to, uh, we have social global talent direct on all socials. Um, and you can actually, uh, send me a text or a phone call at six seven 8 or 8 00542. And then there’s also the admin email on our website, Global Direct. Com.

Joshua Kornitsky: Oh, fantastic. And we’ll have all of that shared on our site as we will for for Sheela and complete investigations and security as well. Um, I can’t thank you enough, Pablo Sheila, for for sharing your experience and your stories and your knowledge with us. Um, it’s been great to have you here in the studio. We try to make it interesting. We try to make sure we ask the right questions. Thank you both for being here. This is Joshua Kornitsky professional iOS implementer and your host today on Cherokee Business Radio.

 

Tagged With: Complete Investigations and Security, Global Talent Direct

BRX Pro Tip: Why You Should Serve Local Business Associations and Non-Profits

July 17, 2025 by angishields

BRXmic99
BRX Pro Tips
BRX Pro Tip: Why You Should Serve Local Business Associations and Non-Profits
Loading
00:00 /
RSS Feed
Share
Link
Embed

Download file

BRX-Banner

BRX Pro Tip: Why You Should Serve Local Business Associations and Non-Profits

Stone Payton: Welcome back to Business RadioX Pro Tips. Stone Payton, Lee Kantor here with you. Lee, you know, so many of our studio partners, including you and I, are very involved with business associations and nonprofits in our respective communities. I think I know why we’re doing it. A big part of it is it makes me really feel good. But, how would you articulate the the reason? I mean, why do this?

Lee Kantor: Yeah. I think it’s so important, especially in our business, where we’re trying to be the voice of business in the community. We’re the place to share the stories in the community. So in order for us to do our job and to fulfill our mission, we have to be kind of that hub for business in the community. And a great way to do that is to serve the local business associations and the local nonprofits. And again, in our case, we’re there to tell their stories. We want them to get the word out, to help them get the word out about the good work that they’re doing. That typically gets ignored by traditional media resources. So we want to be that safe place where those stories are told.

Lee Kantor: So it’s logical that we partner with them. It’s logical we share their stories. It’s logical we interview them. Now from a strategic standpoint, it’s good business. It’s good business to be that person in the community, because we are going to be known as one of the good guys. So there’s that good kind of corporate citizen halo that comes along with doing this kind of work. We’re going to be trusted by the leadership of all these associations. When we get involved with local business associations, we’re unlocking kind of these super powerful networking opportunities because we’re invited to all their get togethers.

Lee Kantor: They want us to appear there. They want us to interview their folks. They want us to be connected with their association. There’s something in it for them. And by walking the walk rather than talking the talk, these are groups that are important to the community and we are important to them. So that’s a great positioning place to be. So it puts us in front of the right people. It puts us positioned as the right kind of person within that group, and it connects us with other entrepreneurs, because a lot of the people that are on the boards of these groups are entrepreneurs.

Lee Kantor: It puts us in front of potential clients. It puts us in front of industry experts, and it opens the doors to lots of different partnerships and referral opportunities that you’d never be able to get on your own if you weren’t affiliated with Business RadioX. So the bottom line is, serving local associations and nonprofits isn’t just good corporate citizenship, it’s a smart business move to make the relationships. The visibility, the goodwill you build is going to pay dividends in your business for years and years and years.

BRX Pro Tip: Nurturing Vs. Selling

July 16, 2025 by angishields

BRXmic99
BRX Pro Tips
BRX Pro Tip: Nurturing Vs. Selling
Loading
00:00 /
RSS Feed
Share
Link
Embed

Download file

BRX-Banner

BRX Pro Tip: Nurturing Vs. Selling

Stone Payton: And we are back with Business RadioX Pro Tips. Lee Kantor and Stone Payton here with you this morning. Lee, let’s explore the comparison, nurturing versus selling.

Lee Kantor: Yeah. I think in marketing, you’re doing one or the other but you’re not doing both, and I think a lot of people try to do everything in one marketing piece.

Lee Kantor: If you’re sharing educational thought, leadership, best practices, tips, then you’re helping nurture your prospect into trusting you as a resource and considering your service. That’s not the time to necessarily ask for the order. That is the time of, “Hey, I’m a good corporate citizen. I’m sharing information that I think is useful and that’s important. I’m smart. I’m a thought leader. Here are some things that have worked. This is what I’ve learned. Trust me.” That’s what you’re doing in that case.

Lee Kantor: When you’re selling, that’s about asking for the business. That’s making a recommendation on how they can solve a prospect’s problem. That’s something else. Then you’re asking for the order. Then it is appropriate to ask for the order and sell somebody actively.

Lee Kantor: Do one or the other, but don’t combine them both in one marketing piece and understand that when people are checking you out, which they are, they have a different mindset at different times. So when you’re nurturing, nurture, and when you’re selling, sell, but don’t do both simultaneously.

BRX Pro Tip: Always Deliver More Value

July 15, 2025 by angishields

BRXmic99
BRX Pro Tips
BRX Pro Tip: Always Deliver More Value
Loading
00:00 /
RSS Feed
Share
Link
Embed

Download file

BRX-Banner

BRX Pro Tip: Always Deliver More Value

Stone Payton : Welcome to Business RadioX Pro Tips. Lee Kantor Stone and Payton here with you. Lee, under rules to live by, always deliver more value.

Lee Kantor: Yeah. That’s one of those things that are kind of the basics of business. Obviously, you have to deliver good value at a fair price in order to get a client. And once you’ve figured out how to do that, then you can start pushing that value line and adding more and more value. And the deeper you understand your client, you can start anticipating your client’s needs and help them get more and more out of your service.

Lee Kantor: By always trying to deliver more value, you will become that indispensable resource and partner to your clients that will separate you from everybody else. So obviously at the beginning of a business relationship, you want to be able to deliver a good value at a fair price that everybody feels like they’re winning and it’s a win-win situation. And then over time, the better you get to know your client, you can keep pushing that value line and keep finding services that you can be delivering to help your client become that much more successful. That way, you will have a customer for life.

Corey Harlock with KeyHire Solutions

July 14, 2025 by angishields

HBR-Corey-Harlock-Feature
Houston Business Radio
Corey Harlock with KeyHire Solutions
Loading
00:00 /
RSS Feed
Share
Link
Embed

Download file

KeyHire-logo-2021

Corey-HarlockCorey Harlock is the founder of KeyHire Solutions©, a talent strategy and acquisition consulting firm that helps small businesses—typically in the $5–25 million revenue range—scale successfully by hiring the right people at the right time.

With his Strategic Talent Scaling System© and KeyOwner Stages© framework, Corey empowers business owners to move from reactive hiring to intentional, strategic growth by redefining how they approach leadership and team building.

In his conversation with Trisha, Corey shared his unique journey from the hospitality industry to becoming a trusted advisor in the world of small business talent consulting. He explained how most business owners fall into the trap of hiring the wrong leaders or expecting too much too soon from new hires—and how KeyHire helps prevent those costly mistakes.

By deeply understanding each client’s business, constraints, and culture, Corey ensures a 90% first-hire success rate while saving time and frustration. His passion for listening, strategic hiring, and shifting leadership mindsets is what truly sets his work apart.

