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Teresa Caro With Liminist

May 5, 2025 by Jacob Lapera

High Velocity Radio
High Velocity Radio
Teresa Caro With Liminist
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Teresa Caro is the founder and CEO of Liminist, where she helps CEOs, CMOs, CPOs, and leadership teams navigate pivotal moments of growth and transformation. Drawing on over two decades of experience in digital strategy, acquisitions, and team leadership across industries like CPG, Retail, Fintech, and B2B SaaS, Teresa blends strategic insight with grounded, empathetic coaching.

An ICF credentialed executive coach and co-author of “The Purpose Playbook,” she empowers leaders to evolve from functional experts to visionary collaborators. Her clients value her practical tools, human-centered approach, and ability to unlock lasting clarity and connection—both professionally and personally.

Connect with Teresa on LinkedIn.

What You’ll Learn In This Episode

  • The business of coaching
  • Coaching vs. therapy vs. mentoring/sponsorship
  • Tips for finding a coach
  • How to determine how much to spend on a coach (1:1 coaching and team coaching)
  • Results you should expect from a coach

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix.

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios in Atlanta, Georgia. It’s time for High Velocity Radio.

Lee Kantor: Lee Kantor here. Another episode of High Velocity Radio, and this is going to be a good one. Today on the show we have Teresa Caro. She is the CEO and founder of the Liminist. Welcome.

Teresa Caro: Thank you so much. I’m so happy to be here.

Lee Kantor: Well, I am excited to learn what you’re up to. Uh, tell us a little bit about the Limonest. How you serving, folks?

Teresa Caro: So let’s start with what that word even means. It’s a combination, really, of two words liminal and specialist. Liminal is that state of being between and betwixt. So if you think about someone in a liminal state, they’re going from this, this journey of discovery to Realization to action, to something new. And a lot of people and companies tend to get stuck in that middle, in that liminal state. So I am a specialist or myself and limonest. We are specialists and moving people and teams through that liminal state to get them unstuck and move them forward.

Lee Kantor: So when a person’s in flux or maybe transition, what percentage of the time are they in that state, rather than being either in that beginning state or, you know, the state of where they’re doing action or some sort of thing like that?

Teresa Caro: I’m really depends on the situation. If you think of someone that they really want to do something new, yet their day to day is getting in the way and they’re really just looking for an accountability partner. That person is not necessarily stuck, stuck. They just need someone to hold them accountable. So we meet once a month. We have homework assignments knowing that we’re going to meet again, pushes them forward on that extra thing that they want to do. That true state of being stuck is you have a team that has probably been together for a decade, and they’ve been trying to move the company forward or transition to a new way of thinking or a new purpose, and they just can’t figure out how to get there. They keep trying and failing, or they try and they believe that they have come to a decision, but then they fail and holding each other accountable and they’re not seeing the results. That level of stuck now you’re into a bigger level of stuck that that might take you a good six months, maybe even a year, maybe even longer to figure out the the source of what’s causing them to be stuck and then retraining or rewiring our brains or creating new habits to move them forward.

Lee Kantor: So if you just took an average person or an average business leader. Are they in that moment in time? Are they typically stuck or are they? They got a plan?

Teresa Caro: Well, that’s it really depends on the situation. Some leaders have plans and they know how to implement that plan. They have the right team. They have the right people in the right seats doing the right, right things. They’re happy. They have clarity. They have buy in. They have all the things. Those teams are not stuck. They are really pushing things forward. If you have someone completely on the other side and they can’t figure it out, they might not even know that they’re stuck. So a good way for a leader or a team to figure out, even if they are stuck, is if they’re having the same conversations over and over again with no progress, if they’re coming up with big ideas, but then they come up with lackluster results. It’s really being honest with ourselves around what is trying to be accomplished, and what kind of success or lack of success that they are running into.

Lee Kantor: Now is being stuck. Is that something everybody’s going to go through at some point in time, or just some people are just more apt to be stuck periodically, and other people are just are able to avoid that.

Teresa Caro: It just depends on the personality. This concept of stuck. So let’s take it back for a moment. If you think about our brains and how they’re wired, we you know, we think of our brains as just this thing that we use every day. In all actuality, it’s a muscle with nerves and just different ways of firing things. And over time, those pathways become just like highways. It’s the same pathway over and over again, which is great in some ways. It enables us to move quickly, efficiently, effectively, because we’ve been there before and we just know what to do and we can do. It requires very little thought. The challenge is, is if that pathway is one that keeps on ending up in a, in the result that we don’t like, in us not showing up the best way that we can be, or us not taking an action in the way that we would want to take it, then that’s a pathway that needs to be reframed. And much like, you know, muscle memory. I don’t know if you play golf, but I love the analogy of golf is, yeah, your swing could be great. And it gets, you know, you know, your drive gets you a certain amount of yardage. Um, but it maybe isn’t the right way. Um, or it isn’t as best as it could be. And so you have someone come in and break down your swing and give you a new swing, which you tend to use. But then if you don’t practice it over and over again, if you don’t have that person reinforcing that new swing, you get tired. You go back to old behaviors. You end up in a stressful situation. You go back to old behaviors. So the concept of stuck just depends on where we. Where are we in our career? Where are we from a team perspective? What situation is causing pressure on us or triggering us to behave in certain ways? There’s so many things that we need to take into consideration around this definition of stuck, and how to get unstuck.

Lee Kantor: Now, the idea of, I think you referred to it as grooves or these kind of repetitive behaviors that are happening time and time. It sounds like that transcends beyond business. That sounds like it could apply to your personal life, whether it’s your parenting or your relationships. Uh, is all of this a similar thing? But it’s just you would work on it differently if it’s business as opposed to something more personal.

Teresa Caro: Uh. You are. That is just such a great question. Gone are the days, and I’m a Gen Xer. Generation X was taught to leave home at home and work at work, and they will not combine. Um, it’s almost like the Apple TV show severance. Like it must be split. And what we’re coming to realize is that we bring personal to work and we bring work back. And a lot of times, the behaviors, how we lead a team or how we parent a child or how we relate with our spouse or our peers or bosses, uh, a lot of times you can find some common behaviors in those different situations. So, so yes, you know, something you work on at work or something you work on at home, you actually can figure out that it applies in the other, um, but not always. The other thing to think about, too, is we might go home and feel fully supported and understood and appreciated. So we show up as our best selves when we are at home. Yet when we go to work, we may not feel heard or appreciated or have clarity of what is expected of us or all the things. So we may go to work and feel triggered and get stuck and not show up as our best selves, but be fine at home. It again, it just depends on what’s going on around us that’s causing us to be the way that we are, or even from a team perspective. That’s because now you’re looking at a bunch of humans trying to work together to a common goal. What are the things that are tripping them up in the business world? That’s not getting them to move forward?

Lee Kantor: So if an individual is stuck, how do they know the right kind of solution to this? Is it a business coach that’s going to address my business issues? Is it going to be a therapist that’s going to address my personal issues? Like, it seems like there’s a blurring of the lines everywhere. And it’s as an individual, how do you know which is the right path to go on in order to alleviate some of the stuckness?

Teresa Caro: So there’s a few things to approach what you just said. First is, is let’s help people understand the difference between therapy coaching and advising. Slash consulting. Advising slash consulting versus coaching therapy is is very clear. Do you want someone to tell you what to do? Will you hire a consultant? You hire advisor if you pretty much know what you need to do, and you’re just struggling to lay it out, or you’re looking for a thought partner or someone to help you break through all the weeds and help you realize the right answer. Now you’re looking at more of a coach or a therapist. The difference between a coach and a therapist has to do of what’s the source of the issue. Therapists are receive a lot of schooling. A lot of training, a lot of degrees, certifications, all sorts of things. Because if there is an issue that you cannot get behind. Beyond that, issue needs to be resolved with the tools and techniques and the therapies that a therapist brings to bear. Where a therapist and a coach tend to overlap is the creation of the new behaviors. So a therapist can actually work with you and help you figure out. Now that we’ve resolved or the therapist has resolved that core issue, they can partner with you to help you create new behaviors so you don’t go back to that.

Teresa Caro: You’re now moving forward. You’re getting unstuck and moving forward. Coaches do the same thing. We help you create new behaviors so you can get unstuck and move forward. Coaches and therapists a lot of times actually work together because a therapist will help you move forward in everyday life. Whereas a coach might have an area of expertise that helps you do that in a particular area. So for me, it’s business. For me, it’s I tend to work with marketing people and product marketers and product managers. So they know I come to the table with a certain area of expertise. I already understand the language that they speak, the situation that they’re in, and so I have that cognitive shortcut. They don’t have to explain anything to me. And so then I can partner with them in that particular area and help them help their teams, help these people work together more effectively. So that’s I’m a looking forward from a coach perspective. I help them look forward and get unstuck and move forward. A therapist comes in if there’s unresolved issues that they need their certain expertise to resolve.

Lee Kantor: So what’s your backstory? How did you get involved in this line of work?

Teresa Caro: Oh, well, so I had that pivot moment, and my background is I did most of my career in the advertising agency space, leading amazing teams across really amazing advertising agencies. I did some time as a chief marketing officer for a credit card company. And so I have grown up in the marketing product management, product marketing space. I realized when I had that moment to pause and to reflect upon what did I want to do for the rest of my career. I realized, although I will completely nerd out with the best of them, talking about product development and marketing and all the great marketing things, I am very happy to nerd out about those things. I don’t want to do the work anymore. What I do enjoy and what I started doing very well when I was on the corporate side of the world, is mentoring and coaching leaders to make them great leaders, mentoring coaching teams to make them great teams. And so when I had that opportunity to reflect and sort of get myself unstuck and heading into a new direction, get me out of my comfort zone, my liminal state, I chose coaching as the way to go.

Lee Kantor: Can you share maybe that first inkling that you had, uh, when you realized, hey, I’m going to be good at coaching? This is something that I do have the ability to help people get to new levels. Is there was there an aha moment that you were working with somebody and that occurred?

Teresa Caro: Well, it’s pretty easy on the agency space to start realizing that you’re good at something when you. So in the advertising agency world, it’s a service based model. So each person at a different level goes at a as a particular rate. And so everyone’s very mindful of how expensive it is to have me in the room versus someone else. Well, that moment where other leaders on my team, other members of their teams are starting are being requested to show up at meetings. And I’m not. I realized I did my job, that I really set them up for success that people preferred to have them have a seat at the table because they were impactful. They did bring value and oh, by the way, they were less expensive than me. So I sort of accidentally kept putting myself out of a job. Uh, and I kept being recruited to the next company to fix the next thing. So as you think about that, it wasn’t necessarily my marketing expertise at the end of my marketing career that people valued. It was my ability to transform organizations into higher performing organizations. So it was really the reason why people were recruiting me away to join the next company. And so why not do that for multiple companies at once?

Lee Kantor: When that was happening, was there a a point in time when you were thinking, hey, what’s the deal here? Why am I being excluded? Or are you able to, um, you know, have a level of humility and humbleness to say, hey, this is good on me, that I’m able to, um, help these other people reach a new level. And it’s nothing personal about me and my abilities.

Teresa Caro: Oh, yeah. No, my my goal was always to get them the seat at the table. And the moment they were requested, I knew I did my job.

Lee Kantor: And then when you took the leap to go out on your own, was that being in that transition? How did you handle that? Did you have a coach at the time for yourself, or was this something that you felt that you had all the skills that you needed in order to make the leap from going from corporate to being an entrepreneur?

Teresa Caro: I am a big believer that the smartest people know what they don’t know, or know that they don’t know, and you hire the right people. You surround yourself with the right people to ensure your success. So the very first thing I did was hire center for Executive Coaching. Andrew and his team are an exceptional organization, and they helped me, you know. Yeah, I was coaching before, but I didn’t truly understand what it meant to be an International Coaching Federation credential coach and ICF credentialed coach. I didn’t know what that meant. And he and the team helped me get that credential. And now two and now a second level PCC coach because of him and his team. And then I’ve surrounded myself with coaches who have gone before me who really are paying it forward because coaches have helped them in the past. I’ve had mentors. I even within your own organization, I learned from really talented people like John Ray and the generosity mindset. So my recommendation for anybody, it doesn’t matter if you’re a leader or in corporate or if you’re choosing to run your own organization, is make sure you you are aware that you have blind spots and make sure you have people around you, organizations around you that can help you identify those blind spots and then help you learn how to fill those blind spots.

Lee Kantor: Now, when you were looking for that coach for yourself, did you have to kiss any frogs? Or was this something that you just found the right coach right away? Because finding the right fit, I would imagine, is the first major decision that you hope to get right.

Teresa Caro: Well, I would say so. There’s two things for me to that. One is for me. No, I you know, I talked to a lot of coaches. I had a good sense of what kind of coaching program I wanted. And then thankfully, coaching programs do a good job explaining who they are, what they represent. So I’m very much a spreadsheet kind of person. I just put them all in a spreadsheet, put in all the key things I found on the website, and then Ceec was a clear choice for me. When others are looking for a coach, it’s not necessarily kissing a lot of frogs. It’s more just you need to do your due diligence. This person is someone you’re going to bare your soul to. Um, we all follow a code of confidentiality, so you can trust that we’re not going to share anything that happens in that one on one session, but it still is. You almost pretty quickly have to develop a sense of trust. So that’s the first thing is it’s not necessarily kicking kissing frogs. It’s it’s getting a sense for what do you need. What’s your objective. Do you need someone to tell you what to do, or to partner with you to come up with the best decision? What kind of value do you want? Do you want to see out of it? There’s a whole.

Teresa Caro: We could probably have a whole podcast on all the different things you need to think about to select a coach. And the most important thing, though, is trust. And then the second thing is just understanding what kind of results do you want from this relationship. Either a one on one coaching relationship, a team coaching relationship, or even a cohort or group coaching relationship. What value do you want to see and can you in your mind? And you know this isn’t a a soft skills kind of thing, you should be able to sit down and say, this is how much they’re charging. This is the value that I expect to see. And this is the expected return on investment that I expect to get out of that. If you can combine trust with an ROI conversation, a value conversation, and you feel good about your choice, you should be able to to come up with a coach that makes sense for you and your team.

Lee Kantor: And how much time should you give a new relationship with a coach to know if you’re on the right track? Like, are there certain things that happen where you’re like, okay, this seems to be working, but I’m not getting any tangible results, but I feel like I’m on the right path. Like, are there some kind of, you know, yellow lights, red lights, green lights. As the relationship is evolving at the beginning.

Teresa Caro: Well, a good coach is going to make sure that we are all on the same page. So what typically happens is we get hired on for an executive, a team, or even within group coaching to solve a particular issue. And that’s part of the kickoff. So I, I always talk about my program is two months, two months, two months for, you know, just to use one on one coaching as an example, two months of discovery, two months of pushing you out of your comfort zone, two months of results. And we start with, I want to solve this problem. I want to get promoted. I want to show up as a better executive and get better scores. I want to find a new job. There’s different things that they want to do. What typically happens, though, is in the discovery phase, we actually discover something else, and it is at that point that we pause and say, okay, we discovered this. So we can either continue down the path that we have set or we can pause and resolve this first. So we set another near-term goal, and then we head towards that so that persistent check in to make sure that you and your coach or your team and your coach are all heading down the same path and have clarity and buy in around what success looks like over the next period of time.

Teresa Caro: That’s really critical and a sign of a good coach, because you can’t just blindly say, oh, you want to solve this in six months later. It’s like, okay, you really need to continue to to check in and confirm we’re still on the same page. And really, as a leader of teams, you should be doing the same thing with your teams. You may say, okay, the beginning of 2025, these are our goals and objectives. But having making sure everybody’s clear on their roles and responsibilities. What they’re heading towards and how to get there. Starting off with that, getting buy in and commitment, but then doing those regular check ins to make sure that everybody’s still in alignment, to make sure that nothing else has popped up. That’s going to keep them from moving forward. That’s just that’s just typical great leadership kinds of conversations and how we should progress forward.

Lee Kantor: Now, you mentioned several different ways to approach coaching in terms of one on one. I think you mentioned group and maybe cohort coaching. Mhm. Can you explain maybe the trade offs of those.

Teresa Caro: Sure. Um so group or cohort. So group and cohort are the same thing. Group and cohort coaching is typically people with some kind of similar thing, similar goal. So I run um a group or cohort coaching program called living a Prioritized Life. It’s very focused on how do we show up as our best selves, as leaders of teams? Um, both, um, well, professionally and then of course, personal also comes into the mix. It’s a certain level of person, uh, with a certain focus using similar tools. So the benefit of that is you get to value me the, the, uh, operating system or the tools that I teach you. And you can tap into your peers as a form of a, as a form of peer advisory. And you can do that weekly. And it’s very cost effective to do it that way. The shortcoming of that is if you have a particular challenge that you really need to work through, you probably need some one on one time in order to do that. So a lot, a lot of my clients tend to do one on one coaching with me because there’s something that they’re trying to accomplish, and they need that intense one on one time with me in order to work through the latest challenge and come up with the next steps that the new way that they’re going to break down that muscle memory and build new muscle memory. So that’s the benefit of having that one on one with the actual group coaching team is a whole nother thing. So team is all working for the same company, all trying to achieve the same goal at that company. And so a coach is going to come in and make sure that that team is working together the best that they can, working on presence and communication skills and conflict resolution and psychological safety. Enter any business buzzword here. That’s what a team coach is going to help that team do.

Lee Kantor: Now, is there a story you can share that, um, maybe illustrates the power of having a good coach in terms of don’t name, obviously the name of the person or the company, but name the share the the problem they were having and how you were able to help them get to a new level.

Teresa Caro: Yeah. So a common thing that I run into is when a company or a team is shifting their direction. So and this isn’t one company, this is several companies that I work with that all have a common challenge, which is you’re going from a particular organization that I’d like to call a lifestyle organization or a best place to work organization where they prioritize. And I’m a big believer that there’s no such thing as balance, but let’s just use the a balanced life as a as a term for this discussion. So they they prioritize that. They prioritize, um, field trips and volunteering. And it’s just really a great, fun place to work. And yes, the company still does. Well. Um, it may not be growing exponentially, but it’s a good, solid company. Then that leader, for any number of reasons. It might be a family owned business. It might be, um, a particular organization that. Yeah, that was great for 20 years, but now it needs to be sold. There’s a there’s certain things that may happen that shift from that best place to work to more of a growth mentality. Well, when you shift from best place to work to growth mentality, for a lot of people, that means the culture changes. That means that everybody needs to get on board around the fact that they’re going to go from maybe 5 to 10% growth per year to now, 20 to 30% growth per year.

Teresa Caro: They’re going to have to put in longer hours. The intensity of the work, the type of work, the pressure around the work. There’s a whole bunch of things that go into that sort of more of a growth mindset versus a steady state kind of mindset. So with that said, having working with that leader because a lot of them get stuck. Because if you think about it, the people who have been with their companies for 20 or 30 years have they’ve been probably working with the same people for at least ten years. There’s a certain amount of loyalty to them. There’s a there’s an IP. These people know the business. They know how to do the business. And losing these people would, you know, would cause pain. And so helping that leader and these teams shift to this new way of thinking, helping these teams, these leaders figure out, do they want to shift? Are they excited by the fact of, you know what, we have worked really hard to grow this company, and now there’s this potential exit, and we are all going to benefit from that exit. Some people can really step up and be very excited about that and others do not.

Teresa Caro: So I’ve had that in several different times. And so what we tend to do, and this is not a quick change, this is not I’m going to come in at three months, change it. This is a couple year kind of evolution where we come in and do discovery. Who’s on the team. What kind of there’s different data driven assessments you can use to make sure the right people are in the right seats, doing the right things, making. So that was the first step, making sure that all the owners and everybody that’s that’s involved, they are all in alignment with where the next direction is for the organization. So then getting that settled and then it’s going the next layer down and making sure do they have you’re going to be putting these people in a pressure cooker. So do they have the right communication skills. And you know I’m very much a huge fan of Lencioni. Do they truly trust one another? Not just functional trust, but truly do they trust that these people all understand where the organization is heading, and do they trust that these people are all in it together? Do they know how to have a constructive conflict conversation? Because we’re going to be taking them from the nice, happy conversations that they’ve been having that can take a long time to the need of having very efficient, effective, intense conversations.

Teresa Caro: Do they have the tools to do that? Do they know how to commit to a decision? Do they know how to hold each other accountable? Don’t just wait for the owner or the leader to hold them accountable, but to truly hold each other accountable so they can all work together to generate results. And then putting that plan together. So I wrote a book called The Purpose Playbook, which is around purpose and vision tenants, which is another way of saying strategic statements and values. So then the final step is, is running them through what we like to call pdtv and making sure that they have a uniform plan, making sure that people are clear on who is accountable, necessarily responsible for everything, but who’s accountable that it gets done. And then sending them off to do it. And so I’ve had several companies go through this process with me. And yeah, it’s fun because they actually graduate. And yeah, I’m still doing one on one coaching with the leaders. But at the end of the day, the rest of the organization has has graduated and they are off to the races with this this new purpose, this new vision. And they they have clarity on what’s going to do. And that is truly exciting and satisfying.

Lee Kantor: So who is the ideal client for Limonest? Is it a team like you just described? Is an individual? Is it both? And what type of pain are they in right now where it would be a good idea to contact you and your team?

Teresa Caro: So there’s a few ways to look at it. One is I tend to operate more in the advertising marketing, product management, product marketing space. So if you’re looking for a coach who can speak your language in those areas, that would be me. From an advertising perspective, it’s generally a 50 people or more. Once you hit that 50 person mark in the advertising agency space, you’re now running into a new set of challenges, a new price point. You’re looking at different goals and paying more attention to succession planning. And I generally work with independently owned agencies in that space because I want to work with the owners, the decision makers. On the brand side, I tend to work in around the C-suite area. So again, marketing, product management, product marketing, VP and above, ideally people who lead teams. So as you look on the. Com on my website and you see one on one coaching and team coaching that helps you understand who I generally work with. From a cohort group coaching perspective, it’s typically leaders. I have some entrepreneurs in that group. Um, so to me, the cohort and group coaching are really people with a certain certain level of expertise, certain years of experience that ends up deciding to do all group or cohort coaching. And that’s called my Living a Prioritized Life program.

