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 ®

Jordan Fladell with MLevel

July 31, 2020 by angishields

mLevel-logo
Atlanta Business Radio
Jordan Fladell with MLevel
Loading
00:00 /
RSS Feed
Share
Link
Embed

Download file

OnPay-Banner

Jordan-Fladell-mLevelJordan Fladell is CEO and Co-Founder of MLevel, the award-winning digital learning platform. He brings a unique viewpoint to the learning world as for the past twenty-five years Jordan has been delivering and educating corporations on disruptive technologies witnessing firsthand the engagement challenge companies face today.

The excitement and passion for helping companies successfully drive advancement via education is what Jordan brings to the table each and every day.

Follow MLevel on LinkedIn and Facebook.

What You’ll Learn in This Episode

  • Impact of COVID on Corporate Training at large companies
  • Impact of COVID on the frontline workforce
  • The pace of digital transformation and the lack of recognition of the impact on employees mental health and well being
  • Consumer confidence and how the economy won’t return to normal until business owners take the lead

About Our Sponsor

OnPay’sOnPay-Dots payroll services and HR software give you more time to focus on what’s most important. Rated “Excellent” by PC Magazine, we make it easy to pay employees fast, we automate all payroll taxes, and we even keep all your HR and benefits organized and compliant.

Our award-winning customer service includes an accuracy guarantee, deep integrations with popular accounting software, and we’ll even enter all your employee information for you — whether you have five employees or 500. Take a closer look to see all the ways we can save you time and money in the back office.

Follow OnPay on LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter.

ATDC Radio: Take 5 – Talkin’ Capital and Companies Edition

July 31, 2020 by angishields

About Your Host

Jane McCracken returns to ATDC as a Startup Catalyst, having started her career here many years ago. She then moved into venture capital and investment banking both in the United States and Europe before joining an early-stage, medical diagnostics company as chief financial officer.  During her time there, she raised $60 million and completed eight international acquisitions. The company was listed on both the London and Oslo stock exchanges.

Jane then worked with two venture-backed companies.  She joined the founders of an online travel company as CEO, and took it from startup to the world’s second-largest hotel booking site before Travelocity acquired it. At the request of her venture investors, Jane then joined a computer games developer as CEO and turned around the faltering enterprise before it was sold to a NASDAQ-listed games company.

Most recently, Jane was CEO of an oncology-focused clinical research company, which grew from startup to a multinational firm with $15 million in annual revenue and offices across Europe and the United States.  The company was financed through its own cash flow and was sold in early 2012 to a larger clinical research organization.

Jane continues to work with fast growing companies — in interim and full-time positions — as a consultant, board member, and angel investor. In addition, Jane has served on boards for public and private companies, as well as government-related and non-profit organizations. She is a frequent speaker and panelist at conferences, companies, and universities and is an active volunteer in her community. Jane obtained her bachelor’s degree from Wake Forest University and her master’s degree at the Georgia Institute of Technology.

Connect with Jane on LinkedIn.

BRX Pro Tip: Additional BRX Revenue Streams – Coaching

July 31, 2020 by angishields

Franchise Marketing Radio: Kelly Gray with Rapid Fired Pizza and Hot Head Burritos

July 31, 2020 by angishields

Kelly-Gray-Rapid-Fired-Pizza
Dayton Business Radio
Franchise Marketing Radio: Kelly Gray with Rapid Fired Pizza and Hot Head Burritos
Loading
00:00 /
RSS Feed
Share
Link
Embed

Download file

Brought To You By SeoSamba . . . Comprehensive, High Performing Marketing Solutions For Mature And Emerging Franchise Brands . . . To Supercharge Your Franchise Marketing, Go To seosamba.com

Hot-Head-Burritos-logo

Kelly-Gray-Rapid-Fired-PizzaKelly Gray is a co-founder of Rapid Fired Pizza Franchising and partner in Hot Head Burritos Franchising. She was named one of Dayton’s 50 most influential women by Dayton Business Journal for the past 5 years.

Kelly is a 10 year+ CCIM (Certified Commercial Member of the Board of Realtors) Real Estate veteran with extensive experience in site selection, development, leasing and capital investments. She was the go-to agent for ten franchisors for nearly a decade who direct their franchisees to her to site stores in the Ohio Valley region.

Her national real estate network supports store development nationwide in concert with the franchise system Area Developers. Under her leadership, Hot Head Burritos and Rapid Fired Pizza corporate stores and franchisees transitioned to from traditional in-line, Subway style locations to high profile, prime retail end-cap and free standing formats.

Kelly is former Series 7 licensed Financial Securities Representative with a degree in Public Relations. She and her PR team have marshaled the brands to national rankings in the Top 100 QSR/Fast Casual Movers & Shakers and Future 50 brands to watch in 2019 and 2020..

Kelly has her Bachelor’s Degree in Public Relations from Capital University, Columbus, OH.

Connect with Kelly on LinkedIn.

Tagged With: franchise, Hot Head Burritos, Rapid Fired Pizza

High Velocity Radio: Speaker and Coach Vincent T. Edwards

July 30, 2020 by angishields

Vincent-Edwards
High Velocity Radio
High Velocity Radio: Speaker and Coach Vincent T. Edwards
Loading
00:00 /
RSS Feed
Share
Link
Embed

Download file

Vincent-EdwardsVincent “Mr. Speaker” Edwards was a college dropout, diagnosed with cancer and faced dealing with the mental and physical anguish of serving in the Army during the Gulf War. He is the owner of Blessed Enterprise and a John Maxwell Certified Speaker, Trainer, and Coach.

For the last 20 years “Mr. Speaker” has impacted students, professionals and members of the general public with such motivational topics as “Purpose, Plan & Performance,” “Out In Front,” and “Good Success.”

From athletic teams and promising student leaders to department store employees, senior management staff and faith-based organizations, “Mr. Speaker” has been called upon for his personal and interactive approach, as well as his ability to take his own life experiences and catapult them into stepping stones toward success for his audiences.

In addition to holding a business degree from Florida State University, Vincent “Mr. Speaker” Edwards brings to each speaking engagement an arsenal of professional expertise, which includes Management (Hotel & Restaurant), Financial Services, Training & Professional Development, Military, Human Resources and Consultancy.

Vincent is a native of Pompano Beach, Florida, resides in Tallahassee is married to April and they have one son, Isaiah.

Connect with Vincent on LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter.

Customer Experience Radio Welcomes: Jay Papasan with Papasan Properties Group

July 30, 2020 by angishields

JayPapasanheadshot
Customer Experience Radio
Customer Experience Radio Welcomes: Jay Papasan with Papasan Properties Group
Loading
00:00 /
RSS Feed
Share
Link
Embed

Download file

Jay-Papasan

CER

JayPapasanheadshotJay Papasan [Pap-uh-zan] is a bestselling author that serves as the vice president of learning for Keller Williams Realty International, the world’s largest real estate company.

He is also vice president of KellerINK and co-owner, alongside his wife Wendy, of Papasan Properties Group with Keller Williams Realty in Austin, Texas.

He was born and raised in Memphis, TN.

After attending the University of Memphis he spent several years working abroad in Paris before attending New York University’s graduate writing program. Upon graduating he found work at HarperCollins Publishers, where he helped piece together such bestselling books as Body-for-Life by Bill Phillips and Go for the Goal by Mia Hamm.

After moving to Austin, Jay joined Keller Williams Realty International, and in 2003 he co-authored The Millionaire Real Estate Agent, a million-copy bestseller, alongside Gary Keller and Dave Jenks.

His most recent work with Gary Keller on The ONE Thing has sold over 2 million copies worldwide and garnered more than 500 appearances on national bestseller lists, including #1 on The Wall Street Journal’s hardcover business list and has been translated into 39 different languages.

Follow Papasan Properties Group on LinkedIn and Facebook.

Transcript

Jill Heineck: [00:00:12] Welcome everyone to this very special edition of Customer Experience Radio. I’m your host, Jill Heineck. And I’m a business owner, real estate adviser, and customer experience enthusiast. Some of you may not know that I helped start the southeast region of Keller Williams Realty International back in 1999. It’s the world’s largest real estate company, by the way. It has been a wild ride ever since, which is why I’m super excited about our guests today.

