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Stephanie Richards on PR, AIO, and B2B Visibility Strategy

December 8, 2025 by John Ray

Stephanie Richards, SowGrow Public Relations, on Building B2B Visibility Through PR and AIO (Artificial Intelligence Optimization)
North Fulton Business Radio
Stephanie Richards on PR, AIO, and B2B Visibility Strategy
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Stephanie Richards, SowGrow Public Relations, on Building B2B Visibility Through PR and AIO (Artificial Intelligence Optimization)

Stephanie Richards, SowGrow Public Relations, on Building B2B Visibility Through PR and AIO (Artificial Intelligence Optimization) (North Fulton Business Radio, Episode 920)

Stephanie Richards, founder of SowGrow Public Relations, joins North Fulton Business Radio host John Ray to discuss how B2B companies can break through growth plateaus and adapt to the rapidly changing search landscape. SowGrow Public Relations is a Metro Atlanta-based agency that helps mid-market companies increase visibility and credibility through strategic PR combined with Artificial Intelligence Optimization (AIO).

Stephanie discusses how B2B companies often hit a wall after exhausting their referral networks, watching competitors appear everywhere in media, at conferences, and in searches while they remain invisible. She introduces the concept of Artificial Intelligence Optimization, the practice of ensuring companies show up in AI-powered search results as decision-makers increasingly turn to platforms like ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini instead of traditional Google searches.

The solution combines old-school PR fundamentals with modern content strategy, building credibility through third-party media placements, thought leadership articles, and podcast interviews that AI engines recognize as verified and trustworthy. Stephanie shares a compelling case study of a food packaging company that transformed a mundane plant opening into industry leadership by challenging their entire sector on pharmaceutical-grade standards.

John Ray is the host of North Fulton Business Radio. The show is produced by John Ray and North Fulton Business Radio, LLC, an affiliate of Business RadioX®, and is recorded inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta.

Key Takeaways from This Episode

  • B2B companies often hit a growth plateau when they rely solely on referrals and personal networks, missing opportunities to reach new audiences through strategic visibility efforts
  • Artificial Intelligence Optimization (AIO) is becoming essential as decision-makers increasingly use AI search engines like ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini instead of traditional Google searches
  • Companies need to create high-quality content that establishes expertise while ensuring it appears across multiple third-party sources like trade publications and podcasts, since AI engines prioritize verified, credible information over self-published website content
  • Finding what makes a B2B company newsworthy often requires outside perspective to uncover innovative angles that the company itself overlooks in day-to-day operations

Topics Discussed in this Episode

00:21 John Ray introduces the show and guest Stephanie Richards
02:12 Stephanie Richards introduces SowGrow Public Relations
02:37 Stephanie’s career arc and why PR work is gratifying
03:21 Why B2B companies can stumble along without visibility
04:09 The importance of third-party validation and education
05:09 Problems created when B2B companies lack visibility
05:59 Common misconceptions about PR and media
06:07 Public relations as reputation management and visibility
07:24 How B2B companies know they’re in pain from lack of visibility
08:38 Conducting a brand audit to find what’s newsworthy
10:19 Why PR needs an executive seat at the table
11:12 Introduction to Artificial Intelligence Optimization (AIO)
12:36 What B2B companies need to do about AI search
14:09 How AI platforms score credibility and expertise
15:48 Why AIO strategy brings back old-school PR fundamentals
16:31 Practical steps for adapting to the AI search environment
18:12 Defining content production beyond social media
19:54 Finding what’s newsworthy in a prosaic B2B business
20:11 Case study of food packaging plant and pharmaceutical standards
22:08 How initial conversations with SowGrow unfold
23:22 What to do if you don’t think you have anything newsworthy
24:09 Symptoms indicating you need PR help
25:15 Success story with packaging company and brand managers
26:36 Balancing CEO visibility with broader organizational PR
28:00 Contact information for Stephanie Richards

Stephanie Richards, Founder & Director

Stephanie Richards, M.A.P.W., is a business-to-business (B2B) public relations expert. She is the founder of SowGrow Public Relations, which specializes in increasing the visibility of B2B companies with complex or high-investment products or services through strategic PR and Artificial Intelligence Optimization (AIO) / Generative Engine Optimization (GEO).