Lee Kantor: And, uh, you mentioned the website, the. Com. Is that the best place to go? If somebody wants to learn more, have a more substantive conversation with you or the team and get a hold of your book.

Teresa Caro: Uh, yes. So if you can start there, that gives you an idea of the kinds of products and services that I offer. Uh, also, I highly recommend people follow me on LinkedIn. I am a prolific writer, so if you want to get a sense for who I am and how, I think going to LinkedIn and finding Teresa Caro there and reading some of my content, that’ll give you a good sense of who Limonest is and how we approach different challenges that are out there. The Purpose Playbook I highly recommend you go to Amazon. It has been written by myself, Theresa Caro, as well as Jeff Hillenmeyer and Megan Barney, and it’s called The Playbook. It’s blue and yellow. That’s how you know you have the right one.

Lee Kantor: And Theresa Caro is spelled t e r e a r.

Teresa Caro: Correct. And you’ll see me on LinkedIn as Theresa Caro, MBA, PCC. That’s how you know you found the right one.

Lee Kantor: Well, Theresa, thank you so much for sharing your story today. You’re doing such important work and we appreciate you.

Teresa Caro: Thank you so much for having me. What great.

Teresa Caro: Questions. So much fun.

Lee Kantor: All right. This is Lee Kantor. We’ll see you all next time on High Velocity Radio.

Tagged With: Liminist, Teresa Caro

Rohit Panedka With Microsoft

May 5, 2025 by Jacob Lapera

Atlanta Business Radio
Atlanta Business Radio
Rohit Panedka With Microsoft
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Rohit Panedka is Microsoft General Manager, E+D Product and Atlanta Site Lead. He is responsible for M365 and Experiences and Devices Support, Care, Innovation and value generation for our customers through Care and Support.

His organization looks to understand customer needs with empathy and consistently experimenting on improving outcomes and experiences for our customers and aspire to scale those experiences to all our customers so we can live us purpose of impacting every individual and organization on the planet.

His professional career spans ~20 years in technology focused on delivering managed services, supply chain, and customer service/support/care, go to market, delivery and transformation. He enjoys giving back and paying it forward and always open to engaging and learning from others.

He serves as the Executive Sponsor for Asians at Microsoft Atlanta to advise and provide resources for the organization and leadership team. He enjoys being of service to others as a mentor, support to HBCUs, donating time to charities such as Ronald McDonald House, Emerging 100 of Atlanta, Boys and Girls Club, The Urban League and MANNRS here in Georgia.

Connect with Rohit on LinkedIn.

What You’ll Learn In This Episode

  • Microsoft’s work here in Atlanta
  • What is the Microsoft Work Trend Index and what’s new about this year’s report
  • How does AI fill productivity gap

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix.

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studio in Atlanta, Georgia. It’s time for Atlanta Business Radio, brought to you by Kennesaw State University’s Executive MBA program, the accelerated degree program for working professionals looking to advance their career and enhance their leadership skills. And now, here’s your host.

Lee Kantor: Lee Kantor here, another episode of Atlanta Business Radio. And this is going to be a good one. But before we get started, it’s important to recognize our sponsor, CSU’s executive MBA program. Without them, we couldn’t be sharing these important stories. Today on the land of business radio, we have Rohit Panedka and he is the end product and Atlanta site lead for Microsoft. Welcome.

Rohit Panedka: Thank you. Lee. So great to be here. I remember we talked about some of these things last year. Thanks for having me again.

Lee Kantor: Oh, well, I’m excited to get caught up. And for folks who don’t remember last year, can you share a little bit about your work at Microsoft here in Atlanta?

Rohit Panedka: Yes, I’m a partner and general manager here at Microsoft Atlanta. I lead our presence here in Microsoft Atlanta. We have engineers that build our core products, which is M365 now, you know, largely focusing on Copilot, our AI work, our intelligent cloud. We have our Azure products dynamics products security. We also have our sales folks and customer solution architects. So the whole breadth and gamut of what Microsoft does, we have a presence here in Atlanta. We are here to serve our customers that are here locally. We are here for our diverse talent pool here locally, but also to serve the community, our diverse and vibrant community here in Atlanta. So very glad to be here and the community has been great and good to us as well.

Lee Kantor: Now, every year I think it was last year we talked about this same work trend index that you all put out. Is there anything in this year’s report that you’d like to share?

Rohit Panedka: Yeah, certainly. Uh, just to give a little bit of context. Uh, Work Trend Index is a global survey that we do, uh, largely focused more recently on, uh, how, you know, AI at work is being used and how the, you know, workplaces are adopting AI as a tool. And last year, you know, I was relatively new tool in the workplace. So we wanted to see how many people use such tools and how they’ve applied it across their work. And this year, we took a more critical look at how business leaders have planned to apply AI to more of their operations and what they could be. Um, you know what that could mean to their work, but also to the, you know, experiences of their employees as a part of a global survey. We also asked 500 specific business leaders and knowledge workers here in Atlanta for their thoughts. And, you know, we have a pretty good snapshot of where Atlanta stands in this moment. And the biggest takeaway we found here in Atlanta is 84% of the business leaders say that 2025 will be the year that they will use AI strategies to address their operations, specifically to improve productivity. And that is the biggest takeaway that we’re seeing, Lee, from our initial findings.

Lee Kantor: Now in your career? Um, a lot of times when there’s a disruption like AI historically, uh, it’s been I, I remember kind of a slower uptake, you know, kind of gradually than suddenly, but with AI, it seems like it’s suddenly then suddenly, um, how do you feel about the embrace of AI amongst whether it’s the worker themselves, maybe they were first to get in and start playing around with it. But now leadership is, like you said, looking at ways for AI to fill that productivity gap.

Rohit Panedka: Yeah, I think you’re spot on. When we looked at the report last year, you might recall, uh, we were seeing that, uh, workers were bringing AI on their own into the workplace. And the theme remains the same, which is the fact that, uh, workers are feeling, uh, compressed. Uh, you know, that’s the reality today, right? Um, you know, leaders are demanding more productivity. Uh, but workers are feeling more compressed to do the work that’s already on their plate. In fact, uh, within the Atlanta workforce itself, uh, more than three fourths, uh, almost three fourths of the work workers feel like, uh, they don’t have enough time to do the work that’s already on their plate. So that’s the dichotomy that we’re dealing with, right? You know, our leaders want more productivity for all the right reasons. I mean, obviously we in Atlanta want to lead the, you know, economic landscape. We want the greatest productivity here. Uh, our workers want to do a great job, but they feel compressed. Um, so that theme still exists. But the good news now is that, uh, leaders do want to use the tools that are now available in the form of AI to solve that problem. I think that’s the real sort of, uh, I would say opportunity. Right. Uh, there’s, there’s intent to solve that problem, so. And do it the right way. I think that’s the opportunity. We are in the crossroads of opportunity that we are here now.

Lee Kantor: What is if there is a right way, what is the wrong way? What is the right way and a wrong way look like to you?

Rohit Panedka: Yeah. I think the, you know, the wrong way is not, uh, you know, employees bringing some of these tools on their own, uh, without the knowledge of their, uh, you know, employers and their IT departments, uh, trying to do their work with the use of unauthorized tools and AI capabilities, trying to, uh, plug them into their, you know, data, uh, expose their data outside of their, you know, uh, secure environment, uh, that could expose their, you know, trade secrets and, you know, uh, do do harm to their business. The right way to do that is, you know, ensure that the organization itself has an AI strategy and, uh, make sure that, uh, the employees are brought along the journey of, uh, implementing, uh, the AI strategy, the the first step, I would say, is making sure that, uh, every employee gets comfortable with the use of AI for their own workflows. What that means is, uh, you know, one other really important step that, uh, you know, stood out for me was, uh, and this probably we all relate to every employee today, on an average, gets interrupted, uh, every two minutes by meetings, emails, other things. That’s about 275 times a day that they get interrupted. So how do we make their, you know, individual workflows? Uh, easy. So this is with everybody having a personal assistant like, you know, the Microsoft copilot. So being able to summarize your meetings, being able able to summarize your word documents, being able to draft your emails. So everybody having their own personal assistant to do their work uh, much easier, you know, remove the drudgery of work. The second layer of this is, you know, introducing, uh, teams to work with AI agents.

Rohit Panedka: So this is where, uh, collective workflows could be automated. So, for example, let’s say a team is used to working with, uh, insights and reports that the whole team uses to come up with the next project or idea, or build project plans together to work on the next product. These are things that, uh, AI agents can do for the teams such that removing some of the, uh, you know, um, I would say the burden on the team to kind of come together, you know, lengthy meetings and workshops and things like that, which the agent can do in the background. And it can be doing this 24 over seven. Uh, you know, when the teams are, you know, you know, sleeping and, you know, taking care of their life and spending time with their families. The agent could be working in the background doing all of these workflow stuff. Uh, while the teams can come back and do the creative work. Right. That is where the integration of AI into those kinds of workflows will make the team’s productivity enhance. But also the happiness index of the teams goes up. I think that is where that is the right way to do things right, which is bring AI agents into these business workflows and automate them, where the teams can spend most of their time on the creative and the core value addition part of the the business. That’s the next, uh, you know, uh, you know, I would say the area where we can deploy AI, uh, the right way.

Lee Kantor: Now, what do you tell that employee who might be fearful? And when you start listing all of these tasks that an AI agent can do, and they start thinking in their head, that’s what I do. Um, how do you kind of either help them prepare for this inevitability or, um, or just get retrained into some other area that will make them less easily to be displaced?

Rohit Panedka: Yeah. You know, this is this is a fair, uh, you know, fear with any, uh, new technology that, uh, does come into play, right? I mean, with anything new, there is a little bit of skepticism. Uh, you know, this goes back to when computers were introduced, uh, people, you know, did fear what happens to their data entry jobs or, uh, you know, when the internet was introduced as well, there were quite a few roles that were fearful of elimination. But what’s really happened is, uh, there’s been a proliferation of other jobs that have come in place of that. You know, there’s been proliferation of, uh, sysadmin jobs. There’s been a proliferation of cloud architects. There’s been a proliferation of, uh, you know, network administration, security jobs, right? Because of the proliferation of, you know, compute, uh, heavy jobs and technology jobs. So it’s the same thing with AI. Uh, there will be a proliferation of jobs that require specializing in training the AI models specializing in, you know, uh, creating, uh, infrastructure that, uh, you know, and models that, uh, need, uh, you know, uh, the technology expertise to build these AI, uh, tooling.

Rohit Panedka: There’s also a need for people that know how to manage, uh, AI heavy organizations as well. The organization structures will also get upended when we introduce these AI agents to work with humans as well. So how do you manage such organizations? Uh, you know, how do we manage organizations where we have both humans and agents working together to create outcomes for an organization? All of these are net new concepts that we’ll have to learn, uh, to, to deploy and make sure that, uh, they, they, uh, perform as expected. These will all create new opportunities and new jobs. Uh, so, yes, there’s an element of learning. There’s an element of skilling, reskilling and upskilling that has to happen with anything new. But it’s not that it’s going to necessarily eliminate jobs or it’s a zero sum game. It’s more of a, you know, we’ve got to move towards those new opportunities and new jobs. That’s definitely a need. The way work is done, the kind of jobs that are needed to do those kinds of jobs will definitely change.

Lee Kantor: It’s just historically, though, it’s been like a blue collar or maybe the the lower paid people in the organizations were the ones being displaced. And now with AI, it seems like it’s moving up the ladder in terms of white collar. And, you know, now coders can be replaced, even lawyers. Or they’re talking about replacing a lot of medical professionals can be replaced by AI. This is a different group of people who aren’t usually the ones that get displaced by a disruption like this. And it seems to me that a lot of organizations are now looking a lot more like tech companies, where it just takes fewer people to execute what it used to take lots of people to execute.

Rohit Panedka: Yeah, I think I mean, that’s a that’s a good observation. But we also have to recognize that, uh, there’s a lot of problem sets that are unsolved as well. Right? I mean, one of the other important stat that, uh, we did, you know, glean even last year and even this year is that, uh, you know, there is a, um, you know, consistent lack of talent or there is a consistent need for intelligence on demand, uh, especially human intelligence on demand that needs to be augmented, that needs to be complemented. Uh, I does solve that. Um, you know, in the, in the form of, uh, ability to compute large problem sets, uh, ability to compute very large problems and things like that. So think and put that in context of still unsolved problems, like in healthcare in the field of, uh, diagnostics, in the field of cancer research, in the field of, uh, you know, climate change, uh, you know, in the field of, uh, you know, agricultural problems, growing needs of, uh, you know, humanity at large. I think those are still problems unsolved and new fields of engineering, biomedicine, uh, you know, even creative fields and arts are continuing to grow. So, you know, I believe that, uh, that’s where, uh, you know, human potential is going to continue to shift. Uh, so to your point, uh, I think there is tremendous opportunity for talent to shift into those spaces as well as, uh, we get this, uh, you know, intelligence opportunity filled.

Lee Kantor: So where in your mind is the low hanging fruit for an organization to really, um, kind of lean into this opportunity with AI.

Rohit Panedka: You know? So there is really no barrier to entry, you know, uh, if you if you start working with Microsoft today, you could just go to, uh, copilot Microsoft.com. And if you are a Microsoft customer with any sort of license, you could get access to Copilot chat. And copilot chat gives you access to, uh, you know, copilot uh, to, to start working with copilot, you also get access to what is called as agent builder, where a user can start building agents, start experimenting with, you know, small workflows. Now, if you want to do more complex, uh, agent building or, uh, you want to start working with very contextual data. Then you have to obviously get into paid licenses. Uh, and then you have, uh, you know, capabilities like Microsoft Copilot studio, where you can, uh, build more complex, uh, agents that, you know, uh, you can automate more complex, uh, you know, business processes and things like that. But you can start with simple, uh, workflows at user level, uh, you know, workflows and start, uh, improving their individual workflows. So start with getting your, uh, employee experiences better, their drudgery out of their work, getting them comfortable with the use of AI. One stat to remember is leaders are more familiar with AI today than the employees.

Rohit Panedka: So, uh, I think, you know, from from the stats, it looks like seven out of ten, uh, leaders are more familiar with, uh, in Atlanta or more familiar with AI against four out of every Very ten employees. So let’s get our employees also more familiar with AI. And the barrier to entry is very low. Let’s get them, you know familiar with copilot chat. Get them to use it on a daily basis. This is a very secure environment. Uh, you know, it’s it’s within the boundaries of your own data. And then, um, get them to start building, you know, agents, then start integrating your workflows, uh, into, uh, you know, with, with copilot studio like capabilities. That’s when you start getting, uh, your teams, you know, uh, larger teams integrated with agents. That’s when you start transforming your organizations to be more AI ready. But start with your employees getting more familiar and comfortable with AI. And this goes back to your question, Lee. How do we get employees more comfortable, right, with the AI and not, uh, view it as a fearful thing? You know, we have to, uh, get everybody comfortable with the idea that this is a tool for good and, uh, higher productivity and greater experience.

Lee Kantor: So if they have, uh, Microsoft licenses, is this something that I can offer to my employees and say, hey, there’s learnings like, or is that something that there’s additional fees for learnings or is there kind of free opportunity to learn or at least get my feet wet from an employee standpoint of learning about AI through Microsoft and from a strategic standpoint of my leaders want to, um, you know, get some help and get some expertise from somebody in Microsoft to get their thoughts on the best way to roll something like this out. Are there people to talk to there?

Rohit Panedka: Yes. So if you’re a you know, if you’re a large commercial business, obviously you’re going to have your account team that can connect with you. But if you’re a small business, you know, we have help and learning sites that have a lot of, uh, you know, resources for you. We have a small business customer advisory boards that we recently launched. This was a very recent launch that you can reach out to if you’re working through a partner of ours. We have partner programs that get that are also enabled with the same materials. We have AI adoption kits that are available on the same, uh, you know, Microsoft websites. We also have, uh, you know, uh, programs where, uh, these are paid programs, but, uh, they are called Pro Direct and Business Assist. Uh, we also have on our support.microsoft.com, which are also free landing pages where you can go and you can look by based on your use cases. Uh, we can, uh, support you. So the use cases could be you’re trying to create a hub for your team, or you’re trying to create, share and create and share documents with your customers. We also have very free, uh, resources like getting more done with your with with AI as your companion as an example. That is a ten minute course. Uh, if you if you’re pressed for time just to get started. Uh, so there’s a lot of resources, uh, for, for small businesses. So, you know, try those out. And some of these programs that I mentioned, uh, you know, like, we have a business advisor program that actually you can speak to somebody, uh, human, uh, basically that can walk you through these things. We also have programs where, uh, we do reach out to customers. Uh, if they’ve made an attempt to reach us out, we proactively reach out, especially if they bought a Co pilot license and they’re struggling to start. We reach out ourselves and give them a hand. Uh, it’s called welcome to copilot. We help get them started if they don’t know how to where to start.

Lee Kantor: Now, is there a story you can share? Maybe a small business success story of somebody who, um, hadn’t been using AI and then started using Microsoft’s AI in order to, you know, get to a new level or to improve their productivity.

Rohit Panedka: Yeah, there’s a few, actually, uh, you know, there’s a story of a solo founder that actually, uh, started a staffing firm, um, and, uh, they used, uh, you know, you know, our copilot, uh, capabilities to actually, uh, streamline a lot of the, you know, resume sorting, uh, helping their, uh, clients build resumes, uh, you know, keyword, uh, targeting those kinds of things. Uh, so that thus eliminating a lot of the, uh, you know, uh, the human powered, uh, pieces of the work, and then that actually helped them, uh, in their own words, about $2 million in, um, profitability increase. There was another construction group, another 5%, 5% start up company. Again, a small business that said that they boosted revenue, sorry, operating margin by about 20% by using AI across their operations. So basically, uh, using it for, uh, market research. Uh, a lot of their, um, research was done by, you know, uh, human effort that they were able to redeploy for other activities. They did a lot of the research through, uh, copilot, research assistant. Uh, another one was another entrepreneur who basically skipped hiring an expensive CFO but made do with their, you know, financial staff by using, uh, expertise through, uh, you know, uh, copilot for, for financial, uh, you know, um, capabilities. So these are all, uh, you know, stories within the small business solopreneur kind of, uh, uh, examples.

Lee Kantor: Yeah. The impact is real. It’s not going anywhere.

Rohit Panedka: No it’s not. It’s not. Look, you know, uh, on the other hand, you know, I will say this, right? There’s a there’s a real reason why we, uh, kept the name as copilot. Right? It’s, uh, you are still the pilot, right? You are still in control. Uh, you set the tone, you set the direction. You still have to validate the work, right? And, uh, there is an element of continuing to validate the work and training, uh, through your validation. So, uh, that’s also something to be confident about. Like you, you’re still in control, right? So there’s no to. Goes back to the point of fear, right? You you still control the narrative and you still control the outcomes.

Lee Kantor: Well, if somebody wants to get a hold of that work trend index report or connect with that, uh, Microsoft’s AI community, is there a website or what’s the best way to connect?

Rohit Panedka: Yeah. So it’s aka Dot Ms.. Slash. Uh, 2025 is the work trend index and for the customer advisory board. Uh.

Lee Kantor: Let me just ask your I.

Rohit Panedka: That’s right. That’s what I’m doing right now. Um, let me follow up with you on that one.

Lee Kantor: But is there if they went to is there kind of a central Microsoft Atlanta website they can go to, to Support.microsoft.com?

Rohit Panedka: Yeah.

Lee Kantor: And then they can get uh, that’ll go to if they can search for the Atlanta folks. And then from there they can probably get that community.

Rohit Panedka: Yeah. Customer advisory board.

Lee Kantor: Yeah. Good stuff. Well, Rohit, thank you so much for sharing your story today. You’re doing such important work and we appreciate you.

Rohit Panedka: Thank you so much, Lee. And you are too.

Lee Kantor: All right. This is Lee Kantor. We’ll see you all next time on Atlanta Business Radio.d

Tagged With: Microsoft, Rohit Panedka

Jeanne Omlor With Jeanne Omlor International

May 2, 2025 by Jacob Lapera

High Velocity Radio
High Velocity Radio
Jeanne Omlor With Jeanne Omlor International
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Jeanne Omlor is a Business Strategist, multi 7-Figure Online Business Coach, and Certified Servant Leadership Executive Coach at Jeanne Omlor International. At 54 years old she was a solo parent in deep debt and got herself online and to $1M in 17 months, without ads, and has since scaled to multi-millions in 5 years.

Her company has helped almost 500 businesses to thrive online. She is emotionally connected to helping others prosper, as she lived in lack for years and overcame that mindset.

She is now helping as many people as she can to maximize profits and reach their full potential while being the visionary they’re destined to be.

Connect with Jeanne on LinkedIn and follow her on Facebook.

What You’ll Learn In This Episode

  • How to leverage what you already know to help others.
  • Launching and scaling your business online without ads or complicated tech.
  • How to make a good living while creating impact.
  • Navigating overall marketing challenges.

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix.

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios in Atlanta, Georgia. It’s time for High Velocity Radio.

Lee Kantor: Lee Kantor here. Another episode of High Velocity Radio and this is going to be a good one. So excited to be talking to my guest today, Jeanne Omlor with Jeanne Omlor International. Welcome.

Jeanne Omlor: Thank you. Nice to meet you, Lee.

