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BRX Pro Tip: Profit First

August 19, 2025 by angishields

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BRX Pro Tips
BRX Pro Tip: Profit First
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BRX Pro Tip: Profit First

Stone Payton: Welcome back to Business RadioX Pro Tips. Stone Payton and Lee Kantor here with you. Lee, today’s topic, profit first.

Lee Kantor: Yeah. We’re big believers in the profit first philosophy. We’ve been doing it in our business for a long time. And I think it’s important to periodically go through what that means, and why it works, and why it works for us.

Lee Kantor: So, typically, a business, historically, I guess, they’ve run where they’re saying sales minus expenses is profit. Which means that anything left over is your profit. And that’s how most businesses operate and they’ve operated for a long time that way.

Lee Kantor: In our model or in the profit first model, we use the same kind of variables, but we just adjust the order of things. So, in our world, we prioritize paying ourselves first. So, it’s about anything left is the expenses. So then, you cut the expenses before you stop paying yourself, in other words. So, in our world we are taking profit first before expenses. And anything left over are the expenses.

Lee Kantor: So, we do the adjustment on the expenses side, not the profit side. So, once you’ve determined what the profit percentage you want to have in your business, now you just adjust your expenses so that that profit is there for you when you need it each month.

Lee Kantor: So, I think that by doing that in our business, at least I can speak for us, is that, we’re in business a lot longer and with a lot less stress because we know that there’s the amount of money coming in that we want to come in each month. So, I think it’s something for a lot of entrepreneurs to consider profit first, go by the book, check out the website, and learn how to implement it in your business.

The Mosquito Shield Playbook: Strategies for Growing a Thriving Franchise

August 18, 2025 by angishields

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The Mosquito Shield Playbook: Strategies for Growing a Thriving Franchise
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In this episode of Franchise Marketing Radio, Lee Kantor talks with Brad Sutliffe, franchise owner of Mosquito Shield of Southern Delaware. Brad shares his transition from a 20-year insurance career to entrepreneurship, detailing how he and his wife researched franchising and chose Mosquito Shield for its recurring revenue, seasonality, and growth potential. He discusses building brand awareness, scaling operations, and leveraging franchise support, as well as expanding into additional franchises. Brad highlights the rewards and challenges of business ownership, the importance of community engagement, and involving his family in the business, offering practical insights for aspiring franchisees.

Mosquito-Shield

Brad SutliffeBrad Sutliffe is from Lewes, DE, where he lives with his wife and business partner, Kristi as well as their three children – Nate, Emme and William.

He has spent over 20 years in the corporate insurance world. Over the past 4 years he has become an entrepreneur in the franchise world owning local territories for Mosquito Shield, DonutNV and Frios Pops.

Follow Mosquito Shield on LinkedIn and Facebook.

Episode Highlights

  • Transition from a long career in commercial insurance to franchising.
  • Reasons for choosing franchising over independent business or continuing in insurance.
  • The process of selecting a franchise with the help of a consultant.
  • Operational aspects of running Mosquito Shield, including initial roles and responsibilities.
  • Benefits of the franchise model, including support, training, and infrastructure.
  • Marketing strategies and customer acquisition methods, including SEO and community engagement.
  • Importance of understanding the seasonality of the business and planning accordingly.
  • Balancing multiple franchise businesses and managing growth effectively.
  • Personal commitment and hard work required for franchise success.
  • Involvement of family in the business and the personal rewards of entrepreneurship.

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: Coming to you live from the Business RadioX studio. It’s Franchise Marketing Radio.

Lee Kantor: Lee Kantor here. Another episode of Franchise Marketing Radio and this is going to be a good one. Today on the show we have Brad Sutliffe. He is a franchisee with Mosquito Shield of Southern Delaware. Welcome.

Brad Sutliffe: Thanks for having me. Great to be here.

Lee Kantor: Well, I’m so excited to learn what you’re up to. For folks who aren’t familiar. Tell us a little bit about Mosquito Shield.

Brad Sutliffe: Yeah. So Mosquito Shield is a residential mosquito control company. So primarily, you know, when I don’t know your age, Lee, but when I grow up. Right? Certainly, people. This wasn’t an industry that was around, right? I always joke your parents sent you outside, you got bit, or you sprayed the off, and you put the lotion on and you went about your day, you know. So this is an industry that’s really taken off, I would say, in the last 15 or 20 years, 95% of what we do is residential mosquito control, and the whole goal is really to just allow people to enjoy their their out their lawn and their outdoor space for the season.

Lee Kantor: So now let’s talk about kind of your journey into franchising. What were you doing prior to franchising?

Brad Sutliffe: Yeah. So historically, I’ve always been in the commercial insurance business close to 20 years. The funny story on that is, you know, I worked for one of the top 3 or 4 insurance agencies in the company or in the world. Excuse me. And, you know, my wife had been a stay at home mom for close to ten years. We have three kids that are now 15, 12 and nine. As she said, once our youngest was starting to get into the school world, I think I’m ready to start to talk to adults. Right. And then that conversation kind of led to we were being truly honest with ourselves. Lee, in terms of, you know, if we put everything on the board, you’re kind of starting over in a profession. Do you know what you want to get to? She wasn’t sure at that point. We said, hey, you know, honestly, the salary that you’re probably going to make, you were probably going to make this much money, you know, but now you’re going to have two weeks vacation. We’re going to have to put kids maybe into daycare or summer camps. And when you really looked at that on paper and we were kind of like, you know, man, this may be causing more problems than it’s worth. Not that we didn’t want to do it, but, you know, again, just throwing everything.

Brad Sutliffe: I’m kind of a planner. She’s more of a free goer by nature. And then we kind of said, well, hey, we’re in her early 40s. Let’s start a business. That should be fun, right? You know, we’ve never thought of doing that again. I was always a traditional W-2 employee for close to 20 years. And then the next conversation is certainly like, okay, well, what business are we going to start? You know, we didn’t have anything that we organically built or some creative marketing idea or anything like that. And that casually led. I knew nothing about the franchise world, and I think if there’s anything I can encourage people to do, it’s, you know, just learn and take 30 minutes to educate yourself about franchise. I always use the term I always thought the franchise world was, you know, the chick fil A models of the world, right? But you needed $2 million of cash. You needed a lot of liquid liquidity to be able to put down in a transition to that. I had no idea the plethora of business available out there in the market. And, you know, those newer businesses that are on the forefront, hopefully, of kind of breaking through and being household names, so to speak.

Brad Sutliffe: So we ended up just doing a little bit of research. We met with a consultant, educated us, as I said, hey, this could go a 30 minute conversation or we could have further conversations into this. But you know, you know, the beauty of franchising, if you can find the right brand, it’s that really it’s diving into that turnkey process. Right? So my wife and I, we did not want to, you know, pick a color for our brand. We did not want to pick a logo. We wanted something that was super turnkey, um, and ready to go. Right. Because I’ve always been a salesman by nature. So I said, hey, if we can find a good product and something that we both love and can kind of get into. Um, you know, finding that key with the franchising space is, is, was was awesome. And we kind of hit a home run. Um, moving forward with that. I do joke, though, and that could probably lead you in a further conversation. What about mosquito shield? You know, I always laugh with people. I said four years ago, if you had told me I was in a residential mosquito control industry, I would have said, what are you talking about on that end?

Lee Kantor: Now, why did you choose franchising when you were in insurance? A lot of folks just would have organically just said, oh, I’m going to just open my own insurance office up. I got my wife here. We’ll make flexible hours. I’m already know everything about the ins and outs of this. How come you didn’t take that path?

Brad Sutliffe: Yeah. So I have gone a little bit out in that route and kind of now that I’ve gotten into the entrepreneurial stage, as I say in my life, I have gone out of my own. So I do dabble a little bit in that with a small handful of clients. In all honesty, if I’m being completely honest and I think a lot of people at my age Kind of go through the same kind of concepts, right? You’ve been in the same industry. You do pretty well. Start doing pretty well financially. You start to have kids. As somebody explained to me, then you add the more valves on, right? So the more payments of, you know, starting to save for college, bigger mortgage, uh, second car, all the additional kids expenses and you kind of sit there saying, I’m making probably too much money to kind of step away or to start something completely new because I can’t go from, you know, a six figure income to $25,000 because I want to be a baker. Um, and I and frankly, I was very good at my job, and I still think I am, but, um, you know, you get bored over the years of constantly ringing the bell, um, doing the same thing over and over.

Brad Sutliffe: So my wife would probably tell you if she was on this call, you know, over the 4 or 5 years before this, she could tell I was kind of bored. I was still good, still very productive in my job. But, you know, I’d kind of come to her saying, man, I’d love, you know, to do something else. And and again, financially, that’s always the tough conversation. But if there’s one thing I’ve always learned for that and will certainly preach my kids, it’s, you know, I think everyone should have a side hustle, business, side hustle, passion, something that they can. You know, again, if you got to have the, the, the W-2 salary, the benefits for a period of time, but try to find something that you can build on your own. The rewarding and gratifying gratification of that. What I didn’t want to do is to be 70 years old, stay in insurance at a W2 job for 4050 years, and then say, hey man, I never took a shot or a risk. And I you finally got to a point where you said, what is the worst thing that happens if the worst thing that happens is we hate the business and we want to sell it, or we don’t do well in it, and we’ve lost a little bit of money.

Brad Sutliffe: Hey, at the end of the day, we can at least look at each other and we always felt, hey, we can go out and get a job if we needed to down the line. But, you know, we were in a position and now I kicked myself for just saying I should have started this process ten years ago. And again, that’s where it gets back to, you know, a lot of people that I talk to. Or younger professionals, I’m always in their ear just saying, hey, you got anything on the side that you want to start to build? You know, especially before you start to have kids and the responsibilities and the other stuff. Because again, I always look at to these people, if the worst thing that happens is that side hustle is so, um, it takes off right, and becomes so successful that you now have to make a decision, oh my gosh, I can’t stay in my W2 because my time involved and my side hustle, um, is taking off and I need to devote more energy to that. And I always look at people and say, that is a great problem to have. And I think you’d agree.

Lee Kantor: Now when you were going through the okay, so now you’re getting a little burnt out in insurance, you’re kind of curious about franchising. Uh, you talk to, I would assume, a franchise broker or some consultant of some sort, and they show you a variety. Um, they probably make you do some sort of an assessment to see what you like. Don’t like things like that, and you kind of narrow it down. Were you going all in where you’re like, okay, here’s my two weeks notice and now I’m doing this thing? Or did you kind of ease into it, like you were saying, as a side hustle and then kind of work your way? And then when it was kind of financially stable, then you kind of pulled the ripcord.

Brad Sutliffe: Yeah, definitely. It was, uh, because again, I’ve been in sales, I’ve always been able to set my own schedule, make my own, um, on my end. Um, this was going to be 100% for a job for my wife in terms of, you know, especially in the business, she was going to be investing whatever the 40 hours of the week, so to speak. Um, I was going to be behind the scenes, obviously still looking to do my W-2 job. Um, as, as long as we possibly were able to do that, obviously fill in nights, weekends or as needed. Um, but she was totally invested from the start to be able to build, um, to devote that, you know, that 40 hours of, of time on that end and like you said, yes, we did use a consultant, um, one to just be truly educated on what is franchising, what is? When people talk about the franchise disclosure documents, the F9 team, all that kind of important stuff that again, as a newbie, you don’t know anything about. Um, and having that, um, using that consultant to obviously represent brands. Right. So again, we evaluated probably 12 to 15 brands. Um, we did a fun exercise where again, a lot of it does come down to financially, how much are you able or willing to kind of invest. Right. Uh, do you have any, uh, certain industries that you’re maybe kind of more passionate? So are you more artistic or are you more business, or are you more sales? Um, and so we did a fun exercise where I took we took all the information home. I picked my top three. Kristy, my wife picked her top three, and then our consultant picked what their top three was. Um, and on that end, it was funny because, uh, mosquito shield, both ranked in our top three. So, uh, we actually locked in on that pretty quickly to the point where I said, you know, are we going through this process too fast? Because, you know, it just seemed like it was checking so many boxes for each of us.

Lee Kantor: So what about mosquito shield was so attractive to all of the parties involved here? Was it, um, is it a hands on? I’m not that. I know I’m kind of seeing the brand, but I don’t know what the actual how you deliver the service. Um, what what part attracted you to it?

Brad Sutliffe: Yeah. So a couple things that were definitely for us were, uh, home runs. Um, so the seasonality business of it. So our season typically goes from, uh, April through October. So obviously you’re doing, um, planning throughout the winter months and developing your marketing budgets. So it’s not like there’s nothing to do but the true service or deliverables of having technicians, um, provide the services, uh, April through October. Um, so again, a seasonality business, we were kind of really excited to say, hey, 15, ten years from now, you know, we could be able to set this up where if we want to go to Florida or somewhere for 4 to 6 weeks a year, it’s okay to do it because we we have that business, um, on it, I my mentality in the insurance world. Um, I was a commissioned employee, so I was used to the guaranteed renewal ability. So I love the recurring revenue stream. Right? So I looked at us to say, okay, if we got 50 clients our first year, we can get a 150 year two. I understood the math that, hey, at the end of the day, if you’re putting on more clients than you’re losing every year and you’re delivering strong customer service, then at the end of the day, that that recurring revenue stream hits every single year. And, you know, you can kind of scale up and build this up as you possibly could. And then I did we did a little bit of market analysis. So we said, hey, where we live. And I know you don’t necessarily know our area in Delaware, but we were we’re about two hours from Philly, two hours from Baltimore and two hours from DC.