Connect with Corey on LinkedIn.

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios in Houston, Texas. It’s time for Houston Business Radio. Now, here’s your host.

Trisha Stetzel: Hello. Houston Trisha Stetzel here bringing you another episode of Houston Business Radio. It is my pleasure to introduce you to my guest today, Corey Harlock, who is the founder and principal of KeyHire Solutions, a specialized talent strategy and acquisition consulting firm dedicated to small businesses. Through his proprietary Strategic Talent Scaling system, Corey helps elevate owners businesses from where they are to where they want to be. And I know you don’t want me to go on Corey, but I’m going to do it just a little bit longer and then I’m going to turn it over to you. So what sets Corey’s approach apart is how quickly and intimately he he learns each client’s needs, talent gaps, and constraints. This comprehensive understanding allows roles to be precisely defined, leading to the recruitment of highly qualified professionals who hit the ground running. Corey, welcome to the show.

Corey Harlock: Thank you. Pleasure to be here. Man, you can make yourself sound really good on paper, hey?

Trisha Stetzel: I know,right?

Trisha Stetzel: Yeah. Every once in a while, it’s nice when somebody uses your bio to introduce you. And that’s only a portion of it. Right. So, Corey, I know people listening and even I would like to learn more about you. So tell us about Corey and then let’s jump into Kiara Solutions.

Corey Harlock: Do you want personal professional. Bit of both.

Trisha Stetzel: Yeah, a little bit of both.

Corey Harlock: Sure. I’m, uh, been married and I’ve been with my wife now, my wife, since 1999. We got married in 2016. We have two kids, a 16 year old and 11 year olds. We’re right in the middle of it. Um, and, you know, we moved down to Houston from Canada. I will be speaking Canadian throughout this entire interview. We moved down here in 2014, so not long enough to get my drawl yet. But my wife’s a French speaker, so hers is really taken a long time. Um, but, uh, so we came down here and, you know, I’m I was an agency. My first life was in hospitality. Then I transitioned into agency recruiting back up in Canada. And when I came down here, I slipped into another agency job. But the whole time, um, I knew I’m an entrepreneur. And so, uh, I wanted to start a business, but I wanted to do something totally unique and different. And because I’m an entrepreneur, I wanted to help entrepreneurs. And it’s easy to look around the landscape and see everyone is happy to help the big guys because they got lots of money. And so I kind of put a challenge to myself to find a solution for small business that was fair and equitable for both sides, right? Your experience has value and I wanted to add value, but I also wanted to be able to earn a living.

Corey Harlock: And I was involved with Vista. I still am, but at that time I was in a different group and so I pitched this idea. I thought I had, and my members of the vistas group who had, you know, so many different disciplines, um, very graciously started kind of pulling me aside and saying, well, you know, our, our the CFO in the group pulled me aside and said, well, how are you going to make money? I said, I don’t know. It’s a great question. So he helped me come up with my my model. Um, we had Neo’s a really great EOS implementer here in the area named Randy Busby. She was like, well, how are you going to deliver it? I said, I don’t know. And she said, well, you know, the EOS model is pretty good. So she helped me work through the delivery of it, and then I leveraged that to go to my chair and say, hey, in your CEO group, if there are any companies that want to demo this for free So I can prove my model. I’d be happy to do it.

Corey Harlock: So I did it. I think I had three people that tried it. They all kind of came back and said, yeah, what you’re delivering is not what we want. And so I changed the model again. And now we have key here as it is today. Right. So it was a bit of a journey, but um, and it’s developing all the time. But where it is right now is, uh, you know, we focus on small business owners 5 to $25 million. And our goal is to we come in right where when you start a business, you hire your neighbor, you hire your neighbor’s cousin, you hire your friend, and everyone pitches in and does everything they think they need to do. And if they do a great job, eventually that business will. The needs and requirements of that business will outgrow the experience and the capacity of the group of people that started it. And that’s where we come in. That’s where we go to the owner and say, okay, let’s look and see. Where are you? Do you have talent gaps? Where do we need to build capacity into your business so we can keep you on this trajectory? So that’s kind of what key hire was built for.

Trisha Stetzel: So I heard you talk about the collaboration and the effort to get you where you are today. And also underpinning that listening to your clients. Hey, talk to me more about how how you got where you are today. Were you always open to collaboration or was that something you had to practice because you were really good at doing it yourself? Tell me more about how that journey from there to here was part of your business journey, or your entrepreneurship.

Corey Harlock: Tricia, that is an amazing question. Thank you. So, um, when I was in hospitality, I went very far, very fast. Uh, just through sheer will and determination. Um, I didn’t know what I didn’t know, and I had a very, very healthy ego, and I thought I knew everything. And as I transitioned through, you know, different phases of life, learning to listen and accept the help is something I have worked very hard on when it came to building Key Hire. I had a group of people that I knew, like and trusted, and even they at times had to say, hey, hey, hey, just settle down here. Just listen to what I’m saying. Um, because it’s you build. You build something, you know, there’s there’s there’s a blog by Seth Godin. Godin, whatever you want to call it. And it’s, it’s entitled who Will say go? And I recommend every entrepreneur go read it. It’s two paragraphs, but it essentially says anyone on the planet can be a proofreader. Anyone on the planet can take your idea and poke holes in it. But it takes real courage to take an idea and put it into the world. Um, and so that’s that’s what I’ve had to learn is, um, to not talk. To listen. Right. Even when you’re asking the question, I thought I knew what the question was halfway through, and I was ready to answer, but I had to go. No, no, no, just beep. And I’m glad I did because it was different than I thought, you know? So, um, it’s it’s a journey. I’m a work in progress. Uh, I can still be a little hard headed. I can still be a little stubborn, but, um, I have people around me who care enough and are brave enough and are honest enough to say, yeah, get over yourself. You need to listen to reason here, so I’m happy for that.

Trisha Stetzel: Yeah, you have to collaborate and you have to listen to your clients sometimes, right, to see what they actually want or need. Read alongside of what we think we’re bringing to the market, right? In order to support them.

Corey Harlock: And the other side of that is in business. If I try to solve a client’s problem before they feel like I’ve heard the problem, they’re not going to listen to me and they’re going to say, you don’t get it right, and I’m going to lose business. So listening to this is not a revelation, right? Listening is a really important skill, and there are very few negatives to it, and tons of benefits to just listening to people and acknowledging them and, and, and, and, and, um, letting them know that they’ve been heard. I don’t think there’s a downside to that that I can think of. Maybe you can, but.

Trisha Stetzel: No, no, I think I, I would absolutely agree with you. And there isn’t there really isn’t a downside, a downside to listening. And now as human beings, we get to choose what we take with us and choose what we leave behind. Right. The good listeners actually take it all into consideration instead of just neglecting the part that doesn’t sound like very much fun or is hard.

Corey Harlock: The selective hearing. Yeah. And I don’t know about you, but I like to let things marinate. Right? I like to, um. People will tell me something and I’ll say, uh, maybe I don’t know. I don’t like it. And then you circle back. Two days, two weeks, two months later. And I’ve said it to my marketing guy. I’ve said it to my ear. I know you told me this, like, four weeks ago, and I didn’t like it. But it’s the right thing to do. Let’s let’s go with that, you know. So it takes me a minute to, to get there.