Lee Kantor: Well, nice to meet you. For those who aren’t familiar, can you share a little bit about your practice? How are you serving folks?

Jeanne Omlor: Sure. So I’m a coach for coaches and consultants with my company, and we help coaches and consultants and certain online businesses as well to get more sales, get more clients without ads. So it’s organic social media marketing.

Lee Kantor: What’s your backstory? How’d you get involved in this line of work?

Jeanne Omlor: Well, I’ve been a coach for 13 years and I’ve been coaching people offline. I was coaching people offline, all sorts of businesses with business coaching and consulting, and I did that for eight years and also executive leadership. And then I realized, you know, there’s an easier way to it must be an easier way to get clients. So I got online and I figured out how to get clients not having to run the funnels and the ads, although I have tried those and they don’t work. You know, I got to $1 million in 17 months at very high profits, and I started showing other people how to do that. And it’s been a very big solution for people that don’t want to go down the high tech funnels ads sort of fiasco route.

Lee Kantor: Now, at the beginning of your career, were you working in corporate as a coach or were you always kind of self-employed coaching other coaches, and were those your typical?

Jeanne Omlor: Yeah, I always had my own business because to me, if you’re going to be a coach, I mean, you really I mean, I know people do that, but you really want to make it that it’s your own business because otherwise you still just have a job.

Lee Kantor: So, um, so you started coaching individuals. What’s kind of the ideal profile for at the beginning of your career? Who was the ideal client for you?

Jeanne Omlor: It was always business owners. So small business owners and entrepreneurs, all sorts of businesses, lawyers, people that were in beauty and all sorts of any designers, you name it. Uh, some coaches and consultants as well. So any small business, I’m just really good at helping people make money. That’s kind of my jam is how do we help people make money? So. And marketing. So it really didn’t matter. Like anybody that had a business that needed help, I would coach them.

Lee Kantor: And then initially, how were you going about getting your leads before you figured things out, or did this just come to you naturally?

Jeanne Omlor: No, nothing comes naturally in business. We’ve got to completely alleviate ourself of that la la land that things are just going to come to us. Very few people that happens. So when you have a business you have to market. So I always marketed and I knew that from the very beginning because I got to coach from day one. So I used to do networking, speaking at events, public speaking, and that was it. That was how I got my clients just meeting people offline. This is great, but there is hard to get critical mass when everything you do is depending upon you getting in a car, driving somewhere, and meeting a handful of people because the numbers just aren’t there. Online, there’s millions of people you can meet, and you don’t have to get in a car and drive around. And that’s the beauty of online marketing.

Lee Kantor: So when you start working with somebody, walk me through, like, what are those initial conversations? What do you need to get clarity around in order to help them?

Jeanne Omlor: Okay, so we get a lot of people that are just starting coaching. Some people have been coaching a while and haven’t been able to get, you know, a sustainable monthly income. So just depends where they are. So let’s just say it’s a new coach, somebody that says, Hey John, I’ve been wanting to coach for years, I don’t know what to do. We will actually help craft their offer, their coaching offer from scratch. So okay. You don’t know. What do you want? Well, I think I want to coach these people. Okay, great. You want to coach men on, you know, leadership and the relationships. Great. Okay. So let’s build an offer around that. And I help them build an offer. We get price and then we have an offer. And from there we show them how to position the offer online, create content lead generation and how to do a sales call and sell a high ticket offer.

Lee Kantor: Now, how is that, um, like what? What part of this is different than a funnel? How are how are you differentiating this from the typical funnel sales strategy?

Jeanne Omlor: Okay, so with marketing, everything technically that you do is a funnel. But when we say funnel because you’re funneling and it’s a step by step funnel. But when we’re talking about funnels, we’re normally talking about tech funnels that are landing pages, and then you get the landing page and then you run an ad to it, and then they click on it, and then it goes to something else and then something else. Then they get on a call or they buy a product. That’s when we say funnels. We are talking about those sequences. Make sense?

Lee Kantor: Yeah.

Jeanne Omlor: Yeah. Okay. So the difference is we’re not creating a funnel of landing pages and this and click on that and upsell a downsell then they get a $20 product and then they get this. Then they get a sales call and then you get a client. We don’t have that kind of a tech funnel the funnel. For instance, my funnel used to be I would drive my car to a networking event. I would meet people, I would get their card, and I would go. And if they said they were interested and sure, I want to get on a call with you. Then I would go home. I would email them and say, hey, so nice to meet you. Book a call. And then they would get on a call with me and they would either hire me or not. That’s a funnel. That’s a marketing a very simple marketing funnel. So they’re all funnels actually. But when people talk about funnels and ads, they’re talking about the landing pages. Okay. So I just wanted to explain what a funnel is and the different types of funnels. So this funnel is not a landing page funnel. It is a kind of like the offline funnel. But it’s organic social organic. So it’s not hey click on this and book a call. It’s reaching out online. Kind of like how you I was reaching out offline, but now it’s online and we do it differently. Make sense.

Lee Kantor: So I’m still unclear on how you do it differently. So if it’s similar in the sense of it’s an offline conversation but it’s online, how is it done online?

Jeanne Omlor: Okay. So offline I would be getting in a car and I’d be driving to an event. Correct.

Lee Kantor: Right.

Jeanne Omlor: Okay. Online there is no car. There’s no well, there are some events, but, you know, I’m not in a car. I’m sitting in front of my computer like I am right now. But instead of going to an event, I’m going to go to LinkedIn or Facebook or Instagram, a platform, and that we’re getting the clients on the social media platforms because there’s millions, billions of people. Actually, I think at this point on these platforms. So we’re reaching out through the platform. We’re creating content. People see our content. We’re saying, hey, you want to get on a call? So it’s, uh, it’s using the social media platform. So if I were going out and I go to a networking event, the networking event is the platform. That’s where the people are. Right.

Lee Kantor: Right.

Jeanne Omlor: Online, it’s let’s just say as an example, for instance, LinkedIn. So that’s the platform. That’s the difference is I’m not driving to the local networking chamber networking event with a few people there. I’m staying at home and I’m logging into LinkedIn and there’s my platform. Does that make sense?

Lee Kantor: Right. So now you’re on LinkedIn. So anybody can get on LinkedIn at any point and then post anything you’d like. So your recommendation is to do more posting on social platforms.

Jeanne Omlor: No no no it’s much more involved than that. Yes, people should post, but just I’ve heard that so much and it’s just such bad advice. Just post more really. Just just post more. That’s no strategy. That’s just posting more. It’s not a strategy. And what we teach is actual strategy posting with reach out with sales. But before that, the very first thing we help people do, I’ll repeat that, is we help them craft a really good offer so they have something. First. First thing, who are you selling it to? What’s the offer? How much does it cost? Now we have an offer. Now we have a product. Then you work on your messaging, which I can’t just tell people how to do that in three seconds. You need coaching on that messaging. Then there’s content and different types of content. It’s not just posting more. Absolutely not. Please don’t. Don’t go post more. Folks of random stuff won’t work. So it’s really about what you’re posting and what kinds of posts and which ones work. And then from there, lead generation, which is reaching out to people and what you say when you’re reaching out to them. This is very involved. Even though it’s simple, it’s not easy. Does that make sense?

Lee Kantor: So how are you defining lead generation?

Jeanne Omlor: Lead generation is the content is lead generation. So the content you’re doing that for lead generation because some of that content pulls people in. Okay. And then there’s the same way at a networking event, I walk up to Lee, who’s standing on a corner with his hand cards, his business card in his hand. I say, hey, Lee, how are you? And you go, I’m great. Same exact thing, but on social media.

Lee Kantor: So how do you do that interaction in an elegant kind of non-salesy way. Or do you? You don’t mind if it’s salesy?

Jeanne Omlor: Yeah, I do mind if it’s salesy. And we coach people to not be salesy.

Lee Kantor: So how do you do it? In an elegant manner.

Jeanne Omlor: Uh, we coach you on how to do it in an elegant manner by creating those, uh, messages for you.

Lee Kantor: And that’s all part of the coaching program that you offer?

Jeanne Omlor: Absolutely. In fact, I will work with people on their particular messaging so that it’s not salesy and spammy and weird, because that’s not what people want. People don’t want that anymore. And they’ve seen through it. And there’s just a whole new way of selling. And we teach that. We call we call it heart based sales. People don’t want to be tricked and treated like you’re tricking them. And it’s just very not not good. And I believe that the way that people have been sold to how we’ve been sold to for hundreds of years is just unethical. It’s like about tricking people. So you don’t want to trick somebody, you want to just reach out to somebody in a very normal way without any kind of tricking or weirdness or spammy or or just strange. I mean, people, they’re not good at this. Generally. I get such weird messages on LinkedIn and all over the place. So teaching people how to to sell in a heart based way and the messaging, well, there’s a lot of coaching on that. I can’t like tell you now here on the podcast exactly what you would say, because it depends. It’s different for every person because it can’t be the same for everybody else. So that’s just weird because if I’m a business coach, it’s going to be a certain way. And if there’s a relationship coach, they can’t do my messaging. Does that make sense that it can’t be exactly the same for everybody?

Lee Kantor: Absolutely. I think that’s the problem with the thing. My pet peeve on LinkedIn is someone says, hey, do you want to connect? And then you say, yes. And then the very next message is buy my stuff. And like.

Jeanne Omlor: That’s not good. That’s like, that’s a bait and switch, right?

Lee Kantor: Like I’m not I mean, you got to at least have a conversation first. Um, exactly.

Jeanne Omlor: Yeah. And there’s different ways of doing that. Um, but 100%. If, you know, I had people say, hey, well, the other thing is nobody really wants to read your latest post or your article. We don’t. We have so much to read. You know how backed up I am on my audible right now. So it’s not like the old days where it was so amazing that you sent somebody an article. Nobody thinks, gee, thank you. They’re like, oh great. Another thing you want me to read? It’s almost an insult because if we’re really aware of what’s going on in the world, there’s so much media, books, articles for us to have to act like we’re grateful because somebody sends us. Their article is insanity.

Lee Kantor: So did you, um, how did you kind of discover that there is a more elegant, more heart centered way of communicating? Was that something that was just natural for you, or was this something you learned through trial and error?

Jeanne Omlor: This was something I learned offline when I’d go to a networking event and people would throw five of their cards at me and like, I’m going to go out and sell for them. And I was always amazed that I would go to a networking event and they’d go, hi. And they would just start talking at me. And I thought, wow, these people really have no idea about human nature. So I started developing this offline and I would coach my clients on this. And I used to actually do whole talks about this at NYU, NYU, MBA, alumni, and all sorts of business places on how to act in a networking event, how to actually get your little, you know, intro. I didn’t call it a pitch either. I called it an intro. How to do this? Well, and guess what? We’re human beings, so doing this well offline translates to doing it well online. Basically, when somebody walks up to you, do you know that? What do you know that I never tell anybody what I do unless they ask me. Never. I never tell somebody what I do unless they ask me why. Permission based selling. So people meet me and they start telling me everything, and I listen and I listen. I listen and then I go, that’s that’s interesting. And then I ask them questions and, and sometimes they don’t even say, what do you do? And I’m okay with that because that was what they wanted that interaction to be, was me being like having to listen about them selling to me. And it’s so disingenuous. And they think it’s so great that they just told me, I’m just thinking, well, wait a minute, you didn’t even ask me what I did, you know? And at that point, I don’t even care because I’m thinking, this is not somebody that’s interested in what I do, so I’m not going to force it on them.

Lee Kantor: So how do you, um, with that philosophy, how how do you incorporate, uh, any level of proactivity into that if you’re just kind of absorbing the person initially before and you’re waiting for permission to, um, you know, share what you do.

Jeanne Omlor: Most human beings will turn around and say, tell me what you do. Some do not.

Lee Kantor: So that’s your first level of vetting. If they don’t do that, that’s probably not the right fit for me.

Jeanne Omlor: Probably not. Because the thing is this if they don’t have the social aptitude to ask another human being, after basically talking at me for a long time, what do you do? This is not the kind of client I’m looking for, so I’m good because I only coach people that are high achievers and high achievers. They have enough social grace to say, well, look, tell me about what you do. I’m like, yeah, sure. Here’s what I do. Now, this rarely happens that somebody just talks at me and doesn’t every now and then. And I’m not criticizing. I’m just saying human beings are all wonderful and beautiful and they’re different, different styles. Now that’s great, but they’re just showing me that they have zero interest in what I do. If they have zero interest in what I’m doing, I’m not going to force it on them. Why would I do that? I just I’m zen about it. Great. Nice to meet you. Thank you so much for sharing that. And I move on. Most people say, hey, what do you. By the way, John, I really wanted to hear what you do.

Jeanne Omlor: Actually, I’m like, yeah, sure. And they go, yeah, I wanted to hear about that. Most people don’t get on a call with me unless they’re actually interested in what I’m doing, because they’ve seen all over social media the help that I provide. And they’re just like, okay, I want to talk with this woman. So usually there’s no problem there. I’m talking about, you know, it’s not really. All of this is so easy for me at this point. People see me, they say, sure, I want to get on a call. We do a 15 minute just, you know, connection, uh, on Facebook, on on LinkedIn, on other places. They go straight into the booking, the one hour, um, with me like a sales call. So, yeah, it’s really about, um, you know, everybody knows you have something to sell, right? We all know that. It’s. How are you doing that? Are you getting on a call? And just like, oh, okay, here’s my chance just to tell somebody exactly what I do, that desperation doesn’t work.

Lee Kantor: So should a coach have, um, kind of tiers of things? They sell a lower price thing, a mid-price thing, a high price thing.

Jeanne Omlor: That depends. There’s no actual rule. Like exactly what every single person needs to do. It depends on their offer. Lee, are you a coach?

Lee Kantor: I am not a coach.

Jeanne Omlor: Okay, I was just wondering. So. So that depends. It just depends on the offer. It’s just really. There’s no. I think people are too attached to everything being set in stone. And my answer is it depends.

Lee Kantor: So when you’re working with a new coach, um, how do you help them decide what is the appropriate offer for them?

Jeanne Omlor: Well, we work with them. And the very first, um, first session, and I work that out with them. I just work back and forth, and I figure that out.

Lee Kantor: And then what are some of the criteria you use to decide the type of offer?

Jeanne Omlor: Uh, it depends what they’re doing. So let’s say it’s a relationship coach then that might be different. Might be different than somebody that’s a business coach, for instance. And whether they’re coaching a corporation will be very different from an individual.

Lee Kantor: And then is the offer different or the pricing different or both?

Jeanne Omlor: Everything will be different because if you’re coaching a corporation to do go in and do a team coaching, it’s going to be very different deliverable than some individual that needs a relationship coaching because their boyfriend left them.

Lee Kantor: And then but the offer would be different and the pricing obviously would be different.

Jeanne Omlor: Everything’s different. The pricing and the offer completely different because it’s a different context. Yes.

Lee Kantor: And then when you’re working with the coaches, is there something you’ve learned over time, like the typical objection that they might face when.

Jeanne Omlor: Well, you know, with sales there’s always the same objections with all sales. Do you know what they are? Help me out here. What are the sales objections?

Lee Kantor: Um, time and money effort.

Jeanne Omlor: Yep, yep.

Jeanne Omlor: It’s always the same for anything you’re selling. You’re going to get the same objections.

Lee Kantor: So, um, what are some of your advice to them? In order to get past some of those objections?

Jeanne Omlor: You need to be so good that those objections don’t matter when you show that you have had great results with somebody, or even not have had that. But when you give them an offer that is a grand slam offer that they’re like, can’t lose, then those objections are easier. And I don’t say to deal with because some people don’t want to get past their objections, and I don’t if they don’t want to get past the objections, I don’t try. So it’s all it’s not about forcing people. It’s about just peeling back, the peeling back the obstacles to them wanting to do it. That’s that’s more how I look at it. So somebody goes, oh, John, I really, really, really want to do this, but I don’t have any money. I’m like, well, you know, do you really, really want it? Yeah I do okay. Well what would that look like if you don’t get coaching? Well I’m never going to make this business work. Okay. What would you rather have the risk of investing or never make your business work and then it’s their choice.

Lee Kantor: And, um, early on, when you were developing this and you were selling it to other people, can you share the first story of maybe one of the early wins you had where you’re like, okay, I’m on to something. This is definitely transferable. I’m able to help people get to new levels.

Jeanne Omlor: Exactly. My very first client with this particular offer signed up, and we had a couple calls and he and his wife, he said, do you have any testimonials? I said, not for this. I said, I’m not going to lie to you. You would be my first client for this online offer. He went, aha, okay, cool, because everybody needs to start somewhere. I said, yep. So I’m not going to give you testimonials from another offer, which was the one on one coaching. I said because it wouldn’t be true. So I’m not going to give you that. You would be my first client. He said, wow, my wife and I are so amazed that you did not lie to us and make up some fake stuff. We’re hiring you. I said great. Then before he got on the first call, he said, guess what? He gets on the call. And he said, I just got a 30 K client. Just by being in your world, just the mindset. I never would have gotten that. Just just those two sales calls and what you were telling me, I went and got a 30 K client even without actual coaching. Now that’s pretty good.

Lee Kantor: And then is your offer one on one coaching or is it group coaching or. You have both.

Jeanne Omlor: Is it a group? It’s neither. It’s actually a group one on one hybrid model. So there I have other coaches that work with me. I have a mindset coach who’s also a theta healer. I have a heart based sales coach because that’s what we teach. And we have a content and copy coach that used to run Universal Studios video content department. I have another head coach, client success director, and me. So you have a very, very dialed in professional high level team of coaches. And there’s also unlimited one on one. It’s a very unusual model in the marketplace.

Lee Kantor: And then so, uh, a person signs up, they have a call with you at some point, or you just get information.

Jeanne Omlor: Because they have unlimited one on ones.

Lee Kantor: Right? But before they make the buying decision.

Jeanne Omlor: The very first call is we are going to craft that offer and get them their pathway.

Lee Kantor: So there’s this is an introductory paid for call is the first call.

Jeanne Omlor: No, the first call is actually a sales call, which is free.

Lee Kantor: Okay. So there’s a free sales call, I guess, for each of you to vet to see if this is a good fit.

Jeanne Omlor: Absolutely.

Lee Kantor: And then from there, there’s a paid offer call where you craft the offer.

Jeanne Omlor: Nope. There’s not a paid offer call. There’s there’s two offers that we sell. They get one or the other. And that first. No we don’t we don’t. We’re very professional. We’re not like bits and pieces. And that’s what I teach is to run an actual coaching business. That’s not like we’re, you know, like actually professional. So people get a free call, of course, to see if they want to do it. They sign up or not. Sometimes they want a second call. Sure. That’s also free, of course. Then they’re in a program and it’s all included. It’s not. Then one call and then we pay. No, it’s the hire. They hire us for a program and it’s all included. So that first coaching call we do is all included in a program. Does that make sense? We’re not then doing one column. We pay for that. That’s not very professional.

Lee Kantor: And then is a program a month, 90 days a year. Like what’s the how’s the program defined?

Jeanne Omlor: We have a 12 week program and a year program.

Lee Kantor: So those are the two programs.

Jeanne Omlor: Yep.

Lee Kantor: And then um, and then is it something that people just keep signing up for? Or if you go through the 12 week or the year, you’re kind of self-sufficient at that point.

Jeanne Omlor: Some people do the 12 weeks and then they want to continue because they want to keep building it. But we do the 12 weeks because the 12 weeks is geared to giving people the fishing rod how to go get clients online. Some people just want to learn that, hey, show me how to go fish. And we say here, sure, 12 weeks, you’re good. They’re starting to get clients, so now they know how to do that over and over again. Some people want to build the business. They want mentorship as well. They want to learn other things other than just getting clients. They want to get on podcasts. They want to monetize that. They want to start a podcast, maybe get speaking gigs. We coach on all of that in our longer program, team building, all that.

Lee Kantor: But either one you get access to the team.

Jeanne Omlor: Yes.

Jeanne Omlor: Both of them just. And some people do the 12 weeks and then sign up for the year. One of my clients signed up for three years. He just kept signing up because he enjoyed the mentorship. It was working. He just wanted to keep building.

Lee Kantor: What rewarding work. I mean, you must sleep well at night knowing the impact you’ve had on so many people.

Jeanne Omlor: It’s amazing actually, and I’m actually very proud of me and my team. Um, because, you know, during Covid when people were dropping like flies, not just dying, but I mean, like, they were just like, what am I doing? I have no job. We helped a lot of people position and offer online and start selling it, and they were putting food on the table. So what we provide, what we help with is a very simple solution.

Lee Kantor: Well, I mean, it’s meaningful work and you’re really impacting a lot of individuals, their families and their communities. So it’s important.

Jeanne Omlor: Exactly.

Jeanne Omlor: And you know what what people need is they need to thrive. They need. It’s the worst feeling because I’ve been there, you know, I have been very poor. Deep debt. It’s the worst feeling in the world to wake up and think, gee, how am I? Going to how am I going to provide for my children? Worst feeling in the world. And my thing is, once you get to a point where you’re not worried about paying the rent or the mortgage and all your daily expenses, that’s a level of freedom where it’s like, you know, it’s just taken care of. That’s the first level of freedom, and I want everybody to feel that level of freedom where they have no worry about their day to day livelihood. And then from there, then you go to the next level.

Lee Kantor: So if somebody wants to learn more, have a more substantive conversation with you or somebody on the team, what’s the website? What’s the best way to connect?

Jeanne Omlor: Best way is we’re going to give you that link. But it’s just com. And if you look you’ll see, you know, reviews and you can click on that page. And then there’s a place where you can see hundreds of client testimonials. And there’s also a place where they can book a call.

Lee Kantor: And that’s j e e m l o r.com.

Jeanne Omlor: Yep. That’s it.

Lee Kantor: Com and then do you are you on all the socials or do you have a main social that you’re active on?