Brad Sutliffe: Um, it was right around post-Covid. Um, and we saw a mass exodus of folks from the cities move out to where we are in the coastal beaches of Delaware. So we saw mass construction, um, uh, boom, out here. We saw very limited competition in terms of we do have one residential mosquito control company out here. Um, and but a couple other pest control companies that we thought, hey, opportunity to be able to grow this. There wasn’t a ton of competition. So those are probably the three main drivers, um, that I would say when we really looked at it, we were like, yeah, we think we have some really good potential in this. And then certainly again, financially it was a fairly lower started compared to some of these franchises. On the end, you could base the business starting out of your house, right? So at the end of the day, you needed one truck, right? Uh, you didn’t need a huge space or a big, uh, rent to be able to pay in a, in a commercial space. So, um, as you go through this, you can scale it up. The goal is to get to that level where we need 4 or 5, six trucks. We need a bigger commercial space. Uh, but you could, you know, in your first year or two basis out of your home, um, and control some of those startup costs, um, that obviously come into play.

Lee Kantor: So now when you’re delivering the services is something that you and your wife had to be the deliverer of the service as well, or is this something you immediately hire somebody to do?

Brad Sutliffe: Yeah. So that that’s everybody’s different. Right. So it comes down to, um, um, you know, how you, how you kind of structured and build it out. So for us, year one, uh, I ended up doing the tech work. So I went out about two days a week, one week and three days the next week. So I tell people, uh, we finished our first season with 75 clients on the books. So I went out spring two days, one week, and three days the next week. So it was two, three, two, three kind of the schedule for the season. And again, I had the flexibility through through my work as a commissioned sales person to be able to do that. My wife handled all of the, uh, sales calls. Um, we do have access to a call center. They do a solid job, but we felt, hey, at the end of the day, nobody knows the area better than us. She was active in the PTO. Um, we were just. Her close rate we just saw was through the roof in terms of just being able to talk about the service, because, again, so many people weren’t aware of the service, um, that we provide.

Brad Sutliffe: Um, and then as we’ve grown out, you know, like this year, I have sprayed maybe under five times. Um, we now have a full time general manager who is a year round employee. We have a second full time technician. We have two vehicles. So again, back to my previous point about scaling this thing up. Um, you’ve got the ability. Uh, my goal this year was to start to work on the business and not in the business, so to speak. Um, so I want to do more of the high level stuff. So obviously the marketing, the budget planning, the the infrastructure, how do we build this up? Some of the training to get my GM to the level, um, you know, to be the lead technician to take, uh, some of the training aspects, some of the day to day stuff. Um, and leading all the tech work. But that’s how we’ve kind of grown and expanded, you know, over those first two years.

Lee Kantor: Now, is is the selling happen? Um, because they inquire from an ad or some marketing, and then your wife has to kind of explain it and close them. Is that the is that the marketing kind of flywheel or funnel you’re using?

Brad Sutliffe: Yeah. The biggest thing I would tell people in franchising is, is just getting your name out there. So, uh, again, SEO search engine optimization is great, right? Everyone runs to Google, but you also have to get out there. You gotta wee wee wee pound signs out the door. Uh, the biggest thing you have to do is to educate people on who, frankly, who is mosquito shield. And then what do you do? And then how do you differentiate yourself in the marketplace? Um, you know, when you’re, when you’re going against your competitors. So, yeah, our first year was to just brand ourselves and get people to understand that we’re one we’re out here and then to educate people on, on, on, uh, you know, what service that we can provide them. So that can include putting out 4 to 500 signs in our territory that will include going to home shows, um, and just educating people. But yeah. Typically a lead comes in. My wife would be reaching out to them pretty quickly. Same day, if not within 24 hours at the latest. Just giving them the education of how to how what is mosquito services? How does it work? Our biggest differentiator with mosquito shield is that we come out at a 14 day cadence. Industry standard is typically coming out closer to 21 days. So we’re never going to typically be the cheapest on the piece of paper. But we’re typically coming out about 50% more often over the course of the season. So competitors typically come out, you know, 7 to 8 times. And we’re more in the 12 to 13 because we just looked at the data as a company. Um, and uh, mosquitoes really start to start activity around day 14 to 21. And we just said, hey, we’ve got backpacks that are efficient, our routings efficient. Um, and we want to really start to come out and give a truly better experience by coming out more often, more regularly than competitors.

Lee Kantor: And when you deliver the service, you don’t need the resident to be there, right? Like, you can just walk around the yard front and back and then knock it out. Or do you need the the the homeowner to be there?

Brad Sutliffe: Yeah. The we try to say you almost kind of set it and forget it. Right. So we have a very great system in terms of we send out a text message the night before that says your scheduled service is scheduled for tomorrow. So again, that gives the client to some heads up of, hey, I’ve got a construction guy in the morning. Is there any way to move it? Or, you know, we have had situations where they said, hey, tomorrow really isn’t going to work for me because I’ve got, um, we’re we’re building a deck in our back. Is there any way to move it? So we try to give them the feedback of, hey, if you if you know, we can’t be there, um, then please let us know. We also send messages out about 15 minutes before they come. We typically want to meet the person on our first service just to say, hey, let’s walk the property together, right? If there’s any areas that you want to point out to us, let’s walk the property line. Because a very important thing, obviously in our business is, you know, adhering to our state regulations on, you know, adhering especially to property lines, right? So we can’t spray into the neighbor’s yard.

Brad Sutliffe: And, uh, but again, getting that feedback from the, uh, from the client of, hey, they’re really starting to come from under my deck that I’ve noticed, or in my back left corner so we can make the proper notes. But after that, you know, we we certainly have clients where we haven’t seen again, you know, so it’s it’s more of we can come out. You don’t have to be there if you’re there. Great. Uh, but if not, it’s no, no big deal. And then the beauty of our services, we tell people, you know, once we leave the truck, our average stop is about ten minutes on a property, you know, let it dry for about 15 to 20 minutes and that’s it. You can come right back out and start to enjoy your property. So that includes kids, animals on the property. Um, it’s a very quick process because if you know, Lee, if you’ve ever done, you know, yard work or they’ve sprayed your lawn, right, and they put the sign up and you got to stay off the lawn for 24 hours, our process is a lot faster, and it allows employees to come out a lot quicker on their property and enjoy it.

Lee Kantor: So how did Corporate Mosquito Shield do in terms of training you, or kind of managing your expectations of what to expect? You know, when it is your business now and and it’s no longer, you know, something that you hope will happen. It’s happening and you’re on a clock as soon as that check clears, right? Uh, you gotta you got to get clients now and it’s on you. So how did they do in terms of setting you up for success?

Brad Sutliffe: Yeah, that’s a great question. And that’s I think some people, you know, need to understand. Hey, at the end of the day, it is your business, right. The franchise is there to support, provide the feedback, help you build this. But hey, at the end of the day, some people I think, think, you know, the franchise is directly supposed to send them leads. It’s a turnkey. I always tell people, hey, at the end of the day, if you’re not willing to put the blood, sweat and tears into build your business, um, you know, at the end of the day, that success does fall on the business owner. So sometimes, you know, you hear the term semi absenteeism, um, which consultants try to use. And I kind of hate that term in terms of at the end of the day, if you could work a business that you’re just starting out 5 to 10 hours a week, b semi absenteeism, everyone in America would own this type of business or getting the franchise right. So can you get there? Absolutely. I think if you build it right, you build the team. Um, you can get to that level if you want to as an owner, um, to be able to say, hey, I put in the five years to ten years to kind of build this out. I’ve got a great team. I can take a step back and allow my, my employees to kind of lead this charge. I’m there for support and training purposes. But those first couple of years, you got to be putting in the work to to kind of build that out on the corporate side.

Brad Sutliffe: Right. Um, because our business is seasonal, seasonally, uh, we signed papers in January, and my wife and I both looked at ourselves and said, you know, hey, I’m on around April 1st. Really? People start to really, you know, lock in and say, okay, the weather’s turning, I got to buy this. And we just said, hey, we’ve got a, uh, you know, uh, depending on the corporation, they may say, hey, it’s a 30 day training, a 60 day, 90 day. We said, we are going to try to onboard this and get this done as fast as we can, because basically we want it to be ready to go for April 1st. So second, we sign those papers. Uh, we started to have an onboarding portal of all the training that the corporate was able to provide to us and, you know, marketing 101. Right. Some people don’t have any idea about how to set a marketing budget. I certainly didn’t I didn’t know anything about starting a small business. Um, how do we differentiate ourselves? How is if Brad, you’re going to be the technician, here’s videos and here’s tech training. So I actually flew out to, uh, North Carolina for two days and did basic tech training with people across the country because I never put on a backpack, I didn’t know how to properly spray. And just in the 2 to 3 days, you get so much better with just getting a couple sprays under your belt and how to operate the backpack.

Brad Sutliffe: So yeah, any good franchise? You know, again, as the owner, you know, they may not be proactively reaching out saying, hey, do this, do that. Um, but any good franchise is going to have that infrastructure where the support that you need, you can take as much of it or as little of it. Um, so I looked at myself and said, hey, I’m pretty good in these areas, but I definitely don’t know anything about, you know, marketing how to properly build a marketing budget for mosquito residential mosquito control in year one. So I leaned heavily on the marketing team at corporate for the first year. Um, and then on the tech side, uh, for the first year, and then again, as you get a certain couple years in the business, you know, maybe I’m not leaning them as much, but you’re still having your monthly calls to hear, you know, what’s corporate doing, how how the numbers look on an industry. We also have local what they call f a c meeting financial hour, uh, uh, where we meet regionally, uh, once a month to talk about what’s going on, successes, Is, uh, what’s working maybe marketing wise, that people, um, have spent dollars on that are leading to sales, all that kind of stuff. Where, uh, again, you as a owner, you got to be willing to attend, put the put the meetings on your calendar and attend them. Uh, because the more you get out of it, the more you can get to that level to build the business up as fast as possible.

Brad Sutliffe: Because at the end of the day, you know, we’re all in business to hopefully build this out in the, to make money. Um, and it’s, it’s how quickly can can you, can you, can you get to that level where um, you as a business owner can say, hey, I know for us, Christy and I, we reinvested all of the money for the first couple years into marketing because we said, hey, our goal is how quickly can we build this up to 3 to 400, uh, clients? Um, so then we can, as the owner, start to take, you know, a decent salary, right? And then the goal is, okay, if it took us 3 to 4 years to get to 400, right. How do we get that to 800? Is now what we’re starting to think? Can we cut that time in half. So our goal is, hey, if it took us now four years. Or give or take four years to get to 350 to 400. Can we cut that time in half to get to 800? And that’s where you really can start to see the business kind of take off. And and the good thing is, you know, you can see that light at the end of that tunnel and then that growth trajectory, um, again, assuming you’re doing the right things and putting the work in to kind of build it up.

Lee Kantor: Now as part of your, uh, entrepreneurial evolution, you purchased two other franchises. What was kind of the thinking behind that and of doing that rather than kind of doubling down on, hey, let me just get more mosquito shield territories.

Brad Sutliffe: Yeah. It was kind of, um, interesting. Right? So some people would say, you’re crazy, right? I’m sure my mother probably looked at saying, well, you’re adding more different franchise and different businesses. Um, on the mosquito shield side, basically, in Delaware, we were a small state. We are a small state. Um, so we had, uh, our what we call northern Delaware was already acquired and purchased. So when we did the initial acquisition, we did purchase three territories and we wrapped up the rest of the state. Um, the reason we didn’t expand into other states, uh, was really, um, because that does open it up to more state licensing, more state tests. Um, and we thought we had the opportunity to just kind of build out our three territories as big as we possibly want. Right. So a lot of conversations people have is can I start with one territory? Do I need to buy two? Three. Expand it. I always tell people, hey, at the end of the day, you know, um, you can start with just one. If financially you’re just more on the conservative side to say, I just need to see how this goes. Um, and then you can obviously expand. You know, obviously the faster you do the acquisition, you’re just limiting, you know, people coming in from maybe acquiring those certain territories. Um, but then as we grew and looked at this, we just said we thought we had some other opportunities with some other businesses. Um, and, uh, And that led us to the line of, uh, you know, expanding kind of our portfolio, I guess, in entrepreneurship.

Brad Sutliffe: So, um, you know, over the last couple of years, we’ve also acquired donut envy of southern Delaware. So we do hot, fresh mini donuts, uh, uh, fresh squeezed lemonade. Um, and then we also added, uh, frijoles pops. So it’s gourmet popsicles. Um, so to give you some perspective on that, you know, the donuts is a year round business. Obviously, certain months in certain, uh, weathers dictate, uh, better months of the year, but that is a year round business. And then the popsicles is truly seasonal, similar to Mosquito Shield, where that’s really kind of for us, uh, you know, April through October with June, July and August really being, uh, the super heavy months in the popsicle space. Um, and again, because of where we live, we’re in a coastal community, a lot of beach people, um, we just saw the opportunity in that, getting into that food and beverage space that we thought, hey, we can kind of build this out to. And again, the key is not letting it impact our growth on mosquito shield. We didn’t take our eye off the prize. Right. So my wife and I, you know, we’ve got solid employees. Uh, like I said, we we invested in bringing in a general manager on the mosquito shield side. So we’re we’re very invested in all three of the businesses. Um, so our goal was to not just, hey, be content. We put on, you know, we’re at 200 mosquito shield clients.

Brad Sutliffe: We’re okay. We’ve built that out. It’s hey, we still want to grow each one of these accordingly and put the the time and the effort to. But we just saw the, the ability to kind of expand that way. And we really loved I can tell um, tell you just from personal experience, don’t get me wrong. You know, you’ve had the sleepless nights. You’re a business owner. I always say you’re the last one to get paid, right. Everyone kind of knows that if they’re in that small business world, but the the opportunity to kind of grow into build, um, your own business and your own, you know, legacy, so to speak, I guess, you know, so if this is something that our kids want to possibly get down. Get into. Down the line. What we’ve seen is, again, I mentioned my kids. They’re 15, 12 and nine. We have all three of them that work in some aspect in terms of attending an event here, helping us here. Um, and just the payout on that to see them start to develop work ethic, which is I think is so important in today’s world. You know, handing out pops, learning some customer service skills, counting money, all these kind of things that, you know, again, in that that age, I think are so important to see kind of them kind of build and mature, uh, through that process. We’ve really enjoyed that process of getting into that business ownership aspect.