Clients have been featured by prestigious media outlets including Harvard Business Review, Forbes, CNN, Fox Business News, Entrepreneur, Newsweek, U.S. News & World Report, Atlanta Business Chronicle, Inc.com, Wall Street Journal, and a myriad of trade publications.

Stephanie earned a bachelor’s degree in public relations with a minor in marketing. She also earned a master’s degree in professional writing with a concentration in applied writing and support areas in composition and rhetoric, as well as creative writing. Stephanie is also the director of the SowGrow Marketing Council, a membership organization for executive-level marketers who want to stay ahead of developments in multiple areas of marketing.

LinkedIn

SowGrow Public Relations

SowGrow Public Relations is a B2B PR agency based in Metro Atlanta that specializes in elevating visibility, credibility, and market influence for high-investment and complex business-to-business mid-market companies.

Founded in 2006, the firm blends strategic PR and Artificial Intelligence Optimization (AIO) / Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) for a full visibility strategy that grows your “Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness” (EEAT) factor. With the rapid rise of AI-powered search, including platforms like ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, and Bing Copilot, SowGrow has developed a proprietary B2B Visibility Strategy that integrates media relations with AIO. This approach ensures that clients not only earn coverage in traditional media but also appear in artificial intelligence search results where decision-makers increasingly seek information.

SowGrow PR has secured placements for clients in leading outlets such as CNN, Fox Business News, Entrepreneur, Forbes, Harvard Business Review, Newsweek, U.S. News & World Report, The Wall Street Journal and a myriad of trade publications, strengthening brand authority and supporting long-term business growth. Guided by the belief that marketing requires intention and consistency, a company that does not invest in marketing is like a farmer that expects a crop without planting a seed, SowGrow helps organizations proactively cultivate the visibility needed to stand out in competitive markets.

Website | Facebook | LinkedIn

Renasant Bank supports North Fulton Business Radio

Renasant BankRenasant Bank has humble roots, having started in 1904 as a $100,000 bank located in a Lee County, Mississippi, bakery. Since then, Renasant has grown into one of the Southeast’s strongest financial institutions, boasting over $26 billion in assets and more than 280 offices offering banking, lending, wealth management, and financial services throughout the region. All of Renasant’s success stems from the commitment of each banker to invest in the communities they serve, which in turn helps them better understand the people they serve. At Renasant Bank, their banking professionals understand you because they work and live alongside you every day.

Website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Instagram | X (Twitter) | YouTube

Beyond Computer Solutions supports North Fulton Business Radio

Whether you’re a law firm, medical practice, or manufacturer, there’s one headline you don’t want to make: “Local Business Pays Thousands in Ransom After Cyberattack.” That’s where Beyond Computer Solutions comes in. They help organizations like yours stay out of the news and in business with managed IT and cybersecurity services designed for industries where compliance and reputation matter most.

Whether they serve as your complete IT department or simply support your internal team, they are well-versed in HIPAA, secure document access, written security policies, and other essential aspects that ensure your safety and well-being. Best of all, it starts with a complimentary security assessment.

Website | LinkedIn | Facebook | YouTube

About North Fulton Business Radio and host John Ray

With over 900 episodes and having featured over 1,400 guests, North Fulton Business Radio is the longest-running podcast in the North Fulton area, covering business in our community like no one else. We are the undisputed “Voice of Business” in North Fulton!

The show invites a diverse range of business, non-profit, and community leaders to share their significant contributions to their respective markets, communities, and professions. There is no discrimination based on company size, and there is never any “pay to play.” North Fulton Business Radio supports and celebrates businesses by sharing positive stories that traditional media ignore. Some media lean left. Some media lean right. We lean business.