Jeanne Omlor: Linkedin Instagram, Facebook are the three main socials. I also am on YouTube TV. I have a podcast that’s uh, we put on YouTube as well, and other videos.

Lee Kantor: Well, congratulations on all the success. You’re doing important work and we appreciate you.

Jeanne Omlor: Well thank you. Thank you for the opportunity to speak with you about this today.

Lee Kantor: All right. This is Lee Kantor. We’ll see you all next time on High Velocity Radio.

Tagged With: Jeanne Omlor, Jeanne Omlor International

Louis Gump With Cambian Solutions

May 2, 2025 by Jacob Lapera

Atlanta Business Radio
Atlanta Business Radio
Louis Gump With Cambian Solutions
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Louis Gump is a business builder, transformational leader, and pragmatic optimist. He has served as a senior executive within large corporations, as CEO of smaller companies, and in industry leadership roles. He has worked with talented teams and achieved remarkable success for technology-driven growth businesses within companies including The Weather Channel and CNN, where he led their mobile teams.

He is now president of Cambian Solutions, which focuses on excellence in growth, innovation and team performance. Here in Atlanta, he is co-chair of the Media & Entertainment Society at the Technology Association of Georgia, and also serves on the boards of Junior Achievement of Georgia and the Fernbank Museum of Natural History.

Gump is also author of the award-winning, best-selling book The Inside Innovator: A Practical Guide to Intrapreneurship, which was published by Fast Company Press in March 2024.

Connect with Louis on LinkedIn.

What You’ll Learn In This Episode

  • What is intrapreneurship and why should this type of work be supported
  • What are the key characteristics of intrapreneurs
  • Why is intrapreneurship important
  • What are the key differences between intrapreneurship and entrepreneurship
  • How does intrapreneurship help develop new leaders
  • What can organizations do to improve the environment for intrapreneurs

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix.

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studio in Atlanta, Georgia. It’s time for Atlanta Business Radio, brought to you by Kennesaw State University’s Executive MBA program, the accelerated degree program for working professionals looking to advance their career and enhance their leadership skills. And now, here’s your host.

Lee Kantor: Lee Kantor here, another episode of Atlanta Business Radio. And this is going to be a good one. But before we get started, it’s important to recognize our sponsor, CSU’s executive MBA program. Without them, we wouldn’t be sharing these important stories. Today on the land of business radio, we have Louis Gump, who is the president of Cambian Solutions. Welcome.

Louis Gump: Thank you. Lee. Great to be here.

Lee Kantor: Well, I’m so excited to get caught up with what you’re up to. Tell us a little bit about Cambion Solutions. How are you serving folks?

Louis Gump: Oh, happy to do that. So we’re helping teams to both drive innovation and also excel at team performance. And we’re doing that with companies based in the US and international ones. And as it happens, because of my book that published last year, The Insight Innovator, we’re speaking to teams about excellence in entrepreneurship or innovating within larger organizations.

Lee Kantor: Now, for folks who aren’t familiar, can you share a little bit about the definition of intrapreneurship versus entrepreneurship? How do they compare?

Louis Gump: Happy to do that. So entrepreneurship involves creating value through innovation and growth within a larger organization. And an entrepreneur is typically someone who does this. They act like an owner. They, you know, work with responsibility often. They are leaders of business units or leaders of initiatives or people who are driving incremental innovation, but they aren’t necessarily the owner or the founder of the company. An entrepreneur often is the owner or founder of a company, or both. They have both the opportunity to guide the organization and also the responsibility of kind of everything from, you know, meeting the needs of customers to ensuring that team members are taken care of. So each one has its value, but they’re very distinct disciplines. And as I was, you know, along my career journey, including leading teams at places like The Weather Channel and CNN and then serving as CEO of two small businesses, it became abundantly clear that the two practices are very different.

Lee Kantor: Now, how is an entrepreneur different than like a project lead or a director of, you know, one of the divisions of an organization? How do you see the distinction between that?

Louis Gump: It’s a very important question, and it has to do in a lot of ways with the type of work that’s being done. Sometimes they’re one and the same. For example, when I was responsible of for mobile at The Weather Channel and we were building the mobile business, I was both a division lead and also an entrepreneur. On the other hand, if you have someone, let’s just take an example, someone who’s running a call center or responsible for essentially making sure that operations go well and smoothly. Often that will be essentially a maintenance mode sort of role, not necessarily an innovation sort of role, but not necessarily. It depends, again, on the nature of the work if you’re constantly looking for ways to improve. If you’re constantly looking for ways to contribute to the growth of the organization, not just the ongoing operations, that’s when you look a lot more like an entrepreneur.

Lee Kantor: Now, one of the big distinctions to me, entrepreneur versus entrepreneur and entrepreneur has stakes their skin in the game. If it fails, that’s going to cost them either financially or reputation. There’s something to lose. What? How does that kind of track with an entrepreneur?

Louis Gump: You’re putting your finger on one of the most important distinctions, along with size and complexity of organization in many cases and that sort of thing. And that is an entrepreneur typically is taking more risk, and an entrepreneur typically is able to mitigate the risk somewhat by relying on a larger organization. Just to be clear, uh, you know, regardless of what type of role you take on, you know, there’s no guarantees in general. Rather it’s just how you want to weigh that type of risk. In the case of an entrepreneur, often, you know, the whole payroll is on your shoulders. The success or failure of the organization is on your shoulders, and also the rewards that come with that. As an entrepreneur, you often have a broader organization, and especially if you’re leading a growth A team within a larger one than the way this plays out often is that. And again, I’ll use a media company just as an example, although there are many other places within industry that this happens, and nonprofits for that matter. But let’s say you have an existing organization and it’s got a TV network, and the TV network has been successful for a long time, and it generates a lot of cash. And then you’ve got a growing desktop web business, at least over time. And that also generates cash, although it’s much smaller. And then you have a nascent organization. And with some of the trends today, let’s say it’s an AI driven product, and it’s not necessarily making money, but it can be funded by the rest of the organization. Whether you hit your goals this month or next month or the one after, it really doesn’t matter that much to the health of the organization overall. And so you have a lot more latitude to move. If you’re an entrepreneur, you kind of got to hit some of your goals for many reasons, including it It’s in, uh, a very high percentage of the time. Uh, specific revenue and profit goals.

Lee Kantor: Now, is your recommendation that organizations have just, uh, teams of intrapreneurs or is it something that, hey, we need a lot of management people to make sure the trains run on time and everything happens very predictably and reliably. But also, we should be investing in some of these people with some more out of the box thinking and more, um, innovative ideas and throw some resources to them as well. Like how do you balance the two?

Louis Gump: So it’s very important for organizations that want to grow to have intrapreneurs in their organization, where the concentration is and whether you have teams of them or whether they’re sprinkled through. It’s very situational. My preference from the perspective of building a sustainable growth organization Innovation is to have a high representation of entrepreneurs, but especially be attentive to business unit leads. I recently met with a group of senior executives, and most of them were CEOs, and we were talking about the top characteristics of entrepreneurs, which I’d be happy to comment on a little bit more if that’s helpful. And after the conversation, he pulled me aside and he said, hey, Louis, you know, you just helped me to see something with clarity for the first time. And that is one of my divisions, has a leader that perfectly fits the characteristics of someone who’s naturally wired to be a successful entrepreneur. And one of my divisions actually doesn’t. And I have to figure out how to manage through that. And by the way, there are different ways to manage through it. In some cases it is, you know, shifting responsibilities. In some cases it’s training up. But regardless, the status quo doesn’t work so hot. And so what I would say in general is that anyone who’s leading an organization and wants to drive growth should be very intentional about the placement and the support of entrepreneurs.

Lee Kantor: So why don’t we get into a little bit about what do you see as the qualities of a good entrepreneur in an organization?

Louis Gump: I’m happy to do that. So as I was writing The Inside Innovator, I decided really quickly that I didn’t really want it to be a narrative sort of book, even though there are a bunch of stories in there. Rather, I wanted it to be a practical guidebook and to make sure that it was a practical guidebook. I went and did as many interviews with a set set of questions, and what came out of that research is that there are five core characteristics of successful entrepreneurs that bubble to the top, and then there’s a set of other ones that are required as well. And I’ll focus on the top five. The first one is curiosity. Essentially this desire to learn. This sense of adventure, this willingness to explore things that haven’t been done before. The second one is action orientation. It’s it’s one thing to be curious and to want to understand. It’s much more important from the perspective of entrepreneurship. If you have the combination of curiosity and the intention to turn that into action, to move forward, to make things happen. The third one, and this 1st May be a little bit predictable in some ways, and it turns out to be especially powerful for the people who do it well. And that is the ability to build bridges with other people. If you are, you know, working inside an organization that has 50, 100, 200 or more people and you are trying to make things happen in a growth business or an initiative, then often you’re having to work with, you know, five, ten, 15, 20 or more people.

Louis Gump: Any one of whom can say no. And if they say no, you can’t move forward. So someone who has those relationship skills and is able to build bridges to understand what other people need, what their concerns are, what their opportunities are. They tend to be much more effective. The fourth one we’ve already touched on some, and that is risk tolerance, not necessarily the same risk tolerance as an entrepreneur, but still the willingness and ability to say, hey, we’re going to try things. They might work, they may not. If they work, we’ll do more. And if they don’t work, we’ll learn from it. And lastly is this sense of optimism that came through the research. Anyone who is going to be effective at this over a longer period of time, it helps to be able to connect the vision to a sense of possibility and then in a very pragmatic way, in a very grounded way, understand, hey, we’re going to keep this moving forward. We think we see a path to make it work. And having a kind of a practical understanding how to apply that to a growth initiative.

Lee Kantor: Now, as an organization, a lot of organizations are at least give lip service to. I’m okay with taking risks. I’m okay with, um, you know, innovation and things like that, but really, they’re okay with it as long as it works. They’re sometimes less okay when it doesn’t work. And then the leader who is championing that gets kind of punished or fired or moved or something negative happens to them. How do you coach these organizations to really kind of keep their word when you’re doing something intrapreneurial? Because like you said, throughout this whole thing, there is a risk involved. This may not work.

Louis Gump: Sure. So we could do an all day seminar on this topic for, for starters, an answer to your question how would you coach someone? This is where I’m fairly direct. If you’re going to behave that way, you’re going to fail. It’s just a matter of time. If you aren’t willing to take some risks and adapt to change, then in the current marketplace especially, there just isn’t an easy way to succeed over a longer period of time. You can make it work for a while. So my starting place is it’s essential that you be willing to take calculated risks over a reasonable period of time. Next, I want to add that of course, we’re in an environment where some companies are required to manage for efficiency. So not every last thing you need to do needs to be high risk, but you should have an appropriate blend in the mix. And then the third thing that I would point out here is having processes to evaluate ventures. So you can essentially de-risk them, decrease the level of risk, increase the probability of success, but then understand that anytime you’re trying new things, you aren’t going to bat a thousand. In fact, a good batting average in baseball, you know, is let’s say, 300. And so it’s worth keeping that in mind. And the last thing that I would point out here in terms of coaching is it’s very helpful to be intentional about assigning the right people to these sorts of adventures, these sorts of ventures, so that when you get started, you have people who understand both through experience and through, also through natural wiring. Hey, here’s how to succeed and let’s make it happen. And oh, by the way, when you find someone, don’t just push them off to the side, but help them to articulate what they need and then advocate for them so that they can be successful instead of frustrated.

Lee Kantor: I just see so many organizations that just would like that, but they aren’t. When it comes time to do that or to accept something that didn’t work, the team is punished in some manner, and the morale of the whole organization and the culture of the whole organization becomes distrustful, and then it makes them less likely to put their stick their neck out for any type of new initiative, because the the cost is too high. And in today’s job market, I mean, people are looking for any reason, you know, to leap to another opportunity.

Louis Gump: I think that’s right. There was a study by BCG in the last year or so that said that 70% of companies that they surveyed said that innovation is in their top three priorities, but only 3% of them think that they’re doing it well. And I think that’s an indication that some of the behaviors that you just described are alive and well in corporate America. And when we look at that, then I think the more enlightened leaders are going to say, okay, what do we do to get better at this? You know, for companies that are good at it. And I would, you know, with with all due respect to the many, uh, smaller companies that are doing this well, and I’m familiar with some of them, you know, a couple of the best known companies that have, by and large, innovated pretty well over time are ones like Amazon and Apple. They’ve been willing to take on risk. They’ve been willing to, uh, empower their entrepreneurs. They’ve been willing to kind of finance growth. The thing that I would emphasize on those examples, those though, is those are so big, but you don’t have to be really big to behave in a similar way.

Louis Gump: And furthermore, one of the best ways to run off your most talented employees is to essentially close down the paths for them to innovate and have a voice. And so if you think you aren’t as far along as you want to be as a as a company leader or as a company advisor, sometimes you start small, you pick one initiative. Maybe you look at ways to change the budget process so that instead of allocating all the dollars to things that are proven, you allocate 1 or 2 or 3% of the dollars to things that that aren’t so proven. Maybe instead of the CEO saying no to the next gathering about, you know, uh, innovation in, uh, an area that’s important and And strategically aligned. The CEO shows up and when the CEO shows up, they don’t just listen, but they engage and they encourage. A lot of this is done by example. And so if a company is struggling to innovate, the first place for the top leaders to look is in the mirror.

Lee Kantor: Now when a company raises their hand and say, Louis, we’d like you to come in, uh, we have some challenges. We’d like your thoughts on them. What does that first kind of, um, the first project look for you. How do you typically get your foot in the door somewhere? And then, uh, what is typically the evolution of a kind of a relationship with you and your firm?

Louis Gump: Oh, thanks for asking. My first comment is that what I found is that it’s almost all referrals. You know, I’m trying to advocate for entrepreneurs. Uh, the book has been a very helpful platform. And over the last four months in particular, I’ve started to expand publicly on that with weekly posts. And as that has happened, more and more people have been engaging and the starting place tends to be somebody I know or somebody who has come across some of the material related to the inside innovator. They said, hey, Louis, could we have a conversation? And I spent a lot of time listening, and I think that’s a really important part of what we do at Cambian Solutions to understand, hey, is there really a an opportunity here, and is there willingness for this leader or this group of leaders to really address the opportunity? So that’s an assessment stage. And then after that we go to problem identification and saying, well okay, if there’s a willingness and there’s opportunity then what are the barriers. And once we get past that, then it gets down to very specific aspects of projects so that it’s practical and applied. And the additional piece that I would say is that we tend to be pretty Inclusive of team members, wherever that is practical. So we understand the perspectives. A phrase that I use a lot of the time is if you can’t find the keys, look in your pockets. And what I mean by that is in the context of entrepreneurship. If you think you have opportunities to grow and you’re struggling to do it, there’s a very good chance that you have both the knowledge and the people power to affect the change that you want to. And if you don’t, you can get there in a small number of steps.

Lee Kantor: Now for, uh, the leaders who are listening that are buying into this and say that they want to kind of lean into more of this entrepreneurship culture change. What are some what do you need first? Do you need to identify some potential entrepreneurs in the organization, or do you have to identify some opportunities?

Louis Gump: I would go even earlier than that. I would say you need the vocabulary. I was just talking with somebody earlier this afternoon about this, uh, who said, hey, Louis, I just read your book. And so did my team members. And one of the team members, this was an entrepreneur, and her whole team read it. And, uh, one of these team members said, hey, that looks like me, but I didn’t even know what the word entrepreneur was. And so, Lee, I would certainly say start with understanding. And for anybody who’s curious about this, I can point folks to a lot of resources, whether it comes from me or others. But it’s learning about the discipline. Uh, after that, I would say that what you said about identifying people is critically important. You’re exactly on target because in so many cases, entrepreneurship is not just about process and structure, but it’s also about having the right people and then giving them care and feeding. That said, process and structure both matter. In the case of process, there’s a big difference, for example, between an annual budget cycle. So you essentially have one bite at the apple every year versus, you know, a line item that says we’re driving innovation and. Increasing the speed. And also for certain ventures that need fast growth and essentially not to be misdirected or interfered with by other divisions, you need some kind of structural protection. All of this is situational. Um, you know, you can read something like The Innovator’s Dilemma and get a sense of it. However, I’d say the practice of an entrepreneur is largely about the application with the right people.

Lee Kantor: Now, is there a story you can share that maybe, um, illustrates how this could work for an organization? Uh, you don’t have to name the name of the organization, but maybe share the problem that they had and how you were able to help them get through it and maybe get to a new level.

Louis Gump: Uh, I’ll be happy to do that. And are you okay if I use an example from when I was in an operating business, does that work for you?

Lee Kantor: Anything that you think would illustrate how this could work for an organization, whatever serves you?

Louis Gump: Uh, I’m happy to. And one of my favorites among a large collection of them at this point, including with the folks that I interviewed. But one of the favorites is is one that I experienced myself, and it was at the Weather Channel, and I arrived there in 2001 intending to focus on desktop web. We had some changes in the organization, and the person who was leading weather.com went to the person who was leading wireless, went to weather.com, and we needed someone to pick up the business development responsibility for mobile. And we quickly found that in order to succeed in mobile, we were going to have to make some fairly dramatic changes. And the first thing we did was build a generation of applications using technologies like Java, Brew, Windows and Symbian. A couple of those work better than others, especially our Java apps and brew apps with 2 or 3 of our partners. And then we built some made for mobile video, and then we came back around to mobile web. And then we did some pioneering work, both inside and also in the industry with mobile advertising.

Louis Gump: And then we came back around to apps. And in 2008, The Weather Channel launched both our brand new iPhone app and a new Android app. And especially in the case of the iPhone app, it became the most downloaded app in the App Store, and we became widely recognized as a leader in the space. There are many reasons I love this story, but one of them is that we chipped away at it for a while. We were seeing some success early, and then it grew and it grew, but it didn’t grow linearly, linearly. And so I describe our experience at the Weather Channel in Mobile as a seven year long overnight success. Where we worked on it, we worked on it, we worked on it, and then it took off. And for anyone who wants to be an entrepreneur sometime, especially with incremental innovation, you’ll get the immediate satisfaction. But for a lot of us, it requires some thoughtfulness, alignment with strategy and hard work. And then the payoff comes over time. And when it comes, it tends to come very fast.

Lee Kantor: Now, when it was kind of maybe not meeting expectations or the growth was slower than you would have liked. What was leadership saying? Like did you? How how close were they to pulling the plug of the whole thing?

Louis Gump: So in the early times they were very close. We were like, oh, is this really worth it? And as we got further in, it was less about pulling the plug of the whole thing, and it was more about saying, how much do we invest, especially in the second half of the journey. And, you know, we were a frugal company. We weren’t willing to put large amounts of money into unproven, untested ventures very often. But we what we were willing to do is to try experiments and put a modest amount of investment with the right people in the right place, right places. And when I say the right places, that doesn’t mean that it worked all the time. We had a couple that went sideways. We had a couple that didn’t work at all, and we had more than a couple that worked really well. So one of the things I also advise for people who are interested in innovating is think of this more as a portfolio strategy. And one of the most dangerous things someone can do, whether it works or it doesn’t work, is to assume that one test will give an indication of how you’re going to do over time. If it fails, then you know you’ve got the story for five years. Oh well, we tried whatever it was and it didn’t work. And if the first one works, that’s great mostly, but it’s not all great because it can set the expectation that everything will work. So I think going in with eyes wide open and the understanding that you’re going to succeed in some places with thought and hard work almost always, and then being ready for the journey, that’s key. And oh, by the way, being willing to invest regardless of whether you know, it’s high or low. And then when you really have a hit, be willing to double down.

Lee Kantor: So if somebody wants to learn more, have a more substantive conversation with you or somebody on the team, what’s the website? What’s the best way to connect?

Louis Gump: Oh, thanks for asking. They can reach me on LinkedIn at Louis Gump. Louis Gump. My email address is Louis Louis at cambian. Solutions.com. Uh, and I’m also pretty easy to find at Louis Gump. Com where there’s a lot of information on the book, and some folks have said some nice things about it. I’m I’m pleased to say that the book has been well received, and so that’s been a large part of my focus recently.

Lee Kantor: Well, Louis, thank you so much for sharing your story today. You’re doing important work and we appreciate you.

Louis Gump: Thank you Lee, I’m so happy to do it. And especially for those people who are interested in executive education and growing, this is a perfect topic.

Lee Kantor: All right. This is Lee Kantor. We’ll see you all next time on Atlanta Business Radio.

Tagged With: Cambian Solutions, Louis Gump

Leisa Reid With Get Speaking Gigs Now

April 28, 2025 by Jacob Lapera

High Velocity Radio
High Velocity Radio
Leisa Reid With Get Speaking Gigs Now
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Do you want to be a speaker, but aren’t sure what to talk about, where to go to find gigs, or how to offer your services from stage? As the Founder of Get Speaking Gigs Now, Leisa Reid trains entrepreneurs who want to use public speaking as a soul-fulfilling marketing strategy.

Clients who work closely with her build their speaking skills and confidence through the Speaker’s Training Academy. They get their “Talks Ready to Rock,” and learn how to STAY booked as speakers through easy to implement strategies.

As a speaker herself, she has successfully booked and delivered over 600 speaking engagements. She is the CEO of the International Speaker Network, a community of heart centered speakers who value collaboration, relationships, results and fun.

In her book, Get Speaking Gigs Now, she shares her 7 Step System to Getting Booked, Staying Booked & Attracting Your Ideal Clients Through Speaking.

Connect with Leisa on LinkedIn and follow her on Facebook.

What You’ll Learn In This Episode

  • How can entrepreneurs tell if speaking is the right marketing strategy for their business
  • What’s a simple way speakers can attract ideal clients without feeling pushy
  • What’s the biggest obstacle aspiring speakers face—and how can they quickly overcome it

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix.

