Business RadioX ®

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

From Military to Cybersecurity: A Veteran’s Journey to Protecting Businesses

August 11, 2025 by angishields

From Military to Cybersecurity: A Veteran's Journey to Protecting Businesses
Veteran Business Radio
From Military to Cybersecurity: A Veteran's Journey to Protecting Businesses
Loading
00:00 /
RSS Feed
Share
Link
Embed

Download file

In this episode of Veteran Business Radio, Lee Kantor interviews Susan Rouse, Navy veteran and CEO of AG Grace, Inc, an IT managed services firm specializing in cybersecurity. Susan discusses the evolving cyber threats facing businesses, common misconceptions, and the importance of proactive risk assessments, continuous monitoring, and compliance with standards like NIST 800-171. She shares her journey from the Navy to cybersecurity, explains how AG Grace helps clients protect sensitive data, and emphasizes the need for ongoing employee education and strong security partnerships to safeguard organizations in today’s digital landscape.

AG-Grace-logo

Susan-RouseSusan Rouse is a highly accomplished professional with extensive experience in both the IT Services and Health Services industries.

With over 24 years in IT Services and 15 years in Health Services, she has a proven track record of directing a wide range of IT and security initiatives. Her expertise includes implementing secure network design, systems analysis, secure software development, and full lifecycle project management.

Susan is known for her ability to implement innovative security programs that drive awareness, decrease exposure, and strengthen organizations. She has hands-on experience leading all stages of system development efforts, including requirements definition, design, architecture, testing, and support. As a leader, Susan excels in coordinating and directing project-based efforts, managing, motivating, and leading project teams.

Her strategic approach includes developing strategy, mission, scope, and objectives for the creation of information security and risk management programs 2. Susan holds several professional certifications and affiliations, including CISSP, CISM, PMP, and memberships in ISSA, ISACA, (ISC)2, FISSEA, PMI.

Her core competencies are reflected in her extensive knowledge and experience in network and system security, cyber security, cyber intelligence, program management, and more.

Throughout her career, Susan has made significant contributions to various organizations, demonstrating her ability to manage complex programs, ensure compliance with legal and contractual requirements, oversee risk management processes, and develop and execute capture and strategy plans.

Her diverse roles and responsibilities have equipped her with a comprehensive understanding of the challenges and opportunities in both the public and private sectors.

In summary, Susan Rouse is a dedicated and skilled professional whose extensive experience and certifications make her a valuable asset to any organization. Her commitment to excellence, combined with her leadership and technical abilities, contribute to her reputation as an expert in her field.

Follow AG Grace on LinkedIn, Facebook and Instagram.

Episode Highlights

  • Importance of cybersecurity for organizations, especially veteran-owned businesses
  • Transition of a Navy veteran from healthcare and compliance to cybersecurity
  • Common myths about cybersecurity and misconceptions regarding small business vulnerabilities
  • Types of cyber adversaries: data thieves, disruptors, and ransomware attackers
  • AG Grace’s approach to identifying and mitigating cybersecurity risks
  • The necessity of continuous monitoring and proactive security measures
  • Role of employee education and training in maintaining cybersecurity
  • Specific security practices, including the use of virtual private networks (VPNs)
  • Compliance with cybersecurity standards for federal government contractors
  • The ethical obligation of organizations to protect sensitive data and maintain regulatory compliance

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios in Atlanta, Georgia. It’s time for Veterans Business Radio. Brought to you by ATL vets, providing the tools and support that help veteran owned businesses thrive. For more information, go to vets. Now here’s your host.

Lee Kantor: Lee Kantor here. This episode of Veterans Business Radio is brought to you by ATL vets, inspiring veterans to build their foundation success and empowering them to become the backbone of society after the uniform. For more information, go to ATL vets.org. So excited to be talking to my guest today, Susan Rouse, CEO of AG Grace. Welcome.

Susan Rouse: Thank you for having me on your show. I really appreciate it and I am really excited about having the opportunity to talk to you today.

Lee Kantor: Well, let’s get started with AG Grace, how you serving folks?

Susan Rouse: How do we serve folks? So AG Grace is an IT services managed services organization with a focus on cybersecurity. So what we do is we help our customers and our potential customers understand where their security risks are, and then we help them alleviate those risks or close those risks. That’s that’s what we do. And and we love what we do.

Lee Kantor: So what’s your backstory? Um, how’d you get involved in this line of work?

Susan Rouse: So it’s it’s a long story, but I’m gonna try to cut it really short. I started out in healthcare. I’m a Navy veteran, and while I was in the Navy, I was a Corbin. After getting out of the military. I transitioned into working for a government agency at the state of Maryland. As a compliance officer. And I learned about the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act at that time while serving there. And there was a portion of that rule, the law that required organizations to implement what they call the security rule, which indicated which meant that they had to actually go in and understand what their where their security risks were in their IT infrastructure and then close those risks. And at the time, I just really got interested in it. I really loved what we were doing. I loved how we were, you know, making things better for the organization and protecting patient data. And I just really fell in love with it security at that time. And since then, I pivoted my career so that I would always have the opportunity to help organizations, federal organizations and commercial companies increase their security posture and protect their data and protect their intellectual property.

Lee Kantor: So what are some myths around cybersecurity? A lot of people talk about it. Not a lot of people, in my view, understand it and maybe don’t appreciate really the cybersecurity risks that are happening every day for businesses of all sizes. But do you mind sharing a little bit about kind of the lay of the land, what’s happening in in the world regarding cybersecurity for business owners?

Susan Rouse: So what’s happening in the world is we generally have three different types of what I would call adversaries, right. We have the adversaries that just want to steal your data. We have the adversaries that want to interrupt your business operations, and we have the adversaries who want to take your data, hold it hostage, and make you pay to get it back. Right. And that’s called ransomware. A lot of companies, especially small companies who feel like they don’t have a large footprint, um, on the internet or, and even if they have a website, sometimes they feel like they don’t have a large footprint. And they think that because they’re small that the likelihood that they will be targeted is diminished. But that’s not necessarily true, right? If you have a web presence, if you have a network, if your network isn’t protected, then you are not protected. And adversaries will do whatever it is that they can to infiltrate your environment, hold your data hostage, make you pay for it, or at a minimum, cause severe damage and financial damage to you and your organization. A lot of times without you even knowing it, right? So I heard a person say once, you don’t know what you don’t know. And that really meant a lot of times companies have been attacked or they have someone who have already infiltrated their organization and they don’t know. And the reason that they don’t know is because they don’t have the infrastructure in place to be able to determine whether or not someone has infiltrated their organization and has started stealing their data. And if you’ve noticed, or if you if you’ve read from some of the, um, instances where very large companies have finally realized that they have been attacked. Number one, it takes them months and months and months before they even discover that they’ve been attacked. And sometimes those attackers and or hackers have been in their organizations for years, sometimes or months, just stealing the data.

Lee Kantor: Now is there I mean, maybe there’s a misconception that hackers are these, you know, um, teenagers in the basement drinking Red bull and eating Cheetos. Doing this for fun. But a lot of times these are kind of large organizations that this is their job. Like they treat this like they go into work, they whiteboard, they come up with strategy. It’s like, this is not just somebody kind of winging it here. It’s very organized and it’s very coordinated amongst multiple parties.

Susan Rouse: That is absolutely true. It organized crime organizations do it. Uh, nation states do it. And then you do still sometimes have people that just want to play around and see if they can, you know, break in and steal someone’s data. But it is very organized. It is very covert. And what I like to say is our adversaries are operating 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and they’re in different time zones all across the all across the world, and they get paid to do it.

Lee Kantor: So what? How do you kind of advise your clients in order to, um, you know, kind of at least prevent some of the, the easy stuff because I’m sure that there’s different levels of treatment you have to do when you’re working with the clients. There’s probably like the low hanging fruit, like, hey, let’s not click on emails that look like this versus, hey, you know, maybe there’s more security we have to put in the back end of the computer to protect ourselves from people doing some bad stuff. So how do you kind of work with your clients to explain the risk and the different the variety of risks there are, as well as implementing kind of preventative measures to protect them, sometimes from themselves.

Susan Rouse: Well, absolutely. So one of the things that we we like to do with our customers, our potential clients, is we offer a free initial risk assessment. Right. And with that assessment, we it. It is a tool. And we do use tools with that risk assessment. And we come in and we ask questions and we we run our tools and we show them through the reports from the tools where they’re vulnerable. Right. A lot of times people don’t know that they’re vulnerable. They don’t realize they’re vulnerable. So we show them where they’re vulnerable, which is a surprise to some. They like, oh, well, I didn’t know, you understand what I’m saying. But we show them where they are vulnerable. And then after we, you know, have that discussion with them and we show them where they’re vulnerable, then we help give them some tips on the things that you can do right now that isn’t going to cost you any money or a lot of money to, um, alleviate or eliminate some of those vulnerabilities. Now they are going to be some vulnerabilities that they have where it’s going to take a little bit of time, a little bit of effort, a little bit of expertise, and maybe spend a little bit more money than they were thinking about.

Susan Rouse: And I’m not saying break the bank, but at the end of the day, once they realize where they’re vulnerable and we help walk them through how to decrease their footprint. And when I say footprint, your footprint means that when some your vulnerability footprint like what the actual adversaries can see about your organization just from being outside of your organization, that’s that’s your digital footprint. So once we show them what their digital footprint is and where they’re most vulnerable, we help them close those vulnerabilities. And then we continuously meet with them on a regular basis. And to make sure that they’re still working on closing their vulnerabilities and doing whatever it is that we can do to help them maintain, because you have to implement your your solutions to mitigating your, your, your, your posture. But at the end of the day, you have to always continuously monitor it and make sure that your security is functioning the way that it should and is continuing to protect you the way that you want to be protected.

Lee Kantor: Right. Like this isn’t something that you just buy some software, put it in, and then you’re done, right? This is.

Susan Rouse: No. Absolutely not. Unfortunately, it is not like that. And some people think that it could be or it should be. And the reason why is because number one, technology changes all the time, right? Uh, some of the solutions that you buy have to be managed and maintained. You have to maintain your licenses. And every product that’s a software product or a hardware product, the vendors who build those tools have to maintain those tools and patch those tools, because adversaries are out there looking for weaknesses in those tools. They look for your firmware weaknesses, they look for hardware weaknesses. They look for software weaknesses. Right? And if you’re not constantly working with your vendors and getting those patches and applying those patches on a regular basis. Then adversaries will take advantage of those weaknesses because they do have a way, um, where they can tell whether or not your software or your firmware is up to date. And that’s called footprinting, right? So one of the things that adversaries do initially is they they establish a footprint of your organization. Right. And when they find organizations that have out of date hardware, out of date software, out of date firmware, you are a prime candidate for them to infiltrate your environment, steal your data, steal your financial data, do whatever it is that they need to do to harm your organization. Or. For lack of a better word, harm your organization, either professionally or financially.

Lee Kantor: Now, um, When a company contacts you, is it typically because something bad has happened, or some of them are proactive in trying to get ahead of it before something bad happens? Both.

Susan Rouse: We prefer the proactive approach because it’s much easier, and it helps us establish that relationship because we know that they are vested and they’re trying to they’re having a vested interest in protecting their information. When we have customers who think they’ve been attacked or have been attacked or have been, um, victims of ransomware, it’s usually because they’ve they’ve been victims of ransomware, and now they’re realizing that something happened and we need to fix it. And they’ve already spent money. They spent money trying to get their data back.

Lee Kantor: You mentioned some of the organizations you work with or some of the industries. Is there a niche that you find yourself working in a lot that you’ve developed? Some, uh, You know, some specialized knowledge around.

Susan Rouse: So our primary customers are mostly federal government agencies, commercial corporations, healthcare organizations, small IT service firms, um, marketing firms and financial organizations. And I’m sorry. And also manufacturing firms.

Lee Kantor: So now when you’re working with those, what are those what’s kind of the first, uh, conversation look like after they’ve gone through the security check to see where they’re at? I guess a baseline of of where things stand. What happens next?

Susan Rouse: So after we have our initial consultation and we show them where they’re where they are at risk, the next thing that we discuss with them is, you know, we prioritize, you know, how do we mitigate those risks? We talk about what are the easy things that you can do today that aren’t going to cost you a lot of money, that will significantly increase your, um, security posture. Right? And a lot of those things are just really, you know, one thing is like, um, a VPN, like a lot of companies do not use VPNs or VPN technology, and they don’t require their, um, employees who maybe work outside of the organization to use a virtual private network. Right. Well, you know, when you use a virtual private network, then that establishes a secure tunnel from wherever they are in, in, in the world to wherever your organization is. And now you’re you’re exchanging data using an encryption and encrypted tunnel. Right. So the information is not going across the internet in the clear any longer. Right now it’s it’s cryptographically protected. So we start to talk about those different things that they can do that are easy to implement that they they don’t really have to have a full time person on staff to do, and they don’t really have to. You know what I would say? Um, hire a managed services organization or a managed services provider. Just easy things that they can do right away to start that process of protecting their data. And then we sit and we come up with a strategy and a plan. Uh, what what what in the government is called a plan of action and milestones, right.