Jill Heineck: [00:00:38] Jay Papasan is a best selling author that serves as the vice-president of Learning for Keller Williams Realty, as well as vice-president of Keller Inc., and is co-owner alongside his wife, Wendy, of Papasan Properties with Keller Williams Realty in Austin, Texas. In 2003, Jay co-authored The Millionaire Real Estate Agent, a million copy bestseller. And for some of us, a business Bible whether you’re with Keller Williams or not. He wrote this alongside the great Dave Jenks, who was once my coach back in the day, and Gary Keller, co-founder and current CEO of Keller Williams Realty International.

Jay Papasan: [00:01:11] Jay’s most recent work with Gary on The One Thing has sold over two million copies worldwide and garnered more than 500 appearances on national bestseller lists. The premise of the book is to give the reader tools on how to become laser focused on The One Thing that will propel your business, marriage, life, family, et cetera, forward. Perfect for today’s discussion. Welcome, Jay.

Jay Papasan: [00:01:33] Thank you, Jill. I’m really happy to be here.

Jill Heineck: [00:01:37] I’m so excited to talk to you. So one of the biggest attractions for me when I came to work with Keller Williams was that Gary’s commitment, even early on then, was to encourage agents to build their brand under the Keller WIlliams umbrella and really deemed us as agent partners. And so, for this discussion today around customer experience, we’re talking about really the internal customer from this perspective. And I kind of wanted to get an idea of if you could give us a little bit more about the leadership journey and what the discussions were around this concept.

Jay Papasan: [00:02:12] From Keller Williams Realty, we think of the agent as our customer and not the buyer or seller. Is that what you’re referring to?

Jill Heineck: [00:02:15] Right. Exactly.

Jay Papasan: [00:02:17] Absolutely. And what’s weird is our actual legal customer is the franchisee. So, there’s a little wormhole of land renting customers here. But the reality is, we’re a franchise company. So, the broker, the franchisor is our customer. But Gary understood pretty early on that success on a local level was about the reputation and quality of the local agent and the business they brought. So, he made all of his success measures if we become this the company of choice for the best agents, then everything else will follow. The franchisees will attract the best agents. They’ll have the most buyers and sellers.

Jay Papasan: [00:02:54] So, it was very much a one thing principle before The One Thing was around. But the first domino is how do we attract, how do we get in business with the highest quality, the most successful agents, and just the most of them. Because a lot of times the quality comes from the quantity as well. So, that’s where that philosophy comes from in everything. I mean, we prize people who’ve been in the real estate business. My wife runs one of the top real estate teams in the country. You know, we want people with direct experience, with the agent experience so that we’re always creating the best tools for them. It’s a deeply embedded philosophy here.

Jill Heineck: [00:03:29] That’s what has been, you know, really an eye opener for me as I talk to agents from other companies, whereas, there might be some things that are going on internally that a lot of things that can happen that fall on deaf ears. And what I’m finding is that we have had such a phenomenal – even in the last five years, the biggest changes have been the agents have spoken and leadership has responded. And so, when I talk about the customer experience, I’m talking about my experience as an agent within Keller Williams and how that’s enabling me to bring the best experience possible to my end user, the buyer and the seller.

Jill Heineck: [00:04:04] So, I’d love for you to touch a little bit more on how internally you all are working on trying to keep the franchisors, giving them the best tools they can to provide the rest of us the tools that we need for the end. You know, is there anything fine or is there are one thing that you like to share with us about what’s happening behind the scenes?

Jay Papasan: [00:04:24] So there’s a lot happening behind the scenes. I think when I first really got to know Gary – this move me back in summer of 2002 – I had worked in the company for a couple of years. I bumped into him in the bathroom and I broached the topic that “I hear you’re writing a book,” because I’d come from publishing, and that sparked a whole conversation. And the thing I remember is that day was the day he dedicated it. And back in the early 2000s, at least two days a month, he would spend all day just talking to our top agents. So, he would carve out a huge amount of time to have one- on-one conversations with our top performers.

Jay Papasan: [00:05:02] And, you know, you hang around with Gary and he’s like, “Jill, what are the big challenges that you’re facing? What’s working well for you?” Lots and lots of curiosity. So, he’s always leaned in to what are they experiencing? What do they need? So, the closer you get to the field, the people who are doing a 100 – I mean, back then 100 transactions was a lot. We had about five agents who are doing over a thousand transactions now. Right? So, you talk to those people, they have a deep sense of what’s needed. And so, it started with, I would call it entrepreneurial conversations. That was just Gary being Gary, a great entrepreneur.

Jay Papasan: [00:05:38] Now, we’ve ensconce, we call them labs. But we actually have a whole division of our company – a lot of other companies would call it focus groups. But we actually designed all of our products, whether they be education or technology, we bring the best of the best in and we say, what is it you’re looking for? And I’ve been in these rooms and they’ll literally hand out, like, 11 by 17 paper with a blank screen of computers on it or blank screens of mobile phones on it and saying, “Let’s draw the experience.” So if you opened up your phone and you were trying to host an open house on your phone, what would that look like?

Jay Papasan: [00:06:14] And granted, I mean, there’s a huge gap between what the average person thinks technology should be and the technologist. But having the technologist in the room with top performers has been a game changer for us. And it’s also allowed us to set, I think, better and better expectations with our customers because we understand what their pain point is. We can communicate it back to them clearly. We’ve heard from them what we think the solution is. And we use our expertise to translate that to actually a best practice.

Jay Papasan: [00:06:43] So, from direct conversations with your customers, now, we have very formal ones. We call them labs. I think that that is the test kitchen. The big secret behind a lot of our success is our willingness to take longer to ask the question, what do we need? And then, go all in on those solutions and really be dedicated. Our current technology platform – I mean, we’re just coming into the light. In my mind, we’re five years into this journey. I mean, that takes a huge commitment when you’re already number one to blow up your business and say let’s recreate it from the ground up. But that’s Gary Keller. That’s who we work for.

Jill Heineck: [00:07:20] And I am a beneficiary of that. And I really appreciate where that has come from. And I know that no matter what, nothing’s perfect. But we certainly have come light years from where we were, like you said, five years ago or even five years before that. But I think I’m seeing a lot of – we’re talking a lot about pivoting during this this pandemic time. We’re talking a lot about how can we continue to serve and still have these opportunities for agents to grow, even though we’re still in a learning phase, right, with labs? It’s just going to continue to evolve.

Jay Papasan: [00:07:57] I think it’s a discipline for the business. I don’t think it’s a phase. I think, I see it as an evolution to Gary. I mean, he started that practice in the early 90s of spending a few days a month with his top people and then masterminding four times a year. We’ve just taken that process and made it a business practice and ask how do we get more of our top people in the building who are designing products and courses really in tune with what’s happening in the field so that we can keep our products really, really relevant.

Jay Papasan: [00:08:27] And here’s the trick, like you said, it’s not perfect. The joke in the building is like, “Jill, if you don’t like it, you and your peers helped design it. So, how do we fix it?” And it’s part of our culture, right? It’s a we culture, not an I and they. And we’re going to do it together. And we’re going to share the blame when it doesn’t work. And we’re going to be accountable when it doesn’t work. And we’re going to fix it together.

Jay Papasan: [00:08:50] And that’s just been a fairly unique hallmark of our culture, this willingness of people that are paying to be in business with us, to roll up their sleeves and say, “I want to have a voice in this process. I want to have agency so that I can help make this experience even better for me and my customers.” It’s fairly unusual, I think, in business.

Jill Heineck: [00:09:11] I agree. And so, I’d love to dive in a little bit deeper regarding what you mentioned about franchisors ,and, you know, when someone is looking to Keller Williams as a possible option. I mean, is there one or two or top three things that you would have that person really bear in mind when they’re approaching Keller Williams about becoming a franchisor?