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios in Atlanta, Georgia. It’s time for High Velocity Radio.

Lee Kantor: Lee Kantor here. Another episode of High Velocity Radio and this is going to be a good one. Today on the show, we have Leisa Reid, who is with Get Speaking Gigs Now. Welcome, Lisa.

Leisa Reid: Hi, Lee.

Lee Kantor: I am so excited to learn what you’re up to. Tell us about your company. How you serving folks?

Leisa Reid: I serve entrepreneurs who have a deep calling to use public speaking as a way to attract their clients.

Lee Kantor: So what’s your backstory? How did you get involved in this line of work?

Leisa Reid: Well, I. My dad would say I probably started in preschool when I started teaching other kids how to speak English, when he wanted me to go to a Spanish speaking school and learn Spanish. But I started professionally speaking in In 2013, and my first year I booked 83 speaking engagements in my local area, brought in hundreds of clients to the company I was representing, and started an organization for speakers and network, and people started asking me for help all the time and I told them no until eventually one day I decided to tell them yes.

Lee Kantor: Now tell us about how that beginning started, where I guess you were working for someone and they said, you know what? As part of our marketing, we’re going to use speaking. And FYI, you’re the speaker. Like, how did that all kind of bubble up?

Leisa Reid: It was a company that has been around for decades and they’re still around. So they’ve probably been around over 40 years now. So they had started that model a long, long time ago. And it really worked. They do experiential work. And so it helped to give people an experience of the work. It was like a personal development model. And so that had worked for them for years. I loved the work that they did. And when they said, would you like to be a speaker for us? I said, yes, I actually have a bachelor’s and master’s degree in speech communication. So it wasn’t like a total 180 from what I love to do. I just hadn’t done that professionally.

Lee Kantor: So now if a person is kind of in a boat where maybe in a similar way where they’re thinking, hey, you know what, maybe I can be a speaker too. What are some of the, I would guess, foundational things you have to really get right before you can even attempt getting that first speaking gig?

Leisa Reid: Yeah, there are some things I call it getting our ducks in rows and we would want to what I call get your talk ready to rock. Meaning you need to have it decide what your talk is going to be called. What’s the title, what’s the description? What are the learning points for the audience, and what’s your call to action? Those are the key decisions that you want to make right out the gate. Because once you say that you’re a speaker, even if you’re at a barbecue or you are saying it on LinkedIn or wherever on your website, people are going to ask you, what do you speak about? So that would I would think that’s the first step. But you also want to consider who is going to be hearing that talk. Who would be best served by your knowledge. So there’s this thing that happens where both of those things need to happen somewhat simultaneously.

Lee Kantor: Now when you work with clients, are they coming to you as like, say, I’m an entrepreneur and, you know, maybe I’m an accountant and I’m like, you know what? I’m pretty good speaker. So I think I’m going to use speaking as a way to get my name out there and get the word out about what we do. Um, or are they coming to you with, hey, I’m want to be a speaker for a living. And that’s, you know, I think I can be the next Tony Robbins.

Leisa Reid: Uh, most of my clients are utilizing public speaking as a way to generate clients. So if they’re an accountant and they want to use speaking to get clients, or they’re an attorney or a doctor or a coach, a nutritional coach, a healer, those are different types of people that have I’ve worked with and they just have a desire to do it. They enjoy it, they think it’s fun. You got to do sales and marketing anyway. Might as well enjoy yourself doing it. When someone comes to me and they just want to be like, no, I only want to be a full time speaker, that’s it. I’ll typically refer them out if like, especially if they don’t have a program at all. It really depends. If they’re newer into speaking, then it’s actually a really good idea for us to work together so that they can start to get an idea of what they need to put together and how they would start to approach it, especially if they have something to offer. If they don’t have anything to offer, like they’re they’re just going to generate money through a speaker fee and nothing else. Then I usually refer them out to someone else.

Lee Kantor: That’s so interesting because in our business, we work with entrepreneurs and we tell them the same exact thing. If you want to be famous, um, you know, we can have the beginning steps, but that’s not what we do. We’re here to help an entrepreneur kind of leverage the platform to make more money in whatever they’re doing.

Leisa Reid: Exactly. And I think a lot of times people miss that. There’s a lot of misconceptions. I’m sure that you find this, too, Lee, in the speaker world, because that is how it used to be. It was like you are a speaker, period, and you don’t do anything else. But now it’s like, no, it’s a platform. You you can utilize the platform and leverage it to do the thing that you love. The other thing. So for me, it’s about like, well, can we make marketing and sales fun? And if you enjoy speaking then yes, you can. You can make it fun.

Lee Kantor: Yeah. That’s so interesting that a lot of people think that whatever the it doesn’t matter really, the platform is that their first inclination is I’m going to do it to become famous like that. It’s a path for me to become famous or, you know, make a viral video. Whatever the thing is, whatever the new platform is, they think it’s a means for them to be famous. But that’s such a lottery ticket effort to to be famous in doing anything.

Leisa Reid: I think that’s I can really relate to what you’re saying, Lee, because when someone comes, I don’t get that too often in my industry. But there is a couple of times I’ll get that where I get the sense that they just want to be like, I want to be on the biggest stages ever and be like, Tony Robbins or whatever. That’s not really my client. Um, and that’s there’s nothing wrong with those desires. That’s just not my area of focus. I definitely work with, and we’re probably aligned here. I work with people who want to make a difference. People who want to make an impact, people who have a purpose. They’re a little more heart centered, um minded, and they just really want to educate people because what they’re doing matters and they’re actually providing solutions for people, but they need to attract more people.

Lee Kantor: Right? Yeah. No, it’s just interesting that there were these parallels. I never connected the dots that you would have those same issues that we have that uh, sometimes, you know, like your lane sounds like our lane. Look, we’re here. We are very specific skills. And if you want to do this thing, we can help you. But if you want to do this other thing, uh, you know, we probably can give you some general advice, but you’re better served going somewhere else. And and that’s probably a good lesson for entrepreneurs at all. You got to know when to say yes and when to say no to anything.

Leisa Reid: I agree, like you’re creating your own path, your own, your own lane. What do you want that to look like? What do you enjoy versus what you think you might enjoy. And everyone has a different approach to that. And that’s totally okay.

Lee Kantor: Now, when you’re working with us for an aspiring speaker or sometimes these people have never spoken before, they just think they would be good at it.

Leisa Reid: I do have occasionally some people who’ve never actually spoken before. Usually they come to me and they already know they’re good at it. Maybe it was something they did a long time ago and they just really enjoyed it. Or they volunteer for things like that, or they get asked to speak because they’re really good in front of an audience, but they don’t have a strategy or a plan. It’s kind of been happenstance. It hasn’t really happened on purpose. There’s been no intention. It’s more reactionary. Um, occasionally I will get someone who’s never spoken like officially before. And depending on the skill sets they bring to the table, we’ll just start where they are. I was I gave up a long time ago, Lee, of thinking that everyone was going to come to me at exactly the same point. I have found that what we do, especially when we have, like our speaker readiness assessment call, I will say, okay, tell me what you’ve got. You know what, what holes are in the boat. What do we need to do to get you to the place that you want to be? And we start from there.

Lee Kantor: Now, are there certain things that are maybe, uh, indicators that you’d be good at it? Like if you’re if you’re the person they ask to do the sales presentations or you’re the person that they asked to go to networking meetings, like, are there certain kind of indicators that, hey, you probably can pull this off?

Leisa Reid: I think it’s really a personal, internal, personal desire. I because I don’t want to get into like, oh, you need you know, you need to be an extrovert or an introvert or whatever. I have had clients who fall along all those different spectrums. So it doesn’t mean that you aren’t shy potentially, but what? Or that you’re really outgoing. It could be any of those things. But what I have found, the commonality is when my clients come to me like before, they’re my clients. They will confess to me. I’ve always wanted to do this. Like, I look at that speaker when I’m. I’m in the audience and I think I could be up there like I should, I should be doing this. And they have talks that start occurring in their mind like they’re they’re crafting them. And they’ve always secretly wanted to do it and they just didn’t know the roadmap. So we take like whatever that desire is, whether they’ve done it before or not. How can we get them that clear roadmap so then they can go out and do that thing that they’ve been dreaming about for a long time.

Lee Kantor: So really at the heart of it is if there is a desire to do it, then you can give them a pretty good shot at at getting some momentum. And maybe that escape velocity needed to launch their career.

Leisa Reid: Yeah. And and not just the so there’s desire. But then now we’re talking about entrepreneurs. So it’s like we’ll have a very candid conversation. All right. What are your programs. What are your offerings. Does this make sense for you to do this? If you’re selling a book for 14.95 and that’s all you have on the shelf, you’re probably going to need to develop some programs first or some services or some products or something that you can offer because, uh, a lower ticket is going to be a little tricky if there’s no sales funnel behind that.

Lee Kantor: And then in order to have a sales funnel that sells an inexpensive item, you better have a lot of money behind that.

Leisa Reid: Yeah. Or what? Yeah. However, however, it’s going to look like I do work with a lot of coaches, which is usually pretty simple. Their programs are 1000, 3000, 5000, 10,000. Something along those lines. So even if they got one client from one talk. Usually they’re going to get their investment back pretty quickly.

Lee Kantor: Right. So now let’s talk about uh, you mentioned coaches. So a business coach comes to you. Says I’m in. What do I have to do? So what are can you walk me through kind of. The steps that you or the maybe that initial conversation you’re having with. That business coach in order to, um, build out their, uh, talk.

Leisa Reid: Yeah. We have a. Get your talk ready to rock session. And it’s a two hour deep dive where we decide their title, description, learning points and call to action. Not necessarily in that order, but that’s what they come out with. Then they can go and work on their slides, or we discuss what’s the what’s the next step for them and then start practicing it and refining it, shifting it, letting it evolve until it’s ready to until they feel like, okay, I am ready now to take this to the market. We’ll do that within the first 30 days of working together, because that is the catapult to all the other stuff. So once you have your talk decided, then you can start creating your speaker sheet. You can start adding it on to your website. You can start talking about on social media. You can start practicing it. Then you start all of a sudden you start getting booked and we figure out, like, where’s your ideal audience going to be? How would you field questions? How would you create the conversation in order to get booked? How do you start to develop your own comfortability with, um, those kind of conversations and tracking it all and really having a system to being a booked speaker.

Lee Kantor: Now, how long is a typical talk nowadays?

Leisa Reid: I create a 30 minute talk because in my opinion, and I don’t know if you agree with this, Lee, but it’s much easier to cut than or it’s much easier to expand than it is to cut. So if we created a 60 minute talk, the person would be like, oh my gosh, what do I cut? This is so hard. Everything’s so important. If we create a 30 minute talk, you can always add in more stories, more engagement, more exercises, more whatever. You know, depending on the person’s style. Um, it’s much easier to add than it is to, to cut. And I find I usually talk for 30 minutes is very standard 45 minutes an hour. Those are those are pretty standard.

Lee Kantor: Now, the speaking opportunities that will be presented to your clients or prospective clients, are they all paid or are they all not paid? Like how does the kind of the money work when it comes to speaking?

Leisa Reid: That’s a great question. And I get that, gosh, if I had a dollar for every time I had that question. So the how I look at it is what I call monetize your speaking. So if we have a plan that you can monetize your speaking regardless of the speaker fee, that’s what we want to do. Um, so that way that client could go for speaking engagements that have a fee or don’t have a fee, but know that, oh, I’m in the right room with the right offer, with the right talk. Um, probably going to have good odds of of receiving some clients or some traction there. So that way we can not limit ourselves on just the speaker fee alone, because sometimes that would be way less than it would be if you received a few clients out of the speaking engagement.

Lee Kantor: And then, um, where do they go for these speaking opportunities? Is there is it just locally or is the world your oyster?

Leisa Reid: Well, the world is our oyster right now, which is pretty exciting. Again, this this is really depends on the person. So it’s not a cookie cutter standard. This is the exact model for every single person. So what we do is we figure out okay, what’s your lifestyle? What’s your personality, what’s your desire? What are your business goals. And we put all those things into the the filter and figure out okay then this is the kind of engagements that you’re going to be going for. This is the kind of engagements you’re probably not going to want. So we figure that out. It’s different for every single person. But with zoom now when I used to speak in person. Nine. 99% of the time. Plus I also was, um, you know, selling to a local event. So there was a reason why I stayed close by. But once Covid hit, nearly all my speaking engagements are virtual now. So it depends on the on the client and where they live and what they’re trying to achieve.

Lee Kantor: Now, are there different speaking mechanics? Um, when you’re doing something virtual as opposed to in person?

Leisa Reid: Oh, yeah. Yes, definitely. Slight. I call them like fraternal twins. You know, they a lot of things could be similar but could be similar. Excuse me, but I had to really adjust when I went back in person after the pandemic. Kind of lifted a little bit. I had forgotten all the things that I needed to to bring. I was like, oh yeah, I need a cord, and I need, I need a clicker, and I need to make sure my slides are, you know, going to be on the computer wherever I’m going. Did they receive them like just little things like that. Handouts for the tables. How many people are going to be there? Those things I used to do hundreds of times before the pandemic. But then I had a couple of years where everything was virtual and I had forgotten. Wait. All these things I need to remember. So, uh, there there’s pros and cons to both. But I would say for virtual, it’s pretty simple. You click, you know, as long as you have your links and everything ready to go in the chat, you have slides. If you’re using slides and you have a great microphone and a webcam, uh, you are good to go. When you’re speaking in person, you need to remember to bring some extra things.

Lee Kantor: And then, um, when you’re helping your clients get launched and maybe book that first, um, gig. Is there some do’s and don’ts or is there is there kind of places to look early on to get some just flight time.

Leisa Reid: Yeah, there’s definitely places to look. And again, it would depend. We still want to go for something that’s, um, you know, kind of an easy yes or somewhere you would feel comfortable. Oftentimes we’ll start with a warm, I call it start with your warm market. Who do you know? Who might you know, who knows someone who books speakers or who belongs to an organization that brings in outside speakers? So Warm Market is an easier place to go because you’re probably going to get an answer. You’re probably going to get someone on the, you know, on a on a zoom call to to talk or a phone call. Uh, they’ll be more apt to give you an opportunity if they’ve never heard of you. That type of a thing.

Lee Kantor: Now, if you’re doing, um, a talk to an organization, how do you kind of elegantly weave in some sort of offer to buy stuff? If everybody’s kind of an employee of a company?

Leisa Reid: Yeah. That’s different. So again, I love this question because speaking is like a deck of cards. There’s a lot of different games you can play, but you need to know what game you’re playing and how to win. Right? So we don’t want to offend or give an offer that seems awkward or outside of the scope of the event, because no one’s going to, you know, it’ll it’ll create a little awkwardness. It really depends on what you’ve discussed with the organizer and what our what’s the framework of you being there, for example, if gosh, that’s such a good question. I have so many thoughts because if you were there speaking to, let’s say, a lunch and learn and they’re an organization brings you in, they might pay you to deliver this lunch and learn to their employees and to provide value. You might be working on a contract with the with the organization to offer something for all their employees. So you’re not necessarily selling to the employees. You might be already sold, you may already have a contract tract created or you’re looking to create a contract. But if you’re if you’re saying, well, I’d like to reach these employees because there’s this, let’s say a nutritional coaching and you want to they they’re like, yeah, fine.

Lee Kantor: Right. Everybody eats. So everybody’s my prospect. Yeah.

Leisa Reid: So then, so then if it’s okay and and they say you can offer this thing that you’re doing whether it’s a free something to get on a mailing list or a free a low ticket offer to try something out or, or maybe it’s let’s have a conversation about coaching. So again, it will depend on the venue and the conversations and the purpose. All that needs to be nuanced. And I think that’s where speakers get stuck. They think, oh, just one offer for everything, and I’m going to just force it on every single audience I have. And I don’t agree with that. I think you should have a monetization menu, and you pick and choose depending on, on the venue that you’re at and the rules And because you don’t want to burn those bridges.

Lee Kantor: Now, is there, um, some best practices when it comes to the actual next, uh, the call to action you’d like when you’re having, uh, speak, uh, talk like I know you mentioned it depends whatever that call to action might be, but is there, like, is it better to have a free thing versus a paid thing or, um, you know, like there’s a whole menu of calls to action, right? It could be by my annual, um, coaching package. It could be, you know, here’s a PDF of the ten things you should do the next time you’re doing whatever I’m an expert in.

Leisa Reid: Yeah, it depends on how the person’s business model is set up. Like if, for example, I have one client who, um, she she’s just getting her slides together right now. She wants to sell her course that she’s creating, um, versus doing more coaching for people. So she’s kind of not necessarily interested in jumping on a phone call with them. She’d rather them just go to this thing, purchase the course and be done with it. And that’s where she is in her business, where I have another client who has a mastermind and uses a phone call, a free phone call to generate clients to join her mastermind. But she wants to have a conversation with them first, because she wants to make sure that you know, she’s protecting who else is in the mastermind and needs to interview them. So it really depends. Um, another client I had, she wasn’t. She was in between business, like she was selling one of her businesses and moving into another one, but wanted to really boost her Instagram and her email list so she would use those as her calls to action. Since she didn’t, she was still kind of baking her new business idea. Um, behind the scenes.

Lee Kantor: Now, is this a reason? I mean, because it sounds like a compelling reason, just as it is to work with you or somebody on your team. Because if you can help me get that right, I’m just leaps and bounds ahead of somebody who’s just throwing stuff against the wall and hoping it works and then seeing, you know, oh, well, that didn’t work. Let me try this other thing. But by having an expert by my side, I’m probably closer to the bull’s eye than I would be if I’m just throwing the dart. Um, you know, on my own.

Leisa Reid: Absolutely. And I think one of the biggest mistakes people make is they spend all the time when they’re speaking at the beginning. They spend all their time on this content and trying to whittle down all their expertise into, you know, 30 minutes and they then forget to do the call to action. They haven’t even thought of what the call to action is going to be. And then it’s like this afterthought, and they will forget to do it completely run out of time. Or it’s really clunky. It doesn’t, it doesn’t. It’s not consistent throughout the whole thing and it gets people off guard. So there’s all these different mistakes that I’ll see people make when it comes to the call to action, then it’s usually because they’ve never had sales experience, which is fine. It’s not taught in most college courses and which I don’t know why that that is astounding to me.

Lee Kantor: That should be an elementary school skill. I know.

Leisa Reid: I don’t know, especially in elementary school. They’re so primed they they have no problem bugging you over and.

Lee Kantor: Over, right. To buy, uh, wrapping paper or popcorn or cookies like they.

Leisa Reid: Yeah. Well, if any any parent, I mean, any parent can definitely agree that kids can be persistent as all get out so they’re primed and ready to go to be salespeople. I don’t know why they don’t teach that in elementary school and high school and college, but they don’t. So.

Lee Kantor: So it’s your job now. Now, I guess you’ve taken on the charge here.

Leisa Reid: Yeah. They don’t teach it in medical school or law school either. So sometimes I’ll have a medical doctor or a or, you know, PhD, uh, client or an attorney who’s like, why, why is this not working? And I’m like, well, you’re not. Have you ever sold before?

Lee Kantor: Right? Like.

Leisa Reid: You know.

Lee Kantor: You got to ask them to buy something at some point. Yeah.

Leisa Reid: So it’s a different animal.

Lee Kantor: So, um, so what’s the, uh, for anybody listening here? And they’re contemplating speaking. So what’s the path for them to, you know, what’s your call to action to get them, uh, at least into your funnel and into kind of your, uh, speaking universe?

Leisa Reid: There are a couple ways, uh, one, you can get five top tips to get more speaking gigs now. So that’s further information than what we’ve talked about today. If you’re like, oh man, I really do want to be a speaker. I don’t want to think about that. I want I could use that. And that’s easy. You can just go to get speaking gigs. Now.com it’s right there for you. And if you are thinking, I need to talk to her like yesterday, and I want to start getting booked on stages quicker, and I and I need to figure out this roadmap so that I can catapult my business and really use speaking to attract my clients. Then you can go. You can. We can have a conversation at the get speaking gigs now.

Lee Kantor: Good stuff. Well congratulations on all the success. And I know you have an academy also, right?

Leisa Reid: We do. Yeah, we have the speakers training Academy, and that’s for people who are like really serious about. Yep. I want to get I want to get to the front of the line, get me closer to the target. So I’m not trying to figure this out on my own.

Lee Kantor: Well, again, thank you so much for sharing your story today. You’re doing such important work and we appreciate you.

Leisa Reid: Thank you. Lee.

Lee Kantor: All right. This is Lee Kantor. We’ll see you all next time on High Velocity Radio.

Tagged With: Get Speaking Gigs Now, Leisa Reid

Jeff DeLoach With CogNet

April 24, 2025 by Jacob Lapera

High Velocity Radio
High Velocity Radio
Jeff DeLoach With CogNet
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Jeff DeLoach serves as the President of CogNet. Having hatched the HR global services center over 17 years ago, he has returned to CogNet to help build on that vision in partnership with the outstanding team.

He has more than 25 years of experience in the BPO, HRO, and Technology space. Previously, he served as CEO of US Personnel and CEO of QCI, an international hardware and services provider.

He has also served as Managing Partner for TDG, Inc. a global advisory and services company that helped develop and scale one of the largest human resources service companies in China.

DeLoach is a graduate of Baylor University with a degree in Political Science. He currently lives in Atlanta with his family.

Connect with Jeff on LinkedIn.

What You’ll Learn In This Episode

  • What equipped him to be a CEO/President
  • Working with employees across the globe
  • What are misconceptions about outsourcing
  • Business Process Management changes with technology

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix.

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios in Atlanta, Georgia. It’s time for High Velocity Radio.

Lee Kantor: Lee Kantor here. Another episode of High Velocity Radio, and this is going to be a good one. Today on the show we have Jeff DeLoach and he is with CogNet. Welcome, Jeff.