Susan Rouse: So this is your plan of action, and this is what we’re going to tackle first. This is how we’re going to tackle it. Um, and this is the time frame in which we want to do it. And then we just work down the list and implement the specific, um, recommended security requirements that they have in a, um, in a, in a timely manner. I’ll put it that way. So what you don’t want to do is come up with a plan that’s going to take them like ten years to implement, right? Because in that ten year timeframe, technology technology has changed and so many other things have changed. So you want to keep the momentum going and make sure that we have we’ve established a nice strategy in which we can close all of those vulnerabilities in a shorter time frame as possible, and also give the organization a time to, to catch up, uh, communicate the changes to their employees to make sure their employees understand what they’re doing, it, what they’re doing, I’m sorry, why they’re doing it, and help them understand, you know, what their responsibility is in regarding, you know, the implementation of these different changes that are going to occur within their environment. Now, sometimes security go ahead. Sometimes it requires that people do things differently. And if they don’t understand why they’re doing these things differently, then people will have a tendency to circumvent. Right. So we want to make sure that they’re well trained and they understand exactly why we’re doing this and what the impact is to the organization and What is the impact to the organization if they don’t follow the new security guidelines?

Lee Kantor: Now, you mentioned VPNs for organizations. Is that something that individuals should be taking advantage of as well, like for if they’re working out of their home a lot?

Susan Rouse: Oh, yes. Absolutely. And I mean, if you most of us already use some type of antivirus solution, right? Like Norton, I think most of us, you know, we have our computers and, you know, um, especially if it’s a new computer, you know, it usually comes with a subscription for Norton or McAfee, right? So even Norton has its own virtual private network solution that you can just add it on. You know, pay a couple dollars a month to have it or, you know, the $50 a year or however much it costs. But yes, as a as a private person or as a person, just, you know, working from home, um, it’s easy to download a VPN solution and use it whenever you access the web, like when you’re visiting, you know, your your, your any financial institution that you have or, you know, any medical for anything. Right. So, you know, if you’re using the internet and you’re using a username and password or whatever, you should be using a virtual private network.

Lee Kantor: Now, can you share a story where you were able to make a positive impact for one of your, uh, clients? You don’t have to name the name of the client, but maybe share the challenge they had and how you were able to help them overcome it.

Susan Rouse: So a lot of our customers come to us primarily because they do business with the federal government. And as a result of doing business with the federal government in their contracts, uh, they are required to to have, uh, certain, um, security controls already in place. Right. And I don’t know if you’ve heard of the, um, missed 801 71 requirements. Right. So, um, the National Institutes of Standards and Technology have written these guidelines that they’re not Nonfederal entities are required to implement when they do business and contract with the federal government in order to protect data. Right. So a lot of our customers come to us because they are federal government contractors, and they are required to implement those in this 801 71 controls. And it’s a set of about 17 different controls that run the gamut from what we call access controls to auditing to configuration management. And also there are some physical some physical security controls as well that they’re required to implement. So one of the things that we really do initially is we do our initial risk assessment with them. We show them where they are as far as being in compliance with those regulations. And then we show them what they need to do to get in compliance with to become compliant with those regulations.

Susan Rouse: And then we just basically start from there implementing we write policies and procedures for them. We help them determine which technology they need to use in order to meet the specific security requirement, and then we help them implement those security requirements. Like so. Say, for instance, if you have Microsoft Office 365 and you have to implement multi-factor authentication, right. So not every everybody, every organization usually has Microsoft Office 365 or some version of Microsoft in their environment, but they don’t necessarily know how to go into Microsoft tools and configure Microsoft tools to turn on those security features. So those are some of the things that we do for them. We just go in, we implement the control, we we enable the security features and then we help train. If they have a systems administrator, we help to train their staff on, you know, where to go and how to do, um, how to do certain things to make sure these security controls remain intact. And also how to, you know, do these things. You know, later on, you know, after we leave. To make sure they they stay up to regulations.

Lee Kantor: It must be such rewarding work to know the impact you’re making in all these organizations and keeping them safe and helping them sleep a little better at night.

Susan Rouse: Oh, it absolutely is rewarding. And one of the things that I like about it the most is that people really don’t understand how vulnerable they really are. And so we come in and we show them. And the other thing is people don’t really know if they’ve ever been attacked. Right. And what we do is we help them discover, first of all, if you’ve ever been attacked and some of some of our clients have been right, some of them, we do find out that, you know, they’ve been exploited, right? And then they don’t really know. Sometimes they can’t even tell what’s been taken. Right. Um, so it’s very involved. It’s it’s it’s. But it is very rewarding because at the end of the day, when we leave, we know that our customers are well protected. They’re well educated, and they can reach out to us and ask us any questions afterwards. You know, the follow up work that we do with them is excellent. It’s like we become their security partner.

Lee Kantor: Yeah.

Susan Rouse: I mean, I guess I would say maybe like a virtual security office or whatever you might want to call it. But, you know, we, we, we become a part of the company, but we’re not a part of the company.

Lee Kantor: Right. But you’re protecting them as if it was your company.

Susan Rouse: Oh, absolutely. Absolutely. As if it was our company. Because at the end of the day, you know, organizations have a lot of data to protect. You have your employee data that needs to be protected, which is what we would call PII or personally identifiable information. Right? Sometimes you have employee health information, which we call Pi, which is your personal health information. You definitely have your financial data that needs to be protected. You have your intellectual property that needs to be protected. And then you also sometimes have your own customers data within your environment. So you want to make sure that not only are you protecting your data, but you’re protecting your customers data as well, and you actually have an obligation to protect their data.

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

Susan Rouse: So our website is WW Grace. Com. Um, we are also available I mean on LinkedIn. You know I have a LinkedIn page. Um AG Grace. Com Susan rose um, and also we do have on our website a um, a contact us page where uh, individuals can, you know, just fill out our contact us form and, you know, let us know what they’re interested in learning about. And then we’re hearing about or we all of our services are listed on our website. So whichever service that they’re interested in, um, exploring with us, we have the free consultations, we have the free assessments, uh, the free risk assessments. And we also have, you know, materials on our website like new security newsletters, um, things like that.

Lee Kantor: Well, Susan, thank you so much for sharing your story today, doing such important work. And we appreciate you.

Susan Rouse: Well, Lee, thank you so much for having me. I definitely appreciate it being a part of, uh, this exciting opportunity here with you. And, uh, maybe we’ll get a chance to do it again later.

Lee Kantor: Sounds good. All right, this is Lee Kantor. We’ll see you all next time on Veterans Business Radio.

 

Tagged With: AG Grace

BRX Pro Tip: BRX Pilot – What if it Doesn’t Work?

August 11, 2025 by angishields

BRXmic99
BRX Pro Tips
BRX Pro Tip: BRX Pilot - What if it Doesn't Work?
Loading
00:00 /
RSS Feed
Share
Link
Embed

Download file

BRX-Banner

BRX Pro Tip: BRX Pilot – What if it Doesn’t Work?

Stone Payton: And we are back with Business RadioX Pro Tips, Stone Payton and Lee Kantor here with you. Lee, you know we have the pilot program for candidates who are applying to become a studio partner, but simple, straightforward question here, what if the pilot doesn’t work?

Lee Kantor: I think this is something I like to do during a sales conversation, is, play out the scenario of, okay, say you go with us, say we’re planning on doing this thing, and then what happens if it doesn’t work? What is going to be kind of that worst case scenario? I like to address that early on and let them kind of work through it, and together we work through it, so we understand, okay, if we do this and it doesn’t achieve the objective we are striving for, what is going to happen? What am I left with?

Lee Kantor: So, like speaking about the BRX pilot program, that pilot program is one where we recommend that you go to your network and you send out two messages on LinkedIn to 20 people a day for five days. So, you’re going to send 100 messages to people in your network in order to test to see if this BRX pilot program is going to work for you.

Lee Kantor: So, these 100 people that you’re going to send the messages to, you’re choosing them, so they’re going to be people that are obviously important to you in some respect. There’s a combination of people you know a little bit, you don’t know a little bit, you know very well. So, what would be that kind of worst case scenario? What if it doesn’t work? What if you don’t move forward with the pilot?

Lee Kantor: In our pilot model, what we’re trying to do is prove to you that if you do send out these 100 messages, you’re going to get more discovery calls for your business. So, the worst case scenario is that you don’t get those discovery calls, right? But what you have done is you touched 100 people that were important to you, and you either nurtured that relationship, it improved a little bit, they thought about you a little bit.

Lee Kantor: There’s no kind of negative for that. None of them are going to dislike you for having sent this message. None of them are going to be mad at you for having sent this message. So, there’s really no negative from a relationship building standpoint. You may not get any business, you may not kind of get them to buy what you’re selling, but they’re not going to be mad at you. It won’t negatively impact your business.

Lee Kantor: The upside is you might have dozens of discovery calls to keep you busy for the next few weeks or months. If some of them go through the process, like we hope that they do, and that we recommend that you do. So, hopefully, you’ll be able to persuade some of them to be a buyer of your services at some point down the road.

Lee Kantor: So, I like to kind of play out those scenarios so that people understand, okay, in the best case scenario, every single person books a discovery call. In the worst case scenario, nobody does. But nobody’s mad at me. And who knows, maybe they’re going to book a discovery call with me down the road. I just kind of jogged their memory.

Lee Kantor: So, if you’re interested in learning more about the Business RadioX pilot program, please go to businessradiox.com to learn more. You can contact Stone, he’s happy to kind of have a call with you to discuss to see if you’re the right fit for this program.

Andrea Tsakanikas with Crew Logistics

August 8, 2025 by angishields

HBR-Crew-Logistics-Feature
Houston Business Radio
Andrea Tsakanikas with Crew Logistics
Loading
00:00 /
RSS Feed
Share
Link
Embed

Download file

Crew-Logistics-logo

Andrea-TsakanikasAndrea Tsakanikas is the founder and CEO of Crew Logistics, an Austin-based, women-owned business specializing in large-scale workforce housing and logistics solutions for government and commercial clients.

With a career spanning the logistics, property, and facility management industries, Andrea has led her company to become a trusted GSA Lodging Contractor—earning over 150 government contracts from agencies including the National Guard, Coast Guard, Department of the Treasury, and Veterans Affairs.

Andrea’s company played a vital role during the COVID-19 pandemic, coordinating emergency housing for tens of thousands of healthcare workers and first responders. Her commitment to efficiency, safety, and compliance led to the creation of CrewFacts™, a proprietary software and mobile app that manages over 250,000 housing assets, offering real-time tracking, roster management, and facility certification to meet health, environmental, and quality-of-stay benchmarks.

In her conversation with Trisha, Andrea shared her journey through the logistics industry and her experience building a mission-driven company focused on serving both corporate and government needs. She emphasized the value of mentorship, overcoming fear in entrepreneurship, and supporting women and veterans transitioning into civilian business roles.

Andrea also outlined her vision for Crew Logistics as a strategic, compliance-focused component of corporate spend—ensuring workforce safety and accountability while delivering world-class housing solutions.

Connect with Andrea on LinkedIn.

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix

 

TRANSCRIPT

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

Trisha Stetzel: Hello, Houston. Trisha Stetzel here bringing you another episode of Houston Business Radio. Today’s guest is a national and international leader in logistics and workforce housing, known for tackling massive operational challenges with precision and compassion. Andrea Tsakanikas is the president and CEO of Crew Logistics, an Austin based woman owned firm that become that that has become a trusted partner to agencies like the National, the National Guard, the Coast Guard, Veterans Affairs and so many more. With over 150 government contracts and a client list that spans disaster relief, emergency Response, energy and defense. Andrea’s company ensures crews and critical teams are housed, fed, tracked and cared for across the globe, whether during the pandemic or rapid response. Military mobilizations. Crew Logistics Deliver delivers 24 by seven operations field lodging and custom tech, including their proprietary Crew Fax system with over 250,000 vetted properties. I’m not done. Andrea, I know it’s so much. I’m almost there. Andrea, also a WB e NC leader, mentor to future women entrepreneurs and was named one of the Women Enterprise USA’s top CEOs in both 2020 and 2021. She’s here today to share how smart logistics saves lives, why compliance and accountability Matter and what it takes to lead with excellence and one of the toughest industries out there. Andrea, welcome to the show.

Andrea Tsakanikas: Thank you. I am so excited to be here, especially meeting you. You and I like have so much. I can’t wait to hear. I said, I want to interview you today, so thanks for having me. I’m excited to be here. Yeah.

Trisha Stetzel: You’re welcome and I’m so excited to have you here. I’d really like to start with just tell us more about Andrea, who you are and why you got into this business in the first place.

Andrea Tsakanikas: Love it. Thanks. Thanks so much. I am, um, basically started out as, um, in the property management industry, so I grew up both. What’s really interesting is both sides of my family on my mother’s side, my grandmother on my dad’s side, my great grandmother. They were all in property and facility management. Um, and so I basically started out my career in that area, growing up and just hanging out with, you know, the family and the summers and weekends and all of that. And one day I just woke up and realized, like, how did I end up here? I ended up doing the same business as all of the females or the women in my family. Um, and when I was a child, I used to think I was a little bit unique. Not on the on not on the plus side, but not so great. Um, as far as my mom was always working, my grandmother was always working. My great grandmother, they were all workaholics and they were never home. And I always found myself to be different than the other kids because I never learned how to do the basics of how do you cook, how do you do all these things? And I used to not like that. But once I hit my 20s one day I kind of woke up and thought, you know what? I was really given a gift because they taught me so much about how to be an entrepreneur.