Lee Kantor: Yeah. Role modeling. Being an entrepreneur is a gift you’re giving your kids. I mean, that’s for sure, because that’s the gift that keeps on giving. Learning how to sell and interact with human beings in person, that that’s useful no matter what they do throughout their lives.

Brad Sutliffe: Absolutely.

Lee Kantor: So if somebody wants to learn more about what you got going on and connect with you, is there a best way to do that? Is it through Google Shield or LinkedIn?

Brad Sutliffe: Yeah, LinkedIn is probably the best way. So again, Brad Sutcliffe, um, obviously you can probably find us just doing a simple search and reach out through one of our emails, um, on any one of those businesses. But yeah, LinkedIn certainly is probably the easiest and quickest way to find us.

Lee Kantor: And if they need help with their mosquitoes, uh, mosquito shields website, and they can drill down to Delaware and find you.

Brad Sutliffe: Yeah, absolutely. So they can go to mosquito shield.com. Obviously they can put their zip code in and then that’ll link them to their nearest, uh, local franchisee.

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

Brad Sutliffe: Happy to help. Thank you for having me.

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

 

Tagged With: Mosquito Shield

BRX Pro Tip: Capture the Story

August 18, 2025 by angishields

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Stone Payton: Welcome back to Business RadioX Pro Tips. Lee Kantor and Stone Payton here with you. Lee, of course, we know from our work, but it’s no secret, any real thought leader in the sales and marketing arena is going to support and endorse this idea that stories really are incredibly powerful. So, we’re suggesting when you’re out there, capture the story.

Lee Kantor: Yeah. And not only capture the story, it’s important for those stories to kind of permeate the culture of your organization. Those stories are important, obviously, when it comes to moving the prospect to becoming a client because they help them remember what you do. But it also helps your employees believe in their work and it helps your customers refer business to you.

Lee Kantor: o, it’s important to capture these stories, especially the foundational stories that are at the heart of your business, the ones that really made a difference to key people, that really set the stage for maybe how you’ve changed, or how you’ve grown, or how you’ve gotten to a new level. So, it’s important to be capturing stories all along because they build out kind of the cultural DNA of your organization. So, the more stories you have that you can use to help each of your stakeholders tell your story better, the better it is for your organization.

Lee Kantor: So, it’s important to really be mindful for the founder to craft a company story so that it is memorable, impactful, and, most important, shareable. So that it’s easy to understand, the people get it, and they want to get behind it and support it.

Lee Kantor: So, if you can create your kind of Genesis story, the story that launched you, the thing that created the organization, the why behind it, the better it is for you. Because that story becomes that foundational piece that everybody shares and that everybody wants to tell other people about because it’s so cool.

BRX Pro Tip: Results Driven Media

August 15, 2025 by angishields

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Stone Payton: Welcome back to Business RadioX Pro Tips. Lee Kantor and Stone Payton here with you. Lee, you and I have been at this media thing for a while. We’ve seen a lot of different approaches. What is your perspective on driving results-driven media?

Lee Kantor: Yeah. I think we’ve been at the forefront of results-driven media. In fact, we might even be one of the kind of founding fathers when it comes to results-driven media. I think most media falls under the category of ego-driven media, where the people that are creating the media are doing it for themselves in their own selfish purposes. We find that results-driven media focuses more on creating value for the community that you serve than it does about kind of making you the star and making you kind of the center of focus.

Lee Kantor: I think that, ultimately, in results-driven media, you want to be educating, supporting, and celebrating the work of all of the constituents of your community. By focusing on telling the stories of the people who matter most to you, you will become that indispensable leader of your community.

Lee Kantor: Ego-driven media focuses on making you kind of famous, getting your name out there. And this is primarily, sadly, done by being provocative and stirring up controversy. And the folks that are doing this typically don’t care that much about the community, but they’re focused primarily on building a larger and larger audience for themselves by any means necessary. And when you do that, you’re typically focusing on kind of the least of people that you really want to get to know and serve. But when you’re putting yourself at the center of each conversation and you’re making yourself the star, you’re not really helping the community, you’re helping yourself. It becomes obvious. It becomes self-serving.

Lee Kantor: At Business RadioX, we’re really helping service-driven leaders build community by serving first rather than serving themselves.

BRX Pro Tip: Stop Worrying

August 14, 2025 by angishields

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Stone Payton: And we are back with Business RadioX Pro Tips. Lee Kantor and Stone Payton here with you. Lee, two words for today, stop worrying.

Lee Kantor: Yeah. Worrying doesn’t help anybody. Eckhart Tolle says that worrying pretends to be necessary, but serves no useful purpose. People who invest time worrying aren’t taking action on improving their situation. And most of the stuff that people worry about never, ever happens.

Lee Kantor: In a bad situation, you can only do one of three things, you can make some sort of change, you can leave, or you can accept what is happening. Worrying doesn’t change any of those things in the present or in the future, so stop doing it.

BRX Pro Tip: 3 Ways to Cut Costs

August 13, 2025 by angishields

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Stone Payton: And we’re back with Business RadioX Pro Tips, Stone Payton and Lee Kantor here with you. Lee, I recognize that cost cutting is not a first move for the leadership team at Business RadioX. But when you do decide to take a look at cutting cost, where do you set your sights? What are some areas where you do look to maybe try to cut some costs?

Lee Kantor: I think it’s important to keep an eye on all of your expenses, and especially in today’s world where there’s so much new technology that can really help when it comes to automation. So, you have to kind of be diligent when it comes to your expenses.

Lee Kantor: And some ways that you can cut some expenses without sacrificing quality or growth, some of the ways are obvious, some of them not so obvious. Number one, instead of hiring full-time staff for certain roles, you can outsource certain tasks to freelancers or agencies. This will give you access to high level expertise, but usually at a less cost, and it allows your core team to focus on the most high impact work, the stuff that can’t be delegated.

Lee Kantor: Number two, automate repetitive tasks with tasks with technology. There’s so much stuff nowadays cloud-based accounting, CRM systems, AI, power tools, all of this stuff, if you use it wisely, can save you time and reduce labor costs. It can also streamline your operations and it can minimize a lot of manual errors.

Lee Kantor: And number three is don’t accept that first price from vendors or suppliers. I mean negotiate, negotiate, negotiate. When you regularly negotiate for better rates and terms, you’ll see that a lot of vendors are open to this type of negotiation because they want to keep you as a client, and you might have to adjust the services a little bit, but it could be a win-win for both of you.

Lee Kantor: So, regularly audit your expenses to spot any kind of waste or this kind of expense creep that happens, and where you can identify some new savings opportunities. There’s a lot of analytical tools out there that track spending and help you make informed decisions about where to cut.

Nurse Practitioners: Filling the Gaps in American Healthcare

August 12, 2025 by angishields

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In this episode of Tech Talk, Joey Kline interviews Krish Chopra, CEO and founder of NPHub, an Atlanta-based startup focused on healthcare innovation. Krish shares his journey from corporate sales to entrepreneurship, discusses the challenges of scaling NPHub, and highlights the company’s mission to address the primary care shortage by supporting nurse practitioners through clinical placements and job matching.

Krish-ChopraKrish Chopra is a serial entrepreneur, investor, and the founder & CEO of NPHub, the leading platform for Nurse Practitioners to secure clinical placements and land their ideal jobs.

Since 2017, NPHub has helped over 10,000 NP students complete their rotations and now powers the first AI-driven job board built exclusively for NPs—bringing transparency and efficiency to a fragmented hiring market.

A three-time Inc. 5000 CEO and Inc. 30 Under 30 honoree, Krish has bootstrapped multiple ventures and leads a global team of over 70 across 10 countries. He’s also the author of NP Jumpstart, a guide that helps Nurse Practitioners grow and market their own practices.

A first-generation Indian-American and University of Michigan alum, Krish is passionate about solving systemic bottlenecks in healthcare and creating platforms that empower overlooked communities. He’s currently based in Atlanta.

Connect with Krish on LinkedIn.

Episode Highlights

  • Healthcare innovation and its importance in the U.S. healthcare system.
  • The role of nurse practitioners (NPs) in addressing physician shortages.
  • Challenges faced by healthcare providers, including long wait times and lack of access.
  • The mission of NP Hub to improve healthcare accessibility through support for NPs.
  • The entrepreneurial journey of Krish Chopra and his transition from corporate sales to founding NP Hub.
  • The business model of NP Hub as a two-sided marketplace for clinical placements and job matching.
  • The significance of maintaining company culture and leadership during growth.
  • The fundraising process and challenges faced by early-stage companies in Atlanta.
  • Differences between nurse practitioners and physician assistants in terms of training and approach to patient care.
  • The potential for technology-driven solutions to enhance patient care and address workforce shortages in healthcare.

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: Coming to you live from Atlanta, Georgia. It’s time for another episode of Tech Talk with your host, Joey Klein.

Joey Kline: Welcome. Welcome to another Tech Talk. I think that this is actually the first one that we have done all summer. We’ve been a little bit dormant. So thanks everyone for tuning in. We’ve got a really great conversation that is going to focus on the healthcare world today. Local Atlanta early stage company and NPHub CEO and founder Krish Chopra. How are you doing, Krish?

Krish Chopra: I’m doing well, man. Thank you so much for having me here today.

Joey Kline: Yeah, absolutely. Looking forward to chat about this. So before we started rolling here, you mentioned that you were from New York. And I always like to understand how people get to where they got to. So give me the story of New York to Atlanta and whatever was in between, if anything.

Krish Chopra: So the story I always tell is. I was born and raised in New York City. Right. Born in Queens, Brooklyn. Been tons of times just exploring and loving New York. When I went to undergrad, I applied to Michigan, got in one of the better schools I got into, and so I wanted to go. And after Michigan, I had a decision to make of where do you go? You know, where am I going to sort of put down roots. And you know how a lot of people in college, they sort of think of, I’m going to go kind of start my life and become who I want to be in New York or LA or the Bay. The the issue was, I’m from New York, and so I didn’t have that luxury. Right. You go back and you have a family. You have a, you know, friends pressure and and for me to get the chance to restart. I was I was in Atlanta for a training program, um, right out of undergrad for six months. Like the city. Enough. And what I loved about it was also the cost of living. And so when I was in New York working for a couple of years, I moved back to Atlanta to start my company because my burn would last longer. Yeah, I only had a certain amount of money saved up and I needed to figure it out. And so in New York, that might have lasted 3 or 4 months, but in Atlanta it lasted six. Seven. And so that was critical, you know.

Joey Kline: So did you go straight from undergrad to entrepreneur?

Krish Chopra: No no no, no. I always I refer to myself as sort of like a, um, uh, what’s the word I’m looking for, like a converted entrepreneur. There’s some people that are born and bred and that’s kind of, you know, they never had a job. They had a, you know, newspaper selling business as a kid. That was not me. Yeah, I was in corporate sales out of undergrad for two years and from 22 to 24. Sounds about right. And moved down at that point to start my company. And the main reason why was in corporate America, I was very much a cog in a wheel. And what in the nicest way possible, what I did didn’t make a difference every day. So if I didn’t show up, it didn’t matter. And so nothing hurt. More like, you know, psychologically speaking of like, you know, I was a as a seller, I was ranked 17th out of a thousand sellers. Yeah. When I was, when I left my last six months in. Not bad and no one had asked me to stay. They didn’t backfill the role. And so if you’re a good seller and they’re not doing that, then you really have to think about what’s the whole point of this. And so starting a company was really just a matter of finding a place to fit in.

Joey Kline: Yeah, I hear that. And I think your point is a I, I, I have you heard the saying like there are two kinds of people in this world. People who think there are two kinds of people in this world. Everyone else. To some degree that is true. But when it comes to entrepreneurs, I really do think that they typically fall into two buckets. One are those that could never take orders, needed autonomy, couldn’t deal with authority. Um, from day one. Right. And they had the paper route, whatever it was, and it was just a foregone conclusion that I could never work for the the man, quote unquote. And then there are others that come to it almost because they have to either they have to because they just find the corporate world insufferable. They have to because they have an idea and they can’t shake it, whatever it is. Um, and there’s nothing wrong with either one of those, right? Most people get to the same place. You sound very much like you were in the second bucket 100%.

Krish Chopra: Because I didn’t fit into corporate America. Uh, the way I talk, the way I communicate, I’m very much. Let’s get it done. We don’t have to say it the best way possible. We don’t have to politic this. We just need to. What’s the actual answer? What’s the best thing to move forward here? And I felt like I had a ceiling in corporate America. Like I would maybe I would get a promotion, maybe. And I would camp out there because I didn’t play the game, I didn’t know how to play the game. And even now, that’s not part of my repertoire, if that makes sense.

Joey Kline: Yeah, yeah. Well. And do you ever wonder and we’re gonna, we’re gonna want to ask this question, then just double back to what NP hub does. Because anyone listening, I want them to just know right off the bat. But okay, you’re growing your company, right? And right now you are very far from being a large, stodgy corporate institution. Okay, but I imagine that you have high goals for your organization. Okay. You want to grow it? I’m sure, as big as it can get. Right. So do you ever get look. Sometimes as the organization grows, the founder’s vision and the founder’s personality gets stamped out a little bit. And so I’m curious, do you ever wonder to yourself, like, okay, if I make this thing, what? As big as I think it should be. Is it going to turn into something that I don’t want it to?