Jeff DeLoach: Hello. Glad to be here.

Lee Kantor: Well, I’m excited to learn what you’re up to. Tell us a little bit about cognate. How you serving folks?

Jeff DeLoach: So cognate we are. It’s funny this question. We’re right in the middle of, of sort of, uh, adjusting our message down to something simplified. And because we do some pretty complicated stuff. So cognate is a business process management company. We, uh, focus on the HR outsourcing space, where we help companies that work smarter by offloading the administrative tasks around payroll, payroll, tax, benefits, Finance and accounting. And we also do help them do AI and automation development as well. So that’s sort of us at a high level. We do it at scale because we we support HR outsourcing companies within the US. So you know, a company like I may perhaps an ADP or a or a companies in the PEO and Aso space. We’re, we’re sort of their back office administrative uh go to organization for them. So help them scale and and create efficiencies and reduce costs.

Lee Kantor: So so what was the genesis of the idea? Were you always an outsourcer for outsourcers or did you start just trying to get customers individually?

Jeff DeLoach: Actually, it’s even got a bigger genesis than that. We actually were a customer. So 20 I was a CEO of a PEO some 20 plus years ago, and we were looking at ways to create efficiencies for our back office. And we partnered with a company way back when that, uh, helped us develop a shared service center. And over time that we exited the company, sold it, and the acquiring company didn’t want the shared service center. So, uh, that ultimately became cognate some 18 plus years ago.

Lee Kantor: So now, for folks who aren’t familiar with exactly what’s going on here in terms of the service you’re providing, what’s kind of the entry level point where people start saying, you know what, maybe I can outsource this element of my business, and I’m sure there’s kind of project creep once they’re like, wow, that worked out pretty well. Um, why don’t we take another little chunk of the business outsource? Is it always I mean, not always, but is is payroll usually the first step here?

Jeff DeLoach: It’s you’re it’s interesting. You hit it on the directly on the head. So we have something we call land and expand. And so organizations usually have, you know, some particular pain point. And typically it’s not they can’t do it. Do it. It’s just they don’t necessarily have the scale or capacity to do do it. Or maybe they’re they’re struggling with or they lost someone. And so we help them provide that capacity. And so it might be one task payrolls one area. But payrolls typically a broader engagement. Because when you think about uh, HR outsourcing company, you know, they they do a lot of payroll. So it usually starts in a smaller engagement. So perhaps something like Garnishments. So perhaps they start with us and we’re managing their garnishments. And then uh, they say, wow, this is amazing. You guys do great. And then they start moving into other areas. And, and then we begin to, to, to help them and support them in these broader areas. But, uh, so typically we start out with a particular process or a few processes. Uh, occasionally we go, you know, we, we jump, you know, head first into, into broader engagements. But, uh, you know, one of the big things that that we do well is, is, is the change management piece of it. You know, helping integrate our organization with theirs. You know, we have a you know, our product is called we we label it EOS, which is extended office as a service, which we become part of that, that organization. It’s not just, you know, hey, some somebody else somewhere else is handling this for us. We actually integrate weekly meetings with teams and things like that. So it becomes an extension. So that’s where we see this land and expand because they they view us as, you know, part of their organization as they expand the outsourcing engagement.

Lee Kantor: So, um, how far can you expand, like what areas, uh, kind of are your sweet spots? Because it seems like it could be the almost everything.

Jeff DeLoach: So we we we’ve been, uh, strategic about staying within our niche and within our, uh, we’re sort of what I’ll call seven yards wide, but 70 miles deep. Uh, so we have seven practice areas that we operate, and we and we target specifically the HR outsourcing and the associated, uh, organizations around that, such as, uh, staffing companies, uh, insurance brokers, tpas, things like that. So we have seven practice areas. The first one we talk about payroll and then payroll tax is another one, benefits an HR administration that sort of falls into the garnishment falls under that. We have the finance and accounting, uh, where, you know, we’ll close books for people and manage their, uh, their GL and things like that. And then we also have sales support, sales and underwriting support. So within the industry, uh, when when they’re doing quotes, the insurance is a is a product piece in there. So there’s there’s quoting and things like that and information gathering that you have to do around underwriting. And then we do implementation. So we’re one of the things uh, implementation around we’re we’re technology agnostic. Like people contract with us. They don’t have to take on technology. We integrate with their existing technology. So we have broad knowledge across all the different platforms that are in the space. And then one of the newest obvious practice areas that we’ve gotten into is AI automation, where we assist companies that are, you know, doing these processes, automate more of them, and use the existing technologies today to help them do that. So. So those are our areas that we work in where we don’t get into programing. We don’t get into call centers. You know, the other type of things that people might associate with with outsourcing, but that’s sort of our core niche area that we stay in.

Lee Kantor: Now, are your clients typically enterprise level or do you work with kind of the smaller folks as well?

Jeff DeLoach: We have the we have the full scope. Uh, I would tell you that most of our clients would be mid-market. Uh, but we definitely have some clients that are, uh, you know, small, smaller HR outsourcing companies, uh, smaller gauges, maybe, uh, 1 or 2 of our knowledge associates to, you know, engage with larger public companies where we have 100 plus people working with the organization.

Lee Kantor: So how do you get those clients, like if they, um, maybe you were serving a larger enterprise and then these individuals spin off and start their own consultancy or start their own business and they’re like, well, can Cognet come along for the ride here? Because I know that they do good work.

Jeff DeLoach: Uh, we definitely have some of that. But I’ll tell you, the we gained most of our, uh, our revenue and new growth around referrals, referrals and relationships. Uh, our business depends on, uh, trust and transparency of we can perform, uh, with their organization and, uh, they, uh, that’s really how how we how we built it up over, over these many years. And we’ve had a lot of success these last several years. Uh, you know, we made the Inc. 5000. Uh, we’ll make it again this year. So we’re, we’re having some, some good success.

Lee Kantor: So any advice for other leaders that would like to get more referrals and build enough deeper relationships where they come about in a manner that cognitive is able to achieve them. Is there some do’s and don’ts when it comes to building out a strategy that really allows word of mouth to to really, um, kind of grow and work in the way that you envision rather than that sounds like a good idea on a whiteboard, but in practice, it’s not kind of bearing fruit.

Jeff DeLoach: Yeah, I’ll tell you. And I don’t know if it is replicatable to every, every type of business, but I’ll tell you that what’s driven us over these last several years of success is we have a we have a little acronym internally we use it’s called the tackle. And the first two, the T and the A are trust and accountability. And we firmly believe in, um, transparency. For example, um, people don’t usually think about processes like, you know, payroll or benefits administration as being something that you that you manage like a metric that you might with a, you know, with a manufacturing company or something like that. But we we manage our time, monitor our time, and evaluate the processes down to the minute for everything that we do. So so we have the data there that we can we can share and be that transparent and accountable partner, uh, to so they understand what their cost is, what they’re spending time with us doing, what to what their, uh, you know, spend is around around what, what our non-core but critical processes, I mean, uh, being compliant and payroll tax is not something companies think this is how I’m going to be successful. But if they don’t do it right, or if they’re ineffective at it, it can completely derail your plans. So, uh, we really have to build that, uh, that trust and accountability piece around that. And I think that at the end of the day, gives our clients not only comfort and expanding their own business, but also taking it to other businesses and recommending us so.

Lee Kantor: So now how would that happen? Like, I understand the word of mouth internally, like, hey, you know, a bunch of executives have a meeting and they’re sharing what’s working, what’s not, and they’re like, hey, we got this cognate thing. And if you haven’t been using it over here, you might want to think about it. That makes perfect sense. But how do you get it outside the building? How do you get them to tell their buddy playing golf that, hey, if you’re struggling over here, these guys are the ones to work with?

Jeff DeLoach: Yeah. So, um, the HR outsourcing space is is a community. Um, you know, people, you know, for the most part, everybody knows everybody, particularly when you boil it down to the PEO space where we have deep penetration. That’s a, that’s a what I call a smaller pond where people have been involved in the industry for a long time. So we spend a good amount of time at conferences, uh, around the industry, uh, you know, and building out those relationships, uh, and, uh, over and we’ve done it over years now, but, uh, you know, and then there’s places like where there’s the bigger pool of places like HR, tech, uh, where, uh, you know, we, uh, you know, spend time there. And then also, uh, we, we develop partnerships. Uh, so when we develop partnerships with, uh, some, some HR consulting firms that we work with who are into the implementation space or doing other, uh, support services for, uh, HR systems. Uh, they bring us into deals as well as their partners. So that’s where so we build out these partnerships in these specific spaces. And, uh, that’s how, uh, you know, the word gets out, how they share, how people, uh, uh, you know, are able to come to us and we go to them, uh, for, for opportunities. So and then, you know, of course, we do some marketing as well, but, uh, we, we Three. Frankly, because of what we do and the strategic nature of it, it’s not necessarily a dialing for dollars type of type of relationship. It’s, uh, I would I would parallel it more to how perhaps in an Accenture or somebody or TCS, you know, partners with engagement. We just do it at the at the lower end while those guys are chasing the fortune 500.

Lee Kantor: Now, when you’re working in a space like AI and automation, that is just, you know, fast and furious, the information is coming and the opportunities are kind of blossoming in ways that, um, it’s hard to even keep track of because it changes in a minute by minute basis. So how do you are you listening to your customers to say, okay, what are your pain points? Is that even possible, or do you have to just keep staying ahead of them to say, hey, you know, if you’re not kind of doing this now, there’s going to be a cost of inaction here later. Um, so how do you kind of balance that? Because that seems it’s it’s moving so fast. It’s like jumping into, you know, um, the rapids that, you know, there’s no great time to start. So you better just jump in and, you know, figure some stuff out as you go.

Jeff DeLoach: I gotta tell you, Lee, you are hitting the nail on the head because there’s there’s two parts to my answer to your question. Because you covered it so well. The first part is we as a as a process organization, uh, and we are a process organization. We actually had to take a hard look at ourselves and say, okay, this is coming. We how do we adjust our business model, even internally, to take advantage of this technology? That’s this sort of quiet revolution, I’ll call it. Maybe it’s not so quiet that it’s happening around, uh, AI and automation. And so we had to look at that. How do we be a more efficient partner for our partner and for for our clients? And, uh, so, so we took a hard look at that, and that’s where it sort of began. And then we realized that, you know, our clients are not being able to take advantage of. Can we be a partner there to help them do that. And so there’s a there’s a quote, I saw a woman one time that I thought was fantastic that talked about I, as you said, uh, you know, I don’t know that I want to ai to do my, uh, my writing and painting, uh, while I do the dishes and do the laundry. I’d rather me do the writing and the painting, and I do the dishes and the laundry.

Jeff DeLoach: And so because we focus on non-core, uh, but critical activities, we really are in the space of the laundry and the dishwashing, and it’s it’s primed for automation. So we have we have really leaned into that a lot. And one of the things we do is we try to bridge that gap that you talked about, about people really don’t still don’t know actually how they’re going to use an automation. Uh, we were at a staffing conference, and, uh, the, uh, analyst said, uh, everybody talks about AI, but only about 10 to 15% have actually figured out how to utilize or maximize it to assist their business. So we’ve, uh, because we do these processes on a regular basis because we, we’ve, uh, we’re applying it to our own organization. We’re able to come with a solution and a recommendation to clients on certain processes we handle for them to better automate that and utilize the powers of AI. And that’s where we start. And then it gets into, oh, wow, can we look at this? And we can we look at that? Because, uh, I can tell you personally, I’ve been I’ve been amazed at what, uh, what it brings to the table and even the potential of the future for it.

Lee Kantor: So now, is any part of working in AI and automation? Is it something that you’ve achieved kind of monetary savings for a client where it’s like, hey, we used to do it this way, but if you take this thing that we figured out with an AI and automation kind of combo, this is going to save you time. This is going to save you money. This is going to be, you know, there’s a tangible benefit. It’s not a hey, this is a cool thing we can do. It’s a this is a bottom line thing that’s going to benefit everybody if we can really just become more efficient. I mean, that’s what everybody’s shooting for is just be more efficient.

Jeff DeLoach: Uh, absolutely. Uh, we have we have multiple examples of that. Uh, I’ll give you something, an example. It’s something, uh, you probably hadn’t even contemplated. But, uh, when companies do transitions from one system to another. So let’s say they’re leaving one vendor, one payroll vendor, and going to another payroll vendor. Uh, particularly in this mid and larger corporation, one of the things that gets lost is the amount of documents, employee documents that you collect everything from W-2s, I mean, W-4 and I-9. As you’re collecting and at the beginning when somebody comes on board, then all the things that happen in between performance reviews and all that, well, those sit there and there’s no, there’s no, uh, automated way to transfer them to one system to the other. It’s literally a download, upload, download, upload process. So we were able to apply some orchestrations and automations that saved our clients thousands of dollars and hundreds of hours of time in doing this via via automation. And that’s been a that’s been a real growth and success here. Excuse me here for us because and the reason why it’s, it’s it’s difficult is because each company is different. Each company has documents in different areas. Each company has certain things they want and don’t want. It’s so it’s, uh, so automation was a real, uh, successful application there that we orchestrated and developed. So we’ve we’ve done it across dozens of platforms at this point now.

Lee Kantor: So yeah. And this is one of like you were saying earlier, when you have kind of that miles deep understanding of the the nuances of systems and processes, it gives you a, a unique perspective to solve problems in that space as opposed to somebody who is just kind of dabbling.

Jeff DeLoach: Right, exactly. That’s a that’s sort of what we, uh, you know, why we stay with within our, our niche and, and really, uh, you know, we’re, we’re at ISO 9001 company as far as process goes. So having done this for you know, we’re almost approaching 20 years now, our, our SOPs that we have around all the processes that are involved in managing HR and managing HR processes across multiple platforms gives us a knowledge base. And matter of fact, I played a role in that because one of the one of the things we say to our clients and internally is our people are our product. And so we sort of had to treat our, our people that we, that we put into our engagements, uh, from a almost like manufacturing where we, we take people who perhaps have good education but don’t necessarily understand, uh, the, the depths and intricacies of US payroll, US HR laws, benefits, etc.. So we used AI to develop help us develop a broad LMS tool, uh, learning management system, uh, that, uh, literally, you know, test them. We can and we’re able to get people, you know, straight out of college to active, successful, uh, participant in these spaces within three to 3 to 6 months. Uh, and where they’re where they’re actually, uh, on the brink of being almost an SME, uh, to that. So that’s, uh, but I played a big role in that in helping us build out the content and, you know, doing the you know, we have, uh, you know, AI driven, uh, uh, agents that, uh, you know, talk to them, do the testing, have interactive responses? It’s really fascinating. So.

Lee Kantor: So what’s the pain that your ideal client is having right now? Where, uh, they should be calling Cognito. Are they just frustrated, or are they, you know, is something happening internally that they’re, you know, falling behind? Like, like, what’s the trigger that that has a conversation with Cognito has the answer. Yeah.

Jeff DeLoach: The trigger is, is this is 90% of the time the trigger is needed capacity either because of growth. Uh, they just they’re just unable to handle it, though. They made an acquisition, and it’s, uh, they need help. Uh, in the transition. They lost some staff, and they just don’t, you know, they can’t they can’t keep up with the turnover. Uh, it’s typically those things. And we believe we’re in a good space because, uh, the accounting, uh, sort of career in the US has been on the, on the decline for some time now. Uh, for whatever reason, you know, uh, the youth of today are more interested in other in other avenues. And so there is a true labor shortage, uh, in the, in, in the US, uh, in general. And then, uh, so we’re, we’re we find that, uh, you know, when someone has, you know, this, these capacity issues that they need a partner that can, uh, that, that has the knowledge, can scale up quickly, uh, like, like we are and can, uh, you know, um, immediately give them, uh, you know, within 30 days, uh, 30 to 45 days, be ready to roll and operating. So and then, yeah, those are, those are the main drivers that, that capacity, the needed capacity for whatever, whether it’s a negative creation of capacity or a positive creation of capacity.

Lee Kantor: And then your clients are here in the US, but global as well.

Jeff DeLoach: Yes. Yes, we do have some clients global as well.

Lee Kantor: So and if somebody wants to learn more, have a more substantive conversation with you or somebody on the team, what’s the website? What’s the best way to connect.

Jeff DeLoach: Yep. Yeah a cognitive it’s cognitive. Com so cognitive.com is our website. And uh you can reach us there or you can reach me directly at (404) 863-1245.

Lee Kantor: All right. Well, Jeff, thank you so much for sharing your story today. You’re doing important work and we appreciate you.

Jeff DeLoach: Thank you Lee I appreciate it. Enjoyed it.

Lee Kantor: All right. This Lee Kantor.

Jeff DeLoach: Great.

Lee Kantor: Day. We’ll see you next time on High Velocity Radio.

Tagged With: CogNet, Jeff DeLoach

Daniella Granzotto With Wednesday Waffles

April 22, 2025 by Jacob Lapera

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Daniella Granzotto, Chief Growth Officer, Wednesday Waffles.

She brings strategic expertise to Wednesday Waffles, transitioning from her role as Head of VIP Relations where she managed relationships with North America’s most prestigious brands. Her talent for nurturing high-value partnerships and creating authentic connections has been instrumental in Wednesday Waffles’ growth.

As Chief Growth Officer, she leads the company’s communications strategy and go-to-market initiatives, applying her relationship-building expertise to a platform dedicated to authentic connection. She orchestrates Wednesday Waffles’ influencer strategy, cultivating partnerships that align with the brand’s mission to foster genuine friendships in the digital age.

Her approach combines data-driven growth tactics with a deep understanding of what makes friendships flourish in today’s fast-paced world. A passionate advocate for combating digital loneliness, she has shaped Wednesday Waffles’ distinctive marketing voice that emphasizes warmth, authenticity, and meaningful connection over metrics and algorithm-driven content.

Under her leadership, Wednesday Waffles has developed a communications strategy that resonates with its target audience, creating a movement that challenges how we use technology to maintain our most important relationships.

Connect with Daniella on LinkedIn and follow Wednesday Waffles on Instagram.

What You’ll Learn In This Episode

  • What inspired the creation of Wednesday Waffles

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix.

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios in Atlanta, Georgia. It’s time for High Velocity Radio.

Lee Kantor: Lee Kantor here. Another episode of High Velocity Radio, and this is going to be a good one. Today on the show we have Daniela Granzotto and she is with Wednesday Waffles. Welcome.

Daniella Granzotto: Thank you for having me.

Lee Kantor: I am so excited to learn what you’re up to. Tell us a little bit about Wednesday Waffles. How you serving folks?

Daniella Granzotto: Yeah, so we created the concept. The concept was actually created by one of our founders, Zachary, a couple years ago, and he posted on Instagram and TikTok recently just saying that him and his friends had been taking three minute videos of themselves on a weekly basis every Wednesday and just sending it to a group chat. And it was just a really effective way for them to stay in touch. And that video went viral. A couple of us got Ahold of it and started doing it and saw some really great benefits, but there were some pain points of just doing it in a group chat. So we decided to turn it into an app and that’s where we are today.

Lee Kantor: So what is the meaning of Wednesday? Waffles is there is waffle like in America? Waffle is a breakfast.

Daniella Granzotto: Yeah. The term waffling is from British and Australian slang for just chatting or, you know, waffling about nothing, just talking for the sake of talking. And so it is kind of what we picked Wednesday and we play on waffles for the American food as well within the app, but it’s just a once a week ritual that you and your friends can get together and really allows for more deep, authentic connection rather than all of the maybe highlight reels that you see in traditional social media today.

Lee Kantor: So what’s your backstory? How did you get involved in this line of work?

Daniella Granzotto: I’ve been in software and a tech company for the last eight years, and when this opportunity came across my plate and it felt like the I think there’s a real problem personally, with social media today, digital burnout is a real thing. Social media often leaves you feeling worse than better. And so when I saw the benefits of allowing the group of people in your life and the people closest to you, whether it’s friends or family, to connect in a real, authentic way, it just spoke to me and I decided to take the leap and pursue it full time.

Lee Kantor: And then had you done this before? Build community like this?

Daniella Granzotto: No, I, I wouldn’t say community like this specifically. I have a background in personally in PR and marketing for tech companies, and so I was familiar with the space and a couple of my co-founders are developers. And so we all got together and decided to build your new weekly friendship app.

Lee Kantor: So any advice for other business people out there? If they’re trying to create a community around something important to them, whether it’s their business or a mission? Is there some do’s and don’ts when you’re trying to launch something like this that requires kind of, um, you know, somebody you have you’re asking people to share personal things and to not only do that, but also bring their friends along for the ride.

Daniella Granzotto: Yeah, I think from I mean, from the development standpoint, security was super important to us. And so some Dos, as I think, do your due diligence. If you’re building an app that involves other people getting onto the platform, both from a being able to report any not great behavior, but then also being able to have all of their data be super secure. So we want people to really be authentic and vulnerable on this app, and we want to make sure that they feel comfortable and that they know that whatever they say is only being stored locally for them and won’t be misused in any way.

Lee Kantor: So is the is the waffle if I’m if I create a group for my friends and family. Um, is that the only people that are going to see this, or is it kind of have a public feed as well?

Daniella Granzotto: No, those are the only people we really are trying to break the cycle of traditional, uh, social media. So there’s no likes, there’s no filters, no followers. It’s really just you and your group of friends connecting on a weekly basis and sharing a little bit about what’s going on in your life.

Lee Kantor: And what stage are you at right now?

Daniella Granzotto: Uh, we I mean, we’ve launched, uh, we launched in, uh, middle of March, and the results we’ve seen so far have been really, really exciting. We’ve got hundreds of thousands of users on the app already, and and we’re I will say we’re not perfect yet either. Launching a new app comes with definitely some like, bugs and features and and the fact that we’ve received so much feedback of like, hey, this is broken, please make it work. I really want to use it has been really exciting to see.