John Ray, host of  North Fulton Business Radio, and Owner, Ray Business Advisors
John Ray, host of North Fulton Business Radio and Owner, Ray Business Advisors

John Ray is the host of North Fulton Business Radio. John and the team at North Fulton Business Radio, LLC, an affiliate of Business RadioX®, produce the show, which is recorded inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta.

The studio is located at 275 South Main Street, Alpharetta, GA 30009.

You can find the entire archive of shows by following this link. The show is accessible on all major podcast apps, such as Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, Amazon, iHeart Radio, and many others.

John Ray, The Generosity MindsetJohn Ray also operates his own business advisory practice. John’s services include advising solopreneurs and small professional services firms on their value, their positioning and business development, and their pricing. His clients are professionals who are selling their expertise, such as consultants, coaches, attorneys, CPAs, accountants, bookkeepers, marketing professionals, and other professional services practitioners.

John is the author of the five-star rated book, The Generosity Mindset: A Journey to Business Success by Raising Your Confidence, Value, and Prices, praised by readers for its practical insights on raising confidence, value, and prices.

Tagged With: AI, AI search, AIO, Artificial Intelligence Optimization, B2B marketing, B2B public relations, Beyond Computer Solutions, brand credibility, business visibility, content strategy, Generative Engine Optimization, GEO, John Ray, Media Relations, North Fulton Business Radio, renasant bank, SowGrow Public Relations, Stephanie Richards, thought leadership

GWBC Radio: McKeeman Communications CEO Kim McKeeman

June 1, 2020 by angishields

McKeeman-Communications
GWBC Radio
GWBC Radio: McKeeman Communications CEO Kim McKeeman
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Kim-McKeeman-CommunicationsKim McKeeman founded McKeeman Communications more than 25 years ago with a single passion: help businesses and non-profits solve problems and succeed. From creating a virtual agency model against the odds in the ’90s, and growing her team members to be true business partners, “there has to be a way” is just the way Kim thinks.

She’s incessantly curious and loves new challenges. Maybe that’s why she works with her leadership team daily to continue to evolve their agency. Yes, daily. “I’m one day smarter than I was yesterday” is her approach to work and life, and she encourages the same with colleagues. Oh, and she’s pretty darn good at PR and communications, including crisis management.

Family life is critically important to Kim, and probably why she’s always referred to “the McKeeman Boys” as her most valued client.

Connect with Kim on LinkedIn and follow McKeeman on Facebook.

Transcript

Intro: [00:00:05] Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios in Atlanta, Georgia, it’s time for GWBC Radio’s Open for Business. Now, here’s your host.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:19] Lee Kantor here. Another episode of GWBC’s Open for Business. And today is going to be a fun one. I have with me today Kim McKeeman, and she’s with McKeeman Communications. Welcome.

Kim McKeeman: [00:00:29] Thanks so much. Happy to be here.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:31] Well, Kim, before we get too far into things, tell us about McKeeman Communications. How are you serving folks?

Kim McKeeman: [00:00:37] Yeah. So, we actually are a public relations and integrated marketing communications agency. And so, when I first started out, and it was a guest bedroom of our starter house, we were really focused on just working with the news media for our clients, community outreach. And over the years, what we’re doing now, our marketing’s really evolved with social media, with messaging, with internal and external communications. So, we’ve kind of almost serve as like a business’s marketing quarterback, kind of calling the plays. but making sure that all of their marketing is kind of working hand in hand.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:13] Now, do you find over the years that marketing, advertising, PR, that communications really is the best word to describe all that? There’s a blurring of the lines of where one begins or one ends now.

Kim McKeeman: [00:01:25] Yeah, you are speaking my language. Yes, no doubt. And just having seen it evolve over the years, extremely blurred. I think communications, actually, is probably the best way to describe it because that involves not only what you’re doing in a paid capacity, and that’s really an area we don’t specialize in but, also, the earned, what you do by like us doing interviews like this. And some of the other ways that you really show up for your customers, so much of communications can be tied back to just so many different realms from social media, to internal communications, to external. So, it’s definitely been a wild ride as it evolves, but it’s been fascinating at the same time.