Krish Chopra: Yeah. You’re hitting the nail on the head. I think about that all the time, especially recently. So we just completed a series investment and I was ready for what that entailed. But I think once you receive it and then you really understand, hey, these are the growth objectives. This is the investors behind you. And this is a company that they can’t. You know it’s a minority round. And so I’m still in the majority owner. It’s still a matter of managing on what good looks like from their sort of playbook and their sort of concepts here. I think about it nonstop lately, and I think the only answer. It’s a work in progress. Um, the biggest answer I have is making sure you spot correct the behaviors you don’t want. Like you might have friction between the business unit and product, and that shouldn’t exist at this level. Like you kind of intuitively know it and I feel it. And so you have to nip that in the you have to nip in the bud. You have to continue to make sure that the people managing the people now, they’re the ones that get the culture you want. And so it’s the it’s it’s your executive team. It’s your senior leadership team. And it’s your management management team as well, like the managers in the org. So if they follow it, that’s the best way to make sure that the new person being hired, who I might not have a lot of FaceTime with, they have they know from osmosis and even though it gets diluted down, is never going to be perfect. Instead of it being like 10% of what you want, it’s maybe closer to 67 to 80. And you can live with that.

Joey Kline: Yeah. Look, again, there’s only so much that you can do because you’ll drive yourself nuts with everything else that you have to do. Of course.

Krish Chopra: That that’s.

Joey Kline: True. Yeah. Um, okay, let’s let’s get back to, uh, value proposition, mission product. Um, let’s put it out there. What y’all do? What problem y’all are trying to solve.

Krish Chopra: So NP hub, we’re trying to save healthcare in the US. We all know healthcare is broken. We all know that. We go to the we go. We have to wait months to go get an appointment. We don’t have price transparency. And in a lot of ways, you can’t even get in front of providers and in many cases in many parts of the country. So that we’re solving for that by enabling nurse practitioners this incredible sort of provider group that’s spun up over the since the last, like 60 or 70 years, it’s grown in droves. So the fast growing profession in the US, they lack resources, they lack support, and we’re trying to solve for that. And we’re doing that by providing them clinical placements. So that way they can graduate and become great providers. So they get great education. And then we’re helping them get their first and second and third fourth jobs. And so it’s all about alignment where you’re creating this transparency between the candidates, these graduates, these nurse practitioners and market and employers who want to connect with them. They want to hire the right people. And so how do you put them together in a way where there’s less noise in the system and you’re hiring better fits in both sides, like you’re you’re finding a better job if you’re a candidate and you’re finding a better employee if you’re an employer. And so that you have longevity. And that’s what we’re solving for.

Joey Kline: Okay. So I can also imagine you in, in a, in a pitch starting out saying we’re going to save healthcare, which is obviously an extremely lofty, ambitious statement that that gets someone’s attention. Mhm. Um, so look, I think anyone listening, even if they don’t know the ins and outs that, you know, we’re spending 17% Plus, you know, about all of our GDP on healthcare right now. Could say just from an anecdotal experience. Yes. You know, healthcare as is, generally benefits the top 10% of the income ladder. And for everyone below that, you know, leaves quite a bit to be desired. Um, and even for the top ten, right. A bit to be desired. So what why does the focus on the nurse practitioner save healthcare?

Krish Chopra: So when you think about healthcare, think about the entry point of healthcare. We’re seeing primary care physicians and there’s simply not enough of them. And so, you know, for for the multitude of reasons of why that is the case, by the I think it’s 2035 or 2037, there’s going to be a shortage of 160,000 primary care physicians. And so how is the US, the United States, filling this void while they’re filling this void with this new type of provider in market, which are nurse practitioners and physician assistants? And I don’t mean to say that there are new type of provider, but relative to what a physician and the history of what physicians are, you know. Going back hundreds of years. And so you have these new providers and. They’re really becoming the entry point and even in many cases, specialization. The entry point of healthcare. And when we are talking about how do we get appointments faster, how do we not wait three months, how do we see a provider for more than five minutes and not feel like where you are? You know, you we all know that feeling of going.

Joey Kline: Where you’re just a number.

Krish Chopra: You’re a number, you’re you’re in, you’re out. You didn’t catch your name. They didn’t ask you the second question. They said, what are you feeling today? Okay. Got it. Here’s your medicine. You’re out. That’s not health care. It’s a transaction. And I think nurse practitioners, physician assistants, they fit this model, um, in there where they’re actually caring for their patients. And that’s what we need, I think, in the US.

Joey Kline: Okay. So you’re saying because we are going to have a shortage of primary care internist. Another to synonym for those out there um that nurse practitioners pays lower barrier to actually become one. I mean, just from a number of years that it takes to actually get into it. Cost years. Um, you know, the medical school. Um. Uh, gantlet is not a cheap, uh, or easy one or for the faint of heart. So, uh, it I’m I’m putting words in your mouth. You’re gonna tell me if I’m correct or not? Basically, you have another form of practitioner provider that maybe doesn’t fill all healthcare needs, but gets us up 50, 60% of the way there. Of what an internist, um, primary care physician would do. And if we’re better able to get those folks trained, staffed and distributed, that then helps, um, stem the problem of not enough internists in the market.

Krish Chopra: Exactly. Accessibility is the number one concept we’re trying to solve for, because once you solve accessibility, Then you can move into every other topic, right? So 100% exactly what you said. I have this belief that healthcare should be run where your entry point. Right. Like if I’m sick or you’re sick and you know your child is sick and you have to go to urgent care and you know, you have the flu, you know, you have a cold, you don’t need to necessarily see someone with eight years of post-graduate experience. It’s okay to see a nurse practitioner, a physician assistant. And in certain cases it gets escalated up where the physician in my mind becomes this floor general. Sure. And they’re available. They’re available as needed. And now you’re prioritizing the time for the physician to see complex cases that might be out of scope for the nurse practitioner or PA. But I’ll tell you, from everything I’ve seen over the last seven years of building this company, the number many, especially primary care providers, especially mental health providers, the fastest growing profession. Yeah, for healthcare, for inside healthcare, right now, they’re able to accomplish 60, 70, 80%. And in most cases that’s good for us, the patients.

Joey Kline: Yeah, it almost feels like it kind of feels like this is what granted, it’s a much smaller band of the human body of healthcare, but it’s almost like going to the dentist, right? I mean, like you primarily see the dentist at the end of your appointment or if something is really, really complex and, you know, the front line assistant cannot take care of it, but much of their time is spent strategically on more complex issues than the, um, traditional work of dentistry.

Krish Chopra: I think it’s a really fair analogy. Um, a fair analogy.

Joey Kline: There. Sure, there might be some, you know, crudeness around the edges there, but that was what came to mind initially.

Krish Chopra: And I think it makes sense. Right. When we go to a physician or sorry, we’re going to a practice, the first person you see is usually the Ma who’s kind of doing some of the basics, right, taking or charting, maybe capturing your blood pressure, that absolutely still should be done. And again this is about best use of of time. Best. Most efficient use of time. And for whatever reason it is, there just aren’t enough residency slots for physicians. Yep. And so until that fixes, we, you know, us as patients, us in the in the US. We can’t wait for that that that to occur. That’s right. Right. There’s the you know, we were talking about this before the podcast started. There’s politics involved with that. There is, uh, regulations, nuances. It’s politicized. That is not the game we’re in. We’re in the game of this is the problem. We’re trying to solve the problem of accessibility.

Joey Kline: Yeah. People’s health cannot wait for the government to, you know, get out of its own way.

Krish Chopra: That is the best statement so far.

Joey Kline: Yeah.

Krish Chopra: Yeah.

Joey Kline: Do you have a healthcare background?

Krish Chopra: I do not know. Okay. I’m not smart.

Joey Kline: Enough. Yeah. Okay. So how did this come to you?

Krish Chopra: Um, so my very first successful company I started. Successful? Meaning that it didn’t fall apart in three months. Sure. Um, was a similar business where we were working with medical schools, typically schools in the Caribbean or national medical schools in the Caribbean. We were one of the first companies to go to the Philippines and source medical students there, and we brought them to the US for clinical education so they could apply to residency in the US, or they could take that education and go back to their own countries and uh, usually, um, get better, better paying jobs or, you know, more prestigious clinical placements. Yep. We did that for about three years. And in that time we started having nurse practitioners reach out to us randomly. And my entire thesis was, there’s no way us educated nurse practitioners have this problem. It must be a one off, two off. And so for a period of time, we didn’t listen to them and we didn’t listen to the market. Like any, you know, young entrepreneur always misses. And that was that was us. And so eventually one student turned to 500 to 120. And then we realized this nurse practitioner gap is bigger. There were no other competitors in the field, meaning that from a if these students are my medical company, my first company, if these students didn’t work with us, they had alternatives. There’s ten other companies like us for these nurse practitioners. If these students didn’t use us, they didn’t graduate. And so you had the ability to have a larger impact. And then you had the second is there was no one else in the field. So we got to innovate. Yeah. And so I got to build we got to build a platform, build the technology to enable scale. And we would never have been able to do that in a proven sort of like third generation older school dynamic in the medical space of what we were in.

Joey Kline: Sure. That’s the it is the unintended consequence of being in business and learning something that you didn’t set out to to figure out.

Krish Chopra: Mm, 100%.

Joey Kline: Um, okay. So is your direct client, the healthcare system, the practice? How does the product actually work?

Krish Chopra: So we have this overarching platform and we have a we have different products involved. And so on. Our first product, we work with students and we work with universities, and we have in the network of clinical placements that these students or schools will come to us, will provide that for their students. Or at the end of the day, we’re helping the students graduate, whether we’re through the university or student directly. Now that’s product number one. And so in that model, your customers, it’s a marketplace, right. So you ask Airbnb who their customer is. They’re going to say both right. Is it the host or the visitor. Well you need both to survive. So in that model the clinical sites which are the clinics, the hospitals, those are our, our our they’re part of our network. And then we have the universities and the students, and they’re part of our sort of client base on the hiring platform, similar model. We have candidates and then we have employers. And so employers are the people we are, you know, reaching out to and communicating that we have this platform that no one else in the country has. We have this data on, on, on quality control that no one else can provide. That’s what we’re doing there.

Joey Kline: Okay. But okay. So yes, I understand you are. You are a classic two sided marketplace. But how do you actually get paid?

Krish Chopra: Um, on product one that we mentioned, the marketplace, the clinical placement marketplace, it’s students or universities. Okay. And on the hiring platform, it’s employers.

Joey Kline: Okay. That’s what I figured but wanted to clarify okay. All right. So you mentioned earlier that you just raised your series A obviously a really big milestone for any organization. What what happens next? Is it about market reach? Is it about new products? All the above. What’s the plan?

Krish Chopra: It is. It’s really everything, right? You know, you’re sort of supposed to amplify every single thing you’re doing. Yeah, I can tell you that to date, we’ve spent so much time getting our process on working with students directly down, and we are excellent at that. That is what got us to scale. And so the next phase of growth for us is now saying, hey, we worked with these students and we’ve helped thousands of them. Closer to I think actually, we’ve just crossed the 11,000 milestone in terms of students. Now, the next play for us is to really move and speak more with universities, speak more with these employers. Focus on this B2B segment of this because most people, university students, would agree that we all believe it should be accountable to the university on providing clinical placements. And we’re seeing some of that legislation, some of that market, um, uh, sentiment change now around that, where schools want to provide this. It’s a differentiating concept for them. Right? Some schools don’t provide it. Some schools do provide it. The schools that do provider often see of higher tier. And then the second part of it is quality control for when we’re graduating nearly we have 400,000 nurse practitioners right now in school. At any given time there’s about 120,000. There’s 40,000 graduates every single year. These 40,000 quality control now becomes a major, major concern for many of these programs because these students want to be successful and these universities want these students to be of high quality. Mhm.

Joey Kline: Mhm. Okay. Um I you’re a sales guy. I’m a sales guy. I’m always curious in the sales process of how you actually get this out there. Are you, is this an inside sale outside sale kind of model. Is it all, um, you know, internet marketing? I mean, what’s our. Are you hiring a bunch of salespeople to go and make the enterprise sale? Or are you able to pretty easily convert, you know, marketing leads into sales without the help of a large team.

Krish Chopra: So we have a we have a sales team in place. Okay. And so we have two different types. What internally we refer to as the B2C function and the B2B function. So the B2C which is working with the students directly, we have an internal sales team in place there. And they are phenomenal at what they do which is getting to the student, solving their anxiety, solving their concerns, and asking them the appropriate questions to direct them to the best placement possible. And we have AI supporting that effort as well on the B2B function that’s scaling up currently. You’re exactly right. We’re hiring sales reps. A lot of this can be done inside, but it’s less inside outside sales. It’s more of enterprise sales. Sure. And so in many cases it’s zoom. But if you need to be on site, then we’ll get our butts on site.

Joey Kline: Yeah, it depends how big the deal is. Depends how complex the organization is.

Krish Chopra: Exactly. And it depends on what is expected of us from that particular client. Yeah.

Joey Kline: Yeah, I hear that. So, um. And I imagine that you’re so right now, are you national?

Krish Chopra: Yes. We operate, I believe, in 46 of the 50 states. Okay. Um, there’s a few. We’re just not in Hawaii.

Joey Kline: Alaska still, you know, pretty, pretty good count. Mhm. Um, and what was okay had had you ever done a large fundraising round for any of your previous organizations?

Krish Chopra: I have not. This was the first.

Joey Kline: Okay, so I’m curious to hear about what that was like along with, you know, that small job of actually running the company. You’re choosing your words carefully.

Krish Chopra: Brutal was the answer. So we started the fundraising officially in September of last year. Okay. Uh, we we there’s a lot of stages to a fundraising process, and I think a lot of folks focus a lot on getting the term sheet right, which is essentially less of the signal of, hey, we want to partner with you and more of a signal of, we don’t want to get rid of you yet. That makes sense, right? And so if it’s an early step into the investor dynamic investor relationship. And so the first part of this was getting better at how do you secure the term sheet. How are you saying the right things and getting the investors interested and communicating your value proposition effectively. That took time. And so we were under a term with a, um, a, uh, a growth equity company. Uh, at the start of this year, we were expecting to close in January. And towards the end of this, the deal saw the deal started to fall apart. Yeah. And that happens in occasion. And so end of January, the deal started to fall apart. And so we went back to market in February. I’m a big fan of you know, you hit in the face.