Lee Kantor: Now, um, obviously you were very mindful and purposeful around this once a week concept. Um, can you talk about how how you came up with once a week and, um, what did you try twice a week or like, how did you land on once a week?

Daniella Granzotto: Once a week really came from Zach being the original creator and had been doing it for years. And I think it allows the appropriate amount of connection while still not forcing you to go back to the app. Um, these conversations can obviously always continue and develop longer outside of Wednesdays, and we hope that they do. But we don’t want people to feel pressure that they have to be in the app at all times in order to stay connected.

Lee Kantor: Acted now are there, um, within the app? Are there prompts to help a person who might be struggling with even filling their three minutes? Is there things that are thought starters, or is it just like you just turn, hey, you get a reminder, hey, it’s Wednesday, time to do your three minute waffle.

Daniella Granzotto: You get a reminder. We do have prompts. If you feel like you don’t really have anything to talk about that week, we’ll give you some suggestions. And then we also have a notes section that you can go to throughout the week that if something happens on Monday and you’re like, oh, I know I want to put that in my Wednesday waffle, you can go in and and put it in the notes so that when you are ready to record on Wednesday, it’s all there and ready for you as well.

Lee Kantor: Is there anything that kind of reminds me of people in my network that I might want to include on this? Or is it like, how do you kind of expand the network, or is that not really the objective?

Daniella Granzotto: The intention really isn’t, at least right now to expand the network. It’s to really focus on deepening the relationships that you already have. I think everyone has a really close social circle, but even if you think about how often are you actually seeing those people? Um, it’s as we grow up and life changes, it becomes less and less frequently throughout that stage. And you really want to be able to connect with those people. It’s the type of people that when you do get together, it’s like you never missed a beat. And so how can we bridge that gap so that you still are connected and sharing what’s going on in each other’s lives, even if you don’t get the chance to see each other face to face so frequently anymore.

Lee Kantor: Now, if if I, if I form a group and I have like, what’s a typical number of people in a group right now.

Daniella Granzotto: Uh, it can really vary. I would say on average it’s like between 3 and 8 is the largest group size. Um, and that’s I’ll speak for myself. I have a lot of siblings. So there’s, um, I have a siblings and spouses group that has, uh, ten of us in it. Um, and that’s really the most we tend to see because we want people to share what’s actually going on. And it can be quite a vulnerable space. And so you want people, everyone in the group that you feel comfortable with, you can also just create a group with one person too if you want to. I have one friend in Australia who I connect with, uh, just her and I, as a weekly ritual to just to stay in touch with each other. So there’s no minimum or maximum, but that is the average that we’ve seen.

Lee Kantor: And do people have multiple groups, like you said, like you have one with a friend in Australia, you have one with siblings, I have one with maybe, you know, friends from work. Like, is that what typically happens that you have like six different groups going simultaneously?

Daniella Granzotto: Exactly. Um, that is typically what happens. I have six groups myself. And you can if you, you know, have the same thing to say to everyone. You can when you record your video, um, select to have the same waffle sent to all groups Or you can do individually personalized waffles per group, depending on the relationship you have with them and how much you’d like to share.

Lee Kantor: Right. Because I could see that could then become a stressor. Now I got to record six different things.

Daniella Granzotto: Exactly. We’re really trying to eliminate, um, as much social burnout and digital burnout as possible while still being able to use the benefits of technology for good.

Lee Kantor: I know that’s a that’s a tough, uh, needle to thread.

Daniella Granzotto: It is. And but we’re working on it. Slowly but surely.

Lee Kantor: Now. Um, so you found it because you were included in a waffle. Is that how, like, you you just kind of stumbled upon the group?

Daniella Granzotto: I actually, um, discovered it via Zach, who was the original creator on TikTok. His TikTok video about it went viral, and then I just suggested to a couple of my girlfriends that we start and through that experience obviously saw some really great benefits. I had just moved across the country to. And so all of my friends were in one place and I was in the other. Um, and being able to touch base with them and keep up on their with their lives on a weekly basis has just been so amazing. Being able to see friends recently give birth and like just staying connected in a way that I wouldn’t if I’m all the way on the other side of the country. However, there was definitely some pain points about doing it in iMessage. It cut. You don’t know how, um, it can cut you off, and you don’t know how long of a video actually sent. And so you’re only your friends are only getting half of a story. Um, it has lagging issues and storage issues. Your phone, you know, at some point you have to go through and delete everything off of your phone because recording takes up so much data and it just wasn’t a great experience. And so even though I knew the benefits were worth it, the experience wasn’t great. And that’s what inspired us to build an app for it.

Lee Kantor: So did you know Zach at the beginning? Or you just found it on TikTok and you were like, oh, this is a great idea. I’m going to do this. And then you reached out to me.

Daniella Granzotto: Yeah, I didn’t know Zach. I after after, um, enjoying the experience so much and deciding that some of it needed to be fixed. I did reach out to Zach and I said, hey, I’m building this thing. We’re building this thing. Um, do you want to be a part of it? And he obviously jumped on board and we’ve been working towards it ever since.

Lee Kantor: Cool. I mean, what an exciting, uh, adventure you’re on.

Daniella Granzotto: Yeah, it’s, uh, it’s, you know, it’s been really rewarding. I think, um, entrepreneurship and technology in general has, uh, a lot of ups and downs. There’s good days and bad days, but to see the benefits that actually impact people’s lives and how much people are enjoying it by being able to develop more authentic relationships, um, is a really, really important mission that I’m really passionate about, so makes it easy.

Lee Kantor: So how do consumers typically, um, watch the, you know, their other nine if there’s ten in a group like how do they watch the nine other video. Do they just sit and binge nine in a row, or do they just kind of when they think of it, they hit the button and watch a couple.

Daniella Granzotto: Um, it depends like you, you only get notified when someone posts a fresh waffle, right? So depending on when your friends actually post their waffle wherever they are in the world, you’ll get you could get them sporadically through the day. Um, I typically watch all of my waffles while I’m on the treadmill at the gym. That’s just my, you know, way of catching up. And you can, you know, press forward back. You can speed it up to like 1.25 if you want to listen to it on, um, a faster scale to bring down some of that watch time. But, uh, yeah, whether it’s throughout the day, the idea is that at capping it at three minutes means that even if you are watching all ten friends at once, you’re still only investing 30 minutes of your time into deep, authentic friendship. Versus if you get caught Instagram scrolling mindlessly, you could be stuck there for hours.

Lee Kantor: Now, is there kind of a hard cap of, okay, we’re not going to let anybody have a thousand waffle, you know, friends in this.

Daniella Granzotto: We haven’t um, we haven’t made that decision candidly. We haven’t seen it as as a decision that we’ve had to make yet. Um, but I the real intention is for the conversation to be two ways. And I can’t imagine you’re going to have an easy time doing that if there’s a thousand people in the group. But there are other social media. Um, platforms out there that encourage lots of followers and communicating to a broad audience. That’s just not what the intention of this is.

Daniella Granzotto:

Lee Kantor: And then, um, has there been anything that unexpected when you rolled it out and were starting to get more and more users, are there anything kind of surprise you in terms of how people used it or how they benefited from it? Or, you know, what they discovered?

Daniella Granzotto: Yeah, I mean, I think the most rewarding thing has being able to see the feedback and how a how long people have been waiting for an app like this and b the benefits that they’ve had, like we had one user, um, basically say that it’s, it works as therapy for her. And she thinks that if, um, her brother had something like this, he’d still be around today. And so we really believe in the benefits of being able to see someone’s face every week. And actually when they share what’s going on, being able to see a little bit deeper than the surface and be able to check in on your friends and share both highlight reels of what’s going on in your life, but also the pain points because it’s a really small, safe group of people.

Lee Kantor: Now, when you’re going about marketing this and getting the word out, obviously you’re doing shows like this, but are you going into kind of hospitals or, you know, targeting people, um, that are struggling in some way with addiction or something so that they have a resource that can help them stay connected to people that they need in times of struggle.

Daniella Granzotto: Um, yeah. I mean, we haven’t done hospitals specifically, per se, but we’ve been connected with a bunch of psychology associations and just sharing that, hey, this is a tool that we’ve seen work really, really well for people who are either, um, in therapy or considering some sort of therapy or counseling. Um, and then I think the other area that we’ve seen, uh, big success is actually high schools and universities. Um, at that stage of life when they’re graduating high school or university is usually the point where all of their best friends are all breaking up, spreading out, and going to other places in the world. And that can be a really hard, uh, time of life when that’s all you’ve ever known, and now you’re switching it up. And so being able to have a tool that allows them to remain connected, um, and maintain those relationships even as they, you know, continue on their path, uh, in a different direction has been really nice to see, too.

Lee Kantor: So what’s on the roadmap? Uh, moving forward, what are some of the, um, interesting at least ideas that you are considering as you add features?

Daniella Granzotto: Yeah. Um, I mean, first we want to make this, uh, app as smooth and seamless as possible. So we’re still working on that every day. But I think one feature that we’re particularly excited about is the waffle wrap up, which is similar to a Spotify wrap or a Snapchat Memories, where we’ll be able to take, um, all of your weekly Wednesday waffles throughout the year, throughout a specific season of time, and kind of show that back to you so you get a little bit of a weekly journal in the future, as well as just being able to share what’s going on about all the day to day parts of your life.

Lee Kantor: Is anyone using it individually, just for themselves, as a place to just kind of vent or or capture things individually? I know it’s not meant for that, but I was wondering because if you’re going to add that element, it becomes a journaling of some sort.

Daniella Granzotto: Yeah, that’s honestly a great question. Transparently, I have not looked into the data to see how many single group users we have. I wouldn’t be surprised if people do though, but we do, and you can absolutely use it for that feature. But we designed it to be able for you to connect with your loved ones most importantly.

Lee Kantor: So what do you need more of? How can we help you?

Daniella Granzotto: Um, well, we’d love for everyone to check out the app and give us your feedback. You can find us at Wednesday waffles.com. Or we’re on the Apple Store or the Android Google Play Store. Um, and on all social media channels at Wednesday Waffles app.

Lee Kantor: Is there a fee for.

Daniella Granzotto: Um, there’s not. It is completely free. Um, we’re potentially looking at adding additional features for a premium subscription, but we really just want people to use the app at this point, enjoy it and give us feedback and see what the benefit and see for themselves the benefits of using the app are.

Lee Kantor: Well, thank you so much for sharing your story today. You’re doing such important work and we appreciate you.

Daniella Granzotto: Thank you so much for having me.

Lee Kantor: All right. This is Lee Kantor. We’ll see you all next time on High Velocity Radio.

Tagged With: Daniella Granzotto, Wednesday Waffles

Karla Jo Helms With JOTO PR Disruptors™

April 4, 2025 by Jacob Lapera

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Karla Jo Helms is the Chief Evangelist and Anti-PR™ Strategist for JOTO PR Disruptors™. Karla Jo learned firsthand how unforgiving business can be when millions of dollars are on the line—and how the control of public opinion often determines whether one company is happily chosen, or another is brutally rejected.

Being an alumnus of crisis management, she has worked with litigation attorneys, private investigators, and the media to help restore companies of goodwill back into the good graces of public opinion—she operates on the ethic of getting it right the first time, not relying on second chances and doing what it takes to excel. She has patterned her agency on the perfect balance of crisis management, entrepreneurial insight, and proven public relations experience.

She speaks globally on public relations, how the PR industry itself has lost its way and how, in the right hands, corporations can harness the power of Anti-PR to drive markets and impact market perception.

Connect with Karla Jo on LinkedIn.

What You’ll Learn In This Episode

  • Why do VCs place such a high value on media coverage for their portfolio companies, and how does media visibility impact their decision to fund startups
  • In an era of market volatility, how can media visibility protect startups from funding droughts and what role does strategic communication play in securing investment for early-stage startups
  • What steps can startups take to ensure their media narrative resonates with the right stakeholders and aligns with their growth objectives
  • As competition for funding intensifies, how can startups prioritize Anti-PR® strategies to attract investors
  • How can a well-crafted data-driven Anti-PR® strategy improve a startup’s chances of overcoming funding challenges and scaling sustainably

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix.

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios in Atlanta, Georgia. It’s time for High Velocity Radio.

Lee Kantor: Lee Kantor here. Another episode of High Velocity Radio, and this is going to be a good one. Today on the show, we have Carla Jo Helms, who is the chief evangelist and anti PR strategist with JOTO PR Disruptors. Welcome.

Karla Jo Helms: Welcome. Thank you I appreciate that.

Lee Kantor: Well I am so excited to learn what you’re up to. Tell us about JOTO PR disruptors. How you serving folks?

Karla Jo Helms: Yeah, sure. Um, we are an anti PR agency, which means we use innovative, disruptive public relations techniques that are based on crisis management methodologies and the media’s algorithms to get unknown companies put on the map with a lot of consistent positive press. We’re typically dealing with companies that really need to educate their markets, because they have new technology that’s helping a lot of people, and people need to know what’s possible.

Lee Kantor: So what’s your backstory? Do you mind sharing a little bit about your journey?

Karla Jo Helms: Yeah, I don’t mind that at all. People ask that a lot. My background actually is in crisis management, and if anyone knows anything about crisis management, the very first thing people do when they’re in a crisis is in a business is they call the PR people. And it’s about 9% of my industry that are really trained in handling crises of public opinion. So these are like breaches, wrongful deaths, lawsuits, embezzlements things that are in the court of public opinion and are keeping a company from, you know, having a good reputation, which could impact, uh, revenues, impact jobs, impact the ability to compete. And my job was to go in and turn things around.

Lee Kantor: So then how did you make the move to this anti PR strategy that’s behind your your company today.

Karla Jo Helms: Yeah I um it’s okay. It’s a great story. Years of doing this I noticed that there was a common denominator with all of the companies that we had helped and turned around. They had, you know, superior services and products and technology. They were growing fast. They had a loyal following, but they were woefully naive in terms of building up a great publicity foundation of goodwill that protected their reputation. So they were very easy to attack by their larger competitors and turning them around, building up a good foundation of goodwill, good works, well publicized third party credibility through channels like yourself. Speaking of the issues and the the harms that they were solving with their technology and services and why they were doing what they were doing and how many people they were helping. We noticed a few things. Companies expanded much faster that way. Their marketing ROI increased. They expanded twice as fast as their competitors and their profitability increased. So I thought, you know what, let’s just take it and put it on the proactive side of PR and let’s help companies build this up before they get into trouble.

Lee Kantor: And then how did you land on anti PR. What was the thinking behind that semantic term.

Karla Jo Helms: We used to get other people or prospects customers people. They would say oh my gosh this has not been my experience with PR. Like you’re the antithesis of PR, you’re the opposite of PR. Um, you know, years of hearing that. Um, we decided that, well, we saw that we were really going up against sort of an ironic industry. Il. Um, as as great as PR is, um, it doesn’t always have the best reputation as an industry. So after years of being told you guys are like anti PR, the opposite of PR, we just rebranded that way because it is a trademark process. It is different than how proactive and traditional PR works and that’s how we came up to that. Our customers actually named it for us.

Lee Kantor: So you do a lot of work with technology firms, um, and new and old and, um, can you talk a little bit, maybe give an example of what would be a traditional PR approach to, say, a launch of a startup versus an anti PR approach to the launch of a startup?

Karla Jo Helms: Yeah. Uh, traditional PR approach is, uh, you know, let’s put out this, um, news that we have a great new company that, uh, is building this solution that is going to revolutionize an industry. Um, a lot of what they call fluffy news, right? Um, anti PR Anti-prom is really exploiting the biggest issues harm, controversy, money wasted, lost that this technology is solving. So say you have a med tech startup and they have a cardiology device that is, you know, able to detect heart arrhythmias in real time in patients and send that to cardiologists. Well, you know, people don’t know that there’s a problem or why they would need something until they actually know that there’s a problem. So Anti-poor would really expose the the time involved in the, the legacy technology of taking that particular heart monitor and having an arrhythmia go through a whole industry of middlemen that could translate it and then pass it on to the cardiologist 2 or 3 weeks later. Cardiologists get it very expensive reports. They see their patient has a heart arrhythmia. They send them to the emergency room, they could be too late. The patient dies. This is a very common thing that happens. And so instead of saying, we have a new heart monitor that helps cardiologists get information in real time, people may not even understand why that’s so important.

Karla Jo Helms: But if you really like take into account why people go to the news, they’re looking for information that’s really going to help educate them and solve their problems. And you learn about the number of people with heart problems. You learn about this particular industry. That was great at one time. But now because we have so many issues with health and we have so many boomers that have, you know, cardiac disease, and we have so many cardiologists that are inundated with paperwork and insurance regulations that they’re not able to get the information fast enough to save their patients lives. And we can tell this story and really educate people on the problem that startup becomes super relative to our economy, to our health care, to health care facilities, to cardiologists. And they have a ton of positive publicity around that. Rather than doing the 70 year old technique of let’s putting out a really good news, fluffy press release that touts how great this company is, but doesn’t really talk about what they’re doing and then how it’s going to impact society.

Lee Kantor: So when you create a piece of content like that, are you actually producing the content or are you kind of, you know, doing the scripts and the messaging and the, um, delivery in terms of video and all, all that it takes, because of the more and more media companies becoming leaner and leaner, that if you give them something that’s well produced and informative, that that gives, that makes their life easier.

Karla Jo Helms: Yeah. That’s you hit the nail in the head. Um, today we have to really help reporters and journalists, uh, do their job for them or help them do their job for them. Connect the dots. Get the sources for the story. Do the B-roll craft the messaging? Uh, you know, you name it. Uh, we have to do that today. So that’s we’re like an extension of the news. We really help journalists do their job. Uh, just even much better. We’re not only bringing them stories, but we’re also connecting the dots and doing a lot of the collateral that they need to tell those, you know, impactful stories.

Lee Kantor: So, um, in your career, I’m sure you’ve seen the media kind of evolve to where it’s at now and how, um, are there different strategies today in a world of Substack, um, versus, you know, a day of, you know, lots of local newspapers and lots of local news stations?

Karla Jo Helms: Yeah. You know, it’s very interesting that you ask, um, but today we’re in an alternative. We’re in a world of alternate media. Mainstream media calls my firm, um, you know, every day asking about, uh, certain narratives or certain trends that they’re seeing in trade publications, industry press podcasts, even. Right. Um, or aggregate. Um, you know, media outlets that are aggregating stories. Um, and so you have this great benefit today to communicate to, um, many targeted segments of the business population along many channels where people get their information. So today, it’s not really like I’m aiming to be in, you know, the top mainstream media outlets. Those are really peppered in, um, where everybody’s getting their information or alternate channels where people are going to where they actually trust what’s happening. And regional media is not that far off, right? Um, regional media really communicates to their areas, they know what’s happening in their areas. And, you know, a lot of, um, like new technology or businesses today that are making an impact in their community. Regional media and community news is extremely impactful.

Lee Kantor: Now in your work with technology firms. Uh, do you work with like VCs do they hire you to work for their with their portfolio of clients, or do you work with individual, um, startups.

Karla Jo Helms: And individual firms and, uh, private equity? Yes, all of the above.

Lee Kantor: So it’s, um, so you have relationships with people who might have several different startups, and this gives them all kind of a leg up when it comes to the marketing and rollout of their startup.

Karla Jo Helms: Yes. Yeah. I mean, look, venture capitalist and even private equity firms, I mean, they they always want a return on investment for their companies. And uh, today it’s a PR world. Uh, buzz and influence really impacts the markets. Um, it can be upwards of a third of the valuation of a company like goodwill or reputation and really guiding and, um, you know, controlling public opinion to the best you can, uh, is really very important today, not only to startups, but those that fund them.

Lee Kantor: So what, um, maybe some advice for the startup founder out there and especially the maybe the tech startup founder who isn’t as, um, knowledgeable about marketing? Is there some do’s and don’ts? Is there some things that you would recommend? Early steps. Um, you know, when it comes to launching a new product, especially a technology that may be a disruptive.

Karla Jo Helms: Yes. It’s such a great question. You know, I have a podcast where I talk to disruptive innovators, um, every week that are building brand new technologies, uh, in, you know, agriculture, education, uh, the financial markets, healthcare and so forth. And I am hearing that they are learning, um, that one of their biggest skills is becoming a really good storyteller today. Uh, the technology no longer or good works, the technology, the merit of the technology no longer speak for themselves. They have to really tell the why behind the story, why they built it, why it’s helping. Um, before they get into the bells and whistles and all about the technology. People today really want to, you know, they buy into the why before they buy the what. And one of the best things that, um, brand new startup founders can do is really craft their storytelling skill and, um, sell the problem that they’re solving. Quit leading with the solution. People don’t understand the solution until they really understand the problem that it’s solving and why you’re solving it. Many people have personal stories. You know the one I told you about the med tech company? I mean, he had a parent that, uh, you know, had a heart arrhythmia, and that information didn’t get to the cardiologist in time. And he was a technologist, and he says we can do better. Many tech startups and founders, they have these incredible stories, and they’re deciding to do something about it. And those stories is what sells now.

Lee Kantor: Is there a story you can share? Don’t name the name of the organization, but maybe, um, share a little bit about the problem they were having before they started working with your firm, and how you helped them maybe get the escape velocity they needed to grow.

Karla Jo Helms: Yeah, sure. Um, you know, let’s say, uh, a company that, you know, there’s a lot of, um, things that go on in our society that sometimes are not, like, great to talk about. Um, it might be considered, say, a stigma. For instance, you know, back in the day, do you know what chargebacks are?

Lee Kantor: Chargebacks for your credit card.

Karla Jo Helms: When you file a chargeback on your credit card?

Lee Kantor: Yeah.