Lee Kantor: [00:02:15] Now, as part of your work, since you mentioned not kind of leaning into the paid part of the work, how do you manage the expectations of your clients when it comes to earned where there’s some things that are just not out of your control no matter how good the story is or how interesting the client is? How do you kind of help them understand that you just got to keep working at this and this is something that is a long-term kind of investment?

Kim McKeeman: [00:02:42] That’s a million-dollar question, right? So, it is. It’s basically really … what we find so much of what we do as educating our clients into what makes a story. And right now is a great example where like, “Oh, I’ve got this really great promotion going on,” and we’ve got to kind of say, “Hey, that’s not where folks’ heads are at.” And I think part of that, to your question, is we start out with a good relationship with our client. And that’s how we kind of vet our best-fit partners is to make sure folks are open to really the expertise that we bring, and open to being educated and learning about really what makes news. And then, by the same token, knowing that there’s breaking news, all bets are off. Those are, to your point, outside of our control.

Kim McKeeman: [00:03:42] So, I will say we’ve had some really good experiences over the years. And not only ensuring that they’re clear about that going in but really delighting them when we’re able to really hit on a story that folks really want to hear more about and getting our clients to really hone their messaging, so they’re good spokespeople.

Lee Kantor: [00:04:07] Now, how is McKeeman Communications counseling your clients regarding the pandemic in terms of …  Some people are going underground and waiting this out. Some people are saying ,”We’ve still got to let people know we exist.” Other people are like, “Well, that’s not appropriate to really be salesy nowadays.” Some people are like, “Well, I’m going to just be educational.” But then, you get some people who are feeling overloaded with how much COVID-19 information can a human consume. How are you kind of threading the needle here?

Kim McKeeman: [00:04:39] Yeah. And it’s interesting because one of the things that we’ve always told our team, and we’ve got a great team, is we’re our own client. So, we are living through this as well, along with a lot of our clients. Interestingly enough, we specialize in food, restaurant, beverage, retail. So, kind of a little foreshadow on, yes, we’ve taken our hits too. We’ve been working on parallel paths and saying how they need to show up. And by the same token, we’re taking that same medicine, if you will, and saying, “This is how we need to show up.”

Kim McKeeman: [00:05:18] So, it has evolved where my initial counsel to them was now is not the time to sell. And I started thinking about that a little bit more like, “No, actually, people need some of what our clients have.” And I think the key thing that I think is a key takeaway that our customers have said is like they really appreciate it. We say, “You have a unique gift, skill, or ability, or talent, or asset. And in some cases, that’s food. How do we connect that food with the need at hand?” And I think that’s really the biggest thing. And that’s the thing that kind of gets us really excited is figuring out how to connect somebody’s God-given talent, gift or asset with where the need exists right now. And then, use your marketing and your storytelling to support that and to connect those dots.

Lee Kantor: [00:06:14] Now, how was the remote part? Had you already been working with your team in a remote capacity or was this a new transition for you?

Kim McKeeman: [00:06:22] Yes. So, that’s another interesting thing. I keep telling my team like, “We were built for this.” So, when we started our business, gosh this is our 25th anniversary year, but when we started our business 25 years ago, we started as a remote, part-time, work-from-home agency, which was well against the grain at the time, but I had just a wonderful talent pool that I was able to pull of other and primarily working moms or moms that that wanted to balance it. So, we operated remotely, although we would get together. We were all in the same state. We would get together, but we worked remotely with our clients for a good 12 years.

Kim McKeeman: [00:07:07] So, we had been doing this. And then, to this day, even though we have physical offices, we still have a cadence of working from home two days a week. And it’s kind of just based on what I like to do, and I figure it’s something that we can afford to other people. So, it hasn’t been that challenging for folks. It’s actually been kind of fascinating to watch our clients adapt to it and have them realize, “Gee, I don’t need to have Kim and her team in person for us to really connect, and understand, and get the work done.”