Krish Chopra: You don’t, you know, go wallow for a month. You go back out there and pick yourself back up and so confidently, uh, you know, luckily we were able to secure two additional term sheets by, um, by the end of March. And so we had a good turnaround time. And so in those two term sheets, we then we also hired a banker to support us in this effort. And that’s one of the biggest, biggest things I can tell any entrepreneur who is raising their series A, if you should be working with the banker because they are the only representative on your side, that really helps you filter and helps you navigate the dynamic with the investor. And so the investors, they are cutting deals on a 24 over seven basis. They are excellent at cutting a deal. Yep. Entrepreneurs are excellent at running a business. There’s a gap there. And in in a lot of entrepreneurs think they should just go do it themselves. And even many VCs and private equity will tell you, oh no, no, you guys can handle it yourself or you’re fine. But it’s because it’s asymmetric information.

Joey Kline: Of.

Krish Chopra: Course. And so that was a big difference on the on the second time around. In addition to that, we our business was in a really good place. We were continuing our growth trajectory. Everything was working well. And nothing creates more confidence in a fundraising process when you are hitting your numbers during fundraising.

Joey Kline: You are the first person to ever come on here and talk about hiring a banker.

Krish Chopra: I know this is a get in trouble.

Joey Kline: No, no, not not at all. I just I find it interesting because look like To erase middlemen. Obviously that’s not, you know, the. Look, I’m an intermediary. Intermediary? I’m a middleman. Okay. Um, many of us exist for a reason. To enable a transaction, to know both sides. Um, and what you’re saying makes a lot of sense. I have just never had anyone come on and actually talk about that part of it. A lot of people talk about. And this was maybe a little bit more, you know, kind of 5 to 10 years ago. But how hard it is to raise money in Atlanta, that’s changed. But it’s not it’s still not amazing, but it’s changed for sure. Um, but yeah, a lot of it focused on having to go to the northeast and the West Coast, um, as opposed to the actual mechanics of doing it in The Help. It was just interesting. You know.

Krish Chopra: I will tell you that we and I got a lot more success with investors from the northeast, and I think Atlanta has an emerging. Scene and emerging tech scene. So you have, you know, a couple of great conferences. Venture Atlanta, we were a presenter of Venture one a couple years ago. Really helped us along. Um, get out there more. But fundamentally in Atlanta you have more private equity than you do venture. Sure. And so you do have this problem of of people not investing at your stage of series A, and you find that more in the northeast, in the West Coast. And, um, we certainly did. And we eventually, um, um, partnered up with, uh, Edison Partners. They’re Nashville based. Yeah. But funny funny enough, the the lead investor with us, one of the partners there, the we had great rapport, but she was from Boston.

Joey Kline: Yeah. I wonder if I wonder if part of it. It’s interesting because we have an amazing talent scene. Okay.

Krish Chopra: 100%.

Joey Kline: Right. But the level of talent we have, the fundraising or at least the the breadth of fundraising opportunities available and different stages available has not caught up with. I think, where we are from a talent stage, and I’m wondering if part of this has to do with the fact that a lot of the people who have made a massive amount of money that can either, you know, that can be an LP or they can start a fund themselves. There are starting to be more of them who made it in technology in Atlanta, but a lot of them did not make their money in technology. A lot of them made their money in real estate or C-suite gigs at, you know, large fortune 500. And it’s just a very, very different type of investor. I just don’t think that that mindset is not there among those who have the funds to kickstart something like that.

Krish Chopra: So I agree with you 100%. These fundraising rounds develop in reverse, Right. Which is kind of weird. Um, you would think that you would have the you would have organizations funding a series C and D, because those are much lower risk, but it’s not actually how it works. What ends up happening is you have, you know, folks that might have worked at like calendly at the snap, at, um, snap, snap nurse, I mean. Um, and other other, other bigger companies. I made it in from the tech scene in the, in the southeast. They do well and they start angel investing. And you have a fantastic angel investing scene in Atlanta. Totally fantastic.

Joey Kline: Right. It’s like if you’re under a million or like 1 million to 3 million.

Krish Chopra: You have access because you have rise point and that rise point, rise out of the Emory. Um, out of out of Emory B-School over there you have, um, the tech village.

Joey Kline: You have to overline guys.

Krish Chopra: Overline guys, you have um, ATC you have so many opportunities there for sure. Um, uh, tech tech Square Ventures, I think as well. Um, anyhow, and so as you kind of go up and rounds. You know, you go to your series A, series B, etc., that that pool gets smaller. Yeah. And because you have a lot of, uh, I can’t tell you this is the exact reason I can tell you. My inclination on why it occurs is you have less risk appetite in Atlanta, and because you have less risk appetite. You have much you have depressed valuations. I agree. So we got term sheets and we got interest from Atlanta based investors. They were just not understanding the vision of what we want to build here. And they’re seeing us as point A to point B and we’re like well hold on. If we just do point B and see where we are, we’re going to continue to scale up. And that is where for us, at least, we we stopped. We didn’t get the traction or adaptability. I hear that. Yeah.

Joey Kline: Did you wrestle with raising versus not versus just funding from operations? Yeah.

Krish Chopra: For years we didn’t fundraise. We started officially. This company started in 2017. Okay. Um, we raised in 2025, so for seven I should know this. But what’s called seven years? Almost purely seven. Um, I think we bootstrapped this thing from the very beginning.

Joey Kline: But was it because you could or because you were on principle, dedicated to that or both?

Krish Chopra: We did it because that’s how we want it to grow. Okay. Um, I think there’s two, two issues there or two sort of sub points there. So point A is I wanted to be in control. Um, I think, you know, from even the stories of just not fitting in. Um, you know, for my younger days, it was about being able to make the decisions we wanted to make. Even if they were mistakes, even if it was prioritizing the wrong things. That was the call we want. I wanted to make. Then the second call. Inside of that was it took me a long time to realize we were on to something big. Um, I would argue between 2017 and 2020, 2021. It was still this idea of like, maybe I’m going to be a lifestyle entrepreneur. Maybe it’s it’s going to cap out a growth. It was only until 2022 where we started to realize it was actually almost an inflection point of where we we grew so much, we needed more experienced professionals. It couldn’t just be these junior folks on our team that worked really hard. We needed to know a good looks, like myself included. And so I hired a seasoned operator that essentially fixed all the issues I created over as we grew. Um, fast forward a little bit. Then I hired a experienced CTO, and all of a sudden it’s like, wait, with this team in place. Sky’s the limit. We can do anything we want. And, um, those two folks were sort of like the catalyst for for me to realize, all right, these guys are top tier and they’re putting their time here. They’re not doing that. So we can have a fun game doing that so we can do something amazing and build something memorable. And that was.

Joey Kline: It. Well, I think as as the years have gone by, I have realized that all you are and by extension, all your company is, is the sum of the quality of the people around you. Mhm. Um, and it goes for your friendships and your professional relationships. Um, to that end, I would love to get your take on culture and leadership. Um, you know, one of the things that we talked about at the beginning is your fear of your company turning into something that you don’t recognize or that you didn’t want it to. And that part of the way you avoid that is, you know, you hire the right people, you test them, they understand the mission. So, you know, you’re still at the point where I imagine that you are intimately involved with every hire that comes through your door. What do you look for? How do you make sure that a relative stranger. Let’s be honest. Is going to be the right fit for your team?

Krish Chopra: So I am not involved in every hire any longer. Okay. Um, we’ve gotten to the point now where I’m involved with many of the senior hires. So they’re coming at a management level or above. Sure. Uh, I will have some interaction. Um, I usually final round interview or something like that. The biggest thing is making sure we know why we’re hiring. Are we hiring this person? Because, you know, the current person in the role isn’t, um, isn’t doing as well anymore. Um, are we hiring because the business needs it? Have we explored an alternative to hiring? Because when you add new headcount, it is great and awful at the same time. It’s great because you’re bringing someone new in, and every new hire brings a new energy to the company. And especially in that first month, I can I can visualize the moment for some of the best people we’ve ever hired. And, you know, in the first month, if this person is going to be great because no one ever starts off good and turns great, they start off great and they stay great, or they start off bad and they say bad. That’s generally rule of thumb. Um, and if they’re in the middle, you are settling. And that is a rule of thumb. Um, are we someone that I truly believe in? And so it’s you train the methodology and then you you train the methodology to the management team on how to hire effectively. And we use something called the print survey okay. Which is a shortcut on understanding people’s motivations. And so it’s very similar to the Enneagram. It’s sort of like um, the corporate version of that. And so everyone’s assigned these two numbers. And so I’ll give you a quick example. If you’re hiring a sales rep, you want them to be very numbers oriented, right? They want to hit a target.

Krish Chopra: That is what, you know, a great sales rep looks and feels like. And so there’s a print associated with that. And that’s referred to as it’s a it’s a print three. And so a print three. You want that person if they’re in sales to exhibit that behavior, that’s their motivation. Because you know that’s how you’re going to shortcut getting to know them. Because in a long enough horizon, you don’t need a system to tell you how to get one of your team members motivated or how to push them forward. But in the short time horizon, when you don’t know them really well, having a framework really does help and it helps you move faster. And I would argue more importantly, than getting every strategy right or or being the best company. It’s about moving quickly and iterating fast. That is a Herald did. Maybe that’s the wrong word. That is an underrated point of view, and it’s an underrated statement. And I think that for us, we we we have taught our team this methodology on hiring. We’ve established what good hires sort of need to think and feel like, you know, so if you’re in a finance function, you probably want someone to be very detail oriented. You don’t want them to be like me who is not detail oriented. My finance person will tell you that I am the most unorganized person he’s probably worked with. And Rogers. If he’s listening to this, he will probably nod his head along to this right now, because I am. I’m not meant for that. Yeah, right. I’m meant for the you know, we go talk to a customer, you know. That’s right. That’s what it.

Joey Kline: Is. Yeah. From a sales perspective. Um, and you just brought up talking to customer. Right. Do you have you had problems letting go of the sales process?

Krish Chopra: I don’t know, do I? How honest would I be here? Right.

Joey Kline: Um, or have you even been able to.

Krish Chopra: Yes. Yeah, yeah. So by by trade, I’m a sales person and marketer. That’s how I see myself. And, you know, at some point I did, uh.

Joey Kline: That’s typically what most founders are starting.

Krish Chopra: Sales realized. I can’t do every single sale. They switched over to marketing. How do I do sales at scale and and then eventually now. And I don’t do either. As much as I’d like to. And need to. Um. So, have I had trouble letting go? Yes. Absolutely. 100%. Um, on the sales side. I have let go of it. 95% of it. At least that’s what I believe to be true. Uh, um, the remaining is is really. I get tied in on our messaging to our customers. Anyone would tell you there’s there’s always the right way of speaking to the customer. And it’s in my head, unfortunately. And, you know, it’s hard for me to say, hey, this is how you should do it. It’s it’s easy for me to say when I hear it. Like, that’s not how you do it, if that makes sense. Sure.

Joey Kline: Um, but this is like the Supreme Court on pornography. I know it when I see it.

Krish Chopra: Exactly. And so, uh. Oh, that’s a great line. Oh, I want to take it. I want I need it. Thank you.

Joey Kline: Steal shamelessly.

Krish Chopra: Appreciate it. Yeah. So sales I have let go. Quite a bit. Marketing in a work in progress right now. Um, we happen to have we. We’ve developed an incredible sales manager at the organization. And this guy knows what to do. And so because we have great talent, I can let go more. We have a fantastic marketer on the team, someone I’ve known half my life because we have him. I can let him go. And so it it’s less about for me what I realized over time. It’s less like I need to let go. It’s I need to bring in the person I trust who knows it better than I do. Sure.

Joey Kline: Right. Who’s who’s got the ability, wherewithal and clout to be able to tell you? I got it, bro.

Krish Chopra: Yes. And I tell the team all the time if I’m too involved, like there’s a saying, I actually stole this, I think, from, uh, Alex Hermosa. He says, um, use this use if useful. And so I’ll send a message. I send a message out to my CTO today, and I’m like, hey, this is an opportunity for us to do A, B, and C. And I told him, look, look, hey, I’m nothing was wrong here. Just use it for useful. And that is something I find myself doing a lot more of now, where I don’t want to get too overly involved, because just by virtue of me having a question about it, it creates stress in the organization.

Joey Kline: Sure. Good to see you. Yeah.

Krish Chopra: And that’s a pro that’s hard to adjust.

Joey Kline: I get that, but I think being look at it’s never fully going to go away. Right. But being cognizant of it and being present and understanding I don’t know probably half the battle.

Krish Chopra: Hopefully I hope.

Joey Kline: So.

Krish Chopra: Well, we’ll find out a couple of years with the scoreboard. Unfortunately for us, runs in, uh. Uh, it is a lagging indicator. Yeah, yeah. And so we’ll see. We’ll see how this plays out.

Joey Kline: Um, I’d love to learn more about your experience with Venture Atlanta because that is, you know, again, we look, we we criticized or at least commented, um, uh, openly and bluntly on the fundraising scene in Atlanta Venture Atlanta seems like it has just been an unmatched success in a city of ours that, um, you know, punches above its waist class and talent probably punches below its weight, class and access to funding. And so I’d be curious just. I mean, tell me about how you got involved, what you think of it, what’s what it’s meant to the company.