Trisha Stetzel: Mhm. I love that. Okay. So I’m going to circle back to key hire Solutions and what you’re doing in your business. And what I heard you say was you’re helping. Listen I know right now I’m repeating you back to you. Can you just tell I’ve had some lessons. Um, what I heard you say is that you’re helping businesses that have gotten to a point where they’ve hired their neighbor, they’ve hired the cousin, they’ve hired this, this pile of people that they know and love and trust, and they just can’t get to the next step, right? So my question there is, because a lot of people listening are right there. What’s their first mistake?

Corey Harlock: Okay. So the first mistake is um, not taking the time because often they don’t have it because at that point they’re underwater. They’re working 60 hours a week. They’re taking it home with them. They’re stressed out. Right. In the key hire vernacular, you know, we have these key owner stages, and we call that the overwhelm business over a business owner. And a real simple way to think about it is if you imagine a car and all four tires are off the car. Right. And so they’re looking at this business with all four tires falling off, and they’re thinking, I got a problem. I know it’s a big problem, and I don’t even know where to start to try and fix it. Right. So the first mistake is probably twofold. Number one, someone says to them, hey, my neighbor just got laid off. And they’re, you know, they were a high level manager with this big company. They’d be great for you. So they splash out a bunch of cash in terms of salary to go hire a big ticket leader without putting the right process in place. And nine times out of ten, that is great for about three months. And then everyone realizes we’re paying this person a whole bunch of money and we don’t know what they’re doing.

Corey Harlock: They don’t understand our business. They don’t have the right skill set. They don’t. They’re not able to build in the policy procedure capacity of the business. We hope they would. And it’s no fault of either side. It’s just that the right questions weren’t asked or to save the money. They start hiring people on potential, meaning people without the experience who have that go get them attitude, but they expect the results of a seasoned experience person, and then they and if they do well in the beginning, maybe, you know, their first month or two, they’re really taking things on and getting things done and having an impact. They heap tons and tons more responsibility on them, overwhelm them, and then say, well, I don’t know what happened to them. They were doing such a great job. And what’s changed and what’s changed is we just, um, didn’t manage their expectations or we didn’t align their duties. You know, something I call breaking their neck, right? I’m really good at, uh, cold calling people. And, man, you’re really good at cold calling. You should run our marketing program. Well, that’s not the same doing so. Social media and cold calling are very different skill sets. Right. So breaking their neck means their face this way.

Corey Harlock: Then you make them turn around 180 and go the other way, and they’re flip flopping between the two based on who’s knocking on their door at that moment. And then you start wondering, wow, they used to be really get a cold calling, but it’s really dropped off and they’re not doing a great job with their sales or marketing either. What? Why aren’t they engaged? What’s happened? Maybe I need to replace them. And it’s they’re still doing the best they can. Right. That the caveat here is when I talk about these things, I’m always assuming and I feel like I need to put a disclaimer out there. We’re always assuming everyone is doing the best they can and the best they can for the business, right? I never want to paint a business owner in a bad light and say, you know, they’re they’re making bad decisions. They’re doing exactly what they think they need to do. And their intention, they’re well intentioned. It’s just sometimes you don’t know, and you make a mistake and you do what feels right or you think is right at the time. But down the road it could really kind of turn around and make things a little more difficult.

Trisha Stetzel: Yeah, absolutely. And I’m just thinking as you’re talking through that, getting the right people in the right place, doing the right thing at the right time. And sometimes we skew that as a busy business owner and just keep piling things on. Okay.

Corey Harlock: And to add to that, you know, I just I’m onboarding a client right now and they need a production manager. They they did the exact thing. They hired a referral of a friend. They paid them a ton of money. And they and they just didn’t work out. And so they’ve they’ve released that person. And, you know, they said to me, we really need this position. I said, I get it. And and the owner made this thing like, I’m I’m swimming here. And I said, I get it. You have to tread water a little longer. This isn’t a two week fix, because I don’t want you to hire someone just to hire someone. I would rather you struggle now and let’s get the right person in place to take that off your plate so you can kind of exhale, build trust with them and push those responsibilities aside so you can focus on pushing your business forward versus hiring someone who’s kinda there. And then repeat this cycle again and never get you gained any traction and never have you really be able to exhale. Right. So and she’s like, I know, I know, I get it. I’m like, just you gotta hang in there, right? Like, let’s do this correctly because we want to maximize the probability getting this done right. So you can just kind of okay, I trust this person to do the job I need them to do. Yeah.

Trisha Stetzel: All right. So before we I want to dive further into that like your your process of helping people get through this, this space where they’re just swimming and they need to tread water longer and get the right hire on. But before then, uh, would you let people know how to contact you if they want to have more conversation with you about this particular topic?

Corey Harlock: Linkedin is a great way to do it. Just Corey Harlock. I might be the only Corey Harlock on LinkedIn, I don’t know. Or if you go to our website, um, uh, there’s a button on there that’ll say be our next success story. Um, but that is just kind of click that button. It’ll take you to a page where you can get access to my calendar and book. Book a meeting there. Uh, we always say no sales, no weirdness, just help. Uh, we’re a first company, so don’t think you’re going to get on there. And we’re going to try to sell you a bunch of stuff. I’m happy to spend a half hour with any business owner if we can build a relationship. And you like what I say and what we can do for you, then we can talk about working together. But that’s not the purpose of the call.

Trisha Stetzel: Yeah, I love that all of that information will also be in the show notes as usual. So if you’re sitting in front of the computer listening in or watching, just point and click for those of you listening in the car, don’t point and click. Come back to it later. And Corey Harlock is spelled c o r e y h a r l o c k. And yes, you can definitely find him on LinkedIn. Okay, Corey, let’s circle back to how you help clients hire the right people for the right thing at the right time, doing the right things.

Corey Harlock: So the three biggest mistakes a business owner makes when they when they hire is number one, they don’t clearly define the role. They kind of usually have an immediate need. So they build a job description around that. So once the person comes in and solves that problem, you kind of don’t know what they’re doing anymore. Number two is they don’t have a clearly defined process hiring process, which is very important. Right. Candidate experience is the number one thing that will move the needle in someone taking your job or not. And then number three is they hire for current needs not future needs. One of our expressions at Key Hire is we’re not hiring someone to run your $10 million a year company. We’re hiring someone to run your $30 million a year company currently doing ten right. And when you as if if I can give a business owner one piece of advice. Start saying that when you hire right. Take your current revenue. Take your five year goal and say we’re hiring for this goal. Currently doing this because the person who can get you there can build the process and procedure to help you scale. So back to, you know, Kiara, what we do is we do a ton of diligence with the client. So we’re not an agency recruiting firm. We’re consultants that that do talent acquisition. So our goal is to understand your business almost as well as you.