Jay Papasan: [00:09:37] I think it’s not for everyone. I think that it used to be we’ve never had a franchise sales department, I think early on, when Gary was selling – and this is the early ’90s when he was selling – we got in business with the wrong people. So, now it’s much more of a selection process. So, I think come from curiosity, unlike a lot of franchises, I don’t consider it a passive investment. It is, I think, a very complex business instrument our franchise. We run a big model. Our average number of agents in one of our market centers is around 170. The closest competitor is going to be about 60. So, we run a very much kind of like a Walmart, but with a lot of the perks you would think from the higher end stores.

Jay Papasan: [00:10:22] We have good margins. I think, 95 percent of our franchises are profitable in an annual basis. It goes up and down plus or minus two percent, but it’s extremely high percentage. But I don’t think it’s not something you just buy and let your third cousin run for you. You want to be actively engaged if you want to get the most out of it. And I think you really want to look hard at our culture. Is this the culture I want to be a part of? I think that’s the thing that most people who love our company love the most about it.

Jay Papasan: [00:10:52] But I also admit it’s not for everyone. We’re a team. We’re interdependent on each other versus being independent. Even though as independent franchise owners, they have a lot of independence but they choose to give some of that up. So I don’t know. It’s a quirky place. I think it’s a fabulous business to own.

Jay Papasan: [00:11:10] I own part of the franchise in my hometown of Memphis. And it’s got a fabulous rate of return and it’s gotten a lot of my family involved. My sister’s now an assistant team leader in that office, which makes me so happy to see my big sister getting into leadership in the company I’m so fond of. But it is a special place and we’re growing worldwide. I don’t know, we’re in 40 countries now. That culture has really attracted a lot of people. And I think that’s why, in terms of the number of agents who want to be in business with us, we’ve been number one for a while. And I think the culture is number one.

Jay Papasan: [00:11:44] So, it’s not a passive investment. It’s not for everyone. Just because you can write a check doesn’t mean you get one. And you should definitely check out the culture and say, “Is this something I want to be a part of?” Most people fall in love pretty quickly, then you’ll know, like, this is worth pursuing.

Jill Heineck: [00:12:00] Right. And I noticed that early on in the late ’90s that, you know, there were a lot of people throwing checks around and a lot of people got them thrown back right at them. So, it was really interesting to top players, which is not even – it wasn’t even a conversation. So, I find that to be very attractive because the selection process does make a huge difference and that does impact the culture, right?

Jay Papasan: [00:12:24] Absolutely. Well, you know that. You helped run one of the regions, right? I mean, who you’re in business with matters. That is one of our really big cultural values that we will get out of business with high performers that don’t match our culture.

Jill Heineck: [00:12:38] Right. And we’ve seen that happen on the local level here. What would you say the definition of the the customer or agent experiences for Keller Williams when we’re talking about lab [inaudible].

Jay Papasan: [00:12:51] Oh, even though you sent me that question in advance and I struggled with it. And it’s because it’s always evolving. I think that we have a philosophy that every great business has three essential components. You have a value proposition. You have a service plan to deliver on your value proposition. So, it’s not just a false promise. So, here’s what we do for you that’s special. Here’s how we do it consistently. And then, you know this, we believe in the database. The power of the database that we’re going to run a relationship business and stay in touch.

Jill Heineck: [00:13:23] So, I’ve seen our value proposition to the agents change. When I first joined the company, we were a profit sharing company. Very quickly thereafter, when we launched MAPS Coaching, which is now the largest coaching company in the industry even though they can only coach KW people. We, for many years, said that we were a coaching and training company. And on that, I mean, the profit share – let’s just toss it. We’ve given out $1.4 billion historically in terms of profit share. So that’s no false promise. We made as of last month –

Jill Heineck: [00:13:56] I can attest to that.

Jay Papasan: [00:13:56] As of last month, we’ve made 90 millionaires just from that one program. And that’s the direct benefits. We have no idea if they reinvested that money for more.

Jay Papasan: [00:14:07] As a training and coaching company, we were named number one by Training Magazine so many times. We’re now in the Training Magazine Hall of Fame. So, it was kind of like when they created the children’s hardcover book list in The New York Times because they were so tired of seeing Harry Potter taking all the spots in the fiction. So they just created a whole new list. And today we’re a technology company and it evolves.

Jay Papasan: [00:14:31] And I think if you’re going to stay relevant, it’s a particularly dangerous thing when you become number one. You think that how we got here is how we stay here. It’s very disruptive too. If you’re constantly blowing up your value proposition, but you have to ask, what is the next generation need? What is the next – here’s the really morose question, but it’s a great business question for everyone listening. What does the company that puts us out of business look like? And how do I become that tomorrow? And Gary is always asking, like, who is the biggest threat to us and how do we just become that instead of let them attack us? And we would do that within reason. We wouldn’t become something that didn’t match our values.

Jay Papasan: [00:15:17] We asked that question about five years ago. And everyone was like, “Well, look at Zillow, look at Trulia, look at Redfin, or whatever.” It’s going to be a tech company most likely in ten years that’s dominant. So like, “Great. Let’s go become one.” So, I think when you ask what is the definition of the customer experience, you have to ask that question every year. That would be my answer. I wish I could give you, “And here’s the formula.” But the formula is always be adapting so that you’re always relevant to your customers.

Jill Heineck: [00:15:48] And again, it goes back to what you’re saying, you know, what is your value prop, how are you delivering the value prop, and then how are you delivering it, like, in 2020, in 2021, in 2022? So it will evolve and change it. But as long as you are stating this and being transparent with the customer, I think that that’s where these top producing agents and franchises are doing well. And how often – I mean, do you really see a market center go away because they just lost it? They lost the culture. They’ve lost kind of momentum. I mean, how often does that really happen?

Jay Papasan: [00:16:26] You know, we have about – I don’t know – 850 franchise offices. We call them market centers, if someone’s listening and doesn’t know what that means. Maybe one a year. I mean, it’s at the very tail end and that almost always comes from – always rises and falls with leadership. That there was some massive mistake with leadership. The culture went awry and that created a situation.

Jay Papasan: [00:16:51] And a lot of times what we do is either those offices do sometimes close. Or we’ll just merge them in, say, “Look, why don’t you take a smaller portion of a better run office so you all merge.” And a lot of times what we see is the people who fled, maybe, the bad atmosphere, will then coalesce around the new opportunity and we can quickly right that situation.

Jill Heineck: [00:17:14] Right. Which I think, you know, fantastic. It’s not like just somebody just loses. They can at least, potentially, have another option.

Jay Papasan: [00:17:21] Yeah. It doesn’t always happen that way, right? But I do think that one of the people who is looking to get in business with us hired an attorney to look into our litigious backgrounds. And for a company our size – the report is out there on the web somewhere. He ended up publishing it. Like, it’s some of the least litigious places ever. And we’ve had our fair share. You know, we’ve gone through a couple of CEOs in the last five years. We’ve had our turmoil. We’ve had our moments. But we generally get it right in the end.

Jay Papasan: [00:17:50] And I think one of the values of we don’t want to have to go to court. We don’t want to have our corporate attorneys enforce these things. Find a win- win. Win-win is the first thing in our value system. Win-win or no deal. Every win is not equal. It’s not like you get 50 and I get 50. It might be you get 25 and I get 75, but you didn’t get zero. So I think that they’re always looking for how can we make this a win. Because I got to tell you, over the long run, just avoiding the litigation makes being a little bit generous in all those situations, even for people who may not completely deserve it is absolutely a great best practice.

Jill Heineck: [00:18:31] Absolutely. So pick an internal customer, what is the one thing that you would do to improve the internal customer experience at the moment?

Jay Papasan: [00:18:41] You said the magic words, the one thing. Our book is The One Thing. And every training that we’ve ever created around this, everything I’ve learned, this goes all the way back to my parents, if you want to have an amazing customer experience, everything, rides and falls, and how you set expectations. If we set expectations properly, the customer experience will go well.