Andrea Tsakanikas: And that’s not something that just comes naturally. Um, and so from then on, in my 20s, I really embraced it and realized that I didn’t have the same fears that a lot of other people have about taking risks and having a unique idea, and then just executing on it and just diving in. And so from property management, facility management, that evolved over many years until I had sold a property management company and I started doing consulting, and that one of my projects over the years took me to the oil fields of Texas and, um, where I thought I was setting up a property management division. I was actually setting up oilfield housing, an actual management company, to manage all all things oilfield housing, remote housing, remote lodging and logistics. Um, so setting up, um, man camps and modular facilities, um, hotels, apartments, anything in remote areas, and then not only setting them up, furnishing them, hiring the teams and the staff to manage them and then just filling them. I saw a new world and realized there’s a lot more to this. This is not property management. Um, what we were doing is we were housing mobile workforce field crews from all over the world. Um, in these remote areas. And we were doing, you know, crew changes and shift changes and even these apartments had, you know, a day shift and night shift.

Andrea Tsakanikas: And as all of this was evolving for me and I was setting this division up, I saw that there was a need for a company to manage it, not from the ground, as I had always done in managing the facility, but managing the people. So managing the logistics. Um, because there were companies worldwide that whether they were in Canada or Denver or Houston that were managing all these field crews, and it was very challenging for them to track all the moving pieces and parts. Um, tracking the people, tracking the quality of where they were staying and ensuring that they were giving their work and field crews a really a good opportunity to ensure they were getting a good night’s rest and tracking their people and their personnel. A lot of pieces that were related to safety, health, safety, environmental, and just all the way down to a good bed to be able to sleep and get that next shift to ensure that they were really rested and ready to do the critical work that they were doing, no matter what industry. At that point, it was oil and gas. So that’s kind of where this whole whole idea came from. Crew logistics and managing and moving people personnel from on the ground perspective.

Trisha Stetzel: So it sounds like you were already doing the work. Where did the idea of the business crew logistics happen in this timeline?

Andrea Tsakanikas: From from that point I actually saw. Um, instead of doing the property management piece, let’s do the crew logistics piece. And so I then partnered with a company in Austin, Texas that was doing we we launched the idea of crew logistics, but specifically in the oil and gas space. Um, and really learned a whole lot about that industry. And from there. Kind of the light bulb went on and said, hey, there’s a big wide world out there. There’s companies outside of the oil field that also need this type of support, whether it’s companies doing, you know, utility repair, doing Department of transportation, repairing of roads, building bridges, um, construction companies doing emergency response. So Crew Facilities was initially born in January of 2015. Um, and then from there, several years in, it just dawned on me and the idea came to say, hey, there are so many government agencies in addition to all these commercial industries that also need the same support. So starting in in 2017, we started looking into how do we get certified? We’re women owned, we’re women operated, and we started learning about the certification process of being getting into government contracting. And that’s actually how I was introduced to you, was Curtis Mueller. He was actually with at the time the tech at UT San Antonio. And and he really taught me the beginnings of government contracting. So from 2017, we added to our portfolio, in addition to commercial clients, also doing government agencies to this. And to date, we’ve done over 150 government logistics contracts, which spans the any of the different government agencies from Air National Guard in many states, National Guard, Coast Guard, Border Patrol, Veterans Administration, etc.. So we’ve really, really, really had some really great opportunities to help serve those that have served us, for sure. So that’s why I was so excited to meet you today.

Trisha Stetzel: Thank you. Andrea, you you’re an amazing woman. You’re doing so many amazing things. And I’m going to I’d like to dive into how you’re helping other women in a minute. But let’s tackle the this idea of how you started serving veterans. So you talked a little bit about it, but before we started recording today, we were riffing a little bit about this globalization of your company and being in Europe and seeing other veterans and really getting involved there. So talk a little bit more about how this veteran piece of giving back has really bubbled up for you.

Andrea Tsakanikas: It’s been an actual amazing journey because it happened organically. So being part of Women’s Business Enterprise, National Council and being on the board at one point for Women’s Business Council, southwest and the forum and all that I was doing during Covid, I was kind of like, like all of us getting a little like, antsy because I was so used to being on the road and traveling. And so I started doing a heavy, heavy mentoring that that year during Covid, I had nine different mentees as far as women that needed just a little bit of help in whether they were starting a new business, whether they wanted to move up in in their corporate job, or maybe they were retired and wanted to do something new on the side of just helping them coach them, give them the support and helping alleviate some of the fears that I’ve been blessed not to have as far as just taking that first step. And we have this story that we tell in the company, and I’ve been challenged to do this. One of the ways I explain this to women is that pretend that your life’s dream was to get out and skydive, and that’s your live stream. You you’re finally there that day. You’re up in the plane, you’re at the door, you’re ready to go, but you’re white knuckling, and you will not let go of that door to just take that leap.

Andrea Tsakanikas: I always say that’s at the point where if you don’t take that leap, just take it. Just step out of that plane. Because if not, you’re going to miss that opportunity to realize your dream. So my new challenge that I’ve been challenged by some gentlemen. Is that because I use that so often with women to help them alleviate some of the fears, to take the step, to just walk closer to the dream that I need to go and jump out of a plane myself. So I’m telling you this story so that other people can keep pushing me because. Because I’ve used that. I need to take that. I need to do it. I need to do it. So you’re all got to challenge me to take that next step and skydive. Um, but anyway, just I had to tell you this story, but organically from mentoring women about a year and a half ago, we have, um, we have technology partners that are based in Europe. And about a year and a half ago, I went to Europe and started working on upgrading and building our newest piece of technology. And while I was there, I was used to working huge 15, 16, 17 hour days.

Andrea Tsakanikas: I felt like I had so much extra time on my hands that our business development team said. Do you realize where you are? And I said, yes, I know where I am. And they said, have you looked on a map to see like what’s around you? You’re in the middle of some of the biggest U.S. military bases in Europe. And I thought, oh my gosh, well, let’s go say hi in some of these bases. And, you know, just let’s take up some time and go introduce ourselves. And I found that one by one, it was a lot easier to schedule meetings on U.S. military bases in Europe, I think in the US, because we have done so many contracts there. A lot of those different decision makers or contracting officers or end users are so busy and they’re used to getting a lot of visitors. But in Europe, I think they welcome to see a fellow American coming to visit and say hi because they’re so homesick. So little by little, I was spending more and more time on different bases and some of those that I was meeting, they were saying, hey, I’m getting ready to retire, and I’m really, really hesitating and I keep putting it off.

Andrea Tsakanikas: Can I have a job with your company? Are you guys going to be working here in, you know, staying in Europe? I may want to stay in Europe. I may want to go back to Austin or Texas or wherever. And so little by little, I found myself organically meeting with different military members that had had been ready to retire. And then I started getting introduced to some that have already retired and that were still in Europe. And organically, before I knew it, I thought, oh my gosh, like, there is so much potential. I did not understand how much of an adjustment it would be to go from serving your entire life in the military to then having to start all over from scratch and go into civilian life and working in the commercial space. So it’s organically really fallen into my lap and I’m really, really enjoying it. And it’s it’s been for crew logistics. It’s been one of our missions to hire more military members. And so part of that has really, really turned the corner for us to say, come and join us, come and join us. So it’s been a great journey and it’s really happened organically and over a very short period of time.

Trisha Stetzel: So that’s that’s amazing. And thank you for being who you are and supporting those who have served, uh, in a way that is so beneficial to them. And, you know, something as simple as, I don’t know what I’m going to wear tomorrow after I retire is a big decision for someone coming out of the military, right? It just is a big yeah, because I knew what I was going to wear every single day of my life. Right.

Speaker4: You don’t think of those.

Andrea Tsakanikas: Things unless we sat in in their shoes. And it was funny because one of the meetings we had is exactly the feedback I got. And this was like a lieutenant colonel saying this to me, saying I hadn’t asked my wife, like, what do I do? Where do I? And I’m thinking, oh my gosh, bless your heart. Like it really didn’t resonate. So that’s why I see things like that. We really, really are here to help, to just calm that. And so now I know before we have meetings to say, hey, the dress is completely casual to almost feel like, I can say, be comfortable asking me because I don’t want you to stress about something that should be simple and not as basic as what you’re going to wear. So I’m learning, I am learning, I am.

Trisha Stetzel: Well, thank you for all of the work that you’re doing in that space. So I know that people are already interested in connecting with you just based on the front half of our conversation. So what is the best way for people to find you? Andrea?

Andrea Tsakanikas: So on LinkedIn you can find my profile. And I know I’ve got such a challenging last name, but it’s Andrea Andrea. And then it’s sack and T is in Tom S is in Sam AK and is in Nancy I k s as in Sam or Andrea at crew logistics within s.com Andrea crew logistics.

Trisha Stetzel: Perfect. And you guys know I’ll have that in the show notes as well. So you can just point and click straight to her profile. For those of you who are watching or listening from your computer, not in your car. All right, Andrea, I would love to revisit this idea of mentoring women. So I think that’s a really important topic, uh, particularly coming from someone who’s who is as successful as you and willing to have these conversations and willing to be a mentor or coach to these women. So what, in the first place, made you decide to give back to these women or be a part of the WB, Inc.?

Speaker4: I think I.

Andrea Tsakanikas: Think the biggest piece was realizing, because I spent most of my childhood thinking I was unique in a not so positive way, and then realizing I had been given this gift from women on both sides of the family. That really eliminated my fears of doing, you know, making really quick changes or taking the leap to do different things in my career or my life to say, hey, how can I help pass some of that? On whether it’s just helping somebody figure out what’s going to make them feel more comfortable, like you’re saying in deciding what to wear. What are some of the things, not so much where I’m telling them, like what to actually do or where, but I’m just here for them to kind of use as a sounding board to be able to just chat and talk. Um, and letting them say and figure out a lot about how can they walk through. So what that fear may be maybe something as simple as them alleviating the fear by just talking through it to somebody and not feeling that they’re going to be judged or be uncomfortable to just kind of say it out loud. So what I found over the years and during that one, um, event during Covid, and it was actually a we Bank event and there were a few thousand of us on, we were all stuck inside. It was kind of the beginning of being hunkered down and I put in the chat. It was for a Women of Color event that we bank had sponsored, and I put in the chat and said, I have all this free time on my hands.

Andrea Tsakanikas: I’m not traveling. Anybody that really wants a mentor is just somebody to chat with. Here’s my email address. Reach out to me. And I ended up with nine women that reached out and I went, oh my gosh, I did not expect this many. But what’s amazing to me is that was in 2020. I think it was May of 2020. There is still one young entrepreneur that still has gone out of her way to be proactive, reach out, stay in touch, schedule these meetings and we still meet. And I keep telling her how proud I am of her, because most people fall back into that old mode of like, I tried this and I kind of just got out of the routine and it just kind of floats away. Um, and so I think that’s the biggest part. This isn’t like this very formal type of scenario. This is more of saying, what do you need from me and how can I help you? Um, because it’s all different age groups and different women that are in different stages of their lives and their careers. So that that’s kind of what really has motivated me. I really enjoy seeing women thrive and grow like this one young, young entrepreneur and just saying, and she and it’s all to her credit, it’s really to her credit. She did it. She did it. So it’s exciting.

Trisha Stetzel: Yeah. It’s not about the mentor. It’s about the person who’s actually moving through the journey. Right. And using the mentors to get where they want to go, or using them as someone that they can even vent to, right. Or just have a conversation with and get permission. They sometimes just need permission. It’s okay.

Speaker4: And I think it’s human beings.

Andrea Tsakanikas: Like none of us. We never are going to stop learning. I mean, that’s a big piece for me and how we grew. Crew logistics was, you know, in the beginning there wasn’t a lot of capital or funding. And so that’s one of the things I do to say, if you do want to open a business, you don’t have to think, you know, that. You have to go get some huge loan and get approved for half $1 million and all that. I help them kind of walk through how to build in stages and bootstrap to be able to get and grow their company. And so part of what we did Recruit Logistics did was instead of having a full blown leadership team, even at this point, I’ve always believed in hiring coaches and consultants that are experts in different areas. So I wanted to share this with you. I’ve had a leadership coach since 2017 that was an IBM, you know, executive for most of her.

Speaker4: Career.

Andrea Tsakanikas: Because I felt like I’m an entrepreneur. I learned from my great grandmother and grandmother. So I still see our company as a mom and pop company, even though we’ve grown to revenues that extend way beyond that. But I wanted to learn about what real, the real corporate IBM world looks like. So she’s been on board with us since 2017. So even I, I look to mentors and I look to coaches because again, we never stop learning and we never stop growing. And we all, no matter where you are in your career or your company, we all are going to have a lot of the same challenges and days. I just because somebody is at a certain revenue and a CEO of a company does not mean that they don’t have the same challenges that somebody in a startup that can’t, you know, pay their utility bill in their company that month. So I want to remind everybody, we’re all human, and no matter where we are in our careers or our businesses, we’re all still having days where we want to go in the shower and cry a little bit and, you know, say, this was a rough day. So that’s normal for all of us. I don’t want anybody to think it’s this perfect world, depending on where they’ve grown a business or where they are in our organization. I think that’s important for us to all realize for sure.

Trisha Stetzel: Absolutely. Thank you for sharing that. And it’s true. We all have bad days and and it’s okay because it is normal. And the people that we surround ourselves with matter as well. Right. I love to go back to the five people that we spend the most time with. We we become the average of. So who are those people that we’re spending our time with? Are they bigger, better, faster, stronger than us? They should be because we want to strive to be that much better right than who we are today. All right. So I want to circle back to this standing in the airplane, white knuckling with your parachute on. So there are a lot of women or even men listening today. They know that you’ve committed to going really do that. But what would you say to that person who’s standing there white knuckling? They want to, but they’re so afraid to. What is the what’s just one small thing that they can do to make forward progress when they’re in that type of position.