Corey Harlock: Um, you know, I’m flying up to a company in Oklahoma next Wednesday. Just spend the day with them just to walk that company and understand it. So when I when I go to market and start talking to people, you know, we’re not key hire representing a client. We’re representing them. We’re telling their story in the marketplace. Place, right? But when we do that, we’ll also, uh, the role they have. I think we’re going to need to discuss it. And the, um, the job descriptions or requirements are probably going to change a bit once we do our diligence and sit down and talk with them. So we’ll do that. We call that our action plan. And then the action plan. You know we create a scorecard and we’ll create a company overview and we’ll do comp analysis and we’ll create the hiring process that we’re going to use. And then so that is like clearly defining the role. Right. Exactly what we need. Then we’re going to clearly define the process. Our process is proven to work. We have a 90% success rate with our clients in terms of the people they hire. So we’ll we’ll define the process. And part of our scorecard is capacity. There’s three elements to our scorecard. It’s culture experience capacity. And we we measure everyone all on all of those things. Then we walk our clients through the process.

Corey Harlock: We do the heavy lifting in the background on behalf of them, Our clients spend anywhere from 6 to 12 total man hours per hire because we we try to go out and represent them the best we can. And when we bring them someone, we want them to think, um, yeah, this is great. I have a client who always says, if you ever need a referral, just have them call me because he always says the best thing. I like. What I like about working with you, Corey, is you bring me one person and I know I’m going to hire that person. I know I don’t have to interview a whole bunch of people because you know our company so well. Uh, it doesn’t always work out like that. But our interview to offer ratio is about 1.6 to 1.8. So our clients, on average interview 1.6 to 1.8 candidates per offer given. So really our goal is to give them back as much time as they can. Um, the battle cry of every small business owner don’t have the time, don’t have the money. So we try to solve the money issue by being, you know, a fair and equitable resource for them. And we try to solve their time issue by buy. Trust us, we’re going to do all the hard work in the background. You just have to show up when we need you to.

Trisha Stetzel: All right. I’m going to circle back around to the time thing, because it’s really sitting with me. And I talk to a lot of business owners who they’re swimming, right? Barely. They might have floaties. They need floaties because time is a big deal for all of them. So what would you tell these business owners who are listening and saying, gosh, I really I would really like to take that first step, but I’m scared to death to do it because something in my business is going to break. If I stop paying attention to it, what would you tell them?

Corey Harlock: Yeah, that’s so hiring the right. The mindset is in that situation when we’re talking about an overwhelmed business owner and our key owner stages, it goes from overwhelmed to unsure to curious to growing. So when we’re in the overwhelmed stage, the mindset becomes, if I can just hire that one right person, my life will be better. Things will be better. And it’s not. It’s not a home run. It’s for singles, right? So we need to hire the first right person to just let a little arrow to the tire. Right. Just give you a little more back. Just give you a little something back. So then we can focus on the next one. And then that next one comes in. And now we’re really letting the air out. Because now we have two main concerns of the business locked down with professional people that probably know that part of your business better than you do. Right? And that’s the goal. And so then each one is a continuum, right? So you go from that overwhelmed to unsure, which is you know, that the unsure we call those the wobbly wheels. So you know how the, um, the overwhelmed or the tires are off the car? Well, now imagine a car with all wobbly wheels. You’re going down the road, but it is not a smooth ride. Right? And you’re thinking you’re still unsure. Like, how do I fix this problem? But at least I’m getting some motion out of this.

Corey Harlock: It’s not. It’s not fun. Then the curious business owner, we call that the squeaky wheel. So you can point to the tire. You’re still going down the road. Things are okay, but I can point to the tire and go, I know I have a problem there, but I don’t know what my options are. How can I fix that? Right? Um, so we want to take them through that. And each stage, sometimes they go pretty quickly. But you see the the change in the mindset. Now, um, I like to say we, we help, uh, business owners redefine what good leaders look like. So once you put a good professional leader in a business and it works, that’s where they get curious and they start saying, oh, I had no idea they could do all of these things. Now we use I usually do, and we just kind of don’t talk about it because I don’t want them to feel like, well, no, I just need them to do this right. But then once they see it, they start thinking, well, what if I went out and got some other great leaders like this one? How would that impact my business? And then that’s where it starts getting fun, right? That’s where you start really getting some traction and moving through those stages and into that growing stages where ideally we would love to get them.

Trisha Stetzel: Yeah, absolutely. Okay, so one thing that I noticed is that you are almost a true Texan because you when you said you were going to Oklahoma, you said you were flying up there.

Corey Harlock: Oh, okay.

Trisha Stetzel: I’m just saying we’re getting closer. We’re getting closer to being a Texan. Uh, do you work outside? You said you’re flying Oklahoma. So do you work across the United States? What’s your preferred territory?

Corey Harlock: We like to keep it, you know, within Texas, if we can. But occasionally, you know, I’ve worked. We’ve worked in Alabama. Uh, we’ve worked in, uh, Tennessee. Going to work in Oklahoma now. Um, so, yeah, if we can get there and still be a part of that company and have them feel like, you know, we’re in, we’re in sauce for them and we’re part of their team. Yeah. Um, the process just works better when we can spend time with the owners and be with them and build that relationship.

Trisha Stetzel: Okay, awesome. One more time. Tell people how they can find you. And then I have one more question for you. So tell us how we can find you or connect with you.

Corey Harlock: Yeah. Linkedin Corey Harlock c o r e h a r l o k. And then the website is key. Hire dot solutions. So k e h I e dot solutions. Um and then you’ll find a button there like be our next success story or or schedule a meeting or whatever it is. And uh, like I said, no sales, no weirdness. Just help.

Trisha Stetzel: Just help. Just. Corey. I’ve really enjoyed our conversation today. So my last question or my last, I guess. I guess it’s a question. Um, tell me your favorite client story.

Corey Harlock: My favorite client story. Um. Well, I’ll tell you my. I have a and I’m really fortunate because I usually really just really, like, work my business owners. I mean, that’s why I wanted to work with business owners, because they’re really cool people. Right. They have a passion. They have the courage to start something. So, um, one of my favorite, uh, um, happenings was I have a client. He’s in warehouse distribution. He’s got a really cool business. And when I first started with him, you know, two and a half years ago, the first person I put in there was a director of operations for him. And it’s this guy out in New York. And I always say his love language is arguing. He just loves a good argument. But he does everything with a big smile on his face. And he’s just really good. And he’s just this great personality. And he’s built this, uh, relationship with the owner where they are, you know, no holds barred. They don’t hold anything against each other, but they’re not afraid to to just fight for what they think is right. And so we are now in the process of of bringing in a director of finance for him. And he said to me, Corey, this director of finance has to be good as the director of operations, you got me because he’s the best hire I ever made. And I was like, yeah, I love that. That’s amazing.

Trisha Stetzel: That’s awesome. I got goosebumps. That makes me feel sad. That makes me feel good for the work that you’re doing out there. Corey.

Corey Harlock: It’s it made me feel good for him because he hired a really good leader and he was humble enough to, uh, allow him to do his thing, even though he didn’t always understand it. But, you know, it’s just like eventually got to the point. And he’s like, I trust you. I know you will make the right decisions, so I don’t get it, but just go do what you got to do to make my business better. And, uh. It’s great. Right? Just watching, like, when I go on site with those two and just to hear them bicker, it brings me joy.

Trisha Stetzel: Love, languages, arguing. I know a few people like that, Corey. I’m just saying. Yeah. Thank you so much for being with me today. It’s been a great conversation.