Jay Papasan: [00:19:03] And it’s so funny, my wife, you know, they do a couple of hundred transactions a year. And I’m married to a realtor, so we’re always kind of on, right? She’ll get a call. We’re driving around. Like, in corona, one of the things that we do sometimes is we need to take the dog for a long walk in the afternoons or sometimes we’ll go, “We never drive our cars anymore.” You just want to drive around the neighborhood and we’ll get a call. And it’s so funny.

Jay Papasan: [00:19:30] Almost all of the challenges we have with consumers can be traced back to a poor setting of expectations. Even when things go wrong, “Hey, Jill. The reason I’m calling you today is we got bad news from the appraiser and here’s what we’re going to do to handle it.” But when we don’t communicate exactly what’s happening and what will happen and the way that our customers can hear it and actually internalize it, we’re always going to be – though we deliver, we’ll be faced with maybe a poor customer experience. So to me, it’s all about how do we set expectations? How can we do it better in the future?

Jill Heineck: [00:20:05] That’s right. And I found that each time that I don’t set the expectation with the client or if I deviate from what I normally do, like having both decision makers at the initial appointment or from the initial call, any time there’s deviation there, almost always we’ll have a hiccup or ten. And then, you’re backpedaling and trying to fix it. So, that I appreciate so much and I agree 100 percent.

Jill Heineck: [00:20:30] So, now when we’re talking about, you know, you’re on the – there’s the technology team, there is the learning team, there’s the ops team. So how are you coaching your teams internally to really deliver on the customer experience, to whomever we’re discussing whether it’s the franchisee, or the agent, et cetera?

Jay Papasan: [00:20:52] So, you know, our president is Josh Team. He comes from a software background. And he wants things to be predictable. He wants things to be measurable. I mean, he’s like a chess champion kind of smart guy. So he can do a lot of the stuff in his head. His intuition is very smart. But he really looks to data. So one of the things, without it also being like this chore, what we try to do is be really clear going into a new initiative is, what’s going to be our success measure. And I think with a lot of entrepreneurs, we know a good idea when we hear it. And because we’re entrepreneurs, we’re good at pivoting quickly and moving to it. And I think Keller Williams is incredibly agile.

Jay Papasan: [00:21:35] In the last couple of years, though, under Josh’s leadership – we have an executive leadership team that I get to be a part of – we work together. And say, “Look, we have some corporate initiatives that we know our top four or five. Does this new thing actually serve those or are we just doing something because it’s new? So, I think a little bit of it’s not can we do it. It’s should we do it. And if we do it, how will we know we’re successful? And asking that question up front forces us to build in some sort of tracking mechanism.

Jay Papasan: [00:22:08] You know, it might be – like, I know a lot of agents, you know, who do, like, a net promoter score. I mean, anything super simple. On a scale of one to ten, how likely are you to refer me to one of your friends? It’s just one question, but it gives them kind of a canary in the coal mine so they know when things are going off the rails. And they also know when they can sit back and go, “You know, this is good. And I can look at my key metric. That’s my leading indicator of success that’s working.” So, we try to do that as much as we can without it becoming burdensome.

Jay Papasan: [00:22:37] Because I’ll also say, if you have everybody on your team, you know, constantly checking things off on a Google spreadsheet, that becomes a chore that takes some of the joy out of it. So, if we can track it automatically, that’s the beauty of our tech platform. More and more of this is getting automated, but we still rely on surveys. So, I think that, one, should we be doing this? Is it truly something that we need to be getting into? And if so, what is the higher goal that it serves and how will we know we’re successful?

Jay Papasan: [00:23:05] I think if you just ask a couple of questions before you die, then that helps everybody on the team. One, they know what we’re doing, why we’re doing it, and how they can be successful. If we know that the measure exists then how do we make that measure go up? That’s how Southwest Airlines, right? So much of their model came from the low cost airlines. They were very clear that one of their goals was to be the low cost airlines because they wanted people to be able to travel.

Jay Papasan: [00:23:33] And that’s why we had the cattle calls, that’s why they only serve snacks, that’s why, I mean, frankly, a lot of their airline flight attendants are practically comedians. Because they’re not going to wine and dine you, they’re just going to have to make it fun. And so, I think when everybody knows what we’re doing and why we’re doing it, it allows some innovation to bubble up to make those things happen faster, too.

Jill Heineck: [00:23:59] Absolutely. I think that during this time, this crazy time we’re in, have you seen a change in attitude in your teams regarding delivering? Or are you able to continue to pump them up from Zoom and whatever else we’re using to keep everybody engaged?

Jay Papasan: [00:24:19] Well, I’m an introvert. A lot of people don’t know that. But I am a writer, fundamentally. I like to create things. So, I like to live in my cave. I’m here in the office. I’m one of, like, two people on this whole floor and I’m happy. I close my door. I’m very effective. So pumping people up is not necessarily my style. I want to communicate that it’s a mission. Like, you know, a lot of my staff, I’ve got our video team. I’ve got our publishing team. And our, you know, instructional design team, which is the course writing. They’re crafts people. And what they want and value is to know that they made great work and they had an impact.

Jay Papasan: [00:24:58] So, for me, it’s no harder or easier through this medium of Slack and Zooms. Just remind them that, like, this is a mission moment. Like, when we went into this, I kind of gathered the troops and said, “Learning is what is going to get people through this. They’re going to have to adapt their businesses or they’re going to go out of business.” Like, it’s really life or death for a lot of small businesses right now. This is our moment. So, as hard as it is for us with our kids at home, we’re afraid for our parents and our grandparents, we’re dealing with the same things. But we get a paycheck every 15 days. They are relying on a sales commission that is not guaranteed. So we have a duty. We have a mission.

Jay Papasan: [00:25:41] And I saw a lot of people rally around the mission because we have a job to do. And now is the time that we get to write the story. My coach, Abe Shreve – I don’t know if you know him – but you had Dave Jenks as your coach, so you know what a great coach does for you. A lot of times they just ask great questions. They don’t even give you the answers.

Jay Papasan: [00:26:00] But probably two weeks into this, we were curating about 40 live courses a week because we wanted to offer it to the industry. We started up a Facebook Group that grew from zero to 77,000, like, in a-month-and-a-half. It became the second largest Facebook Group in our industry, like, overnight. And we were just sharing free education. He said to me, “What is the story you want to tell about this time when it’s done?” He goes, “Right now is the time you get to author that, so be very clear. Are you going to talk about how you got in great shape? How you cleared out all of your Netflix series that you wanted to watch?” There are a lot of people that are writing this out on the couch, and that’s okay. That might be exactly what they need to do. But he asked me, “What’s the story that you want to write?” And I asked that of my team and we said, “We want to make a difference.”

Jay Papasan: [00:26:57] So, I think that there’s a lot of challenges to working remotely. I think that, ironically, people are far more productive, but they’re also teetering on burnout much faster. Because the kind of work – like, there’s no transition time. You drop one screen, you open another. There’s no transition between your home’s workspace and your workspace. So, people are kind of at work all the time if they’re not careful. So, there’s really good things in productivity. There’s very bad things, like how do we on board new people? How do we teach them culture? There’s all these challenges.

Jay Papasan: [00:27:32] But the net is we can still do our job and we have a mission. It’s not just a job. We have a mission to fulfill. That’s what we’ve been rallying around. And I’ve seen great realtors do it, too. I mean, people have never been more aware of their homes than they are right now. They’re trapped in it, right? Wow. I never thought I would need two home offices, but now maybe I need a bigger space.

Jill Heineck: [00:27:55] That’s exactly what’s happening. And I will tell you that, again, I’m a beneficiary of the amazing training that started right when we were coming in to coronavirus. And every single morning I’m listening to you, and Gary, and these amazing agents who are sharing what they’re doing during this time. And I think that it’s made a big impact on how I’m pivoting for 2021. So, kind of 2020 is still here. So, don’t get me wrong. We’re still working here. But for 2021, we’re going to be in a prime position.

Jill Heineck: [00:28:32] So thank you because I know you guys have been working really hard behind the scenes. And as an agent customer, I appreciate that so much. And I know my office will talk once a week on what KWRI is doing for us. And who is benefiting from it and who can share what they learned. Maybe I didn’t get on all the calls they did. So kudos to you and your team. You’re doing a fantastic job.