Andrea Tsakanikas: I think just that step and that’s what I say removing the word. But I want to do this. But and I’m doing it to you right now. I want to skydive. But you just get it out of your vocabulary. Let go of the butt and just go. Because we’ll always, if we allow it, we’ll always have a. But I want to do this, but my kid’s not yet out of high school, or I want to do this, but who’s going to find a butt? Because that’s fear talking. So I think it’s as easy as that. Let go of that word and find a way that that will work to even do it part of the way. So if you say, well, I need to make enough money to put away in savings till I leave my job to go start this dream business, how about you spend a few hours a week that you put aside to start that business while you stay at that job, so that you don’t have to take that huge leap and then have no income and have that kind of pressure on you. So there’s always ways to work around the butt of what’s keeping you from taking the next step. It’s as simple as that. I know it’s not simple, but the explanation of what you need to do is as simple as that.

Trisha Stetzel: And connect with people who will support you to take that next step. I mean, that’s a big right. I was thinking, as you were telling that story, that if you had someone strapped to you on your first right, the first time you jump out of an airplane, we’re going to do this together. Meaning you have a mentor or coach. How good would that feel? Right? And in some cases you want to jump by yourself. And that’s fantastic. But there are people out there who may need that copilot, if you will, that person who’s going to help pull the straps and make sure that you’re headed in the right direction. Right. And that mentor is there for you. All right. As we get to the back end of our conversation today, I’d love for you to talk about what’s next for crew logistics and Andrea. Yeah.

Andrea Tsakanikas: So we have you know, there’s obviously always changes in different ways that, you know, you look at your business, whether it’s on the commercial side or government side. I think the biggest piece for me is one of my dreams I’d love to see is at least on the commercial side, for for these larger companies. A lot of times they don’t see their logistics spend as a very big piece of their G&A or their overhead. They see it as a small spend compared to their corporate travel spend. But I would love them to take a look at and say, hey, but we’re really missing the boat on a lot of the the health, safety, environmental, a lot about looking at where are our crews and teams staying. Um, so and really focusing on start looking at to the larger companies in their procurement departments of putting their crew logistics piece of their company out to bid, whether it’s annually or every so years, very similar to how the federal government puts out RFPs request for proposals, meaning if they’ve got certain agencies that need the logistics, they’ll actually put out an actual request for proposal with a scope of work for companies to come out and compete and submit proposals and talk a little bit about how they can be helpful. I don’t see a lot of that in the commercial arena with companies where I think they just think their crew housing is just booking a bunch of hotel rooms, but really diving deeper into what is the quality of that night’s rest? Health, safety, environmental and safety? And how does that all correlate? Um, and then I think on the governmental agency side, a lot of the same thing that a lot of times, um, it’s not just about booking a lot of hotel rooms, it’s diving deeper into the entire logistics process of moving people and ensuring that they’re really getting, whether it’s staying in a tent or a modular building or a hotel that they’re really getting a good night’s rest. I think that’s a big piece that sometimes we get too busy and we forget about.

Trisha Stetzel: Yeah. Thank you so much. Like, I’m I’m sitting over here in my head just going, wow, wow, wow. This has been such an amazing conversation. You do so much in your business for the community, for veterans, for women. You’re just a powerhouse and you’re amazing. And I look forward to connecting with you again. Andrea.

Andrea Tsakanikas: I feel the same way. Thank you so much. I’m excited for our next conversation. Can’t wait to hear about you. I said I’m going to interview you next. Here you go.

Trisha Stetzel: We should do that. We should just oh, we’ll just video it and then we can do like a reverse engineered. Uh, yeah. Houston Business Radio, right?

Speaker5: Yeah. Let’s go.

Trisha Stetzel: I love.

Speaker5: It.

Trisha Stetzel: All right, you guys, if you want to connect with Andrea, you can find her on LinkedIn. It’s a n d r e a t s a k a n I t Acres and acres.

Speaker5: I say right again, thank you. I know that was good for me. Thank you so much.

Trisha Stetzel: Or you can email her at Andrea at. Com. Thank you again so much for being here. I’ve enjoyed our conversation so much and I can’t wait until next time.

Andrea Tsakanikas: Same to you. Thank you so much and thanks everybody for listening. Have a wonderful day. Thank you.

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

 

Earned Media Mastery: How to Leverage PR for Franchise Growth

August 8, 2025 by angishields

FMR-RipleyPR-Feature
Franchise Marketing Radio
Earned Media Mastery: How to Leverage PR for Franchise Growth
Loading
00:00 /
RSS Feed
Share
Link
Embed

Download file

In this episode of Franchise Marketing Radio, Lee Kantor talks with Heather Ripley, CEO of Ripley PR. Heather discusses the vital role of public relations in franchising and home services, emphasizing the importance of earned media, storytelling, and media training for franchisees. She shares strategies for balancing franchisor and franchisee marketing efforts, highlights trends in the home service sector, and offers practical PR advice for building trust and brand reputation. The conversation provides actionable insights for both franchisors and franchisees looking to leverage PR for business growth and success.

Heather-RipleyHeather Ripley is founder and CEO of Ripley PR, an elite, global public relations agency specializing in the franchising, skilled trades and B2B tech industries.

Ripley PR has been listed by Entrepreneur Magazine as a Top Franchise PR Agency for seven consecutive years and was recently named as one of Newsweek’s America’s Best Public Relations Agencies for 2024.

Heather was recently named as a 2024 PRNews Top Women honoree in the business entrepreneur category, and she was recently named as ACHR NEWS’ Top Women in HVAC.

She is also the author of “NEXT LEVEL NOW: PR Secrets to Drive Explosive Growth for your Home Service Business,” which is now available on all audiobook platforms. Ripley-PR-logo

For additional information, visit www.ripleypr.com.

Follow Ripley PR

LinkedIn
Facebook
X

Episode Highlights

  • The evolving role of public relations (PR) in marketing, particularly within franchise systems.
  • Strategies for franchisors and franchisees to effectively utilize PR to build trust and grow their brands.
  • The significance of earned media and its impact on franchise marketing.
  • Challenges in balancing marketing efforts between franchisors and franchisees.
  • The importance of storytelling and media training for franchisees to enhance their public presence.
  • Trends in the home service franchise sector and the growth of new competitors.
  • Practical advice for franchisees and local business owners on proactive PR strategies for franchise growth.
  • The necessity for franchisors to invest in PR to stand out in a crowded market.
  • The value of sharing franchisee success stories to enhance brand reputation.
  • The role of media training in preparing franchisees to effectively communicate their brand’s message.

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 Heather Ripley, who is the CEO with Ripley PR. Welcome.

Heather Ripley: Thank you. Glad to be here.

Lee Kantor: Well, I am so excited to talk to you. I know we’re going to give our listeners a ton of great, actionable information as a result of this conversation, but for folks who aren’t familiar, can you share a little bit about Ripley PR? How are you serving folks?

Heather Ripley: I can. Earlier in my career, before I started Ripley PR, I was working internally for a very large franchise system and fell in love with franchising and helping not only grow the franchise brands that I worked for, but I loved helping the franchisees, and I worked for Clockwork Home Services, which owned Benjamin Franklin Plumbing, One Hour Heating and Air and Mr. Sparky. And long story short, ended up getting them on Celebrity Apprentice in 2009. I went over to the agency side of things and quickly realized there was a need for PR folks in the home service and franchising industry. So I started Ripley PR in 2013, and we’ve been helping not only franchise brands, but independent contractors and service business owners throughout the country. And we love it now.

Lee Kantor: Can you talk a little bit about the evolution of PR, marketing digital? It just seems like there’s a blurring of the lines of who does what and why. It’s important to work with expert in whatever area that we’re talking about. So can you, you know, share your kind of maybe your view of the blurring of these lines and how an organization, a franchise or an independent can really leverage those experts the most to get the most bang for their buck?

Heather Ripley: Yeah, absolutely. It’s one of the most common questions I’m asked. A lot of these companies understand the importance of marketing, especially for the franchise owners in their local markets. Making the phone ring. I like to say that PR is a marketing tactic that should be included in a marketing budget, but if you want to think about it in terms of of media, you’ve got advertising, which is your paid media. You’ve got your website, your blogs, your social media. All of that is owned media. And then you’ve got traditional and even evolving media outlets like podcasts that are earned media. So what we specialize is earned media and we help clients get their name out there. Be the franchisor of choice in a very crowded market, or helping the franchisees be the expert in their local market. And we do that by positioning them as the credible experts, issuing press releases and news, and teaching them how to do media interviews so they can really leverage the power of earned media.

Lee Kantor: So now with a lot of the franchisors and we talk obviously a lot of franchisors, a lot of franchisees, there’s sometimes there’s some friction where the franchisors say, look, just do it my way. And the brand is partially that’s what you’re buying is the brand. And that brand value will help you attract business locally. And then sometimes the local people are frustrated because it’s like, well, nobody knows that brand here. You might be popular in Texas. But here, where I’m at, nobody knows who you are as a brand. So what do I have to do kind of physically to get, you know, bodies through the door in my local town. So how do you kind of create the assets for each of those people to achieve their goal, the franchise, or to get more franchisees and the franchisees to get more clients?

Heather Ripley: Yeah, that’s a good question. And, uh, it’s challenging to answer that because, you know, some of the best ideas come from franchise owners. Um, you know, the egg McMuffin is a perfect example of that. So what we try to do is work with the franchisor to let us have direct communication with franchise owners so that we can plant seeds and kind of teach them about PR so that they can identify opportunities for stories and tell us about it, and we can get local media interviews for them in their local market that help them grow their brand, while at the same time reaching out, maybe regionally or statewide or even nationally for the franchisors brand. So I think you need both. Um, you need a strategy for both, and it can play together very nicely. But if you don’t have that and you just allow your franchise owners to do what they want, you come into some problems. We’ve had, um, a couple instances over the years where a franchise owner gets eager to announce something and they let the media know too early. Um, you know, they they jumped the gun a little bit on an announcement that the franchisor wasn’t quite ready to announce, or they write a press release using AI or something and kind of gets the whole brand in trouble. So you do need some boundaries. But I think there’s a there’s a way to coach the franchise owners about things that could go wrong, and then they understand and want to work with a professional.

Lee Kantor: Yeah. I would think that, um, your work is kind of the quarterback, really of the marketing because yours entails, um, earned as well as owned as well as paid. So somebody has to kind of have a, you know, that view, that bird’s eye view of everything. Because if not, then one side, you know, one group is going to be doing one thing and other groups the other. And then all of a sudden you have kind of incongruent messaging or the chance for incongruent messaging.

Heather Ripley: Yeah. And and it’s so important. Trust is more important than ever. And PR can build trust and build up a positive reputation for a brand. And one mishap of a franchise owner, uh, strain can kind of kind of mess that up for the whole brand. So you do want to be careful. And I think communication is key. Training is key. Just teaching them about, you know, the the pros and cons of of good and bad PR not all publicity is good, right?

Lee Kantor: And that’s where I think there’s a misnomer that some people think that any kind of PR is good PR, where, I mean, you can really damage trust in a blink if you’re not careful.

Heather Ripley: Exactly. Yeah.

Lee Kantor: So now when you’re working with a franchisor, what kind of how do you start an engagement with a franchise? Or is it something that first you have to kind of get their brand voice, you have to understand what they’re doing, and then you give them a playbook that can work as a franchisor and also that can be handed to a franchisee. Like how does it work?

Heather Ripley: We do we we try to deep dive into the brand, ask a lot of questions at our kickoff. Um, we we try to find out what are some of the things that they’ve done over the years that worked really, really well. And then what are some things that they wish they could do over? Because we can learn more sometimes from the mistakes that a brand has made. And uh, also knowing their future plans is important because if you know, time and time again, I’ve worked with franchisor that wants to wants to grow the business, but their end game is selling. So knowing they want to be acquired will affect the strategy that we recommend. Um, or knowing they want to acquire other businesses and other brands is important to know too. So we try to find that out in discovery, and then our team goes back and we brainstorm and we make a plan for the next 12 months, 24 months and even five years. Sometimes we’re planning ahead so that we can plant those seeds and get the right media coverage to help them accomplish their long term goals.

Lee Kantor: Now, you mentioned working in the home service area. Are you seeing kind of an evolution in that space? I’ve noticed a lot of, um, kind of a I call them like a cluster. They’re they’re trying to build the franchise or is trying to build a variety of brands that serve that same consumer, whether it’s the pool person in the, the house cleaning and the painter and the. So they have one customer, but they have different brands that serve that one customer. Are you seeing kind of some sort of a consolidation or these kind of groups that are serving the home service area?

Heather Ripley: We are, you know, home service has grown since since Covid. Lots of people are trying to enter the space because they see dollar signs. Um, the franchise world definitely has grown over the years. Um, I was, you know, working for a home service franchisor in oh eight and oh nine, and, and we could name a couple competitors that we had on a national level. Now there’s dozens of competitors and and some are doing it really well and some are not, you know, some are growing and some are kind of stagnant. And it’s interesting to watch. Um, a lot of them are acquiring other brands. Um, it’s because the model is, is, um, easily replicated. You know, if you’re serving a homeowner, the number one thing that you need to do is build trust with the homeowner. The homeowner is not going to want somebody in their house that has a bad reputation. So I think PR is more important than ever for those home service businesses, because people want to know who’s in their home. And the great thing is, if you’ve got somebody in your home fixing your garage door and you find out their sister company is somebody that can replace your windows. You’re probably going to go with that company because you already trust the one that’s fixing your garage. So it’s I think it’s a good model. I think a lot of them are doing it right. Um, you know, we do specialize in home service just because that’s we’re in it every day. Um, we also work with manufacturers in the space and tech companies in the space. So we know it very, very well, and we’re passionate about it. Um, but yeah, it’s definitely grown over the years.