Corey Harlock: I’ve enjoyed it. Thank you so much.

Trisha Stetzel: You’re very welcome. All right everybody. That was Corey Harlock with Ki Hire Solutions. And that’s all the time that we have for today. If you found value in this conversation share it with a fellow entrepreneur, veteran or Houston leader who’s ready to grow. And of course, as always, be sure you follow, rate and review the show. It helps us reach more bold business minds just like yours. Your business, your leadership, and your legacy are built one intentional step at a time. So stay inspired, stay focused, and keep building the business and the life you deserve.

 

Dr. Tangela Harris with Six Figure Chicks

July 14, 2025 by angishields

BTU-Tangela-Harris-Feature
Beyond the Uniform
Dr. Tangela Harris with Six Figure Chicks
Loading
00:00 /
RSS Feed
Share
Link
Embed

Download file

Tangela-HarrisDr. Tangela Harris is a Gulf War U.S. Army Veteran, transformation coach, international speaker, and author committed to helping others live by design—not by default. As the visionary behind God & I, Do… My Vow, she inspires people to reconnect with their faith, purpose, and personal power through daily intentional living. Her movement encourages self-care and spiritual growth, with each empowering T-shirt accompanied by a daily VOW card—prompting recommitment to God, oneself, and others.

In her conversation with Trisha, Dr. Harris shared the life journey that took her from the battlefield to breakthrough. She discussed how her military service shaped her resilience and deepened her commitment to helping others heal, grow, and rediscover joy. six-figure-chicks-logo

Dr. Harris also spoke about her new initiatives, including retreats, inspirational products, and her chapter in 6 Figure Chicks Volume One. Known as “Your Professional Friend,” she coaches ministry and business leaders to break unhealthy patterns, find balance, and align their lives with purpose. Her message is rooted in faith, authenticity, and transformation.

Connect with Tangela on LinkedIn.

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios in Houston, Texas. It’s time for Houston Business Radio. Now, here’s your host.

Trisha Stetzel: Hello, Houston. Trisha Stetzel here bringing you another episode of Houston Business Radio beyond the uniform series. You guys know what that means? I’ve got a special sister vet on with me and a sister from the book, as you guys have been hearing about. So I’m super excited about having Dr. Tangela Harris, founder and CEO and creator of God, and I do. We’re going to talk a lot about that. I also want you to know that she has over a decade of experience as a motivational speaker and life coach, coupled with a bachelor’s degree in entrepreneurship from the University of Houston. Tangela, welcome to the show.

Dr. Tangela Harris: Thank you, thank you, thank you.

Trisha Stetzel: I’m so excited to have you on today. And we have so many things to talk about in so little time. So here’s where I want to start. Okay. Tell us more about who you are. And then I’d like to dive into God and I do.

Dr. Tangela Harris: Okay. Um, I would definitely say I am a woman mother, a sister entrepreneur. Auntie, a grandma. I’m all those things as well as, you know, I’m good at cooking clean. That’s a lie. I’m not good at cooking. That is a lie. I’m not that bad.

Trisha Stetzel: It’s okay. We’ll just take it back.

Dr. Tangela Harris: I’m good at preparing. That’s okay.

Trisha Stetzel: I love.

Dr. Tangela Harris: It. Carry. And you know the fact that, you know, I’m a retired hairstylist, 30 to 35 years. I have seen how I have been involved all these years and all these different things that I’ve done and do and show up to that at the end of the day. I’m just a woman that God created to produce and help others to transform their lives. So that’s pretty much what I’ve been doing. I’ve been helping women pull out what God has instilled in them. I’ve been helping women to heal. I’ve been helping men to heal, too, I think, to lead them out. I’ve helped men to heal. And that’s that’s just who I am. I love to help. I love to show up. I love to support. I love to be your biggest cheerleader. And that’s just this. That has always naturally been me.

Trisha Stetzel: I can see that about you being everyone’s biggest fan, but also learning over the years to take care of yourself. You know, we were talking about that just before we started recording this show, and I appreciate the love that you were giving back to me today very much. Uh, we got to look out for each other, right? Yeah. So you’ve a pretty diverse background. You’ve done a lot of amazing things, but your most recent project is being the founder, CEO, creator of God, and I do. Tell me more about this. I’m going to call it a movement because I hear it coming from. Yes. Let’s talk about it.

Dr. Tangela Harris: Let me tell you, let me tell you. Let me tell you. Okay. It started with me being married three times. So that means that I switched my name three times. And after the last one being a, it ended in domestic violence. So I am an advocate for domestic violence. Um, God showed me that I was running from my name. I didn’t really like who I was. I didn’t like who I, I didn’t know, I didn’t like anything about me. And so what God showed me was I was changing my name, trying to discover this person. And it always came right back to Harris. So after that last, the last marriage, I had to sit back and say, okay, God, what? What am I doing wrong? Like what? What am I doing? He said one. You need to start with a relationship with me. And I’m like, well, God, I’ve been going to church. What do you mean? I’ve been going to church all my life. I mean, I don’t do the the worst things. I’m not perfect, but. And he was like, the relationship with me starts off with allowing me to love you, I chose you. And then in the midst of that, you’ll discover who you really are. You’re the apple of my eye. I love you, I chose you first. I created you in my image. And then whatever you and I have, it spills over into everybody else. But what you’ve been doing is serving everybody else. I think that’s what I want you to do.

Dr. Tangela Harris: And so now you’re drained and you’re tired and you’re depleted because those people are not giving back to you. Now you’re coming to me saying, father, fix this. Fix this now. So in the midst of that transition and him showing me that I was like, wow, I never thought about that. So then the second confirmation was I was listening to somebody speak and they said, most of you are creating a relationship with God based on your natural father. Wait, what? False flag on the play. Wait, what? He said you. If your father, not your father, disappointed you. You look at God as disappointing you. You look at your natural father not showing up. You don’t think God’s going to show up? He was telling the truth. That’s how I was treating God. I was treating God the way that I treated or received affection or attention from a natural father. So there was another journey. So I’m like, God, okay, let’s let’s wipe the slate clean. I’m good at that one. Let’s watch. Just like a teacher. Let’s wipe it clean. Let’s get that soapy water. Get all the residue. Now show me what love is. Show me how to receive love. Show me what that looks like. And that’s where we birth God and I. We do first, then it spills over into everybody else. So now I have a I have this relationship with God. I go to him first. I don’t care what it is, when it is how I go to him first, then he’s showing me how I’m looking at it, how I can look at it, what could be the outcome, what could be the consequences? He shows me all of that and I’m like, okay, okay, okay.

Dr. Tangela Harris: So God and I do. And that’s just my bile. Because I’ve had people to say, well, why are you why are you stopping to do that? Was he the man you had in your life? He’s the head of my life. I go to him first. Before we wrote the book. Six figure checks. I talked to Mel. It was amazing conversation. But when I got off that phone, I said, God, okay, I missed this. Who, me? Mhm. Should I? I went straight to him. So it’s him and I against the world, not the world depleting me. Then I want God to fix it and then I find it myself. Mhm. So God did I do is a movement of let’s put God first. Let’s put things in a proper order. God first. God. What does it mean to be in a relationship? What does it mean to be in a healthy relationship with myself? With others? What does that look like? Let’s start there. Then. Now I need to apply it in my life. I need self-care. I need to put me first. If God rested on the seventh day. Explain to me why I’m going on and on without rest.