Karla Jo Helms: Yeah. So you get something in the mail or it’s not what you wanted or you did say you didn’t get it right. Uh, it didn’t get delivered right. You call visa, you say it didn’t get delivered. And so they go, great. Well, we’ll charge it back. We’ll give you a credit back on your card. Well, this is a big problem in the financial world and the e-commerce world. In fact, 84% of all chargebacks are fraudulent. But just, you know, several years ago, it was taboo to talk about, as a merchant having chargebacks even when they could prove that they were fraudulent. The consumer really did receive the package. They did send it. Um, but they filed a chargeback anyway. And Visa and Mastercard would penalize merchants if they went over a 1% threshold of having chargebacks filed on them. So merchants were afraid to speak up. Um, and so this was sort of taboo, right? And we had to get a lot of publicity, uh, for merchants being able to speak up about fraudulent chargebacks that were costing them so much just to stay in the business. Right. Um, so much so that it created over a period of a couple of years, really exposing this, getting people to talk about it, show the different states that were having the biggest fraud, fraudulent chargeback issues. Uh, what, you know which gender is mostly responsible for chargebacks, by the way? It’s female. What industries are more prone to having chargebacks? What are things that merchants should do to mitigate this? Um, Visa and Mastercard started to listen to merchants instead of penalizing them. And so what became a profit center per se for Visa and Mastercard that would actually charge merchants to file these chargebacks even when they were fraudulent. It became a cost center, and it started to create an ability for merchants and visa and Mastercard and chargeback entities, mitigation entities, to work together as an ecosystem. That’s how you change the court of public opinion for business.

Lee Kantor: And, um, who is the ideal client? Is it just technology firms or or now do you go into other industries?

Karla Jo Helms: We mostly work with technology firms. Most everything is technology based today. Um, so that is our particular niche. Um, but if people have particular things that they need help with regarding, uh, publicity or public opinion, public opinion issues, we will talk to them, but we may not take them on, but we might refer them to someone in our network.

Lee Kantor: Is it mainly B2B or it can be B2C?

Karla Jo Helms: It’s mainly B2B, yes.

Lee Kantor: And if somebody wants to learn more, have a more substantive conversation with you or somebody on the team, what’s the website? What’s the best way to connect?

Karla Jo Helms: Great. The website is jetpens.com. Com that’s the best way to reach out to us. Um, and a member of our team, an anti PR advisor or even myself as the chief strategist, we can talk to you and advise you and let you know what can be done to help you.

Lee Kantor: All right. Well, thank you so much for sharing your story today. You’re doing such important work and we appreciate you.

Karla Jo Helms: Yeah. Thank you very much.

Lee Kantor: All right. This is Lee Kantor. We’ll see you all next time on High Velocity Radio.

Tagged With: Karla Jo Helms

Gary Stokan With Peach Bowl, Inc.

April 4, 2025 by Jacob Lapera

Atlanta Business Radio
Atlanta Business Radio
Gary Stokan With Peach Bowl, Inc.
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Gary P. Stokan is CEO and president of Peach Bowl, Inc., a position he has held since 1998. Under his management, Peach Bowl, Inc. events have generated an economic impact of $1.53 billion and $96.7 million in direct government tax revenue for the city of Atlanta and state of Georgia since 1999.

He has positioned the Peach Bowl as one of the best bowl game organizations in the nation, and earned the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl a position as a New Year’s Six bowl game in the College Football Playoff (CFP) and will host future CFP Semifinal games in 2022 and 2025. He also inked contracts with Mercedes-Benz Stadium through 2025 and with Chick-fil-A to continue its title sponsorship of both the Bowl and Kickoff Games through 2025.

During his tenure, the Bowl has enjoyed sellouts in 22 of the past 25 years, and earned the second-longest sellout record in the Bowl business. Peach Bowl, Inc. has also distributed more than $281 million in team payouts under him and is college football’s most charitable bowl organization – having donated $58.8 million since 2002 – which garnered Peach Bowl, Inc. the Atlanta Small Business Philanthropic Award.

In 2019, Peach Bowl, Inc. donated a record $20 million to Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta creating the Peach Bowl LegACy Fund to find cures for childhood cancer. As result of this effort, the organization was named a finalist by ESPN for its 2020 Corporate Community Impact Award – a category in the annual Sports Humanitarian Award.

Recently, Peach Bowl, Inc. was also named to Atlanta Business Chronicle’s 2021 Best Places to Work list, as well as a Best Employers in Sports by Front Office Sports, a Top 10 Small Business in Atlanta by Business Leader Media, and was presented by the Mayor of Atlanta with the Phoenix Award, the highest honor an individual or group can receive from the city of Atlanta.

He has created major events that bring exposure, economic impact and charitable donations to Atlanta by creating the Chick-fil-A Kickoff Game in 2008, which is the leader in opening weekend games. Stokan’s innovation of the Chick-fil-A Kickoff Game helped change the college football season by elevating opening weekend and placing a focus on scheduling nationally ranked, out-of-conference opponents.

Since its creation, the Chick-fil-A Kickoff Game has distributed a cumulative $83.5 million in team payouts and has sold out 12 of 15 games. He also created the Peach Bowl Challenge charity golf tournament, which since 2007 has given $8.73 million for scholarship and charity to its participating universities and coaches charities is the preeminent coaches golf tournament in the country.

It was his relationships that led to the 2006 Sugar Bowl being moved to Atlanta after Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans. Peach Bowl, Inc.’s addition of the management of The Dodd Trophy presented by PNC, college football’s most coveted national coach of the year award, is due to Stokan’s leadership.

He has also inspired the creation of the Peach Bowl College Corner at the Tour Championship and Peach Bowl Touchdown for Children’s which have raised and donated more than $1.5 million to Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta. These accomplishments have prompted national media to label Atlanta the Capital of College Football.

What You’ll Learn In This Episode

  • Peach Bowl, Inc. events
  • Backstory on the bowl being created in the spirit of giving back,  and how the organization is continuing to implement this philosophy by donating more than $65.4 million since 2002.

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix.

 

TRANSCRIPT

Speaker1: Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studio in Atlanta, Georgia. It’s time for Atlanta Business Radio, brought to you by Kennesaw State University’s Executive MBA program, the accelerated degree program for working professionals looking to advance their career and enhance their leadership skills. And now, here’s your host.

Lee Kantor: Lee Kantor here, another episode of Atlanta Business Radio. And this is going to be a good one. But before we get started, it’s important to recognize our sponsor, CSU’s executive MBA program. Without them, we wouldn’t be sharing these important stories today on Atlanta Business Radio. We have Gary Stokan, and he is the president and CEO with the Peach Bowl. Welcome.

Gary Stokan: Hey, Lee, how are you?

Lee Kantor: I am doing well. I am so excited to get caught up with what’s happening at the Peach Bowl. But for the two people out there who don’t know what the Peach Bowl is, kind of share a little bit about mission purpose and how you’re serving the community.

Gary Stokan: Sure. I appreciate you having us. We, uh, we were founded back in 1968 as the first bowl game founded for charity and the ninth bowl game founded overall. And it’s always been our mission to be the most charitable bowl organization in the country. And we’ve done that by, uh, donating $64 million since 2002 to various charities around the country and here, mainly here in Atlanta. And that makes us by far the most charitable organization in the country. So by being a part of the CFP now, the College Football Playoff and being the most charitable bowl game, we’ve met our mission to to welcome people to Atlanta using college football for the greater good.

Lee Kantor: Now, can you talk about maybe the genesis of the idea? What kind of was the thinking to tie charity along with this bowl game? Because bowl games had been going around for decades, if not now, over probably a century. What was the thinking there?

Gary Stokan: Well, there was there was eight bowl games already in the United States. And George Crumbley, who was leading the Lions Lighthouse at the time, said, well, we need to create a fundraiser to raise money for what our mission is. And Atlanta is a football crazy town. So let’s start a bowl game. And so he tried three different times with the NCAA to get a license to create a bowl game. And finally, on the third time in 1968, he was successful and he started the Peach Bowl. And so we’ve had a great run. It was tough in the beginning. They didn’t make any money for a lot of years. But now we’re very, very successful, very successful financially as well as nationally. And we’ve been able to help the Lions Lighthouse grow as well with our charitable contributions.

Lee Kantor: Now, how did the bowl kind of evolve to get into the CFP? Like you mentioned, because as you mentioned, it was the the at that time, it was the new kid on the block. And then now there’s it seems like there’s dozens of bowl games. How did the Peach Bowl kind of earn its way up the ladder into one of the Premier Bowls?

Gary Stokan: Yeah, I have to laugh because my first year in 1998, uh, I, I was in charge of selecting the teams, and I selected Georgia to play Virginia. And Virginia was ranked 12th in the country, and Georgia wasn’t ranked but the head headline of the AJC sports section that day said that, uh, Georgia going to Peach Bowl, a third tier bowl game. So our own newspaper thought of Atlanta as a third tier bowl game. And, um, you know, back in 1985, I guess we were, uh, because we had Army in Illinois and there were 22,000 people in old Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium. And, uh, the weather was terrible. And Dick Bestwick, who had my position at the time, said that unless the business leaders in this city get involved, the Peach Bowl is going to go out of business. And so he rallied. Um, uh, uh, Ron Allen, who was the CEO then of Delta Airlines, and he was the incoming chair for the Chamber of Commerce. And, uh, he said, well, we can’t let the Peach Bowl fail, so we’re going to put up $100,000 check, and we’re going to sell a bunch of tickets. And, uh, so he had Bob Coggin, his chief marketing officer, go out to all their vendors and have them buy tickets to the Peach Bowl, and they sold 3300 tickets. And financially, that helped the Peach Bowl along with that $100,000. And then Ron rallied, you know, the Coca-colas and the other corporations in the city. And, um, the Peach Bowl stayed in business and slow, but sure, moving into the Georgia Dome, getting a contract with the ACC to play the SEC, uh, getting on ESPN.

Gary Stokan: And then subsequently, in 1997, chick fil A signing on as a title sponsor for the game. It gave us the the underpinnings, uh, financial success with chick fil A, uh, with the ACC and SEC ticket buyers. And we were off and running and, um, in 2006 when the, uh, commissioners said, we’re going to start a, uh, you know, a national championship game. We need another bowl game beyond the Rose, sugar, orange and Fiesta. Us in the Cotton Bowl made great bids, but neither of us won as the commissioners decided to let the four bowls have their game on January 1st, and then take the national championship game and rotate it between the rose, the sugar, the orange and the Fiesta. And so in 2007, the NCAA legislated a 12th game to the schedule. And I said, well, being a competitive son of a gun, I said, well, if they’re not going to let us in the BCS on the on the backside of the season, we’re going to start the BCS on the front side of the season. And so I started the kickoff game and had Alabama and Clemson come to play. Sold out us the game in the Georgia Dome. And uh, you know, we basically recreated what now is the front side of the season in college football with great matchups because prior to that teams would play non-directional schools and get easy wins.

Gary Stokan: It was kind of everybody looked at it as an exhibition season to get three wins and then start your conference schedule. Well, now you have the likes of Notre Dame playing Ohio State in the first game of the year. And, you know, we’ll have two kickoff games this year with Syracuse and Tennessee on Saturday. And then on Sunday, uh, we’ll have Virginia Tech play South Carolina. And that’s never been done. Two games within 24 hours in one city. Um, but the kickoff game really elevated our brand to a lot of people around the country because we had blockbuster sellout games with huge TV viewership. And then, uh, we went after the College Football Hall of Fame. I was just coming out of working the Atlanta Sports Council and using Bob Costas famous statement around the 96 Olympic Games that, you know, Atlanta is becoming the sports capital of the world. So in 98, based on the foundation that was put in place by the Olympics, we went out and, um, you know, we got all the NBA, Major League Baseball, NHL all star games. We brought a lot of Olympic type events back into town. And, um, so we made Atlanta the sports capital of the world. And then I said, well, why not make Atlanta the football capital of the world? Because we have huge football fans in this, in this city from all over the country. They they emanate to Atlanta and get jobs and they follow their teams.

Gary Stokan: And so in 285, it would look like a NASCAR race with flags from all kind of ACC and SEC teams and even Big Ten teams driving around to get to their to their games on a Saturday. And so we, uh, we went after the College Football Hall of Fame and we moved it from South Bend to Into Atlanta. And I think those two things, along with the success we were having of selling out Peach Bowl’s, uh, the commissioners looked at what we were doing in Atlanta and said, hey, they deserve a chance. And in 2014 over 15 season, when the CFP was created, uh, they took Atlanta and the Peach Bowl, along with the Cotton Bowl, added to the four bowls of the Rose, sugar, orange and Fiesta. And we became the new year six bowl games. And now we’re currently involved in running the CFP playoff, which started this past year, where we host quarterfinals for two years and then a semifinal. Um, and so this year, we’ll host the semifinal of the College Football Playoff. So, you know, having the College Football Hall of Fame here, having the kickoff games, having successful Peach Bowl has allowed us to recruit the national championship game here twice since 2017 And, uh, have quarterfinals and semifinal games. So now we are looked at as the, uh, the shining light in college football is, uh, a lot of media have called us the capital of college football in Atlanta, Georgia.

Lee Kantor: And do you see any, um, is there any trends you’re seeing with regarding the Nil and the portal systems, uh, with the player transfers? Is the popularity of the game, I’m sure in game day and especially in Atlanta at those games that you’re describing, it’s full house and and they’re always sold out. But is it impacting kind of the, um, popularity of the sport or is it just growing the sport more and more?

Gary Stokan: Yeah, I think the College Football Playoff was responsible this year for increasing the viewership of college football as well as attendance, uh, primarily because you had interest from around the country longer into November and early December with teams that could vie to make up the 12 team playoff. So you had more interest across the country. Number one, that led to more viewership. And secondly, because you’re probably 30 to 40 teams were still vying for those 12 slot slots to make the playoff in in December late December. Um, attendance was increased all throughout the year instead of in the old playoff where you had four teams. There was no team that had two losses that ever made the 14 playoff. And so if you got an early loss in September by, you know, October, November, a lot of people, you know, didn’t follow the team as much because they knew they were out of the playoffs. So I think the playoff has really created a new opportunity for college football to grow. Uh, we’re currently the second most favorite sport in the country, uh, only behind the NFL. Uh, I think we’ve taken a hit with the transfer portal and nil a little bit, uh, that some people have been turned off by, you know, kind of a pay for play for players. Um, uh, by players transferring. They don’t know the players as well because the players aren’t staying for years. Um, but we need some guardrails. We need some regulation from Congress. Uh, I think that’s going to happen. And, um, you know, we’ve got to we’ve got to remain, uh, a collegiate experience where kids are offered a scholarship, uh, get an education, get a degree, because most of these kids are not going to play pro sports. Um, the advent of the Pell Grant and and helping now nil money give these kids an opportunity to start out their career in life and in business, uh, successfully, without any debt. And, uh, with with a great opportunity. So, uh, college football is meeting its mission and will continue to do so.

Lee Kantor: Now, um, do you think that the fact that the Peach Bowl started I mean, we got to the point where it was ACC versus SEC, um, and Atlanta, they have Georgia Tech and Georgia Tech has a stadium, but the there’s so much activity at, uh, at Mercedes-Benz now with these big college games like that you’re bringing in now there’s two kickoffs. Now the Peach Bowl there just seems to be it’s almost I don’t want to say it’s a neutral site, but it’s it’s kind of, um, maybe college agnostic spot for the SEC and the ACC to just create big events. Are you finding that because of your efforts that more and more people are going and attending these kind of college games downtown?

Gary Stokan: Yeah, certainly the the Peach Bowl back in, uh, 1992. I guess it was when the Georgia Dome was built. Uh, the SEC had started a championship game and played the first two years in Birmingham, Alabama. Uh, but they had bad weather. And with the Georgia Dome being, you know, 72 degrees and indoors, obviously, uh, the Peach Bowl worked with the SEC to bring the SEC Championship game to Atlanta. So a lot of tickets for it. Um, and, uh, so the SEC, along with our two kickoff games and the chick fil A Peach Bowl and the national championship that was played in January, late January, uh, they’ll comprise five of the top six conventions in the city of Atlanta this year. And if you think about Atlanta, Atlanta is the fourth largest convention town in the United States, behind Las Vegas, Chicago, Orlando and then Atlanta. So to think about five of the top six conventions in the fourth largest convention town in the United States. Our college football games. The SEC Championship. The two kickoff Aflac kickoff games, the chick fil A Peach Bowl, and the national championship game. So, um, the economic impact and the tax revenues that flow back to Atlanta and Georgia through college football are unlike any other city in the country. And that’s the reason why a lot of people call Atlanta the capital of college football.

Lee Kantor: Now, how important is it to have kind of this really collaborative public private entities working together for kind of the the common good? Atlanta, to me, seems like that’s part of the secret sauce of why, um, so much gets done here.

Gary Stokan: Lee, you’ve hit on it. There’s no doubt about it. When I talk to people around the country and they ask me that same question, uh, it all started with the Olympic Games. There was a perspective and a feeling after the Olympic Games, through the volunteers, through the city and the state, working together through the corporate leaders that we could do anything. And so that’s one one of the reasons we’ve been very successful. It is the secret sauce in the recipe of our success. Um, a lot of lot of cities have stadiums. Um, we have great stadiums, close proximity to our, our hotels with 16,000 hotel rooms downtown, easy walking distance to the facilities, great restaurants and things to do, like the College Football Hall of Fame and aquarium around the hotels and our and our facilities for people to entertain themselves. Um, we have the most effective and efficient airport in the country, probably in the world. Um, with hourly flights from a lot of the major markets like Chicago, New York, DC, LA, etc. so you can get to town easy. You can, um, you know, you can be in the middle of downtown in 15, 20 minutes. Uh, you don’t even have to rent a car. You can get on Marta and be in downtown Atlanta. You can walk around the city to our facilities, our entertainment, our restaurants, um, and all that is important. The infrastructure, the having three interstates that intersect into downtown. So people from the east and west and north and south can get here. Uh, all that infrastructure makes for the opportunity. But at the end of the day, it takes people, it takes strategy, it takes, uh, people willing to commit, uh, volunteer hours, uh, corporations willing to commit money. And, uh, we’ve been able to rally all of that together, uh, to make Atlanta very, very successful in, in the world of sports.

Lee Kantor: And it seems like we’re just scratching the surface with the advent of the gulch. Uh, what’s happening in south downtown, uh, with, you know, with the Georgia Tech and Georgia state campuses being right there in the midst of things, it seems like we’re just now about to begin again.

Gary Stokan: Yeah, it really is. It’s it’s interesting. Um, the World Cup in 2026 is basically going to mirror what happened, uh, and elevate the city. Um, maybe not to the tune of what the Olympics did, because back in 1990, when Atlanta was selected to to host the Olympic Games, a lot of people around the the world, um, thought Atlantic City had won the rights. Uh, because Atlanta was not a well-known, uh, international city at the time. And then when by the time 1996 got here and the Olympic Games, it made Atlanta an international city. And I think the World Cup is going to take that to the next level in 2026 when we host the World Cup.

Lee Kantor: So what do you need more of? How can we help you?

Gary Stokan: Well, we’re very, very blessed to have great volunteers, a wonderful board that supports what we’re doing, uh, tremendous support from the business community in sponsoring a lot of the, the headquarters, uh, companies like Delta and Chick fil A and Home Depot and Kia and, uh, Georgia Power. Uh, support what we’re doing. Um, the city leaders and the state have been tremendous. The facilities, like Arthur Blank and, uh, what he’s been able to do with Mercedes-Benz Stadium. So everything there, it’s just a matter of creating the next, uh, whatever it is. And we’ve been very exciting to do it in college football and make Atlanta such a prevalent, uh, hotbed and capital of college football, but yet still maintaining our mission of donating, uh, you know, $64 million back to charities to help charities in Atlanta and in, uh, cities where teams come from, you know, our, uh, around the country to play in our game, we donate $100,000 scholarship under our John Lewis Legacy of Courage scholarship. And those scholarship monies, which are over $9 million now, $9.5 million, I believe, uh, all around the country, they’re earmarked for kids from Atlanta and or Georgia, title one kids to get those scholarships.

Gary Stokan: Um, so we’ve been able to look out for the education purposes of kids that in their whole generation of their families, no one’s ever gone to college. And some of these kids now are able to go to college. Uh, they’re underprivileged, uh, to get an opportunity to get a degree and hopefully change the self-fulfilling prophecy of not only their family, but their communities. Um, and then to, uh, work with Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta and with Aflac to, uh, now have 14 trials, uh, in five different, uh, uh, states. Um, and uh, creating hopefully, uh, cure to eradicate childhood cancer with, uh, certainly with, uh, whether it’s neuroblastoma or leukemia. We have trials going on that people, you know, hopefully will come up with a cure for a kid for a day. Another day, another month, another year or maybe a lifetime to eradicate childhood cancer. So those are a couple of our big initiatives that we’re working on by using college football to do the greater good.

Lee Kantor: And if somebody wants to learn more, What’s the website to get tickets or just to learn more about what’s happening over at the Peach Bowl?

Gary Stokan: Yeah, we’re on Facebook. We’re on Instagram. Um, we’re on X. Uh, our website is, uh, chick fil A Peach bowl.com. So, um, yeah, if you want to volunteer and be a part of the, uh, the great success we’re doing and helping people by using college football, please join us. Um, and whether you want to sponsor, whether you want to volunteer, we’d love to have you involved. And it’s it’s a great feeling to give back to the city that’s, uh, meant so much to all of us.

Lee Kantor: Well, Gary, thank you so much for sharing your story today. You’re doing such important work, and we appreciate you.

Gary Stokan: Sure, Lee, thanks for having us. Appreciate it.

Lee Kantor: All right. This is Lee Kantor. We’ll see you all next time on Atlanta Business Radio.

Tagged With: Gary Stokan, Inc., peach bowl

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