Lee Kantor: Yeah. But I think that model of identifying one consumer and then seeing what other complementary services you can sell to that consumer because it’s so hard obviously, to get a consumer nowadays. There’s so much noise out there. So when you have one, you want to kind of wring out the most value you can from that person. And having sister companies like you mentioned kind of makes it easier to get that, um, you know, doing some of that business development locally.

Heather Ripley: Definitely. Yeah.

Lee Kantor: So now let’s give some advice to our listeners, whether they’re a franchisee or franchisor. So let’s start with the franchisee. If you’re a local, uh, business person in a local market, what’s some kind of do’s and don’ts when it comes to PR? If you, um, if you were trying to do this on your own, what are some of the activities you can be doing to kind of get your name out there and not be a best kept secret?

Heather Ripley: Yeah. And this applies to anyone in business. You know, everybody says we’re not big enough for PR or, you know, we don’t have a bad situation and PR is clean up. Pr should be proactive. It should be building your reputation, not necessarily repairing it. If you build a strong reputation from the day you open your door from for business, it’s going to be harder to tear down. Um, I had a I had a client once say that PR is like planning an oak tree. You know, you nurture the seed, you you plant it, you water it, you take care of it. And then if something bad happens, if a storm comes, that tree is firmly rooted. It’s going to be harder to tear down. So the same with you know, the same is true with PR. Um, as soon as you open your business, you should be doing a press release telling your media what you do, who you do it for, how you’re different. Just introduce yourself to your media and let them know that you’re there for interviews. Um, you know, this is for people doing it on their own. Look for trends in the news on a national level and bring it back locally. Tell your local media that you can talk about it. Um, that’s probably the number one advice I would say is don’t wait to do PR. Um, don’t wait for something bad to happen. Just start it right away. Start it now and, uh, just build. It’s. It takes a long time to build that reputation. Um, but if something does happen bad later on, it’ll be harder to to tear down.

Lee Kantor: Now, what about when it comes to franchisors, when they’re trying to use to get their brand out there when it comes to, uh, franchise development? You know, it’s it’s really a struggle right now for franchise owners to get noticed. It’s like you said, there’s so many more out there. And especially with the advent of all these private equity firms kind of rounding them all up, it’s a different kind of environment than it was maybe 5 or 10 years ago. But any advice for, uh, the franchise owners when it comes to franchise development?

Heather Ripley: Yeah. Um, step up your PR, don’t pull back on it. Uh, the the number one way to stand out and be different is to do something that your competitors are not doing, and they’re all marketing in the same ways. They’re all doing the same thing to try to target that same prospect. So if your prospect we know this is true, they’re looking online to read about a franchise brand before they ever talk to your salesperson. So what are they finding about your brand? Is it old? You know? Is it constantly new things? Is it franchisee success stories that they’re finding? Uh, what are the things that they’re finding? If they search and you can you can search your own brand and see what they’re finding. But don’t ever pull back on PR, especially if sales are slow. You need to step up PR and do more so that you really dominate and really stand out.

Lee Kantor: Now, you mentioned that sharing success stories is important for franchisors to do, and I know for a fact that they’re not doing enough of that for whatever reason, whether they’re afraid to ask or they just don’t have a system in place to, you know, capture those amazing success stories. But let’s talk about your firm. Is there a success story you can share that maybe illustrates how? Don’t name the name of the organization, but maybe share what the problem was so that they came to you with and how you were able to help them get to a new level?

Heather Ripley: Mm. Good question. Uh.

Lee Kantor: Well, you mentioned one that was, uh, that you were able to get them on that show, um, early in your career, right?

Heather Ripley: Yeah. Well, that that was a unique situation. The CEO wanted to sell. The company wanted to do something major, wanted to, you know, get major national media coverage. So we ended up getting all three brands on Celebrity Apprentice, and he did sell the company. I think it was six months after it aired. Um, so that was the success. I think that every everyday stories are important, you know. Consider why people buy into your franchise brand. They either want a legacy brand that they can sell later. Um, they want more freedom. They want more money. And with the franchise especially, you know, a lot of times in home service, some of these franchise sales are conversions. So they’re changing. Uh, lease heating and air to a one hour heating and air, for instance. So, you know, what are the reasons they should change their company name? Well, there’s proven systems, there’s national support, there’s an operational coach that’s going to help them with pricing and teach them, you know, how to hire a general manager to manage the business. So those are the reasons. And if you can find those case studies of a franchisee who, you know, this is a real situation. Um, just got divorced, almost lost his business, almost lost his kids and bought into this franchise brand. Went through the motions, changed his systems, changed his operations, made money. Um, was able to get remarried a few years later and spend time at home with his wife and kids. Um, he had the free time. You know, those are the situations and stories you want to share, because that’s why people buy into a franchise system. It’s not because of the name. It’s not because it’s got a cool name. It’s there’s a reason. So if you can tell those stories from the franchisees perspective, that’s going to help the brand sell more franchises. Um, somebody else saying your grade is better than you saying you’re great.

Lee Kantor: Yeah. And I agree 100%. I just think it’s it’s one of those things where franchise owners aren’t really trusting their There are franchisees enough to articulate the story effectively, and I think that the franchisees are hungry to tell the story, and the franchisors just have to kind of just trust the process, you know, and trust that, look, they they signed up with you and, and once want to work with you. They’re proud of that. Let them tell the story.

Heather Ripley: Yeah. And I think that I think that’s, um, true in a lot of cases. I think sometimes though, it’s just not a priority to find those stories or to share it. And if there is that fear on the franchisor side, just put the franchisee through some media training. Um, if you’re worried about what they’re going to say to the media, like, help your franchisees have the tools that they need so that they can speak confidently to the media and, um, and be bold about it.

Lee Kantor: Now, is that part of your services that you provide a franchise, or could you help coach their franchisees with media? Could you help capture some of these stories? Is that some of the things that you bring to the table as a PR person? Because that might not they might not think of that as some of the deliverables a PR firm could deliver.

Heather Ripley: Yeah, we do, we do often, um, offer media coaching. We’ll sometimes do it one on one if somebody has a big interview planned. Uh, sometimes we’ll do a webinar where franchisees who are interested in speaking to the media will hop on the webinar and go through a training, and then they can ask us questions. Um, so we’ve done it both ways. We’ve also held workshops at some of the franchise conventions so that the franchisees can pop in, um, do some mock interviews, which is the best way to learn. And, um, and then we can help coach them to be just more confident. That’s all it is.

Lee Kantor: Right. And it’s it’s easier to do it. Um, you know, in this role playing way rather than, you know, for real the first time.

Heather Ripley: Mhm. Exactly. Yeah.

Lee Kantor: So, um, Heather, if somebody wants to learn more, what is the website. What is the best way to connect.

Heather Ripley: Yeah. Uh our website is Ripley ripley.com. Uh my email is H. Ripley at Ripley PR. That’s the best way. I’m pretty much always on email. Um, we also have a contact form on the website too.

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

Heather Ripley: Thank you. Thank you so much for having me.

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

 

Tagged With: Ripley PR

Reality Check: Building a Brand in the Spotlight

August 8, 2025 by angishields

WIM-Hidey-Socks-Feature
Women in Motion
Reality Check: Building a Brand in the Spotlight
Loading
00:00 /
RSS Feed
Share
Link
Embed

Download file

On this episode of Women in Motion, Lee Kantor and Renita Manley interview Shannon Kehrer , founder of Hidey Socks (now Hidey Style). Shannon shares her journey from launching her brand at 19 to competing on a reality TV show for entrepreneurs. The discussion covers product development, overcoming business challenges, leveraging community support from WBEC-West, and the impact of national exposure. Shannon highlights the importance of resilience, strategic networking, and continuous learning in building a successful, woman-owned business.

Shannon-KehrerShannon Kehrer is the founder and CEO of Hidey Socks, a fast-growing, Women-Owned sock brand known for solving one of fashion’s most frustrating problems: no-show socks that actually stay on. Her patented sock design features a stylish anklet with Austrian crystals, blending function with fashion and redefining what it means to feel confident from the ground up.

Shannon turned a personal annoyance into a six-figure business, growing Hidey Socks into a viral brand featured on QVC.com, embraced by thousands of loyal fans, and admired for its fashion-forward aesthetic, topped off with luxe crystal details and packaging designed to leave a lasting impression.

Her socks have been gifted by companies for employee appreciation, used in giveaways, and even featured on reality TV. As a 2025 Enterprising Woman of the Year and a proud WBENC-certified entrepreneur, Shannon is on a mission to scale Hidey Socks into a multimillion-dollar household name—one foot at a time.

Connect with Shannon on LinkedIn.

Episode Highlights

  • Shannon’s entrepreneurial journey and the founding of Hidey Socks at age 19.
  • The origin of the product idea stemming from personal frustration with traditional no-show socks.
  • Challenges faced in manufacturing, marketing, and launching the product.
  • Intellectual property considerations, including patents and trademarks.
  • Strategies for business growth, including vendor events and social media marketing.
  • The role of WBEC-West in providing resources, networking, and pitch competitions.
  • Experience and insights gained from participating in a reality TV show focused on entrepreneurs.
  • The importance of community support and mentorship in business development.
  • Rebranding efforts and expansion of the product line beyond socks.
  • Future goals for Hidey Socks, including new wholesale opportunities and increased brand visibility.

Music Provided by M PATH MUSIC

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios. It’s time for Women in Motion. Brought to you by WBEC-West. Join forces. Succeed together. Now here’s your host.

Lee Kantor: Lee Kantor here with Renita Manley. Another episode of Women in Motion. And this is going to be a good one. But before we get started, it’s important to recognize our sponsor, WBEC-West. Without them, we couldn’t be sharing these important stories. Today’s show is titled Reality Check: Building a Brand in the Spotlight. So excited to be talking to our guest today, Shannon Kehrer, founder of Hidey Socks. This is going to be a great show, Renita.

Renita Manley: It is. I’m really excited that Shannon then our web is going to be featured on a very special reality TV show that will be airing this fall on Amazon Prime. Is that correct? So we’re just going to dig right in. Yeah, we’re digging right in.

Shannon Kehrer: It’s going to be the second season.So there’s already a first season y’all.

Renita Manley: So we got to catch up. All right so I do know a little bit about you Shannon. I know that you launched Heidi Socks at 19 years old. What made you feel like that was an idea of worth, you know, jumpstarting so early?

Shannon Kehrer: I mean, it really stemmed from a frustration that I had of wearing those other little, like, no show socks or peds little socks that, like, barely cover your toes and go underneath your feet. But the problem is, whenever I would wear those little socks and I would walk around in my flats or my tennis shoes or even my heels, that sock would slide off of my foot and get bunched underneath my foot. And I was so frustrated from it. Like personally walking around trying to do all of the things that I’m trying to do. And so I basically designed Heidi’s style socks with a comfortable anklet for myself to guarantee that my socks would stay on my feet. And then I chatted with other people about it, and pretty much everyone that I talked with about it said, oh my gosh, we hate it when that happens too. It’s so frustrating. And that’s where the idea was born.

Lee Kantor: So how did you go from having the idea to actually kind of creating the sock where you seamstress, did you know how to do kind of this type of sewing that it would take to kind of pull this off? Like, how did you, you know, create those first iterations of the product?

Shannon Kehrer: Definitely not. Lee. I had no idea how to sew. I still don’t know how to sew. And I never went to college because when I was 19, I got my first corporate job. So I just kept with the corporate job. And so I at 19, I had this great idea. But you know what? 19 year old has the money or the resources or, like, knows what the heck they’re doing to turn an idea in their mind into an actual physical product. So it actually took me a few years to find a factory and figure out how to do a website and advertising and all of the things. And so I officially launched Heidi Socks when I was 22 years old. And at the time, I kept my corporate job and I was taking care of my dad, who, um, has been disabled since I was a kid. And so when I first launched it, it was really part time for me because I had these two big obligations that I was fulfilling. And then just about two years ago was when I went full time into entrepreneurship and just doing Heidi Socks full time. And it’s been really big for growth. Now that I’m able to finally do full time for my business.

Renita Manley: So I’m curious, you have your product idea is, it’s so amazing because it’s so simple in the nicest way of saying it, because like you got it’s a simple problem that everyone has. And you were to like the first person that was like, yeah, I got a solution for this everyday problem. How did you have to patent that idea? How are you able to stop other competitors from trying to mimic your product?

Shannon Kehrer: I did I do have two different patterns and a trademark on Heidi’s socks. And not only that, but I have an exclusive partnership with Swarovski crystals because Heidi’s socks do have genuine Swarovski, so you can put them in the washer and in the dryer, and the crystals are not going to fall off. So I’m really branding myself on the quality of the sock. I mean, I personally have had some of the same pairs for over five years because they’re just phenomenal quality and I just want my customers to, number one, have a solution to the annoying problem of their socks sliding off their feet. And number two, have a quality sock that they are happy to buy and wear.

Renita Manley: Have you spotted any will be imitators yet? Like while you’re out shopping, do you see any Renita?

Shannon Kehrer: There is a Chinese company on Amazon right now that looks similar, and they can’t put crystals on it because I have the patent for the crystals, but they put these little rinky dink pearls. And if you look at the pictures, it looks like those pearls are literally going to fall off when you walk five steps. So that’s been unfortunate. And I, like my attorney said I can’t go after them because it’s pearls instead of crystals. So it is what it is. You know, if somebody wants to buy a cheap product from overseas that’s not woman owned, then you know that’s up to them. But it’s probably going to fall apart after what you saw.