Lee Kantor: [00:07:44] Now, any lessons or tips you can give to the new manager and leader that’s dealing with a remote situation? What are some kind of must dos and some don’t dos?

Kim McKeeman: [00:07:56] Yeah, great question because we have a lot of clients that are in that boat right now. And it’s funny, we developed, even with us already being remote in a heartbeat, we developed a business continuity plan that involved really focusing on your people, your customers, and how you want to show up for your community. So, in terms of people and working remotely, I think everybody and their brother has, at least, one in account now. So, as much as we’ve leaned on in-person and conference calls, I think that’s one of the beautiful things that comes out of this is that turn on that camera and get face-to-face, and let’s kiss the conference call goodbye. Right now is a good time to really flex that muscle and be comfortable with showing up on camera.

Kim McKeeman: [00:08:54] And again, internally for your teams, they don’t care that you haven’t had a shower yet. They don’t care. They want to be reassured by seeing you in person. So, I think that’s definitely thing one. Definitely overcommunicate at this point. People need to be reassured. So, when you’re working from home, and you’re not able to be right next to your normal work mates, being able to open. We’ve been leaning heavily on Slack. That’s another communication channel that is a lot more informal, but it also kind of separates things. As much as you can, overcommunicate without inundating.

Kim McKeeman: [00:09:33] And then, lastly would be just encourage open, honest feedback and conversation. That’s something that we do ongoing anyway, but you’ve got to look for where … your folks may be coming across some pain points either working from home or just dealing with everything that’s going on. We do the same thing with our clients. So, we’re doing a very high touch point with them, and look for those pain points where we can, at least, relate, listen and possibly support.

Lee Kantor: [00:10:04] Now, how do you help your team and your clients avoiding some of this burnout that’s beginning to happen where like this new normal is just becoming the normal and that all the days are coming together, it’s hard. Someone said Monday is Memorial Day, what are you doing? And it’s like, every day is Memorial Day, it feels like. It’s hard to tell the weekend’s different.

Kim McKeeman: [00:10:26] Like Groundhog’s Day.

Lee Kantor: [00:10:26] Right. It’s hard to say the weekend’s different than the weekday. It’s like a big blur. How do you prevent that 24/7 kind of mentality to creep in for some folks?

Kim McKeeman: [00:10:37] And that’s such a great point. And I think, for anybody out there who’s a business owner, we all kind of have that type A personality, and we tend to hire some of those type A personalities where we’ve got to actually say, “Okay, folks, it’s time to turn it off, close the computer and step away.” And it’s interesting because when I first put together our continuity plan, and I have a wonderful VP that I’m able to bounce things off of, I was actually going to say, “Okay, we’re good, man. We’re going to mandate that people take time off and it’s just going to be extra time off.” And I went, “Well, I don’t know that I can really do that. I’m not sure that’s really legal.” But what we have done though is it’s funny, we all keep each other accountable. And if we see somebody who is sending emails into the evening or working too early, we will very nicely call them out on that.

Kim McKeeman: [00:11:29] I will tell you one thing that we did recently because I could tell, it was wearing on me, and I could tell it was wearing on our team, we had our normal Monday morning call with our company ops team, and I said, “I need a vacation.” I think everybody else said the same thing. I said, “Why don’t we do this? Why don’t we do a … Guess what? It’s going to be a gift of grace that we give to our entire team on Friday. We’re gonna call it Happy Friday. And we’re all taking it off.” And I think that just gave everybody kind of like this nice big breath, granted folks still to check their emails. But I think sometimes, you have to set that tone and say, “It’s okay. We all are feeling the burn and churn the world. And it’s okay. And we have to kind of like say, “It’s time to step away and take a break.”

Lee Kantor: [00:12:21] Right. And being the leader, and giving them permission, and then letting them know that you’re doing it, it kind of gives it that okay. Like it really is okay. It’s not like just people saying it’s okay.

Kim McKeeman: [00:12:33] Right. I’m not just talking about this. We’re actually doing it, people.