Krish Chopra: So it’s funny you’re saying this because we actually did. I actually recently wrote an article for them, kind of post the series A because I wanted to give them the I wanted people to see the success story of a normal series, a company. Yeah. You know, like, I’m not of the opinion we’re doing anything super special. We have a great business, we have great people on our team. We’re doing something very cool, but we are one of thousands of companies doing this every day right now. Right. These startup companies that are getting scale and so Venture Atlanta meant a lot to us because I was very I was I don’t want to say invisible. I felt the company and I were invisible to the, uh, to the investment market. Mm. Um. Eh. Because you have. We haven’t raised so people didn’t know about us. And then B, we’re in this weird niche, which is. Are we in healthcare? We in edtech? Are we in healthcare tech? Okay. Wait. Nurse practitioners. What do they do? I went to a room of investors in Atlanta. You had 20 partners of different firms and maybe maybe 15. And I went up, down in this kind of front of this room and I asked everyone like, hey, so who here knows what a nurse practitioner does? Two out of 15 or 18 people raise their hand. That is what you have here. Now, I have asked that same question to a group in, um, in Chicago. And guess what? 15 out of 15 raised their hand. And so you think that that was a frustrating experience for me. And so Venture Atlanta helped us get out to market and share the story of what we’re doing. It also because we were selected as a as a presenter, that obviously helps the most as a growth stage company. Yeah. And so being a presenter there, they they help coach you on how to pitch in this three minute format, which is a incredibly short format. But you do figure out how to distill down your ideas quickly. And so that was very helpful.

Joey Kline: Save healthcare. What else is.

Krish Chopra: There? Save healthcare. This is how we’re doing it. This is why it matters. These are why nurse practitioners are okay.

Joey Kline: I’m going to be vulnerable here and hopefully, um, answer the questions for some listening. Can you describe the difference between a nurse practitioner and a physician’s assistant specifically?

Krish Chopra: Um, I can do my best. So nurse practitioner physician assistants overlap in a lot of in a lot of ways. Um, and many times when employers are hiring, they’ll hire an NP or interchangeably. Nurses are advanced nurse practitioners or advanced practice nurses. So they’re nurses usually have worked for a couple of years. Think of the MBA type of format. Right. They’ve worked. Um, and they go back to school. They’re going back to school while they’re working full time.

Joey Kline: Okay. So nurse is different from nurse practitioner. Yeah. The practitioner is again the the MBA of the traditional.

Krish Chopra: It is the graduate. Yeah. Advanced practice version of the nurse. And so the nurse. You know, we’ve all heard the horror stories. Nurses are working in the hospital, especially during Covid. They hated working there. They went back to school in droves. They go back to school for two years, usually three years sometimes. And they become a nurse practitioner, nurse nurses on average. They are generally the providers of care, but they are not providing the instruction of care. They are receiving the instruction. They are, they are providing it. Nurse practitioners are giving the orders. I see okay, very similar to the physician model there. The difference is nurses are trained in the nursing methodology. Physician assistants are trained in the physician methodology. And that is just a different way of it is like two ways of skinning a cat, two ways of is that like saying two ways getting a cat?

Joey Kline: Yeah. I mean, that’s that’s the saying I don’t really understand where skinning a cat came from. But yes, that’s the that’s that is the idea. If you think about it.

Krish Chopra: But there’s multiple ways to get to the same end goal, right? Sure. And then there’s a nursing model and there’s a health care model. I would be remiss I would be inaccurate if I’m telling you exactly what the difference is there.

Joey Kline: But that’s that’s.

Krish Chopra: Helpful. At a high level, I believe. Nurse practitioners come from a more empathetic approach to come with a more of a they need more time with the patient. They like to educate and bring the patient along. The assistants are more than the medical model.

Joey Kline: I think what was what was the most helpful, at least for me, there was the differentiation between the nurse and the nurse practitioner. One is essentially the follower of orders. The other is the more highly educated, more specialized giver of orders.

Krish Chopra: Correct. And you have the same specialization with nurse practitioners that any other provider has, right? So you have psych mental health nurse practitioners. You have family nurse practitioners, you have acute care nurse practitioners. You have, um, you know, down the gamut, uh, women’s health nurse practitioners, pediatric nurse practitioners, Similarly styled. And so you have all of that specialization that occurs is just occurring under the nursing model of education. Do you.

Joey Kline: Okay. Obviously, you are extraordinarily entrenched in the health care world right now. Okay. And part of that, I imagine, is because you have a passion for it. Part of it is because you have happened upon this product that, um, is being well received in that world. Do you think that you will? It’s kind of a ridiculous question to ask an entrepreneur, I understand, but like, do you think you’re always going to be in healthcare? No. No. Okay.

Krish Chopra: Straight.

Joey Kline: No, no.

Krish Chopra: Okay. Nurses remind me a lot of teachers. Yeah, right. They are overworked, underpaid, underappreciated market. That is what gravitated me to nurse practitioners. Um, that that notion of underappreciated, overworked. Overlooked. That is what I gravitate towards. And I cannot tell you why that is. The joke I make is, you know, I grew up in Mets fan and you all know how the Mets suck. And so like, that’s like, you know, the underdogs.

Joey Kline: That’s a good line.

Krish Chopra: I like that, you know. But like, I can’t tell you exactly why why I gravitate towards it. But that’s what I do. And so um, any opportunity where it exists, that scenario exists where we’re overlooking a population group. I think there’s a lot of opportunity in business there to, to to do good work. Right. Because I’m not the type where I’ve never. I’ve never been obsessed about the money or the return on investment or the exit number. I’ve been obsessive. Is this work? Is this work I’m doing? Does it matter? Are we doing something that actually makes the difference?

Joey Kline: Well, look, you and I kind of talked about this. It’s like we have precious few years on this earth. We have even fewer precious few, um, productive and healthy years.

Krish Chopra: And good.

Joey Kline: Point. If you have the ability to really do something that means something to you. Then grab it.

Krish Chopra: Agreed. And I think that hopefully everything we’re doing at NP hub continues to go well. And then it gives me the opportunity to go do it again with less focus around the business model. Yeah, right. Because when I started NP hub, if we didn’t do well, I didn’t.

Joey Kline: You know, I didn’t.

Krish Chopra: Like yeah, I didn’t eat and I didn’t come from a well-to-do family. It was literally my money or no money. If that makes sense. And so, um, you know, and, and a 100% if there’s an opportunity to do this again down the line at the moment and I will carry out. I’m 35, uh, without kids right now. Yeah. Um, I want to do it one more time.

Joey Kline: I hear that.

Krish Chopra: One. Yeah.

Joey Kline: Yeah. Um, I think it’s hard to hear about these people that are like. I just want to get to this number and, like, my mid 40s and then retired. I’m like. And do what?

Krish Chopra: I made that joke. Look. I’m guilty. I’ve been making that joke lately. Mike, what are you gonna do after. If I said I’m retiring, I’m done.

Joey Kline: Um, did I just describe you?

Krish Chopra: You know, you literally just did. Yeah. And, you know, it’s funny. My my wife literally rolled her eyes. The hardest I’ve ever seen. Whenever I say the statement because she’s like, okay, after a year, what are you gonna do? Like, like I love, I love the I love the grind. I love the chaos. Yeah I do I, I might not I’m not openly admit it, but I love it.

Joey Kline: I’m not saying like you work just because that’s what you’re supposed to do. Right. But just to then, I don’t know, like go play golf and have lunch and not use your mind. I don’t know, dude.

Krish Chopra: I know, I mean, it’s the same thing. Don’t you hear? There’s some stat. I’m probably butchering this one, but there’s a stat out there where you are. You know what happens to people that end up retiring? Um, and within a few years, it’s like they deteriorate further.

Joey Kline: Yes. Yeah. I don’t know what the number is, but I know what you’re talking about.

Krish Chopra: That is going. That happens, I think, at any point of view. Like if I, if I take a break for five years. I do believe I will get worse. Yeah. Maybe it’s, you know, absurd. But that’s that’s what I think.

Joey Kline: Um. All right. So for for those listening out there who, uh, either want to be part of the mission to save health healthcare or want to learn more about your product and services, how do they find you?

Krish Chopra: Well, they go to NPB.com, NPB.com.

Joey Kline: And Krish. Your first name starts with a K. Your last name starts with a C if you want to look him up online. Chris, thank you very much for coming here and sharing your story. Really appreciate.

Krish Chopra: It. Thank you so much. It was so much fun.

Joey Kline: Sure thing.

 

Tagged With: NPHub

The Power of Personal Connection: Make Your Brand Unforgettable Through Storytelling

August 12, 2025 by angishields

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High Velocity Radio
The Power of Personal Connection: Make Your Brand Unforgettable Through Storytelling
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In this episode of High Velocity Radio, Joshua Kornitsky interviews Christy Renee Stehle, an award-winning brand storyteller, strategist, and coach. Christy shares her journey from avid reader to corporate advertising leader, discusses her storytelling framework, and emphasizes the importance of emotional intelligence and alignment in brand communication. She recounts success stories, including revitalizing Claire’s, and offers practical advice for entrepreneurs and organizations.

Christy-Renee-StehleChristy Renee Stehle is a dynamic speaker, coach and consultant who specializes in helping organizations stand out and scale through the power of magnetic storytelling and presence.

From chronic illness and spending 5 years traveling across 35 countries to helping organizations find clarity, structure, and consistency of their brand, Christy is a wealth of wisdom and a catalyst for change.

Connect with Christy on LinkedIn and Facebook.

Episode Highlights

  • Importance of active listening and emotional intelligence in understanding brand essence
  • Development of a unique storytelling framework for brands
  • The role of personal stories in connecting with audiences
  • Challenges organizations face in achieving communication alignment
  • The significance of consistency in brand messaging across platforms
  • The impact of mentorship on professional growth and confidence
  • Strategies for integrating storytelling into organizational culture
  • The evolving nature of consumer expectations and the importance of personal connection
  • Resources and methods for entrepreneurs to enhance their storytelling skills

About Your Host

BRX-HS-JKJoshua Kornitsky is a fourth-generation entrepreneur with deep roots in technology and a track record of solving real business problems. Now, as a Professional EOS Implementer, he helps leadership teams align, create clarity, and build accountability.

He grew up in the world of small business, cut his teeth in technology and leadership, and built a path around solving complex problems with simple, effective tools. Joshua brings a practical approach to leadership, growth, and getting things done.

As a host on Cherokee Business Radio, Joshua brings his curiosity and coaching mindset to the mic, drawing out the stories, struggles, and strategies of local business leaders. It’s not just about interviews—it’s about helping the business community learn from each other, grow stronger together, and keep moving forward.

Connect with Joshua on LinkedIn.

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.

Joshua Kornitsky: Welcome back to another exciting episode of High Velocity Radio! I am your host Joshua Kornitsky, professional iOS implementer and in studio today I have a really incredible guest, Christy Renee Stehle, a magnetic brand storyteller, a strategist, a speaker, and a coach. Welcome, Christy.

Christy Renee Stehle: Hey, thank you so much.

Joshua Kornitsky: I’m so happy to have you here. I’ve had the opportunity to to see Christy as part of a panel, and she just made a really, really dramatic impact with the folks in the room. So having you here one on one just makes this all the better. So tell us a little bit about your background and what you do to help folks as both a storyteller, uh, for, for brands, for as a strategist and as a coach. Right. Because it’s multifaceted.

Christy Renee Stehle: Yes. Well, I help brands tell their story to grow their loyal client base. But what I really help brands do is to communicate their essence so that they can really have true transformation, which is really what I’m about. Growth, transformation and communication is all often the biggest sticking point. When companies go to grow. They don’t realize that, but it is okay.

Joshua Kornitsky: So you’re helping them understand who they are.

Christy Renee Stehle: Question mark.

Joshua Kornitsky: Yeah, I, I mean, I, I understand what you’re alluding to, but that must be an incredible challenge to elicit that from folks who are probably very black and white. And this is much more in the creative space than it is in the black and white space.

Christy Renee Stehle: You know, articulating their essence is far less complicated. That comes easy. What is a bit of a challenge, though, is that most brands who need this are what we call problem unaware. They don’t know that what’s sticking them is actually what I can help with. So it’s easy to communicate their essence because through a conversation I can see patterns. I can hear patterns. You know, we often have a blind spot. It’s actually not crazy science. What I do it, you know, if we were having a conversation and you said the word trust 17 times, that’s probably going to be important.

Joshua Kornitsky: That’s a good note to remember just for future interactions with anybody. Right. So people are what it sounds like. What you’re saying is people generally self-identify where their issues are. You’re just tuned to hear it.

Christy Renee Stehle: Yes. Active listening. My background in coaching obviously helped a lot. It really just is a lot of leadership training that allows me to be able to hold the space, listen, have very strong recall. I will say that that is important. Being able to notice that, recall it, and maybe even articulate verbatim what they said. But you can record that. You can take notes.

Joshua Kornitsky: There are ways these days. Yeah, more, more than ever. But let’s talk about that a little. What is your background? What was the foundation for all of this?

Christy Renee Stehle: Yeah, well, you know, I always tell people that I’ve been reading since I was about three years old, and I never stopped, and that’s awesome. Um, people don’t always like that answer because they’re like, no, I want to know exactly where you studied and exactly what you did. And honestly, reading for that length of time and never stopping has been the biggest educator.

Joshua Kornitsky: I’m the son of of a retired now librarian. You don’t have to tell me. Yeah. Um, so it sounds like that constant search for knowledge is, is ultimately the underpinning of of what made you pay more attention or was there more in your background?

Christy Renee Stehle: I mean, it’s definitely it was definitely my first experience with, with the bigger world than the area that I lived in, for sure. But even sentence structure, story structure, paragraph structure, when you’re when it when you’re reading bestselling books. Right. Again and again and again and again, you start to understand that there is a structure to this. And, you know, I have a storytelling framework story. It is used for inspiring trust and motivating action. And it really that was birthed from reading fiction. Yes.

Joshua Kornitsky: I think that’s incredible. Um, did you through your journey to arrive at being the the dynamic storyteller that you are, the magnetic storyteller that you are? Did you have any mentors? Did you have anybody that inspired you?