Lee Kantor: Now when.

Renita Manley: You can’t find. Yeah. Sorry, I was gonna say you can’t find Heidi socks.

Shannon Kehrer: No, Heidi socks are not on team. I’m not on team. We have our website. We’re on qvc.com. That is new. And I worked for four years. Like literally. Okay, I have a vision board every single year, y’all. And QVC logo has been on my vision board for four years and we finally made it happen. So Heidi Sale socks are currently being sold on QVC. Um, but those are really the only two platforms right now. I did have them on Amazon, but I took them off of Amazon to revamp it because this reality show that I was on, I learned a lot. Not only was it a reality show, but they actually helped us entrepreneurs scale our businesses to the next level. And they taught me so much about marketing and branding, what I was doing wrong, what I could improve on, yada yada yada. So because of this, I removed Heidi off of Amazon because we’re currently doing a little bit of a rebranding.

Lee Kantor: So talking about the marketing side of this, how did you do the marketing at the very beginning when you launched, in order to get that kind of escape velocity that is now taking you to QVC and on a reality show. So what were the kind of the early stage ways that you were marketing?

Shannon Kehrer: Well, in the beginning I had zero money. So basically what I would do is do different vendor events where I would go and I would set up a table or a ten by ten booth, um, showing like people what Heidi stocks were. And that was like a very low way to grow it. But it was great because in the city that I was in, um, a lot of people ended up like knowing what Heidi stocks were because I did those vendor events. And then once I started getting more money with those vendor events that I was doing, I would do other things like social media, ad campaigns. And then I started opening up wholesale accounts and to where I would go to boutiques and I would show them Heidi socks, and then they would purchase wholesale, then sell retail. And that was a great way to get the word out as well.

Renita Manley: We have a lot of babies. Hi. I almost killed you, Heidi. We have a lot of baby Shannon like yourself that have great products. So can you tell them how were you able to get a product like yours on what is it, QVC? How were you able to get it on QVC? Like, what did you have to do differently that maybe other VBS aren’t doing and should be doing?

Shannon Kehrer: Okay, so what I will say, number one, the fact that you’re a game changer. Like I said, um, I went full time with my business two years ago, and the number one thing that I did to help me grow it was join way back west. Okay, so the cool thing about we back West is they have different pitch competitions for products and service based companies. So as I mentioned, I’ve been trying to get on QVC for several years now. And then after I joined we back west, I saw a pitch competition that I could participate in. So I participated in my local pitch competition with we back wasps, I did well. They sent me basically. I think I had like three pitch competitions that I had to do three different stages. You know, you make it past this one, you go to the next one, you got a party to where I made it all the way to pitch at nationals, where I got to be on stage with, I believe it was 19 other entrepreneurs. And because I got to go on stage in Washington, D.C.

Shannon Kehrer: and pitch Heidi style socks in the crowd with somebody from QVC, as soon as I got done with my pitch, the very first person who approached me was Samara from QVC, and she was so funny. She comes up to me and she’s like, love your product, I’m with QVC. I am not the buyer for QVC. I don’t want to promise you anything, but what I want to do is pass on your information to the proper buyer for you. And so this was like, I think not even a year ago. And so Samara sees me because the pitch competition thankfully because of way back west. Had I not done that pitch competition with we back west, I wouldn’t have gone all the way to nationals and I, Sameera, wouldn’t have seen me pitch and I probably still wouldn’t be on QVC. So the resources that you get being a TV, especially with we back West, is phenomenal. So take advantage of all of the different things that we left West has to offer the pitch competitions, the networking events, all of the things.

Lee Kantor: Now, when you were considering becoming part of the Quebec West community, was that something that somebody told you, hey, you should do this. Like, how did how did it come about? And, you know, obviously you got this relationship with QVC out of it, but what were you thinking you would get out of it?

Shannon Kehrer: Well, originally, the only reason why I joined way back west was to get the woman owned logo on my packaging. Um, that was the main reason why I joined. And then, uh, after I had joined. You know, I was getting the emails and I was like, oh my gosh. Like, there’s networking opportunities. There’s pitch competitions where I could win money. And so once I started seeing those emails come through and realized that it was more of a networking opportunity and like pitch, competition opportunity. That’s when I really went full throttle in it. But I had no idea that we bank we back was even offered all of these different, um, events. I originally just wanted the logo on my packaging and on my website, and I’m so happy that I paid attention to those emails from way back west and actually participated in a pitch competition. And now I go to all of the networking events. Um, I also just became second chair form for way back west. Uh, which is great. It’s an interview process that you have to do. And so basically I get to be like the voice of the Los Angeles biz when we do different networking events and like hearing their input, and then also like putting together networking events in Los Angeles with my two other form leaders, Angela and Amanda Marr. And so, yeah, it’s like I’ve kind of like just dived deep in after I realized how amazing we, Beth West is to helping me grow my business.

Renita Manley: Okay, I want to definitely get into more talk about the reality TV show, what you can share with us. But before I go there, I also wanted to bring up something since we are talking about Rebekah. I first met you in our platinum supplier program and that’s another resource that we offer. So a little plug for us. Can you please share about the benefits of that PSP program and how it helped you out?

Shannon Kehrer: Okay. If you’re listening to this, you need to join the PSP program. Okay. It’s only like what, Renita? Once a year or twice a year. How did they do it?

Renita Manley: Yep. About once or twice.

Shannon Kehrer: So the moment you see it, you need to join it, because that also helped me really think outside of the box. You know, when we’re a business owners and we get so used to doing the things that we’ve been doing and we get so like stuck in it, but it’s kind of hard to see outside of it. And so when I joined the PSP program, which I was hesitant about because, you know, it’s not it’s not free, but it’s also not like a bazillion dollars. It’s totally worth it. Um, I think the money that I paid for, I got so much more value out of the PSP program. And so what I really learned, the big nugget is that I should not only be selling Heidi sell socks retail like to one consumer here and there, yada yada. But I should also be selling Heidi’s socks to corporates as employee gift appreciation. Customer appreciation and doing branding on the Heidi Sale. Socks is like the main thing that I learned. They helped me put a capability statement together and like I looked back on like my very first draft of my capability statement to what it ended up being at the very end of the PSP program, and it is night and day.

Shannon Kehrer: I’m now proud of my capability statement and what it looks like. And now before I go to any networking events, I take my capability statement, print it out because you never know who you’re going to meet or who you’re going to see. And so that was just like a huge game changer for me being in the PSP program. And at the very end you get to pitch to different corporates, which is really cool. So I mean, that in itself is, you know, why you should do it. And they coach you and they help you on your pitch. You practice your pitch with them. They, the professionals give you great feedback of how to make it better. So I’m just so excited that I did the PSP program, and now I’m even more excited for all of the other pitch competitions that I’ll be able to do. Now that I learned all the things that I did from PSP.

Lee Kantor: So now let’s talk a little bit about the reality show. Was that something that you actively sought out or did they come to you like, how did this come about?

Shannon Kehrer: I’m in a women’s mastermind group, and one of the other women entrepreneurs mentioned this to our group. And I remember, like I clicked the link and I opened it and I was like, I’m not like, I don’t really I don’t okay, personally, I don’t even watch TV. Okay? Like I don’t watch TV. All I do is work. I’m very boring in that sense. And so when I clicked on it, I was like, oh, I don’t know if this is for me. And then literally, like, I guess the day before the applications were going to close, I just ended up applying for it. And then one of the like producers, we set up a meeting and she was like, I just want to let you know, like you literally applied in the very last like minute. And so, yeah, I wasn’t even 100% sure about it. But now that I did it, I’m so happy that I did do it. I mean, it’s not like a love reality TV show. It’s an actual entrepreneur reality TV show, and they literally bring in professionals to help you scale your business. And I cannot tell you, like the value that I got from this amazing reality TV show. And I’m so excited for everybody else to watch it, especially if you’re an entrepreneur, because you were just going to, like, relate to it, relate to our stories, and relate to our hustle so much.

Renita Manley: So what can you share with us about your experience on this reality TV show and the show itself? Can you tell us the name? Um, maybe some of the other participants that were on it. And then can you share with us who maybe you were on this reality show and how how was it filming? Like, really? How was it filming? Were there cameras following you around everywhere? Were there just was it just a competitions because, you know, you kind of pull back in on some of those competitions and that was really fun. So can you just share with us everything you can about that reality show and who Shannon was on that on that show?

Shannon Kehrer: Yeah. So I’m not allowed to say the name just yet. However, the moment I am allowed to share the name and talk more details, we’re going to do another podcast. Um, I know that the red carpet premiere event is probably going to be somewhere, um, in October. So as soon as I’m allowed to, like, share that, I definitely will. Um, I do want to give a shout out to Doctor Pamela, because Doctor Pamela, the moment I knew I got on the show, I reached out to Doctor Pamela. I emailed her and I let her know that I was on this entrepreneur show, and I had no idea what it was going to entail. But I knew it was intense because I had watched the first season, and it was extremely intense, and it was going to take a lot of time and effort and help that I was going to need in order to, like, keep making it. Because every single week, different entrepreneurs are eliminated. So basically every week they give you a different challenge that you have to do. And if you don’t do well in the challenge, then you are up on stage getting ready to possibly be eliminated. And it’s very intense. There’s some drama that goes on for sure, because everybody’s like, stress hormones are up there. And you know, we’re competing for a cash prize of $100,000, so big snakes are on the line. And so Doctor Pamela helps me out a lot. Basically, every single time I went to her, she was there for me. And we all know how busy Doctor Pamela is. So huge shout out to her for helping me and believing in me and supporting me through this.

Lee Kantor: So now that this is kind of under your belt and you’re waiting for this to kind of launch, is there anything else you have going on, like how do you how do you kind of make your next move, uh, after having gone through something this exciting?

Shannon Kehrer: Well, first of all, it’s sad that it’s over because I just loved it so much. You know, I spent two months on stage and back during this question. Yes, there were cameras in my face 24 over seven. The camera crews even came to my house several different times to film. Like who? Shannon is inside of her house. Like, they literally even opened my fridge and was like, what are you eating inside of, you know, Shannon Carey’s fridge? And it was really intense. It was a lot of fun. Um, not only did I have to be on my tippy toes with all of the challenges, but also, you know, make sure that I’m, like, saying the right things and like, like being true to myself instead of, like, falling into, like, oh, this is reality TV show. And there was some opportunities that I very easily could have like X out some other entrepreneurs. But instead of doing that, I feel like I was very true to who I am as a person and who I am as an entrepreneur. And I think that I very much like kept my integrity during the reality TV show, even though there was definitely opportunities to be like more drama or, you know, cause a scene. And so it was a really cool thing to, like, watch how I act underneath all of that pressure with all of these cameras in my face and all the high intensity of there’s $100,000 on the line, which would have like which would change any small business owners life.

Renita Manley: I was going to ask you that question. You kind of led me right into it. I wanted to know, how is it building a brand right there in the spotlight? You have the cameras in your home office, um, in your face. You have to be PC. You have to be professional as much as possible in your comfort zone and your safe zone. So how is that in and even with your brand now on QVC, how is it building a brand right there in the media, right there in the spotlight? What makes it different than it was, um, when you were about 21 years of age?

Shannon Kehrer: I mean, all the pressure, right, of having these big cameras in your face and all of these other entrepreneurs that you’re now working with. What I will say is, when the show started, we started with 20 entrepreneurs from all around the United States. It did film in Los Angeles area where I’m from, which was great because it was only like an hour drive for me, but people literally flew in like every single week. Basically, we would film different days, but basically it was Thursday through Sunday and 12 hour days. I mean, it was intense. Like I woke up like at 3 or 4:00 in the morning just to like make sure I was prepped and I would drive there ahead of the time. And like, I’d always make sure I was there an hour ahead of the time because, you know, all the traffic is crazy and accidents can happen. The last thing I want to do is, you know, be late to the filming. And so, yeah, it was just very intense. On top of filming for this reality TV show, I still had to run the business. So yes, they were bringing in professionals and helping us, but I still have wholesale accounts and I still have my website sales, and I still have my social media sales, and I still have all of my emails that I had to do.

Shannon Kehrer: And so it was just a whole nother experience. But I’m so happy that I did it because I did learn so much. I mean, with every single challenge, they legitimately brought in a professional to teach us and train us and prepare us for the challenge. And I learned so much about my branding and my business and like who I am as a person. And I mean, I think my like my, my, I want to say character on the show with like I was the very like professional person. Like I went in and filmed every single day pretty much in like, slacks or a skirt. And so to me it was very like, this is my business and this is my brand and this is where it’s at. And like some people were a little bit more relaxed with it or they were a little bit more, you know, and so I think that’s the character that they’re going to portray me as is like the very like, business like minded woman on the show.

Lee Kantor: So are there any kind of key learnings or tips that you can share that you learned or picked up going through this process?

Shannon Kehrer: Oh my gosh, so many. I don’t even know where to start. Um, the branding thing was huge to me. I mean, my packaging, like I’m totally doing a whole revamp on my marketing because during one of the challenges, they brought in a focus group of like totally random people, and they pinned my product against another product and the focus group got to like sit down with both of our products, not knowing who we were, not knowing what the product was then of that. And they basically got to like, dissect and like tell us their feedback on our packaging and what it looks like to them. And basically, yeah, that’s why I’m doing a rebranding for that. Um, and then like the main thing that I learned is like, I work my tail off pretty much every single day. But this show pushed me to a whole nother extreme of like, a whole nother, like, hustler for what I’m doing with Heidi style socks. I mean, I worked, I worked smarter being on the show because there was limited time. Normally I worked like 12, 16 hour days, but when I was filming on this show, it was really intense. And then just like working smarter, not harder is what I really learned on the show and outsourcing as well. I use Upwork more. I hire more freelancers now with things that I need to get done. And so that was really good information for me to learn.