Trisha Stetzel: Yes.

Dr. Tangela Harris: Don’t make sense. And then everybody reap the benefits of the love between him and I. And what we doing? Then they get the overflow. So I’ve learned to not put people ahead of God. I go to him first because he’s showing me people I shouldn’t connect with. He showed me with people that have ill feelings towards me. He showed me, hey, you can talk to that person. That’s a good person. I’m dealing with that person. And so the movement is I want people to pause and go back to the first. The Scripture Matthew six and 33 says, seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness. Then all that other stuff will be added to you. Stop forcing or pushing to get the stuff. Start Thought here.

Trisha Stetzel: Yeah.

Dr. Tangela Harris: It’s more you than the overflow. Yeah.

Trisha Stetzel: Oh, I love that. That’s so amazing. And I. I can feel the overflow from you. So thank you for being there for me today because this feels really special. And I love the way that you’ve reframed, um, your priorities, um, so that you can take care of yourself and you can take care of other people with that overflow. So tell me more about this movement and how you’re bringing it to other people.

Dr. Tangela Harris: Oh I’m excited. Okay. So we’re starting with apparel. We’re starting with t shirts. We’re starting with t shirts. God, and I do. It’s my vow. That’s number one. And we hope that it’ll be a conversation piece, because, you know, we do have people who don’t know nothing about God. They don’t know nothing about themselves. And that’ll be a great introduction. That’s number one. And with every shirt comes a vow card. So I got an I do is saying, okay, God, I choose you daily. That’s the whole God. I choose you daily. You’re first. And so the vow cards, the wild cards that come with the shirt, you can tape it to your mirror so you’ll be able to read I am special, I’m his apple of his eye. I’m God’s masterpiece. I know it helps you set the stage for the day. Because we go through as we know, we go through so much. You know, after burying my father 60 days later, burying my grandmother who raised me, and then a year later, my fiance. That’s a lot. That’s a lot. And all I could do is sit on the on the on the on the sofa. And I didn’t want to think. I didn’t want to breathe. I didn’t want to cry. I just I was just sitting there. And so in this movement, when you look at the cars on your on your, you put it in your car, you’re going to put it on in your cubicle or. But I put all my affirmations on my mirror in the bathroom. So when I’m brushing my teeth, I’m reading. Okay, wait and worship. Okay, okay. So while I’m waiting, I can wait and worship God, I honor you, okay? God, it’s about you. Okay. What I got to do. Okay, I need to do those t shirts. I put everything on on my mirror. So the vow cards are cards that come with the come with the t shirt, and you can just tape it to your mirror so you ain’t got to do the work. I do the work for you.

Trisha Stetzel: And I love that. That’s so beautiful. And and I know as a, as a motivational speaker and as a life coach that this is going to be part of your work, right? As you move through this space. I’m so excited. So, um, tell people how they can best connect with you and find these shirts with the vow cards.

Dr. Tangela Harris: And can keep it simple. You can go to tangela. Com simple. Because everything I do is on there because the the work. Like you said, there’s a whole movement, but then the work comes, you know, there will be Bible studies, there will be, um, you know, times of retreats. He gave me this great retreat. I gotta figure it out. But Sacred Pulse, I was like, oh, God, that’s good. But what I what I know God has brought me to leaders. I’m I’m that person that that that work with leaders. And God wants the leaders to understand. I know I gave you great work, but I need you to pause for me. So just like you’re going on vacation tomorrow, that is God’s sacred pause. So you don’t have to think you could just kind of be how to kind of process what you’re dealing with. Just be in that space because a lot of leaders don’t. Because I was one of them. Always going, going, going every weekend, every weekend. Now I at least get myself two weekends out of the month that it’s just nothing. It’s a time that you can you can think better. That’s the time where you can create. That’s the time when you’re able to be refueled. You know, we don’t have to be drained. We don’t have to. If God if God pours on the seventh day Sabbath, why are we not causing art in the new beginning, the beginning of a new week or a new month or whatever? So we have to learn to pause. So I say, okay, God will show me what you want me to do with this retreat. I like that, I like.

Trisha Stetzel: That sounds amazing, and I’m sure that information will be up on your website as well when it’s available. That sounds. I love that it just came to you. I’ve never led a big retreat, but I’ve been called to be a participant in one, and it can be such a special time, not only for yourself in the connection, the spiritual connection that you have, but also the connection with the other people show up. Right. Yeah. I love that you’re doing that. That is amazing. You do such a beautiful work, Tangela, and I can’t wait to see more of what’s to come with God and I do.

Dr. Tangela Harris: I love it, I love it, I’m excited. I start to get scared for a minute. You know, I start to, I mean, for just a brief because I was on vacation last week. So for a brief moment I was like, oh, because I seen warehouses and, you know, manufacturers. And I was like, okay, God. Okay. All right. So I’m ready. I am ready. But for, for for a short moment I was like, oh Lord, okay, okay.

Trisha Stetzel: It’s okay. It’s what you’ve been called to do. And you’re going to impact so many other people through your actions and your words. Right. Because you have this relationship with him and you’ve been called to do this work. So excited. So can we. You mentioned it, uh, the book 66. I’m so excited about this. So my sister, Doctor Tangela, is one of the, um, coauthors or chapter writers in six. Figure six Houston, volume one, P. S international best selling author. Doctor Tangela. Congratulations. This is so exciting. Do you want to tell us.

Dr. Tangela Harris: You two.

Trisha Stetzel: No it’s not. Yes, yes, yes. Uh, do you want to give us a little sneak peek into the chapter that you’ve written so that we can get folks to buy even more of these?

Dr. Tangela Harris: I love it, I love it. My chapter is about bouncing back. Mm. You remember when we were growing up? It was that big ball on that. That that long rubber band that used to boom, boom.

Trisha Stetzel: Yes, yes.

Dr. Tangela Harris: That’s how we are in life. Mm. You know, we go through different things and guess what? We have the ability to bounce back. And if we keep that image in our head that you know what, it might have hit the wall. But guess what. It bounces right back. And in my chapter, I talk about being resilient. The military taught me about being resilient. I didn’t even know what the word really meant. And then when life started happening. Over here, over here, over here, I was like, oh, but then I stand straight back up. I’m standing up. I’m standing tall, you know, and you can’t tell nothing’s going on. Because really, a lot of people don’t think I have any issues. And I’m like, if you knew the fires that go on in my life. But that’s not who God created me to be. He created me to find the solution or understand the solution on how I can use what I’ve been through to help somebody else. So when I’m bouncing back, I’m not bouncing back for tangent. I’m bouncing back for that woman who needs my story. I’m bouncing back for that little girl who needs to hear my voice. I’m bouncing back from that man that just needed time to just tell me a little something. Tell me a little something. Cease, you know? But it’s that bounce back. And so that I. I love my chapter because it reveals something in me because I didn’t think I, I was that bounce back person. But as I was diving into and I’m researching and I was doing, you know, how you doing that little self-assessment. And I was like, girl, you you are a bad mama jamma girl. You you’ve got it going on. You’ve been through some stuff, but yeah. I, I motivated myself. I was like, girl, you did that.