Christy Renee Stehle: Lots of people throughout the throughout the way, I’ve had so much help. I’m always, you know, for anybody listening that wants to feel inspired to do more with your life, seek help. It does not make us weak. It makes us strong. And one in particular, when I was in corporate advertising to have a middle aged man who had been doing this for decades and decades, always pushed the women to the forefront and give us opportunities where, for instance, directing a national TV commercial, being able to write the full script and I don’t know if I can do this and I don’t know how to do this. He’s like, you got this, really? You’ve got this, Christine. Go! Oh, yeah. And. No. Can you help in this? And there would be feedback in the end, but it was such a great mentor and development to help me trust in my own skills and learn this and then refine my delivery for sure.

Joshua Kornitsky: That’s and as you said, reaching for help doesn’t make you weak or show you that you’re weak. It shows you that you’re strong because the the best of the best all work with people who help improve them.

Christy Renee Stehle: And I think that that’s one of the biggest misconceptions. People don’t like asking for help. They think that it makes them look bad. I should know everything. I should do it myself. Absolutely not.

Joshua Kornitsky: If that was the case, they would already be at the top of everything they attempted and I’ve not met too many people there. Yeah. Um, so you had touched on this briefly about sort of this blend of both precision with data, but also with creativity. Right. And and with your background in, in your experience, can you talk a little bit about how the two overlap, or maybe not overlap. Maybe where they meet?

Christy Renee Stehle: Yes. Well, believe it or not, emotions can be data. And I’ve been using that a lot more recently because yes, the emotions that you feel, the emotions you want to convey, the emotions that your ideal audience feels. That’s what drives our communication. That’s true. So there is precision and in this emotional intelligence. And I think that for me, I’ve always been very detail oriented. That comes naturally to me. But working in corporate advertising, as I just mentioned, helped me develop my high level way of thinking. And I still remember, you know, this goes back to transformation and growth. When somebody asks you to do something. Yes, seek help, but also in certain settings be like, yeah, I totally got this. And I remember the first time I was asked to create concepts for a campaign, and that was actually some high level thinking, and that helped to bridge me into the high level. But when I was asked, Christy, can you make some concepts for a campaign? Sure, absolutely. Of course. Call ended, went to Google. What is concept? What is a campaign and. Figured it out.

Joshua Kornitsky: But it’s incredible because the way that you stitch it together now. I won’t say it’s effortless because clearly there’s a lot of effort in it, but you certainly seem to have honed your craft in a way that that shines through with some of the clients you’ve shared with me that you’ve worked with. Um, anything in that regard that, that without giving away names and companies of things that are obviously protected, uh, you had shared with me about, uh, one company that had grown 51% in a particular period of time that was remarkably short.

Christy Renee Stehle: From bankruptcy, I might add. Yes.

Joshua Kornitsky: Back from the dead.

Christy Renee Stehle: Back from the dead? Yes. At a time when many legacy retailers were going out of business, toys R us, K-Mart, Claire’s was threatened to go out of business as well. They did not have a voice that spoke to the new generation. They did not have consistency between their e-commerce site and their in-store experience, and a lot of brands may not think that that’s as important as it is. But for today’s buyers, if you don’t have that consistency, you’re not even registering in their awareness that you are worthy of them investing their time to check you out.

Joshua Kornitsky: Well, I’ll confide in you. Uh, I now both have a love and hate relationship with you because I have a 17 and a 22 year old daughter. And what you did at Claire’s clearly worked a few years back, because we spent plenty of time and money there. But to your point, they are the growing demographic, right? And all joking aside, if they didn’t see consistency between what they saw online and what they experienced in store, uh, you fall into a situation like the electronics retailer Fry’s. They were two different organizations, and the in-store experience was completely removed from the online experience, and they disappeared literally overnight.

Christy Renee Stehle: It happens. It happens. And, you know, with the voice for Claire’s, we were creating this new voice for the generation. And so the task was or what I helped them see, the task was, is that we need to communicate in a voice where the today’s 15 year olds will not roll their eyes. But then, as that bonus, can we communicate to the millennials that grew up with Claire’s and have them inspired too? Because in a lot of times the parents are the ones doing the buying. So how can you bridge that and speak to everybody and still be very specific and nuanced?

Joshua Kornitsky: And so you’re you’re doing multigenerational communication.

Christy Renee Stehle: Which is how we got here today with the Family Business Association Enterprise Center.

Joshua Kornitsky: Absolutely. Well, you had shared with me that you’re pretty well traveled on this planet of ours. Um, how many countries?

Christy Renee Stehle: 30. 36. Actually, I need to revise it. I went to Canada to two weeks ago.

Joshua Kornitsky: That’s amazing.

Christy Renee Stehle: 36.

Joshua Kornitsky: 36. So I think that leaves you about 45. Give or take a few left, but some of them are smaller, so you can probably hit a few of those in a day. But all joking aside, with that level of international exposure, understanding that not all of those were business trips, in fact, I don’t think many of them were business trips. How does that inform your perspective? Because it’s not just about American consumers. You’re dealing. Some of the clients that that you work with are global brands. Many of them are global brands. So did that inform your perspective?

Christy Renee Stehle: It did. And what I would like to share from that is in the idea of transformation and this idea of impossible growth. No, they were not all business trips. In fact, I had a two year work gap on my resume before I landed a six figure salary with no formal experience. Wow.

Joshua Kornitsky: So you are a really good storyteller.

Christy Renee Stehle: And that was a huge part of it. Yes, being able to leverage yourself as the best candidate in any room using your personal experience. So I went into that interview as the only one who had traveled the world, and instead of showing up and being, um, well, you know, I had a two year work gap and and I was like, no.

Joshua Kornitsky: Look at look at how much I built myself.

Christy Renee Stehle: How much and how I can communicate beyond borders. And I just really sold. I sold that, and by the end of that interview, I was the only choice candidate, because I had put myself in a box that no one could compete with. And I.

Joshua Kornitsky: Pretty strong.

Christy Renee Stehle: Piece again and again and again. And if anybody is listening and you feel inspired, but you’re like, I have not traveled to 35 countries, I can’t do that. That is part of what I help. I know we talked a lot about organizations, but for the entrepreneurs, understanding how to leverage that personal story, maybe it’s a misfired email. Maybe it’s a traffic moment. It doesn’t have to be these life altering stories, but captivating is in the delivery, not in what.

Joshua Kornitsky: Happened when you had shared it. It creates this, uh, my word connection point, right? Where where I can see where the person that I’m, um, talking with to convince of my product or service can see themselves in in the story as I tell it.

Christy Renee Stehle: And that’s really the key. It’s that right there. That’s all it takes today. Yes, there’s a lot that goes into that. There’s strategy. There’s, you know, refinement of, well, I have this big, huge life and I don’t understand how my personal transformation has anything to do with my business acumen. Well, that’s where I come in and that’s really where I help merge. Because yes, if you figure out how to do that, that’s all it takes.

Joshua Kornitsky: That’s fantastic. And in truly that that’s a cheat code to to to connect.

Christy Renee Stehle: You kidding me? I have gotten in the room. I was on the Mind Valley stage, my Mind Valley mainstage university next to visionary leaders like Fish and Lisa Nichols as a nobody. Right? I’ve just.

Joshua Kornitsky: Won. Not a nobody.

Christy Renee Stehle: But not a nobody because I positioned myself. And it’s this quantum leap type of growth that I’ve done again and again. And the rug has been pulled out from under me more times than I can count, and I’m constantly pulling myself up by my bootstraps building a new presence in a new industry. And I’ve used this, this magnetic storytelling method repeatedly for all this growth time and time again.

Joshua Kornitsky: I can you tell us a little bit more about it, because it sounds like it’s something that that absolutely taps into not only a need, but is is deeply in tune with the marketplace?

Christy Renee Stehle: Absolutely. I’ve joke I’ve been waiting my entire life for 2025. This is perfect timing. The world needs what I have to offer. And yes, there’s three parts to this, right? So you have your message, which we talked about a little bit with the previous guest. This is really where the data comes from, the emotional data. And under in order to understand what your message is you have to first understand your audience. Then you position it through that lens, then you have then you have something that I call magnetic presence. Magnetic presence is built through courage. It’s built through energy management, and it’s built through leveraging your story. And then you have story which depending on if we’re a large organization, you may have an evergreen story. You may have a campaign story, but then what nobody is talking about is the individual story. And that’s where I’m training leadership teams in the same way that I’m working with the entrepreneurs. Hey, what is your background? Every time you’re in a customer service interaction or sales interaction, don’t come out of the gate with just like, okay, let’s get down to business. No way.

Joshua Kornitsky: Right.

Christy Renee Stehle: Tell a story about what just happened. And so the person sitting there goes, wow, I’m in such good hands.

Joshua Kornitsky: So you bring up a really interesting point, and I want to make sure that I ask this question. You’re some of the organizations that you work with are really, you know, fortune 100 if and because it’s not my information to share pretty high up on that list in maybe even the single digits. That having been said, are you able to transfer the skills and abilities that you’re talking about? Now with me down to entrepreneurs that are at a local level.

Christy Renee Stehle: Oh yes. Yes, I’m working with entrepreneurs right now. I have one on one coaching clients, whether they’re really what I the translation in that really comes down to, are you the face and voice of your brand? That is what it takes today. So yeah, absolutely. It’s that same kind of thing, that same kind of storytelling training. It’s just on a team level or an individual level. But the the golden thread is really the same.

Joshua Kornitsky: That’s really incredible to know, because it’s the type of thing that, as you alluded to before, it’s a quantum leap if you can harness this ability. And it sounds like it’s sort of like the, the, the colors in the house. Right. The information’s contained in the folks. You just have to help them see it.

Christy Renee Stehle: Yes. And that’s really a lot of the work that I do. And, you know, whether you’re an organization you need to be. So if you’re an organization, you need to be as personable as a human. And if you are a solopreneur, you need to be as omnipresent.

Joshua Kornitsky: As an organization.

Christy Renee Stehle: As an organization. So we have all of these platforms that we’re expected to show up on. And no, you don’t as an entrepreneur, need to be everywhere. Focus your energy on maybe two, but you need your presence there. Because if somebody Googles you or goes to that certain platform and tries to find you and you’re invisible, you’re a ghost. Guess what? You don’t even register. Oh, they’re not real. Right. And that’s the that’s the problem that a lot of brands are having in the market right now, they’re not even aware of is that with AI, with all the scams, with the way the market’s changing, there’s a lot of mistrust and we have a really guarded generation of buyers. And so what we need to do is inspire that trust at a new level. So I know people kind of fear this disruption, but there’s so much opportunity here. And it really comes down to personal connection, telling your story. I mean, I think it’s a great time to be in business.

Joshua Kornitsky: It’s the way you tell the story. It certainly makes sense to me that there’s tweaks and and opportunities to improve just the way people are communicating on a basic level to to make a pretty dramatic impact.

Christy Renee Stehle: Well, you know, think about think about communication at the level in your home. Think about your loved ones or your children. How much of a difference does it make communicating with your wife or your husband from a place of emotion, anger, frustration versus internalizing processing your emotions and coming back with a level head?

Joshua Kornitsky: It’s a completely different experience.

Christy Renee Stehle: How much of a difference in an outcome does it make?

Joshua Kornitsky: Sure. That that, um, it’s a great way to to bring clarity to that. So who usually reaches out to you in an organization? Hoo hoo hoo if someone wants to engage with you? Who is it usually that does.

Christy Renee Stehle: I wish I had a simple answer for you. My life would be a lot more simplistic, but because I do so much public speaking, just like you saw me at the Kennesaw panel that same event, a CEO of a family business. A event organizer for the Kennesaw Super Women’s Conference that I’ll be in this month. That’s great. And a CEO event. And then there was an entrepreneur there that night that was interested as well. So honestly, everybody needs this at this time. And I’ve just been try as I might to say, that’s too many people to serve all at one time. I’m a team of one. Let me pull back every time I go into a new room. This same spread of people seem to be interested. So I’ve refined my approach, and now I’m building a very big and dynamic team so I can scale. And it’s my own medicine, right.

Joshua Kornitsky: Right, right. But but that’s what makes so to to your own point, it has credibility because it is your own medicine. Right? Because your belief in what you’re doing comes through very clearly. And it’s obvious that you believe in what you’re teaching, what you’re eliciting from the folks that you’re working with. And it makes a dramatic impact on how those engagements have to execute. Because when people when you love what you do, it comes through. And it definitely, definitely comes through.

Christy Renee Stehle: Well, you make such a good point. You know, that’s one of my core teachings, is that your energy about something is going to sell more than your words. And it’s just like the age old sales technique or job interview. If you’re not convinced, you won’t convince. If you’re sitting there as a job candidate thinking, man, I’m really trying to convince this person that I’m I’m the absolute right choice, but I’m insecure and I don’t have this. You’re not going to get it. And so if you believe in what you do, that energy, that passion, that conviction, it shines through. And that’s how you can really bring a lot of people in. That is the magnetism that I talk about.

Joshua Kornitsky: So when let’s take a hypothetical, when you walk into a leadership team that’s decided to engage you. Um, question number one is, is how often are they all aligned around and for clarity around who the brand is, what its identity is, what what they’re dedicated as a leadership team towards achieving.

Christy Renee Stehle: That is one of the biggest challenges that I see organizations have is that we are multiple people making up our brand. How do we have one voice? And in family business, you tend to have more alignment between and, you know, one of the CEO that I just mentioned when he said, you know, well, we’ve just been hiring people that are pretty much like us.

Joshua Kornitsky: A tried and true approach.