Renita Manley: So here’s a if you can’t answer to, just say I can’t answer that. Okay. Okay. I’m digging I’m trying to dig. Is is there something you might have done or said on this show that you regret? Like, oh, I wish I wouldn’t have said that. Do you have do you have any of those moments?

Shannon Kehrer: Um, there was one moment where one of the one of the other entrepreneurs, um, I was taking a picture. So one of the other entrepreneurs, she’s a female. And there was a moment where we were like at our lunch break, which was really cool because they served us breakfast, lunch and dinner. We went over and so we had like our own little room and like a buffet and a private chef. It was honestly like really phenomenal. So we’re all there and we’re eating our lunch. And one of the guy entrepreneurs, I can’t say his name, but, um, him and I took a picture together, and he just, like, put his arm around me, like, regular, like we’re just taking a picture together. And one of the other female entrepreneurs, um, she was like, don’t you have a boyfriend? And I was like, yeah. She was like, don’t you have a like like that too? Like, don’t you have a boyfriend? And I was like, yeah, I do, but this guy and I can’t say his name, but I was like, I was like him. And I were just taking a picture. Like, my boyfriend would totally be okay with me just taking a picture with another guy. And so I don’t know if they’re going to use that in the show, but I was like, what? Like, who was this girl judging me for taking a picture with one of my cast members?

Renita Manley: Yeah, maybe she was just trying to get some camera time.

Shannon Kehrer: Maybe, I don’t know. I mean, but also, like, we were we were eating our lunch. Like, I don’t like there’s cameras everywhere all the time, 24 over seven. So I don’t know if there was cameras like, rolling at that time. I mean, we were mixed up 24/7, so we were mixed up the whole entire time. So they definitely could have gotten the audio. But I just wish I would have just like, not said anything to her at that point because like, obviously if she’s going to judge me for taking a picture with a male while I’m in a relationship, that’s just, that’s just immature. But that’s that’s literally the only thing that I regret saying.

Lee Kantor: So now, um, if somebody wants to learn more about what’s going on with Heidi style, is there is the website up at all or where are you at with that?

Shannon Kehrer: Oh yeah. Of course. Yeah. I mean, I launched originally on my website, it’s heidi.com which is spelled Heidi style and it’s spelled Heidi is spelled like you’re hiding your sock. Right, Heidi? Why? Because when you wear Heidi style socks with your flats or your shoes, you can’t even tell when it’s a sock. It blends in with your shoe. So you can find us on our website, Heidi style.com. You can also find us on our social media, which is Heidi style. We still own Heidi Socks, but we rebranded to Heidi Style because we also do other products other than just socks now.

Renita Manley: I’m really excited to see your your rebranding. That’s going to be fun. Um, when you are ready to show everybody. And besides the rebranding process, what else do you have in your pipeline? What’s coming up for Shannon and for Heidi? Socks in Heidi style?

Shannon Kehrer: Yeah, we’re doing a lot more different wholesale shows. Um, trying to open up more boutiques and stores and like, larger retail stores as well. So literally this month, I’m home less than I’m traveling. Like, they I’m home like five days out of the whole entire month because it’s just travel after travel after travel and trying to open new accounts to get more stores to carry Heidi style socks so more people can have them. That’s the big thing we’re working on right now. And then just really like prepping for the show, because once the show airs, I know it’s going to completely changed my life, which I am very, very excited for people to watch my story and how I operate, and why I designed and have dedicated my whole adult life to getting Heidi out there.

Lee Kantor: Well, congratulations on all the success. Renita, is there anything going on at we back west that we should know about any events?

Renita Manley: I just want everybody to make sure you go to Shannon’s website and make sure you go to Shannon’s LinkedIn and her preferred social media page. We want to make sure all our we are supporting Shannon while the show is airing. While we are watching her journey in our real time, her reality journey and our real time, I want everybody to be out there supporting. She’s very active on Instagram, so I know you can definitely find her there. Besides that, I just want to encourage everyone to go to Rebecca Hyphen Invest. Just go to our events calendar and check out some of those events that Shannon was talking about. We do have some amazing events, and if you take advantage of them like Shannon did, and maybe your product can get in front of somebody from QVC.

Shannon Kehrer: Definitely. And I know that our We Back West conference has officially secured the dates of December 16th through the 18th. So if you guys don’t have that in your calendar, put that in your calendar. December 16th through the 18th in Phoenix, Arizona. I will personally be there and would love to meet you all.

Lee Kantor: Good stuff. Well, thank you again, Shannon, for participating today. Uh, this is Lee Kantor for Renita Manley. We will see you all next time on Women in Motion.

 

Tagged With: Hidey Socks

BRX Pro Tip: Building a Business You Could Sell Tomorrow, But Won’t Want To

August 8, 2025 by angishields

BRXmic99
BRX Pro Tips
BRX Pro Tip: Building a Business You Could Sell Tomorrow, But Won't Want To
Loading
00:00 /
RSS Feed
Share
Link
Embed

Download file

BRX-Banner

BRX Pro Tip: Building a Business You Could Sell Tomorrow, But Won’t Want To

Stone Payton: And we’re back with Business RadioX Pro Tips, Lee Kantor and Stone Payton here with you. Lee, what’s your take on building a business that you can sell?

Lee Kantor: I think that whenever an entrepreneur starts out on any venture, they should be thinking about what their exit is going to look like, so you should be aiming towards that. The best businesses are built with the future in mind. So, even if you never plan to sell the business, you should create a business that could be sold. And if you’re doing that, then you’re building something that’s truly valuable, that’s truly sustainable, and it’s going to be enjoyable to own throughout the whole journey.

Lee Kantor: So, start by making your business run without you. That’s kind of the beginning that every business, once you’ve kind of mastered, you’ve got a good client market fit and you have a business that seems like it’s going to work, then you got to figure out how to make that business run without you. So, that means document all your processes and procedures so that anybody can step in and keep things running smoothly.

Lee Kantor: You got to build the strong team that isn’t dependent on your daily involvement and delegate sales operations, whatever aspects of the business to other people, so that it isn’t tied to your own personality or your own personal relationships, or your own expertise in order to make it run.

Lee Kantor: You want to create a brand that stands on its own. You want to make sure your company’s reputation, it’s marketing, it’s client relationships aren’t all about you. They can’t be tied to one individual. It has to be the value that the business delivers. So, build a business you can sell tomorrow and you’ll have a business you’re proud to own today.

Exploring FinTech South: A Deep Dive into Atlanta’s Thriving Financial Technology Ecosystem

August 7, 2025 by angishields

ABR-TAG-Synovus-Feature
Atlanta Business Radio
Exploring FinTech South: A Deep Dive into Atlanta’s Thriving Financial Technology Ecosystem
Loading
00:00 /
RSS Feed
Share
Link
Embed

Download file

In this episode we’ll preview Fintech South, a world-class event scheduled to run from August 19-20 at the Woodruff Arts Center and Atlanta Symphony Hall. Hosted by the Technology Association of Georgia (TAG), Fintech South has emerged as one the largest and most impactful financial technology conferences in the Southeast U.S. and nationally. The organizers are expecting as many as 1,000 attendees and the growing list of sponsors include leading organizations like Synovus, Mastercard, Truist, Stripe, Corpay, Deluxe, Priority Commerce, and many more. Join us and our guests TAG CEO Larry Williams and Synovus executive Jonathan O’Connor as we discuss Georgia’s growing fintech ecosystem and how Fintech South will become the center of the fintech universe for two amazing days in August!

For more information and to register to attend Fintech South, visit the event’s website at https://www.fintechsouth.com/. For a $25 discount on the current ticket price, please use discount code BRadioX25. 

FTSTAGLockup-01-01

Larry-WilliamsLarry K. Williams is President and Chief Executive Officer of The Technology Association of Georgia (TAG) and has served in this role since October 2016. As part of Mr. Williams responsibilities, he leads the NTSC (National Technology Security Coalition) and TAG Education Collaborative (TAG-Ed) benefiting workforce development across Georgia.

A recognized leader in economic development, Mr. Williams brings decades of experience in international trade, finance, public and industrial policy and marketing. Throughout his career he has guided organizations connecting local and global initiatives and most recently, he was President and Chief Executive Officer of the Beacon Council Inc (one of 36 accredited economic development organizations in the nation). Williams’ effort at the Beacon Council led Miami-Dade County to greater competitiveness.

Prior to joining the Beacon Council, Williams shaped the vision for the Atlanta tech industry as Vice President of Technology Development at the Metro Atlanta Chamber.

Mr. Williams has held similar roles including serving on Washington State Governor’s Global Competitiveness Council, leading Washington State’s Tourism Commission and Director of Operations of International Trade for the North Carolina Department of Commerce to name a few. Fintech-South-2025

In these roles, Mr. Williams honed his strategic and operational expertise and led economic development emphasizing innovation, international trade and sustainable policy. Resilient and battle tested, Williams has advised and worked alongside several U.S. Governors and dozens of foreign officials.

Mr. Williams stays actively connected to the community serving on a range of boards, including Georgia’s Partnership for Inclusive Innovation, Atlanta CIO Advisory; TECNA, the Economic Development Board, City of Brookhaven, the Buckhead Club; FinTech Atlanta, Metro Atlanta Chamber and Venture of Atlanta.

For many of these Mr. Williams is a founding member and establishing vision, purpose and governance for good. He is a graduate from the Darlington School (Rome, Georgia) and holds degrees from North Carolina State University.

About the Technology Association of Georgia (TAG)

TAG drives innovation among Georgia’s technology community, inspires tech leaders, and fosters inclusivity through four foundational pillars: connect, promote, influence and educate. TAG serves more than 30,000 members statewide through regional chapters in Metro Atlanta, Augusta, Columbus, Macon/Middle Georgia, and Savannah.

TAG hosts more than 150 events each year and serves as an umbrella organization for 18 professional societies. Additionally, the TAG Education Collaborative (TAG-Ed) is dedicated to developing Georgia’s workforce to meet the needs of our technology industry.

For more information visit the TAG website at www.tagonline.org. To learn about the TAG-Ed Collaborative visit www.tagedonline.org.

Synovus-logo

Jonathan-OConnorJonathan O’Connor, Fintech South 2025 Chair; Division President, Third-Party Payments, Synovus.

Jonathan is a results-oriented Executive, with 25+ years of experience leading sales teams, driving revenue, and identifying operational improvement strategies. Expert knowledge of global payment solutions, e-commerce, risk mitigation, digital currencies, merchant processing, mergers and acquisitions.

Adept at effective communication with internal executive leaders and external partners, building strategic relationships to drive corporate objectives and profit margin expectations. Forward thinker, with unique ability to collaborate with stakeholders driving innovative strategies and product offerings.

Dedicated team leader, with a passion for fostering an inclusive culture for teams and clients, prioritizing effective communication, team production, collaboration and respect. Unlocked staff potential with motivational mentoring and ownership techniques, leveraging inter-company resources to exceed project completion timelines.

Connect with Jonathan on LinkedIn.

Episode Highlights

  • Overview of the upcoming FinTech South event.
  • Atlanta’s status as a leading global hub for fintech, known as “Transaction Alley.”
  • The significance of Atlanta’s infrastructure, including its airport and fiber optic networks.
  • The role of the Technology Association of Georgia (TAG) in advancing the fintech ecosystem.
  • Initiatives by TAG to connect stakeholders and prepare the future workforce.
  • Historical context of Georgia’s pioneering role in transaction processing and fintech innovation.
  • Synovus Bank’s involvement and support for the fintech community.
  • The concept of “engineered serendipity” at FinTech South to foster networking and collaboration.
  • Key trends in fintech, including AI adoption and blockchain development.
  • The inclusivity of FinTech South, encouraging participation from students and emerging talent.

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix.

 

TRANSCRIPT

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

Lee Kantor: Lee Kantor here, another episode of Atlanta Business Radio. And this is going to be a good one. But before we get started, it’s important to recognize our sponsor, KSU’s Executive MBA Program. Without them, we couldn’t be sharing these important stories. And today on Atlanta Business Radio, we have Larry Williams with TAG and Jonathan O’Connor with Synovus here to be talking about the upcoming Fintech South event later in August. Welcome, gentlemen.

Larry Williams: Hi, Lee. Thanks for having us.

Jonathan O’Connor: Great to be here.

Lee Kantor: Well, thank you both for for coming on. Uh, Larry, before we get too far into things, why don’t you share a little bit about TAG the overview, mission, purpose and how you’re serving the community?

Larry Williams: Oh. That’s great. Lee, thank you so much. We’re always delighted to be here with you and radio X. We are, uh, so super excited about what we can do in this community. Uh, TAG is really a professional organization about, uh, people that are interested in technology and the innovation economy. And what we do is we really bring together the ecosystem through lots of ways of engagement. Uh, tech for good, uh, projects connecting the ecosystem and building peer to peer networks. We also do a lot of lobbying, both the state and the local level, um, and the federal level, to make sure that we continue to have great policies that will keep Georgia as the number one place to do business, as it has been for 11 years in a row. And then, of course, we’ve got to prepare the workforce of the future, and we’re really dedicated to make sure that we have the most relevant workforce moving forward, because that’s what drives economic growth.

Lee Kantor: And, Jonathan, why was it important for Synovus to be involved with TAG and to be the title sponsor of this great event?