Jay Papasan: [00:28:56] Well, kudos to you and your leadership, too. I think that we look at the market and I think we’re down overall about 30 percent. But when I talked to our top people, a lot of them are at least matching last year’s numbers or better. And when you think about a 30 percent drop in the market and you’re still doing as good as you did last year, that’s a big increase.

Jay Papasan: [00:29:13] And what we talked about – we wrote in a book called SHIFT about this – the time to grab market share is in a down market. This is the opportunity. And we usually just admonish people. It’s like it’s an equal opportunity sport, but it has unequal rewards. So, go get your unfair share of the market right. Get your unfair share. And when the last recession happened, we went into it number four and came out of it number one. So, we’ve lived this multiple times.

Jay Papasan: [00:29:41] So, I just think that if you have the right leadership and we can focus on the opportunity – like, I love what you said 2021 – the work that you’re doing in our industry, the work that you do today at best is laying a platform for income 90 days down the road, right? Sixty to 90 days. But the reality is that, when you work for tomorrow’s dollars instead of today’s dollars, you know, we talk about internet leads, only two to five percent of those convert. Only two to five percent of those convert in the first 12 months. But over a five year period, virtually 100 – I mean, people move every seven years, 80 percent of those will.

Jay Papasan: [00:30:18] If you’re playing the long hay and laying a foundation, that is the key. And that was the thing I asked Gary. I was with him, believe it or not, in the 2000s. He started this company in the early ’80s. And I was with him when he took his first million dollars out of the business. And I said, “Are you kidding me?” Because I know franchisees that have taken a billion dollars in a year out of their business. And he’s like, “Nope.” And he goes, “I was intent on laying a bigger and bigger foundation. And every time I thought I could just take the money and do something with it, I realized I could invest in another person. I can invest in another something. And that would lay just a bigger foundation for the future.”

Jay Papasan: [00:30:56] And that platform from ’96 to, I think, 2006, our company grew by 40 percent on average year over year. Like, it laid a foundation for pretty unparalleled growth. So my admonition is to do like Jill, if you’re laying a foundation for your 2021, that is our opportunity. Can we protect the best talent in our business? Can we wrap our arms around the best, most loyal customers? And know that this year is – the goals that we set in January, just chuck those out the window. We may be laying a foundation for something really great next year.

Jill Heineck: [00:31:28] I absolutely agree with that. I’ll be interested to hear what has been a recent surprise and delight story that you’ve experienced, either with a company or with a service person, anything off the top of your head.

Jay Papasan: [00:31:42] Yeah. I thought about this. Like, I always go back if you’ve ever read – there’s a book by Derek Sivers called Anything You Want. It’s a real short book. He started a company in, I think, 1999 called CD Baby. And the thing that made him famous is he’s running this little shop where he’s just got a couple of workers and they’re packaging up CDs for artists and putting them in the mail. He wrote a really exquisite thank you letter when someone made a purchase. It’s like, “Hey, you know, our team is carrying a picture of you around the office. And like, it was really funny and it was really cute.” He took what was a – you know, here’s your order number and tracking to something that was actually really fun. Laugh like wow. Laugh out loud experience. And I loved it when I find moments that should be mundane. But a great customer service advocate has said, “Can we just make this fun?”

Jay Papasan: [00:32:34] So we shop at the local co-op. So this is all set up. We have a cooperative called the Wheatsfield Co-op. It’s a really old grocery store in Austin that used to be run by hippies. It’s run just a little bit better now. But we go in for the organic food and stuff. And Wendy and I go shopping. And, you know, those little dots they put on the floor just so that you know that you’re six feet apart. I look down at the dot, right? You don’t even read it anymore. You know what it is. And it said, “Please stay six feet apart.” Approximately the width of majungasaurus or twelve breakfast tacos. And it just cracks me up. I was like, they did that little extra thing. They put a picture of a dinosaur on there and they reminded us – because Austin’s a breakfast taco town. That’s part of our image. So they took something ordinary. No one would spend any time and they gave you just a little bit of delight. So I love those moments.

Jay Papasan: [00:33:28] I love it when I hear that our realtors do that. And they find ways to make a closing, which is a big moment. Right? But what about the first time you meet someone, can you make that a special moment? That first email you get, how do we make those kind of throwaway moments special? Because no one else is focused on it. No one else put that effort into that dot. And that’s what made that experience stand out and be worthy of talking about. If you only focus on the milestones that everybody else does, you’re competing with them. So, you know, in baseball, they say hit them where they ain’t. That’s how you get a baseball hit.

Jay Papasan: [00:34:02] So our top agents often do this with lead generation too. If everybody is stopping with postcards, they amp up their postcards. We saw that in the last shift. Nobody could afford them. So our top agent said, “Hey, I’m not just going to send postcards. I’m going to spend eight by eleven-and-a-half like glossies. I’m going to stand out.” So look for ways that not just that you can provide an interesting service, but provide an interesting service that’s worthy of conversation.

Jill Heineck: [00:34:31] I love it. I love it. I mean, I think that’s where we close out our conversation because I don’t even know how you could top that, honestly.

Jay Papasan: [00:34:41] Okay. It’s the breakfast tacos, right? It’s the breakfast tacos.

Jill Heineck: [00:34:43] Well, first of all, I’m starving now. But that is, I think, an excellent piece of advice for our listeners. Jay, you’ve been absolutely incredible. I really appreciate your time and your leadership. And, you know, all the sharing that you have done on your podcast is great. So I’m a big Jay fan. I appreciate it.

Jill Heineck: [00:35:07] And I want to thank everyone out there for listening. I’m proud to share with you these stories. Prioritize the customer experience as a legit business strategy. Reminding us that no matter what business you are in, whether it be real estate, consulting, marketing, writing, the customer experience should always be the heart of the business.

About Your Host

Jill-Heinick-Customer-Experience-RadioJill Heineck is a leading authority on corporate relocations, and is highly sought after for her real estate industry acumen and business insights. As a published author, frequent panelist and keynote speaker, Jill shares her experience and perceptions with people from around the globe.

Jill is a founding partner of Keller Williams Southeast, established in 1999, and the founder and managing partner of Heineck & Co. Her real estate practice specializes in corporate relocations, individual relocations, luxury residential, and commercial properties. Jill’s analytical approach to problem-solving, along with her expert negotiation skills and sophisticated marketing, deliver superior results to her clients. Her winning strategies and tenacious client advocacy have earned her a reputation for excellence among Atlanta’s top producers.

While Jill has received many accolades throughout her career, she is most gratified by the personal testimonials and referrals she receives from her clients. Jill’s unwavering commitment to the customer experience, and her focus on the unique needs of each client, serve as the foundation of her success.

Follow Jill Heineck on LinkedIn.

Tagged With: Keller Williams, KellerINK, Papasan Properties Group

Sara Mornell with Mornell Studios

July 30, 2020 by angishields

Mornell-Studios-logo
Atlanta Business Radio
Sara Mornell with Mornell Studios
Loading
00:00 /
RSS Feed
Share
Link
Embed

Download file

OnPay-Banner

Sara-Mornell-Mornell-StudiosSara Mornell trains actors, athletes, and entertainers to live and exist in their authentic selves. A successful working actor who transitioned into being a CEO, Mornell is revolutionizing the way people work.

Teaching the artistic soul to train with an athletic frame of mind. Here in Atlanta since 2017, Mornell plans to open a female run film and TV studio to accompany her acting academy in the next year.

Connect with Sara on LinkedIn and follow Mornell Studios on Instagram.

What You’ll Learn in This Episode

  • What brought Sara to Atlanta
  • How Mornell Studios has been doing since COVID-19
  • What Sara’s plans are moving forward

About Our Sponsor

OnPay’sOnPay-Dots payroll services and HR software give you more time to focus on what’s most important. Rated “Excellent” by PC Magazine, we make it easy to pay employees fast, we automate all payroll taxes, and we even keep all your HR and benefits organized and compliant.