Lee Kantor: [00:12:37] Right. So, now, tell me about GWBC. How did you find out about them? And why was it important for you to get involved?

Kim McKeeman: [00:12:46] Yeah. So, this is great. Again, having been in business for a while, we did go for our certification, the women-owned business certification. And that was a fabulous process that we went through, having folks come actually to our location, and then just learning about all the benefits. And for any of the business owners out there that feel like they are really just having to learn so much about everything on the fly, it’s really important to use your resources. And that’s what we’ve really seen with – sorry – GWBC. It’s just the proactive information that’s been shared. And whether it’s just networking with some of the other businesses, whether it’s having to to navigate this PPP thing, I have learned more about tax law and finance than I have ever learned. And much of that is due to the information that you all have been providing. So, I just think it, again, have really been of a wealth of information and would encourage folks to seek that out. Even if you are members, and you’re not using the resources, definitely do that. You will cut a lot of time out of your daily schedule. And again, it’s always about maximizing your resources, and this is a really good one.

Lee Kantor: [00:14:19] Now, getting back to McKeeman Communications, what’s your recommendation for your clients now? Is there some people that are kind of just saying, “I just want to survive this” and there’s other people who are saying, “Hey, there’s opportunity here to grow”? Like, how are you kind of helping each of your clients kind of get the most out of the situation?

Kim McKeeman: [00:14:39] Yeah. And that’s great. And of course, I’m going to use that. I think there’s probably 15 dreaded words right now that we just keep hearing over and over and one of those is pivot. And I, at one time, said I don’t want to hear that word again. I said I should embrace it. It’s what we’re doing. And so, basically, it’s been interesting. And I guess I’m in business because I find so much of like what you do in times of uncertainty fascinating. And so, we’re encouraging that just like we are for ourselves. We’re leaning in and doing things a little bit differently, but we’re also being very mindful of if you are an industry that largely has been selling hamburgers and you’re a quick-service restaurant, it’s not time to get into full service. Like some pivots just don’t make sense. But really making sure that any of the changes that they’re doing are fulfilling those needs. It kind of goes back to taking the gifts that you have, the assets, your God-given talents, and making sure they fulfill a need.

Kim McKeeman: [00:15:47] So, we have a restaurant company or a restaurant independently-owned business that’s headquartered in Charlotte, and they’ve got 30 locations. And I love to this. They started doing grocery essentials because, let’s face it, who knows why, but toilet paper is like gold now, and some of the other things that you just can’t find. And they started doing a grocery essentials program. And it really was a godsend for a lot of folks in the greater Charlotte area.

Kim McKeeman: [00:16:19] McKeeman Communications has another client that has been doing water and mold remediation. Don’t be jealous people. I know,  it’s a very interesting, different client for us, but water and mold remediation, but they are set up as an essential business because they’re used to treating biohazardous situations. So, now, they’re offering a deep cleaning, sanitizing opportunity that basically was to use the same solutions and chemicals, same EPA-approved processes that was used in treating places that had experienced SARS. So, we’ve seen some really fascinating ones, but I would say the one thing, again, just to kind of go back to that one message, which is make sure whatever they’re doing in marketing fulfills a critical human or essential need right now that people are really hungry for.

Lee Kantor: [00:17:20] And if it aligns with your superpower, all the better.

Kim McKeeman: [00:17:24] Exactly. Exactly. That’s a win all the way around.

Lee Kantor: [00:17:28] So, if somebody wanted to learn more about McKeeman Communications and get on your radar, is there a website?

Kim McKeeman: [00:17:35] Yes, indeed. We are mckemancommunications.com. And the other thing, obviously, you can find us on any of the social channels. @McKeemanComm on Instagram. And interestingly enough, we’re doing … this is obviously one of our changes that we’ve been doing. We started doing an Instagram live after lunch every week, which is brand spanking new for us, and we’ve had to really lean into it, but any of our social channels. You Google McKeeman Communications, we will pop up.