Trisha Stetzel: Amazing. Well, and sometimes we have to sit down and reflect, right? And reflect on all of the things that we’ve done. Mhm.

Dr. Tangela Harris: Well welcome back.

Trisha Stetzel: Yes, ma’am. Well congratulations on um choosing to be a part of this. So can you tell me just a little bit about the actual engagement with Mel? I know you said oh, she came to you. How did you guys meet? And then I know the follow on to that. Right.

Dr. Tangela Harris: Oh, let me tell you. Oh, male. Well, my, um, president of noble, because I’m part of a Navajo national organization was the national, uh, National Association of Women Business Owners. Yes. And the president, she knew that. She said that she couldn’t do it right then because she had a lot on her plate. So she referred me, and I said, okay, I’ll check it out and see what you know, what it’s about. So when I met with Mel, She was so inviting. She was like. I mean, it was like we we knew each other already, and she just. She just made it very comfortable. And when she explained her her movement because it’s a movement, when she explained her movement, I want to be a part of. And so for me, it was the best thing in me. I’ve written books, I’ve read. I got seven books out there on Amazon, but this book was part of a movement because one I’m with others, everything else I’m doing alone, but I’m with others. And so now I feel like I got sisters. So I’m not the only one that got to be and be in this space. And I ask questions. And so she was just she, she, she showed us the, the steps. You’re welcome to call her and she’ll, you know, she break it down because you know that I feel a little special with that. I didn’t understand trail or Trello wasn’t my plan at first. And so when she said I was handling no problem. And I mean, we just talked and everything. But but most of all, I like the way that she’s creating our community. Mhm. Like we have uh, not just Houston. We got Phoenix. Okay. We got Arizona in the house. So she, she brings us all together. So we have all these sisters that are coming together for one book, but we all have something to contribute in each other’s lives. And that’s that’s why I’m on this show.

Speaker4: You know.

Trisha Stetzel: That’s how we met.

Speaker4: Oh.

Dr. Tangela Harris: No. Is is more is a movement. But of all of it, male creates this amazing community of powerhouses. That’s. That’s what we are. Hey, hey.

Speaker4: Yeah.

Dr. Tangela Harris: Powerhouses. And we’re able to ignite and help each other go beyond. Not that we’re not already there, but go beyond and be that support system as we go through.

Trisha Stetzel: Yeah, absolutely. And and even the, the follow on to all of this, the mentoring with young women and the sharing, as you mentioned, with other cities who are powerhouse women are writing a chapter in a book. It’s just been absolutely amazing. Well, I am so glad that Mel found you and me and that we got to meet each other. We have one other really big thing in common. Mhm. I happen to know that you’re a veteran as well. Right. So I would love as we get to the back end of our conversation today to understand how your time in service, your time in the military helped prepare you for who you are today and the work that you’re doing.

Dr. Tangela Harris: I am a Gulf War Army veteran, so that means I’m in the war. When I went to war. I never would have known. The strength that I carry. I never would have known. Just the. Not just strength, but the fact that I was facing physical danger. And I was able to stand. So going through the death of loved ones, I was able to stand going through three divorces. I was able to stand being a single mother of two. I was able to stand and not just stand. I wasn’t just surviving, literally. I was thriving in the midst of. And the reason why I say I was thriving, because I have people that come back and say, I watched you. I’m like, what? Why were you watching me? You know, that was like. Because I never understood. Where did you get the energy or the capacity to move like you move? And I had to tell him it was the military. So when I had this one person who told me that you need to get rid of that military part of you. And I was like, the military raised me. So basically, you’re telling me to get rid of me. So I had to. I mean, I kind of walked away kind of feeling pretty low because I’m like, that’s who I am. I’m an organized person. I am structured. I make sure that, hey, if you say you’re going to be at three, guess what? I need to see you at 245. You know, I have some things that the military has raised me to be that created me to this point.

Dr. Tangela Harris: And then you tell me that I need to get rid of it. And that didn’t sit well with me. But what I noticed was you’re going to have people that’s not going to celebrate you. And you gotta be okay. You gotta be able to stand in the midst of adversity. I was standing while they stood here trying to shoot at us. Okay? We we. My unit was responsible for the POW camp. So those people didn’t want to fight because the situation they were in, they didn’t want to fight. They had to fight because their family was captive. And, you know, so when you understand and you see all this going on, you start appreciating things. And so I started appreciating life. I started appreciating the freedom. I freedom, I start appreciating and then I say, well, you know what? Guess what? When I have these kids, I’m instill the same thing in them. So through my girls mentor, I have, you know, many layers through my girls mentoring program. Same thing building them, building the capacity to handle life challenges through my life coaching, through the the speaking engagements is all about building the capacity of how people move in the earth. That’s it. It’s about the capacity because some people are narrow tunnel vision. Tunnel vision. I’m like, but there’s still stuff on each side. So you have to learn to pull yourself out of it so you can see the big picture, and then you’ll know how to maneuver and how to move.

Speaker4: Yeah.

Trisha Stetzel: All of these experiences have made you who you are. They’ve made us who we are.

Dr. Tangela Harris: Yes.

Trisha Stetzel: And then you found a way to prioritize the things that come to you that are the most important. Angela, thank you so much. This has been so much fun celebrating you, doctor Angela Harris, by the way, you guys can find her at Angela Harris. Com t a g e l a h a r r I s.com. You can find all of the amazing work that she’s doing out there. Thank you for bringing us this movement of God, and I do thank you for bringing us your chapter in six figure chicks, Houston volume one, and thank you for your service. What would you like to leave the audience with today to Angela?

Dr. Tangela Harris: Um, I would like to leave everybody with choose to live by design, not by default. Default is those things that have happened. Yes it happened. Yes, it was traumatic. It left a little wound inside. But you can choose to live by design and by design. Meaning seek God and understanding why he created you. And who? The reason why you even hear. And then it’s always to serve somebody else. So if you’re feeling bad, you’re feeling low, you’re going through depression. You, you know, need healing from grief and everything. Put that energy in helping somebody else, and then that’ll start helping you to grow and grow and grow beyond this box. So live by design, not by default.

Trisha Stetzel: Oh, I love that. Thank you so much for being with me today. It’s been such a pleasure having you on the show.

Dr. Tangela Harris: It was a pleasure being here.

Speaker4: Thank you.

Trisha Stetzel: You’re very welcome. Doctor Tangela Harris, my guest today. Thank you. And that’s all the time we have. If you found value in this conversation, share it with a fellow entrepreneur, a veteran or Houston leader ready to grow. Be sure to follow, rate, and review the show. It helps us reach more bold business minds just like yours. Your business, your leadership, and your legacy are all built one intentional step at a time. So stay inspired. Stay focused and keep building the business and the life you deserve.

 

BRX Pro Tip: 5 Common BRX Studio Partner Revenue Streams

July 14, 2025 by angishields

BRXmic99
BRX Pro Tips
BRX Pro Tip: 5 Common BRX Studio Partner Revenue Streams
Loading
00:00 /
RSS Feed
Share
Link
Embed

Download file

BRX-Banner

BRX Pro Tip: 5 Common BRX Studio Partner Revenue Streams

Stone Payton: Welcome back to Business RadioX Pro Tips. Stone Payton and Lee Kantor here with you. Lee, of course, there are so many potential revenue streams as a Business RadioX studio partner, but what are some of the most popular in your experience?