Our award-winning customer service includes an accuracy guarantee, deep integrations with popular accounting software, and we’ll even enter all your employee information for you — whether you have five employees or 500. Take a closer look to see all the ways we can save you time and money in the back office.

Follow OnPay on LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter.

Tagged With: entertainers and humans, game-changer, Life Changer, Philanthropist, producers, Working actors

GWBC Radio: Stacey Pierce and Jules Weldon with OME Gear

July 30, 2020 by angishields

Stacey-Pierce-Jules-Weldon-OME-Gear
GWBC Radio
GWBC Radio: Stacey Pierce and Jules Weldon with OME Gear
Loading
00:00 /
RSS Feed
Share
Link
Embed

Download file

OME-Gear-logo

Stacey-Pierce-Jules-Weldon-OME-GearJules Weldon and Stacey Pierce have spent the last 6 years focusing on their Business Coaching business, A Salty Rim, and their outdoor product company, OME Gear, and two podcasts, GSD Entreprenuer and Do It In Nature.

Both have rich backgrounds in the entrepreneurial and business start-up space allowing them to come along others to help them build a strategic roadmap to grow their businesses. Their outdoor gear company, a 20-year story, focuses on creating tranforming multi-use products to help people get outdoors.

Their most recent achievement is a children’s book called Rescued by Rico, the true story of an old pup they adopted from Puerto Rico. This book focuses on rescue adoption and how to have the hard conversation about the Rainbow Bridge when a beloved pet passes.

Follow OME Gear on Facebook.

Transcript

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

Lee Kantor: [00:00:16] Lee Kantor here. Another episode of GWBC Open for Business. And this is going to be a fun one. Today, I got Stacey Pierce and Jules Weldon with OME Gear. Welcome, ladies.

Julie Weldon: [00:00:30] Hey, Lee, thanks so much.

Stacey Pierce: [00:00:32] Hi, Lee.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:32] For those who haven’t been avid followers of this show, which you’ve been interviewed once at, I believe, the pop marketplace. I don’t even know how many months ago. Was that a year ago? It’s probably close to a year ago.

Stacey Pierce: [00:00:44] Actually, I think it was – yeah – closer to a year ago.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:47] So tell us about OME Gear. How are you serving folks?

Julie Weldon: [00:00:51] Yeah. So OME Gear, it stands for Oceans plus Mountains equals Earth Gear. And it’s a product company, so it’s an outdoor gear product company. It’s a 20 year story that’s a lot more fun to tell over cocktails. But my parents invented the original concept. This is Jules talking. And 20 years later, we’ve brought it into the market.

Julie Weldon: [00:01:14] And so, our flagship product is called The Wanderr, and it’s a five-in-one product. So, it’s great for any time you need to haul something somewhere and then have comfortable seating options once you get there. So, it’s a cart that holds 150 pounds of gear and that easily transforms into a low beach chair, a high camping field chair, a fully reclinable lounge chair, and a camping cot.

Julie Weldon: [00:01:38] So, it’s kind of a multipurpose product that’s great for things like kid’s soccer games and tailgating, which we’re not doing a whole lot of now. Maybe home gating. But, yeah, also the beach. We have tires that we have an exclusive on that actually roll really well in sand. So that’s a differentiator for us. But just a super innovative product that we’re excited to take to market.

Lee Kantor: [00:02:06] And then because of the pandemic, are you able to still ship stuff? Like, where are you at with them?

Stacey Pierce: [00:02:13] Well, we were going to start shipping in February. And the manufacturer we were working with, they kind of went silent on us during COVID. So, we’ve had to do a shift and find a new manufacturer during the pandemic, which is not an easy task. It is kind of like turning the Titanic. And now, we had to do some redesigns on it because the first 100 units we got weren’t exactly the quality we wanted. And so, we’ve had to do a few redesigns. And, hopefully, we’ll start shipping probably in November of this year.

Lee Kantor: [00:02:50] But can you still preorder, you can get on the list right now?

Stacey Pierce: [00:02:55] You can preorder if you like. You can actually reach out to us at info@omegear.com. Right now on our website, they look like they’re sold out but you can still preorder if you get to us directly.

Julie Weldon: [00:03:09] And we’ll open that up on the website, too, where people can actually preorder right on the website. We’re just waiting on an official timeline for delivery so that they can know when we’ll get it.

Lee Kantor: [00:03:21] So now, you’re learning a lot of lessons about business in this adventure, aren’t you?

Stacey Pierce: [00:03:27] In patience.

Julie Weldon: [00:03:28] Oh, gosh. Lee, it’s a greenhouse of learning is what it is.

Lee Kantor: [00:03:33] So any advice for the listeners out there that have a venture that is kind of relying on other people to manufacture? Because, obviously, you have a good idea. It’s very well received. Everybody wants one of these once they see it. And the pictures you have are wonderful. And it seems like a lot of people – there’s a lot of pent up demand. But how do you kind of manage, you know, keeping them engaged and keeping them still interested and kind of being in for the ride with you guys as you wait for the thing to actually be manufactured?

Julie Weldon: [00:04:10] I’m not going to lie, it’s been tough. Just to be really transparent, one of our values is honesty and integrity. And it’s been really hard. We did a Kickstarter that funded back in December of 2018. And when I decided that I wanted to do a Kickstarter and our team wanted to do a Kickstarter, the one thing I said is, “I’m not going to be like those Kickstarters that don’t deliver on time.” And be careful what you say, because there are – when you work with a manufacturer, everything is out of your control, unfortunately. Not everything, but the majority is out of your control and you’re fully dependent on them.

Julie Weldon: [00:04:47] And so, whether or not they’re a good manufacturer is one thing. But then you throw something like the pandemic, which is worldwide into it, our initial factory was shut down for a couple of months. And so, that was out of our control. And so, the best way that we know how to do it – and I’m not saying it’s the right way – but the best way that we found out is just to stay in touch with people. I think when you don’t communicate, paranoia sets in, maybe, and wondering sets in. And then, as humans it’s really interesting. I think we sort of go to the worst case scenario.

Julie Weldon: [00:05:23] And so, if a company decides that they’re not going to communicate because, well, then maybe they don’t have any information or maybe it’s not good information, then that really causes more concern, I think, in the people that you’re supposed to be communicating with. So, over communicate has been our tool that we’ve used and we’ve created a lot of goodwill with our current customers because of that.

Lee Kantor: [00:05:48] I think you’re right on the money with that. I’m a big fan of Kickstarter and I invested in lots of different Kickstarter things. And I’ve had this situation where I invested in one project and, I want to say, it was, like, 300 bucks. And, you know, it sounds good and they’re being communicative up to a point. And then, all of a sudden they probably hit a stumbling part and maybe they’re embarrassed, or they realize they’re not going to be able to deliver this, or it’s going to cost them way more than they anticipated. And all of a sudden, it’s radio silence. And then, all of a sudden, you know, they’re hiding. And you start going online and you see all this negative kind of, you know, it spirals. In a blink of an eye, it spirals. And then, it was unrecoverable. You know, the money was gone and then they went dark.

Lee Kantor: [00:06:44] And so, I think you’re doing it exactly right. I mean, your heart is in the right place. You’re going to deliver this. And as long as you let people know every step of the way, “Look, you’re as frustrated as I am as the consumer. We’re all in this together.” And if they really believe that and they believe in you, then they’re going to hang in there.

Stacey Pierce: [00:07:04] Yeah. I say one thing that we did and I think we did this to show our customers are already – people that helped us fund our Kickstarter, our backers, is we got 100 units right before Chinese New Year. And like I said, they weren’t perfect. They were supposed to be production ready. They were not perfect products. And so what we did, we’re like, “We can’t sit on 100 units. So, what are we going to do with these?” How are we going to take lemons and turn it into lemonade?

Stacey Pierce: [00:07:32] We started an ambassador program, so we reached out to all of our backers. And we’re like, “We have 100 units. We’re going to ship these to you for free in exchange for you taking them out in nature and getting pictures and sending pictures.” And then, when we get our actual production units, we’ll ship you those.