Lee Kantor: [00:18:12] Good stuff. Well, Kim, thank you so much for sharing your story. And that’s McKeeman, M-C-K-E-E-M-A-N Communications dot com.

Kim McKeeman: [00:18:22] Correct, yes. Yeah, thanks so much and appreciate the opportunity to kinda share our experiences, and definitely have loved hearing about the other ones as well that you guys have been sharing.

Lee Kantor: [00:18:33] All right. This is Lee Kantor. We’ll see you all next time on GWBC Open for Business.

About Your Host

Roz-Lewis-GWBCRoz Lewis is President & CEO – Greater Women’s Business Council (GWBC®), a regional partner organization of the Women’s Business Enterprise National Council (WBENC) and a member of the WBENC Board of Directors.

Previous career roles at Delta Air Lines included Flight Attendant, In-Flight Supervisor and Program Manager, Corporate Supplier Diversity.

During her career she has received numerous awards and accolades. Most notable: Atlanta Business Chronicle’s 2018 Diversity & Inclusion award; 2017 inducted into the WBE Hall of Fame by the American Institute of Diversity and Commerce and 2010 – Women Out Front Award from Georgia Tech University.

She has written and been featured in articles on GWBC® and supplier diversity for Forbes Magazine SE, Minority Business Enterprise, The Atlanta Tribune, WE- USA, Minorities and Women in Business magazines. Her quotes are published in The Girls Guide to Building a Million Dollar Business book by Susan Wilson Solovic and Guide Coaching by Ellen M. Dotts, Monique A. Honaman and Stacy L. Sollenberger. Recently, she appeared on Atlanta Business Chronicle’s BIZ on 11Alive, WXIA to talk about the importance of mentoring for women.

In 2010, Lewis was invited to the White House for Council on Women and Girls Entrepreneur Conference for the announcement of the Small Business Administration (SBA) new Women Owned Small Business Rule approved by Congress. In 2014, she was invited to the White House to participate in sessions on small business priorities and the Affordable Care Act.

Roz Lewis received her BS degree from Florida International University, Miami, FL and has the following training/certifications: Certified Purchasing Managers (CPM); Certified Professional in Supplier Diversity (CPSD), Institute for Supply Management (ISM)of Supplier Diversity and Procurement: Diversity Leadership Academy of Atlanta (DLAA), Negotiations, Supply Management Strategies and Analytical Purchasing.

Connect with Roz on LinkedIn.

About GWBC

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

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

 

 

Tagged With: hospitality, Media Relations, PR, restaurants, Social Media

Telling Your Story in a Pandemic, with Mark Hayes, Mark Hayes Consulting

May 5, 2020 by John Ray

telling your story in a pandemic
North Fulton Business Radio
Telling Your Story in a Pandemic, with Mark Hayes, Mark Hayes Consulting
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telling your story in a pandemic
Mark Hayes, Mark Hayes Consulting

Telling Your Story in a Pandemic, with Mark Hayes, Mark Hayes Consulting (“North Fulton Business Radio,” Episode 228)

How do you go about telling your story in a pandemic if you’re a business owner? Former journalist Mark Hayes of Mark Hayes Consulting joins host John Ray to discuss this question and much more. “North Fulton Business Radio” is produced virtually by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® in Alpharetta.

Mark Hayes, Mark Hayes Consulting

Mark Hayes is the President and CEO of Mark Hayes Consulting. The firm’s mission is to help everyone from CEOs to small business owners make the most of their opportunity for media exposure. Providing media training and placement consulting, Mark’s firm helps businesses and brands find media placements and create content to build and enhance their brand. The firm also provides media training and communication skills workshops and seminars. Mark is a Certified Jack Canfield Trainer.

Mark is scheduled to appear on the TEDx stage in Woodstock in November.