Lee Kantor: Well, the most obvious one is sponsorships. Obviously, that’s where most of our studio partners get their most revenue, through sponsorships, to help their clients get the outcome they desire, which is usually business development in some form or fashion to help them get more clients and use our platform to help them do that. That’s by far the number one revenue stream that most of our studio partners take advantage of.

Lee Kantor: And there are literally, like you said, dozens of other potential revenue streams. Four more of the most popular ones are number one, remote broadcasts at local events, conferences, or trade shows. We get paid a lot of money multiple times a year to show up at different types of events and broadcast live or just broadcast from these events and give them – make the event a little bit more special by having kind of a live broadcast there and by having a lot of the important folks that this event is around be interviewed by us. So that’s another revenue stream that we can tap into throughout the year.

Lee Kantor: Number two is studio naming rights. We have several – several of our studio sponsors have a – their studio has a branded company name attached to it. And that’s an area that is just really easy if you can pull it off to facilitate. And then that company gets to come along for the ride every time that studio is mentioned.

Lee Kantor: Number three is these community partner membership programs. A lot of studios do this in a variety of ways with different names and stuff, but ultimately they are community partner membership programs that allow people who may not be able to afford a full-fledged sponsorship still have access to the studio, still have access to some of the benefits of being a sponsor in a more limited way, and also to give their brand a lot more kind of exposure just in the studio, in and around the studio, and they’re getting access to some of the benefits. So that’s a great way to generate additional revenue in the studio.

Lee Kantor: And lastly, we have something that a lot of studio partners take advantage of is a content concierge service because we create so much content for our clients, and in the studio, we can be creating video content, audio content obviously, but also we can take those the words of the interview and then repurpose them in multiple social media places. So, the content concierge service is something that a lot of studio partners take advantage of as well.

Lee Kantor: Those are kind of the top five most common revenue streams at Business RadioX studio, but there are literally dozens more ways to make money from being a studio partner. But these are the most common.

BRX Pro Tip: 3 Things to do to Better Understand Your Customers

July 11, 2025 by angishields

BRXmic99
BRX Pro Tips
BRX Pro Tip: 3 Things to do to Better Understand Your Customers
Loading
00:00 /
RSS Feed
Share
Link
Embed

Download file

BRX-Banner

BRX Pro Tip: 3 Things to do to Better Understand Your Customers

Stone Payton: Welcome back to Business RadioX Pro Tips. Lee Kantor and Stone Payton here with you. Lee, what can we do to help us better understand our customers?

Lee Kantor: Here’s three things you can do to better understand your customers, but I think it’s important to realize that the reason why it’s important to better understand your customers is because that’s going to help you with your customer retention. And customer retention is critical for a healthy, growing business. You can’t afford to be burning and churning through customers. Especially our customers who are primarily in professional services, they need customers that stick around and that they have to figure out ways to make sure they are sticking around.

Lee Kantor: So, here’s three things you can do that’s going to improve your customer retention, but it really is focusing on knowing and understanding your customers better.

Lee Kantor: Number one, you got to ask. You got to get some feedback. You got to regularly collect feedback through surveys, reviews, interviews. You have to really get to know them and understand their needs, wants, and pain points. And those things change, so you can’t just think you’ve done this one time, you know, three years ago and then you’re good. Things have changed. Just think about your own life, things have changed dramatically over the last few years. So, you better be regularly collecting feedback from your customers to truly understand what their needs are today, not what they were, you know, three years ago when you met them.

Lee Kantor: The second thing you should be doing is to personalize their experience. Is there anything you can be doing to make your customers feel more valued and appreciated by tailoring your products and services and communications to their individual preferences? That’s the level of customer service people are expecting today. Everything is very customized and that’s their expectation, so you better figure out ways that you have these kind of customized solutions. It can’t be a one size fits all anymore. That’s very difficult in today’s world.

Lee Kantor: And lastly and so importantly, is, figure out ways to build community. You got to get beyond these transactional interactions and invest in building genuine relationships with your customers. And you got to figure out ways to help your customers grow. And a lot of that can happen if you can help your customers interact with your other customers. If there’s ways for them to work together, to learn together, a way for them to serve each other, those are all great things that you can be adding that can separate yourself from your competition to help differentiate your service from everybody else.

Lee Kantor: If they see that you are trying to build community and they’re part of it, they’re going to really resonate with that and they’re going to really want to help in ways that they can. So, if you can build community, that is a great way to help you with your customer retention and a great way to understand your clients better.

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 27
  • 28
  • 29
  • 30
  • 31
  • …
  • 1318
  • Next Page »

Business RadioX ® Network


 

Our Most Recent Episode

CONNECT WITH US

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Our Mission

We help local business leaders get the word out about the important work they’re doing to serve their market, their community, and their profession.

We support and celebrate business by sharing positive business stories that traditional media ignores. Some media leans left. Some media leans right. We lean business.

Sponsor a Show

Build Relationships and Grow Your Business. Click here for more details.

Partner With Us

Discover More Here

Terms and Conditions
Privacy Policy

Connect with us

Want to keep up with the latest in pro-business news across the network? Follow us on social media for the latest stories!
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Google+
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Business RadioX® Headquarters
1000 Abernathy Rd. NE
Building 400, Suite L-10
Sandy Springs, GA 30328

© 2025 Business RadioX ® · Rainmaker Platform

BRXStudioCoversLA

Wait! Don’t Miss an Episode of LA Business Radio

BRXStudioCoversDENVER

Wait! Don’t Miss an Episode of Denver Business Radio

BRXStudioCoversPENSACOLA

Wait! Don’t Miss an Episode of Pensacola Business Radio

BRXStudioCoversBIRMINGHAM

Wait! Don’t Miss an Episode of Birmingham Business Radio

BRXStudioCoversTALLAHASSEE

Wait! Don’t Miss an Episode of Tallahassee Business Radio

BRXStudioCoversRALEIGH

Wait! Don’t Miss an Episode of Raleigh Business Radio

BRXStudioCoversRICHMONDNoWhite

Wait! Don’t Miss an Episode of Richmond Business Radio

BRXStudioCoversNASHVILLENoWhite

Wait! Don’t Miss an Episode of Nashville Business Radio

BRXStudioCoversDETROIT

Wait! Don’t Miss an Episode of Detroit Business Radio

BRXStudioCoversSTLOUIS

Wait! Don’t Miss an Episode of St. Louis Business Radio

BRXStudioCoversCOLUMBUS-small

Wait! Don’t Miss an Episode of Columbus Business Radio

Coachthecoach-08-08

Wait! Don’t Miss an Episode of Coach the Coach

BRXStudioCoversBAYAREA

Wait! Don’t Miss an Episode of Bay Area Business Radio

BRXStudioCoversCHICAGO

Wait! Don’t Miss an Episode of Chicago Business Radio

Wait! Don’t Miss an Episode of Atlanta Business Radio