Stacey Pierce: [00:07:49] But we gave people that choice or having a refund. And we only had two people ask for refunds and that was great. And then, the other people had raised their hand and said, “I would love to be an ambassador. I understand these aren’t perfect.” And we wanted them to be a part of our team. So we’re like, “Give us your feedback. Here are the things we know we’re going to change. But give us your feedback on other things.” And we have not had anyone complain about any of the products that we have out, even though they’re not perfect. They know they’re not perfect. So, they’re just super excited. And what that did was kind of, like, validate that we’re serious about our company and we’re excited about the product we’re going to be putting out.

Julie Weldon: [00:08:32] And I think the other just follow up to that is, like I said, the goodwill that we’ve created. I think it’s easy for people these days, especially because emotions are so heightened with everything that’s going on with COVID and the stress levels and all of that, to just fire off an email where you’re just really mad, you know. And we read every one of those and we respond. Stacey and I respond to every one of those and we take each one to heart. And so, a lot of times we’ll just write back and say exactly what you just said, Lee. “We’re as frustrated as you are. I know you don’t understand that, but we’re as frustrated as you.”

Julie Weldon: [00:09:07] And I’ve even gone so far as just picking up the phone and calling people and just saying, “Hey, I want you to hear my voice. Like, I’m a human behind this business and I’m as stressed out – well, actually, a lot more stressed out than you are over not getting your one Wanderr.” And it’s just been so amazing when you approach things in a non-defensive way and just over communicate with people. They soften really quickly because nobody really wants to be mad about something like that. There’s plenty of bigger fish to fry. So, it’s been interesting. I’m not going to lie.

Lee Kantor: [00:09:42] I think that this kind of can cement you in the minds and hearts of your – now – these super fans that really, really believe they’re in it with you now, you know. And when they’re part of the community and they know you and feel like they know you personally, I think that’s when they give you the benefit of the doubt. When you’re a faceless organization, you know, then you’re this big business, this big company that isn’t humanized at all, it’s easy to not like that person. That person can be the villain. But the more human you become and the more open and vulnerable you become, then it’s hard to, you know, be mad at you for too long.

Julie Weldon: [00:10:28] Yeah, we’d like to think that.

Lee Kantor: [00:10:32] There’s always exceptions. Believe me, there’s always exceptions. So now, you’re doing this – OME Gear is part of your life. But you’re also involved in other things as well. You’re doing the coaching. You’ve got a couple of podcasts going. You’re keeping busy, that’s for sure. How has all of that been going? Is that the same thing? I know this is a big part of your life, the OME Gear, but are these other things kind of still humming along?

Stacey Pierce: [00:11:02] Well, they were until COVID hit. Our coaching and consulting firm, called A Salty Rim, we actually lost all of our clients when COVID happened. So, we had to do some shifting and figure out things. And that was kind of our income, because we’re not taking the income from OME yet. So, we’ve had to be creative, and look at our finances, and kind of divest things, and get rid of cable, and just kind of be smart these times.

Stacey Pierce: [00:11:36] And then, we also have the podcast, which we are very – we’re relational people. We love meeting people and traveling and doing podcasts in person. So, all these Zoom podcasts are a little bit different for us. You don’t build the relationship we typically build when people come into our home and we drink wine and we do a podcast or we go and travel and meet people outdoors and do a podcast with them. So, you know, but we’re staying busy in all of it. We’ve actually started picking up more clients for our coaching firm, so that’s good. So, things seem to be leveling out a little bit. But they’re in the beginning. It kind of got a little stressful.

Julie Weldon: [00:12:17] I would actually say Stacey is 100 percent right on that, except for the fact that we lost all of our client’s pay. We didn’t lose our clients. So, our clients for A Salty Rim are small businesses. And honestly, when COVID hit they just couldn’t afford us. And so, we actually shifted back and said, “All right. You know what? We’ll provide our services for free just to get you out of this.” And so, I feel like consulting-wise, we’ve never been busier. But we’re just not getting compensated for it like we used to. And so, that’s been really interesting.

Julie Weldon: [00:12:52] We started a weekly call, we invited all the women who’ve been on GSD Entrepreneur podcast on a Thursday morning Zoom call just to navigate all of the complexities of COVID in their businesses. And so, we’ll have anywhere from 10 to 40 women on that call on a consistent basis every Thursday. And that has been really powerful and something that we both look forward to every week. And we’re still doing it every Thursday morning.

Lee Kantor: [00:13:22] Now, if that weren’t enough stuff on your plate, you, somewhere along the lines, decided to write a children’s book. If you want to talk about that a little bit.

Julie Weldon: [00:13:31] Yeah. So I’ll say it does sound like a lot and I get it. But any mom of three kids and a business or two kids and a business or whatever, it’s no different, right? I mean, each one of these businesses are like our kids. We don’t have any children. And so, they’re like our kids. And they all have different personalities. And they all require different levels of commitment. And so, yeah, we are busy. But Stacey and I just love that. So, yes, we did write a children’s book. It was our COVID project.

Julie Weldon: [00:14:01] We actually wrote the book two years ago when we had to put a dog of ours down who we rescued from Puerto Rico. We named him Rico. He was a 12 to 14 year old chocolate lab and he was 20 pounds malnourished, and had heartworms and all of that. But survived through two hurricanes outside, which is amazing in itself. And so, we ended up seeing him. A friend found him in Puerto Rico and we said we wanted to adopt him, so we did. We had him for five months and had to put him down after we got him back to full health, except for the heartworms. And then, came home and Stacey said, “I’m going to write a children’s book.” And so, she sat down and, in an hour, she had the book completely written. Then, why don’t you say what happened two years later right at COVID?

Stacey Pierce: [00:14:55] Yeah. Right at COVID, a friend of ours who helped get – found Rico and got him over to us, she is starting a TV show. And so she reached out and she said, “Hey, do you have your book done?” Rescued by Rico is the name of it. And we were like, “Nope. But we need to get it done.” And so, that kind of made us press go and find – I mean, hire the illustrator we had been wanting for a couple of years and worked with their editor. And yeah, we’ve now produced and published our book. We’re doing an Indiegogo right now and doing some pre-sales. And then, hopefully, we’ll have those books ready to go in September.

Lee Kantor: [00:15:41] So, what was that like? You’ve done a Kickstarter. Now, you’re doing Indiegogo. What’s that kind of crowdsourcing plan? Is that pretty easy or that have its own kind of – is that its own adventure?

Stacey Pierce: [00:15:56] I can tell you we said after our first Kickstarter, we would never do a crowdfunding again. A Kickstarter was one of the hardest things for us to do because you have to have a lot of money backing you, especially, because it used to be for the small kids. And now it’s for the big boys and big girls and that you have to have a lot of money behind it. And so, we chose not to go the Kickstarter route again. Indiegogo is a little bit more lenient. And I feel like it’s more of a platform where, actually, people can go and raise money in smaller amounts of money, obviously.

Stacey Pierce: [00:16:32] We did fund on Indiegogo within three days, which is exciting. Right now, we’re at $8,100. Our goal was 5,000. And so, 50 percent of all the proceeds from our book is going to four different rescue organizations. So, we do have a give back. So, I think that that also is something that entices people to help us and support this and buy the books. And we have pups coming in that we have made little Rico pups. So, yeah, all that to say is this wasn’t – we never thought we would do another crowdfunding platform again. But this one seems to be a little bit more successful or easier. Yeah, easier.

Lee Kantor: [00:17:16] How was it in finding an artist?

Julie Weldon: [00:17:19] We’ve been admiring this woman in Charleston and her illustrations for a while now. We saw it at Farmer’s Market and just fell in love with her illustrations. And so, we knew that if we could afford her just because she’s really talented, that that was who we wanted. And so, it wasn’t hard for us because we had already had that connection ahead of time. And then, she put us in touch with a copy editor who was amazing as well. So, we got really fortunate based on people that we knew.

Lee Kantor: [00:17:48] And then you’re using what? You’re earning through the crowdfunding in order to pay them, basically?