Mark Hayes has spent nearly three decades bringing news viewers in major cities across the country their news and information of the day.  Some of his stops include major markets like Dallas, Denver, Detroit and Baltimore.  His proudest accomplishments, however, came during his tenure in the great city of Atlanta, GA.  For more than a decade, Mark was a staple of early morning television on Good Day Atlanta on Fox 5 Atlanta.  He believes his most noteworthy achievement, was the nearly 20 hours he spent on air during the Fulton County Courthouse shootings and the subsequent capture of Brian Nichols. He has been recognized nationally with two Emmy nominations and recognition for spot news coverage from the National Press Photographers Association.

For more information, go to https://markhayesconsulting.com/ or call Mark directly at 678-829-4632.

Questions and Topics in this Interview:

  • Mark’s background in journalism and how he works with business owners
  • community impact
  • credibility and reputation in story-telling
  • social media management
  • branding and personal branding
  • media relations
  • digital media

North Fulton Business Radio” is produced virtually from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® in Alpharetta. You can find the full archive of shows by following this link. The show is available on all the major podcast apps, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, iHeart Radio, Stitcher, TuneIn, and others.

Renasant Bank has humble roots, starting in 1904 as a $100,000 bank in a Lee County, Mississippi, bakery. Since then, Renasant has grown to become one of the Southeast’s strongest financial institutions with over $13 billion in assets and more than 190 banking, lending, wealth management and financial services offices in Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee, Georgia and Florida. All of Renasant’s success stems from each of their banker’s commitment to investing in their communities as a way of better understanding the people they serve. At Renasant Bank, they understand you because they work and live alongside you every day.

 

Tagged With: Branding, credibility, digital media, John Ray, Mark Hayes, Mark Hayes Consulting, Media Relations, North Fulton Business Radio, pandemic, personal branding, reputation, Social Media, social media management, story-telling, TEDx

SowGrow Public Relations and Dimensional Solutions Managed IT Services

August 12, 2014 by angishields

Midtown Business Radio
Midtown Business Radio
SowGrow Public Relations and Dimensional Solutions Managed IT Services
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Talking Public Relations with Stephanie Richards, MA, of SowGrow Public Relations and Managed IT Services with Mike Remy, CEO of Dimensional Solutions Managed IT

PR services IT services
Mike Remy of Dimensional Solutions Managed IT Svcs and Stephanie Richards of SowGrow Public Relations

This week we’ll learn how a good PR expert can help a company get exposure in local and national media outlets that helps expand their brand’s reach and recognition.  Stephanie Richards founded SowGrowPR in 2006 and focuses on B2B businesses in need of getting their stories told.  She has successfully obtained media coverage for numerous clients across a wide range of media outlets including Inc.com, Sold, and Selling Power, numerous speaking engagements at industry trade shows, and more.

Mike Remy, CEO of Dimensional Solutions Managed IT explains their ala cart menu of service options available to their clients.  This lets the customer choose only the elements of outsourcing they need to achieve the highest level of IT reliability, troubleshooting, help desk services, security assessments, and more.  By providing an in-depth free consultation with their client they are able to identify problem areas and help their client company reduce fixed costs, helping to prevent downtime or catastrophic data loss.  They give the small to medium company the ability to have large company IT performance without an onsite IT department.

Special Guests:

Stephanie Richards, MA, CEO/Founder of SowGrow Public Relations  Linkedin  Twitter 16x16  google-plus-logo-red-265px

  • Over a decade of experience in Public Relations
  • Author of numerous published articles on the topic
  • Numerous accolades from clients and media representatives for her quality of work

Mike Remy, VP, Enterprise Solutions of Dimensional Solutions Managed IT Services  Facebook  Linkedin  Twitter 16x16

  • Over 20 years of experience in enterprise/IT solutions
  • Self-funded, launched and ran his first IT company for 12 years before selling the business
  • Accomplished pilot and photographer

 

Tagged With: CW Hall, Data Management, Earned Media, IT, IT consulting, it services, IT Solutions, Managed IT, Managed Services Provider, media, Media Relations, Michael Remy, Mike Remy, MSP, networking, New Media, outsourced it, PR, Public Relations, Stephanie Richards

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