Christy Renee Stehle: And it and it works, but it still yeah, it it it it will have a hard time continuing to be sustainable in this new. Exactly, exactly. So there’s all different range of alignment. Um, but the I do have an align framework as well. And it was birthed from the fact that when I was in corporate advertising and I was at that director level, I was constantly like a broken record. Hey guys, I need to get the team to align. Can we align before this? So alignment is on a grand scale, but it’s also on a micro level of everyday interactions. You think that you’re saying the same thing. And this is why communication breaks down. And it is that sticking point, because a team will be having a conversation about something and then they’ll go break. And then they all go to execute and then you bring them back. I cannot tell you how many times a creative team delivered their heart and soul on a screen in a project, and the team said, oh, this is great, guys, but it’s not the ask, right? It’s like, who can you please learn how to communicate a little bit better, please? So I got in the habit of just getting into the micro moments of alignment.

Joshua Kornitsky: So, so are you bridging the gap between what I say and what you hear.

Christy Renee Stehle: Often, often. And as writers, our job is to be very literal. So I did train my staff to get into the habit of after everything, then go back. And it’s kind of that active listening thing that we talked about, right? Get in the habit of active listening. So what I hear it. What I hear the ask being what I’m going to go do. Just to clarify, these were certain things that I taught. So really an organization, if they were engaging me for my full services, I would be building you internal communication alignment processes as well.

Joshua Kornitsky: Well, and that makes sense, because if you’ve got five leaders that all have a slightly different interpretation of the goal, everyone in each one of those silos has a slightly different interpretation of the goal. And if you’ve got ten people in five silos, you’ve got 50 people that are marching to different orders. And and that’s going to do nothing but create chaos.

Christy Renee Stehle: And we’re communicating where slack teams as fast as we can in short little bursts of text. Then nobody.

Joshua Kornitsky: Ever, nobody ever misunderstands those ever.

Christy Renee Stehle: Ever.

Joshua Kornitsky: Well, so to me that that leads to a question that I’m curious about. How important is common language because of what you’re talking about?

Christy Renee Stehle: Oh my gosh. Yes. So yeah, I have been I’ve had eyes roll at me like, you’re such a dork. But the first thing that I do is like, we need to have a glossary of terms that we all use because otherwise, you know, especially in today, we’re talking about, okay, there’s no standardize for a lot of marketing lingo, let’s say. Right. If you’re trying to make a campaign on social media, the rules are changing all the time. First of all, you have a graphic designer, you have a writer, then you have an account manager. You have all these people. What’s the art copy on image? Text caption. Right. A lot of times people will say, make the text, say this, make the image this. There’s a lot of other text. If you’re doing paid ads, you have a headline. Is the headline the thing that’s on the graphic or is the headline the specific part that you have to plug in in the back end?

Joshua Kornitsky: So is the framework that you introduced to them. What you help them understand brings the clarity to it.

Christy Renee Stehle: It definitely brings clarity and it really depends on where an organization is and what their goals are. So the first thing that I always do is have a strategic onboarding. We need to know where you want to go and know what’s in the way. And then we can figure out what’s happening. So it’s not always the same. But just like we talked about before there commonalities. There’s patterns. It’s just a little bit of customization into the plug and play if that makes sense.

Joshua Kornitsky: So when you have those dialogs, is that where you begin to use your term? Is that where you begin to unearth the essence of that organization? Is that do you find that it sort of leaks out through the seams?

Christy Renee Stehle: It absolutely does. It absolutely does. It is very you know, I think that emotional intelligence is what equips me to do such a fine job at this. It’s being able to walk into a room and hear some stories, hear some conversations, see how people interact and get a little bit of legacy history and I mean within an hour we could say an hour, whether it’s a strategic workshop where we’re getting together. What I really love to do is team building events. I think that we need it now, that we are hybrid. People are wondering what the future of work looks like. How do we do that? Well, people don’t always like to carve out some time, but guess what? If we’re doing three things at once, right? In that time that we carve out, we are actually creating much more sustainability as we go along.

Joshua Kornitsky: So what are some of the misconceptions, right, that when you walk in the door and you’re talking about creating this alignment and creating this understanding, and even as basic a term as as a glossary of terms, right, to get everybody using common language, what are the assumptions that you have to combat?

Christy Renee Stehle: Mm. Yeah. Great. Great question. I always and one of my principles as well is always handle the objections straight out of the gate. So knowing what those misconceptions would be and being able to deliver them is important. I don’t know that they are always the exact same. I do think that really, as we talked about a little bit earlier, the. Amount of time you have to tell your brand story, I would say is probably the most consistent thing. I get the question of, well, how much time do you have to capture that attention? And it really depends on how good you are at retaining that attention. And I think that, well, we don’t need to tell our brand story because we don’t do a lot of long form content. Okay.

Joshua Kornitsky: Right. But but is I want to frame this as a question rather than a statement. Is is a brand’s story at the highest level? Is it a isn’t it more of an arc or a spectrum than a simple. We make widgets.

Christy Renee Stehle: Yes. And I would take it a step further and say that a brand story at the highest level is an emotion. It is an emotion that you leave others feeling at every touchpoint, whether it’s online, whether it’s a customer service, if you are making others feel taken care of, let’s use chick fil A, for example.

Joshua Kornitsky: I was going to ask for an example.

Christy Renee Stehle: I was perfect exactly. Chick fil A was the only brand that’s ever come across my desk. And you keep asking, no, it’s not protected. I’ve worked with the American Heart Association, chick fil A, sire, LTL free, Claire’s next door, the list goes.

Joshua Kornitsky: I just always have to be respectful because I know.

Christy Renee Stehle: Absolutely. And yes, I can be modest in that way sometimes, so thank you for drawing it out of me. Yes, but chick fil A was the only brand that’s ever come across my desk that had well-developed communication guidelines, so it’s easy to see why they scaled from a handful of locations in the southeast to a nationwide presence that people in New York say, yay, chick fil A got here, right? Why? Because they understand their audience so well. Their audience is primarily working parents, primarily working moms. So the energy that they make you feel at every interaction Is taken care of. You can trust chick fil A to give you a moment of peace in your day of chaos. From the little napkins, from the little flowers, from the smiling faces, from the. My pleasure. Everything they do is to give you the feeling that you are taking care of. That is their brand story.

Joshua Kornitsky: So I think you just touched on another aspect of of. I love this term, essence. Right? Because it isn’t just a leadership team discussion decision and they send it off to marketing. It sounds like it permeates every level of the organization.

Christy Renee Stehle: It should. And unfortunately, sometimes it is just a leadership conversation and it is sent off to marketing. But that is the old way of doing things, and that is not what will get you this huge kind of scalable growth that is possible, this impossible growth, this scaling, this nationwide presence. Yes, it does come from marketing, should be permeated in absolutely everything you do. And so I actually believe hot take here as somebody who came as an agency partner. I think that all. Somewhat.

Joshua Kornitsky: So I’m sorry, you were saying someone coming from an agency.

Christy Renee Stehle: A little bit of a hot take. Is somebody coming from it as an agency partner? I don’t believe that brands should have agency partners in this day and age. I think they need in-house marketing teams trained by expert professionals in how to develop the leadership internally to do this. Why? Because the amount of times agencies are a rotating door or they trade people out, they don’t document brand. No, marketing isn’t everything you do. So get really used to telling that story. Have somebody like me come in, give you the processes, outline the leadership training, teach you how to do it, and then carry it forth yourself.

Joshua Kornitsky: Well, so you mentioned before about sort of this next generation of consumer. Right going. Building directly on what you just said. Are you beginning to encounter next generation leaders? Are you helping sort of train those next generation leaders? Because it seems to me, thinking of the traditional stuffy, uh, leadership team meeting that that I’ve been in a party to and, and borne witness to. There’d be a lot of resistance to that concept.

Christy Renee Stehle: To the concept.

Joshua Kornitsky: Of of of that marketing’s got to be that that marketing’s got to be in-house, that we’ve got to have it permeate every aspect of the business because the, the old, uh, curmudgeon perspective is it has its place as, as part of the holistic organizational structure, but it’s no more important than anything.

Christy Renee Stehle: Else. Good luck. Good luck. But that’s how that’s how so many brands are becoming obsolete today because they’re not adapting.

Joshua Kornitsky: So broadly, what does success look like when When it all hits, when you’ve worked with a client and you’ve gotten them to understand and and extracted and they’ve embraced what their essence is and you’ve gotten it to again, you facilitate them. You don’t do it for them. If you’ve gotten them to understand the value of bringing that essence throughout the organization, obviously, financials one aspect of it, but what are the other impacts on the organization other than success?

Christy Renee Stehle: Success for an organization with their brand story are happy employees, fulfilled employees, top tier talent, a culture that not only your employees love to organically share, but also something that your customers can buy into. So it’s this idea of creating a movement, creating a culture. And truly that is the highest form of success because that is how you do less work and grow faster, because you have what I call walking billboards. People, employees, customers who are just so taken with what you. You do that they go and they share you on Cherokee Business RadioX plugging an automotive alpha and omega community leader who’s taking care of the community. People start talking for you.

Joshua Kornitsky: So what you’re saying, if I can paraphrase, is if you take care of good, if you take excellent care of the of your staff, your staff will take excellent care of your customers.

Christy Renee Stehle: Yes.

Joshua Kornitsky: Huh? Novel concept. I feel like that’s. That is both incredibly obvious and so counterintuitive to the way a lot of legacy business operates, because so many legacy businesses just see like the old Tom and Jerry cartoon, they just see that walking bag of cash when a customer walks through the literal or the metaphor, the metaphorical door, helping them understand that value must be a challenge.

Christy Renee Stehle: Yes. And one of the best projects that I worked on was actually a white paper documenting all of the data of this new generation of buyers. And all of the studies show, whether it’s event attendees or buyers today. They value this personal connection. So legacy brands who are thinking in the way that you suggested or that they’re not reading the data, they’re not reading the statistics that show, hey, we have a new generation of buyers who value things very, very differently. And if you adapt now, excellent, huge growth is in your future. And if you don’t, might be like toys R us I’d be like Kmart.

Joshua Kornitsky: And is that white paper available to people to reach out to you?

Christy Renee Stehle: It actually is.

Joshua Kornitsky: That’s a good.

Christy Renee Stehle: Actually.

Joshua Kornitsky: Yes, yes, I’d like to read that myself.

Christy Renee Stehle: Absolutely.

Joshua Kornitsky: Well, Christye, uh, I can’t tell you how informative I found all of this. Is there anything we didn’t touch on that we need to share? Other than. I do want to ask you, I understand that you’re the recipient very recently of an award, and I. I really believe you should shout it from the rooftops. So please tell.

Christy Renee Stehle: Us. I should be shouting it. You’re absolutely right. I think some of the shock is still wearing off. Fair enough. I’m. I’m in the same room in the same category as four time Olympian athletes and keynote speakers and global heads of event companies. I won a 2025 Smart Meeting Best of Stage award in the Life Changers category, and I am just beyond humbled. I’m beyond honored. This means so much to me. This is going to allow me to get out there and help so many other entrepreneurs and organizations transform, and.

Joshua Kornitsky: It’s well deserved. And I say this from a professional perspective, having having spent some time with Christie, having also seen her on stage in a panel, uh, you light up a room and I mean that in, in a strictly professional sense that people listen to what you say because the way you say it is so impactful.

Christy Renee Stehle: And if anybody wants to learn how to do that.

Joshua Kornitsky: How do we reach.

Christy Renee Stehle: You? Work with me one on one. You can find me at my website, Christina, on all the social platforms. That is exactly what I teach to do.

Joshua Kornitsky: That’s fantastic. Well, we will also share all of your mechanisms of contact, including your Instagram, with your permission. Yes. And make sure that people know how to reach you. Uh, Christina Seeley, unbelievable discussion, unbelievable essence that I’m taking away from this. You are a magnetic brand storyteller, a strategist, a speaker, and a coach. And I am so grateful for your time and for you sharing all that you’ve shared with us and our listeners. Thank you.

Christy Renee Stehle: Thank you so much.

Joshua Kornitsky: This is Joshua Kornitsky, the host of High Velocity Radio. Thank you for joining us. We’ll see you next time.

 

BRX Pro Tip: BRX For the Recently Retired Person

August 12, 2025 by angishields

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BRX Pro Tip: BRX For the Recently Retired Person

Stone Payton: And we are back with Business RadioX Pro Tips, Lee Kantor and Stone Payton here with you. Lee, there are so many practical and productive use cases for joining the Business RadioX team and serving your local community. What about the application of a Business RadioX operation run by a recently retired person?

Lee Kantor: Sure, if you’re in business and you’re just retired, there is no better business to start the second act of your life as a Business RadioX studio partner. Because this is going to offer you a uniquely flexible and rewarding business opportunity that’s going to leverage all of your experience, it’ll leverage the relationships you already have, and it’s going to be without any of the constraints of a typical traditional job. This is definitely for the person who has that entrepreneurial itch that would like to do something, but they don’t know what their next move to make.

Lee Kantor: If you partner with us, a Business RadioX studio partner, you set your own fee structure. You keep 100 percent of the revenue that you earn. There’s no contracts. There’s no royalties. You build the business at your own pace. You can do it with no or low overhead. There’s unlocking as you grow multiple revenue streams, and I’m talking about more than two dozen different revenue streams, and it could be from sponsorships, to event coverage, to consulting, to coaching. There’s all kinds of ways to make money with our model.

Lee Kantor: And the model works great if you are a service minded professional who wants to support their community, who wants to remain relevant, and who wants to continue to make a difference in your work. If you want to do work that you feel good about at the end of the day, that you know that you made an impact, Business RadioX is a great fit for that type of a person. You’re going to have access to a proven system. You’re going to have ongoing mentoring. There’s a national network of like-minded partners that are happy and willing to talk to you, share stories and advice, and we make it easy to get started.

Lee Kantor: Again, it’s one of these things where there’s no long term commitment. If we’re not providing the value, you can quit any time. But if you’re ready for a flexible, meaningful business that fits your post-retirement lifestyle, go to businessradiox.com to learn more.

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