Julie Weldon: [00:17:56] Correct. Yeah. Correct. That and then, like Stacey said, 50 percent of the proceeds after we take care of the different costs of it from here into perpetuity are going to go to four different rescue organizations. One in Florida, Big Dog Ranch Rescue, who is a part of Rico’s rescue. And then, two in the Charleston area, Charleston Animal Society and for the Love of a Paw. And then, one out in Park City, Utah, where my sister actually works. And they actually rescue special needs dogs. It’s called Fetch Cares, and it’s a hospice for dogs. So just four organizations that have been really impactful to us we wanted to give back to.

Lee Kantor: [00:18:41] Now, we met initially through the GWBC, are you still active with them? Are they still trying to help you guys?

Julie Weldon: [00:18:48] Absolutely. We’re very much a part of GWBC and and WBENC and all of that. And we have talked to so many of our female business owner friends encouraging them to be a part of it.

Lee Kantor: [00:19:00] And so, there’s been some resources that have been able to help you through this?

Stacey Pierce: [00:19:06] Oh, yes.

Julie Weldon: [00:19:07] Yeah. A lot of the webinars that they’ve done have been really helpful, different articles that they put out. I know that they’ve been very active in trying to help people navigate through the PPP and EIDL and all those different things. And so, yeah, we would recommend it to anyone to be a part of.

Lee Kantor: [00:19:28] Yeah. It’s one of those things where it’s nice to have, you know, people that are like minded and that are going through the same stuff that you are all together and have pretty easy access to them. So now, what’s next? Are you guys – I know you’re still grinding. Anything upcoming that you’re looking forward to?

Stacey Pierce: [00:19:49] I mean, I think right now our biggest focus – I mean, well, all of our businesses and podcasts are a big focus. But one thing is just to get OME finally up and out into the market with a product that we’re proud of. But there’s a lot behind the scenes on that, finding investors and then still working with the manufacturer and just making sure that the quality is there. So, that is a huge focus right now in the forefront. And then, not that anything else is put on the back burner because it’s not. We have a bunch of pots all going at the same time.

Julie Weldon: [00:20:23] Yeah. And with the book, with Rescued by Rico, we are waiting – the Indiegogo campaign will end in a couple of weeks. Once that ends, we’ll switch it over to our Rescued by Rico website so people can purchase through there. And so, it’s that as well as getting the book published, getting the dogs in. We, actually, just today ordered a big brown dog mascot costume. And so, we have been approached by a number of different libraries and schools to do virtual readings or in-class reading of this book. And so, I’m going to do the readings and Stacey is going to be the big brown dog mascot.

Stacey Pierce: [00:21:03] His name is Rainbow, but we’ll call him Bo.

Lee Kantor: [00:21:05] How did you decide who does what?

Stacey Pierce: [00:21:11] So Jules is our family reader. She reads to us all the time. When I say, “us,” we have another rescue that’s usually an earshot away from us. And I’ve always said that she needs to go and volunteer in libraries. And so, now, she can actually take our book and go and volunteer in libraries and classrooms and read.

Julie Weldon: [00:21:33] Well, to be fair, what I’ve been told is I have a voice that puts people to sleep that’s really soothing. And so, I think by default, I’ve gotten nominated as the reader. And Stacey used to be a mascot in her high school. And so, she’s used to wearing those super hot furry costumes. So, she volunteered to be the pup. So, that only leaves one job and that’s the reader, so that’s me.

Lee Kantor: [00:21:58] So, everybody wins. They’re all in their lane. Right.

Julie Weldon: [00:22:01] That’s right. Everybody wins. Yeah. For sure.

Lee Kantor: [00:22:04] So now if somebody wanted to learn more about OME Gear, what’s the website for them?

Stacey Pierce: [00:22:10] It’s just that omegear.com.

Lee Kantor: [00:22:11] And then Rescued by Rico, they can go to Indiegogo and probably search there for Rescued by Rico and find it there?

Julie Weldon: [00:22:20] They can for sure. Yeah. If they just type in, in the search bar, Rescued by Rico, it’ll come up. And, obviously, we would love people support. So, the book is, actually, really an educational book. So, it helps people understand rescue animals and what they go through. But it also really helps have the hard conversations with either, you know, little people or even adults when we lose our pets. It’s really hard.

Julie Weldon: [00:22:46] And this just paints it in a light of the Rainbow Bridge, where the final page of the book is really cool, where it’s a big rainbow bridge that Rico’s coming up on. And all of his friends “that have passed” are waiting on the bridge with “Welcome home, Rico” signs. And so, it just sort of turned something that’s really hard for kids to get their heads around into something that’s hopeful. And so, that’s what we’re just hoping to do, is help parents and grandparents and siblings and teachers help navigate that conversation with kids.

Lee Kantor: [00:23:20] Yeah. That’s so important to have a tool like that to help guide the conversation and not make it as scary and hard as it is for most people.

Julie Weldon: [00:23:28] For sure.

Lee Kantor: [00:23:30] Well, thank you so much for sharing your story and thank you so much for keeping on grinding. I mean, there’s no easy way to do anything and it’s just a battle. And you got to just keep showing up every day and doing a little bit of work. And then, you know, things usually take care of themselves.

Julie Weldon: [00:23:48] We believe that too. Thanks so much, Lee. We appreciate that.

Stacey Pierce: [00:23:51] Thank you.

Lee Kantor: [00:23:51] All right. This is Lee Kantor. We’ll see you all next time on GWBC Open for Business.

About GWBC

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

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

 

Shantha Wetterhan with Competitive Edge

July 29, 2020 by angishields

Shantha-Wetterhan-Competitive-Edge
Atlanta Business Radio
Shantha Wetterhan with Competitive Edge
Loading
00:00 /
RSS Feed
Share
Link
Embed

Download file

OnPay-Banner

Competitive-Edge-logo

Shantha-Wetterhan-Competitive-EdgeAs a high in-demand trainer and speaker, Shantha Wetterhan started her corporate career in sales roles and eventually earned promotions into marketing and digital strategy positions for a global organization. During this time, Shantha recognized and leveraged the benefits of social media and personal branding long before it became the standard that it is today.

She has since cultivated a successful business formed in 2015, Competitive Edge Online Marketing & Branding, catering to professionals and entrepreneurs who not only strive for personal development growth but also seek to grow their businesses through online marketing and personal branding strategies.

In addition to her hands-on experience, Shantha’s firm earned the Best of Atlanta in Social Media Marketing award two years in a row.

Shantha’s podcast The Real Estate Marketing Academy is a platform that brings cutting edge marketing strategies to the real estate industry. She is also the author of the book, Personal Branding Playbook for Real Estate Professionals.

Shantha earned her degree in Mass Communication with a specialization in Journalism and minor in Political Science from the University of Alabama at Birmingham. She earned her certification in Digital Marketing Strategy from Kennesaw State University.

Connect with Shantha on LinkedIn and follow Competitive Edge on Facebook and Instagram.

What You’ll Learn in This Episode

  • Why personal branding is such an important topic given today’s business climate
  • The elements of having an impactful personal brand
  • How business owners can connect in an authentic way with their leads, prospects, and clients online
  • How entrepreneurs can protect their online reputation management
  • How to get your personal brand to stand out in a noisy and competitive market
  • Why content marketing is so important

About Our Sponsor

OnPay’sOnPay-Dots payroll services and HR software give you more time to focus on what’s most important. Rated “Excellent” by PC Magazine, we make it easy to pay employees fast, we automate all payroll taxes, and we even keep all your HR and benefits organized and compliant.

Our award-winning customer service includes an accuracy guarantee, deep integrations with popular accounting software, and we’ll even enter all your employee information for you — whether you have five employees or 500. Take a closer look to see all the ways we can save you time and money in the back office.

Follow OnPay on LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter.

Tagged With: Business Owners, busy small business owners, Certified Digital Marketing Strategist, entreprenuers, Social Media Marketing Agency and Personal Branding Expert

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 390
  • 391
  • 392
  • 393
  • 394
  • …
  • 1320
  • 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