Jonathan O’Connor: Absolutely. You know, Synovus is honored to be diamond sponsor for the event here. In fact, we have a long history with TAG with that two board members. And, you know, the bank itself is is really here to support transactions, uh, in Atlanta. Uh, you know what? Our history from Columbus, in fact, being the oldest bank, uh, in Georgia and we continue to to to grow in the state of Georgia with some recent news as well, with our merger with pinnacle. But, you know, as we look at the, uh, the fintech ecosystem and and we look at what’s around us here. You know, we have over 260 fintech companies calling it home. 70% of all fintech global transactions, in fact run through Atlanta. And you know, we have a very great robust infrastructure here. You know two of the largest fiber optic outlets. And we got the biggest airport in the world. So you know, all of these together with Synovus support will will not only fuze the ecosystem but make made fintech side. 2025 the best event of the year.

Lee Kantor: So what are some of the kind of unique advanTAGes that Atlanta offers to fintech companies and entrepreneurs, startups and established, uh, enterprise level companies to want to move here to Atlanta to do business. And like you said, transaction alley. Larry, you want to take that?

Larry Williams: Sure. Um, hey, by all means, it’s a lot of the things that Jonathan just said. So if you think about the, um, the area, the area of expertise and focus that we have in Georgia about all things transactions and, you know, we didn’t just we didn’t just stand up one day and say, you know, plant a flag in the sand and say, we are going to be fintech. No, we have been involved in fintech since, um, since the early days. I mean, if you go back to Georgia’s history, we used to process checks. If you remember a checklist, people would send the paper to Georgia and we would process it. We actually were involved in digitizing that system. So we helped create what is now the digital transactions world. In fact Jonathan’s co emcee at Fintech South coming up. Um Natalie Hogg her grandfather was the pioneer of digitized payments. And so it was exciting to have them there. My point really is that we’ve helped build every part of our fintech and transaction processing, and that’s what’s put us as number one in the world. We’ve helped build every layer of the onion when it comes to that. So why does that make it attractive for people to expand and grow here, or create new, great ideas to build the next generation of of ingenuity here? It’s because we have the know how. We’ve lived through every iteration of the process and the industry. We’ve helped build it. We have the lessons learned, we’ve got the successes, and we know what’s going to be coming over. You know what’s two you know what’s past 2 or 3 waves. And we’re building that part of the future. People want to be part of that. We didn’t get to the point of being able to, um, um, be at the middle and, uh, process 70% of the world’s transactions by accident. We did it intentionally. We built the industry over a couple of decades. And now we are in that position. And again, people want to be a part of that. And that success begets more success.

Lee Kantor: Now when you’re saying 75. Yeah, please.

Jonathan O’Connor: If I can just add to that, that, you know, by having Atlanta as a very transient hub and city. You know, I’m not from Dublin, Georgia. I’m from Dublin, Ireland. And a lot of, a lot of international people have, have, have made this their home to be part of this ecosystem, to form part of the ecosystem and to grow together. And, you know, that’s very special because our intellectual capital of not only about local people, you know, us space people, but also international people is a very attractive fusion. And as Larry said, the upcoming talent, the next generation Creation of of of amazing fintech professionals in colleges like KSU and other areas. You know, that makes it all exciting for people like us to be involved in this, as we hopefully transfer some knowledge and mentor as well into the next phase of, of this growth.

Lee Kantor: Now, Jonathan, you bring up a great point. I mean, um, you obviously aren’t you didn’t come from Dublin, Georgia. You came from the UK. How did you. Um, how is Atlanta seen? I know we aspire to be seen as this global, um, uh, environment and ecosystem that’s serving the entire, uh, fintech community. And like you mentioned, 70% of these payments are globally. You weren’t talking about, you know, just in Georgia or the US. Those are 70% of the payments globally come through. Atlanta is a is the region seen in a positive way, like when people say I’m going to fintech Heck event. Do they think Atlanta or they think Georgia? Or do they think? What do you mean that? Why is that event? There? Why isn’t it in New York or, um, San Francisco?

Jonathan O’Connor: I think it’s to that point, as I said, it’s the history. You know, this was tactically laid out many years ago, and we have a lot of these payment companies having headquarters here. And now. We have involvements like the Merchant Services Limited bank charter, which is a very special piece of legislation for Georgia that’s now attracting large fintechs from Europe. The likes of Scout.com and and other players who are possibly going to engage in this new area of innovation. But what attracts people here is I would say, you know, its its position. Atlanta is in a good spot in the US. You’re kind of you’re not too far east, you’re not too far west. And you know and and it’s the it’s the easiest of travel, you know, having a great airport hub here, having access to great intellectual capital with people. And and it would have been a very transient city. You know, there’s a lot of change here all the time. And they’ve got a very good soccer team.

Lee Kantor: That’s a bonus, right? So now, Larry, how do how do you kind of encourage an event like Fintech South to become a catalyst for new ideas and strategic partnerships and not just kind of a, um, you know, event that people come and just talk and leave? How do you kind of create that community and in that environment to encourage those kind of, uh, serendipitous collisions so that people can kind of, uh, collaborate more effectively?

Larry Williams: The engineered serendipity. Lee.

Lee Kantor: That’s it. Engineered serendipity.

Larry Williams: You know, it’s, um, it’s both an art and art and a skill as well. Um, so what we do is we we’re bringing, uh, the best part? Leadership, the best content, the people who really know, you know, what’s now and what’s next so that they’re sharing, whether they be on the main sTAGe, um, or they’re on one of our breakouts. So we make sure that we have the most relevant content. Um, we also make sure that we feature some of the great, um, assets that we’ve mentioned here, um, throughout the show as well. We have our innovation challenge. So our innovation challenge that’s been going on for the balance of this year, that’s where we bring together a cohort of startups, um, people that are really thinking again about that next generation of ingenuity, what’s coming on and how are they going to provide services and solve problems for that next generation. And, you know, Lee on sTAGe at Fintech South August 18th, I mean, 19th and 20th, August 19th and 20th. We will award a single startup fintech startup with a $25,000 non dilutive award. That’s huge. That really helps a startup really propel them and catalyze them for the next part of their journey. We also have our advance award, where we celebrate companies that are established for coming up with great new innovations within their enterprises. We’ve always got to stay fresh, and that’s what keeps companies growing. That’s what keeps them relevant.

Larry Williams: And we get to celebrate the people that have really brought this along. Uh, so our Fintech Hall of Fame. I am so happy and so thrilled to be recognizing Sean Banks of TV capital, who’s been a part of a couple things. One, he’s been really dedicated to investing in our startup community, making sure that they have the tools that they need, and really thinking about this Georgia ecosystem as a way that can lift them up. Um, but he’s been part of the broader ecosystem as well. He helped start the uh Technology Association of Georgia. TAGs fintech society. So we were talking about fintech. You know, 20 years ago we were doing fintech before fintech was cool. And we really helped grow and bring together, uh, that ecosystem. And uh, um, Sean really helped bring that together and led that for many, many years. So those are a lot of things that we do. Um, the other is making sure that we have places for people to interact with, people to connect, talk about what they’re doing, uh, how they’re solving problems, the challenges and the opportunities they see. And then we can continue that great, um, dialog outside of the conference through our TAG, uh, societies and with, you know, Fintech Atlanta and other organizations around the state. So there’s a there’s built in mechanisms to have an ongoing discussion even after we leave the road.

Lee Kantor: Now, Jonathan, why was it important for Cenovus to get this involved with Fintech South? And how does how does that reflect the culture of the organization and your commitment to fintech number one, but also the community as a whole?

Jonathan O’Connor: Yes. Lee, like Synovus itself, you know, its commitment to community and community banking is core. As we look at Atlanta and Atlanta is one of our our growth cities, you know, being connected to the fintech arena is so important to us from the branch level of community, bank level, investment bank level, and we’re hopefully going to be here to help some of these fintechs as they start their journey on investments, they start their journey on funding and really having a a, you know, a collaborative approach to to supporting the fintechs and not only startups but mature. And, you know, you look at you look at the the 400, we call it fintech alley because you take any exit off there, you’ll hit, you know, anywhere from 5 to 7 payment companies and fintech companies. And with Synovus, you know, as embedded so much into the community of Atlanta, we want to really be there as a collaborator, advisor, helper for these companies as as they grow. And we look forward to our participation, uh, in Fintech South, uh, 2025, our continued support of Tyga and another, another, uh, association Nevada. And uh, we see an exciting road ahead.

Lee Kantor: So as Jonathan, as kind of being the boots on the ground and interacting with these organizations in the manner that you do, are you seeing any trends that we should be aware of our challenges or opportunities in the marketplace today.

Jonathan O’Connor: I think the, you know, opportunities definitely weigh. You know, any any type of roadblocks for fintech today. Uh, you know, I have to mention AI everybody. It’s everything is AI today. But I think, you know, as we as we get to witness more AI powered solutions, I think that’s a a very exciting accelerator to to both innovation and growth, not only in Atlanta and Georgia, but I think, you know, globally, um, because we have such a great presence and footprint in the financial services industry here. I think the mature, you know, maturation of blockchain and digital assets will will play a very big role. You know, you’ll see institutional action now of crypto and stablecoins. It was a very important piece of legislation this year called the Genius Act. And probably from a banking perspective, I think, you know, real world asset tokenization will be very important. And, you know, having token deposits and you’ll see a fusion, I think of of blockchain as a service. And AI blockchain will play a bigger role. I think now with the acceleration of, of um, of of not only not only stablecoin and crypto, but, you know, from a payments perspective how it happened. We’re also in the world of, you know, of a less stringent regulatory environment, which will I think will trigger a lot of, uh, a lot of innovation because people will rethink some of their models from before. And that said, then we do always have to keep an eye on security and fraud and areas like that. So hoping that the advanced making technology will, will, will help customers and help how any type of customer, you know, be protected. So I think overall a very exciting and path ahead. And we’ve got some great talk tracks and, uh, speakers about these particular topics at fintech site. So get your tickets today and you’ll get to enjoy it.

Lee Kantor: Now, Larry, has there been a moment you’ve been involved in this since the beginning? Uh, that has really inspired you and is really encouraged you in the growth of fintech in in the region, in the area. Is there a story you can share that maybe kind of encapsulates the potential and and how we’re just kind of really at the beginning of all this.

Larry Williams: Lydia, what’s really fascinating is the way money moves and that has been evolving over the last couple of decades. And what’s always fascinating to me is seeing the the dramatic and subtle changes of how that’s been happening. Um, so whenever we think about, um, you know, like I said, the digital. Digitization of payments as well as, you know, the acceleration of, um, of digital payments and then how it’s been migrating over to commercial and B2B payments. All of those have been iterative steps in this process. Some of the things that Jonathan just outlined about the big megatrends that are going on, the things that, um, are fueled by policies, uh, or more open policies about how we’re going to be able to function, um, the creation of things like stablecoins that he mentioned, as well as the new tools that are available, uh, like artificial intelligence. And then what, uh, quantum. When we talked in, lady, I remember we talked a lot about quantum computing at the Georgia Technology Summit earlier this year. That is all going to bring in, uh, Fascinating improvements and opportunities. Um, it’s also going to create some of the threats that we do that, you know, we have to be much more diligent about cybersecurity and fraud.

Larry Williams: But all of these things that we’ve been talking about, those are the things that we’re good at in Georgia. We’re good at looking at the future, looking at how these, you know, transformative technologies like AI are coming and how do we manifest them. So it’s been an iteration. You know, Lee, this is our eighth annual Fintech South. Um, so we we’ve got a great, uh, we’re established, we’ve got great roots, we’ve got great traction. But we didn’t start there either. For eight years before that, we were doing a fintech symposium that really started to grow this, um, and, and create a foundation for us to move this. And Lee, you all remember when we moved it out of a small ballroom and into Mercedes-Benz Stadium. I mean, that was that was drastic. So I think that puts a spotlight onto what we have. The amount of attention that this region has and how we can continue to be the epicenter for not only financial transactions but fintech. Um, this year, super excited about having Sean Neville, the co-founder and, uh, member of the board of directors, uh, of Katana Labs Container labs is going to be the first native AI platform for fintech that’s really going to think about all aspects of the transaction, uh, the compliance, uh, the, um, the fraud and, uh, cybersecurity protections, all of these things built into one.

Larry Williams: And listening to Sean’s perspective are going to be extremely, extremely, um, important. Uh, Doctor Raphael Bostic is going to be there. He’s the president and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. And Alicia Abbott, who was an entrepreneur futurist. And she will be talking about the future is now as it becomes to as it comes to payments, but also beyond that. Natalie, I’m going to give everybody a little preview. We’re now to get the more. But we also have the benefit of Mayor Andre Dickens coming and helping us make sure that this thing is successful. And I want to make one more one more point about this. It’s not just about the people on sTAGe. It’s about the people in the room. Those are the people that you’re going to network with. That’s where you’re going to build your your contacts. That’s where you’re going to build relationships. And those are the people that we’re going to use to continue this conversation after the conference is over.

Lee Kantor: Now, um, you mentioned a lot of the reasons to attend if you’re an individual, is this only for the executives, or is this trickle down to the students that are, um, you know, in the university studying fintech? Like who who should be attending?

Larry Williams: Oh, all means we’re going to have students there. So whether you’re an employer looking for the for the greatest talent or if you’re in talent looking to get into the fintech industry, we’ve got a great partnership with our friends at the Fintech Academy. Um, so we are actually building out and we are having, um, you know, quite a few tickets that are being dedicated to our next generation of talent that will be there. And so I know a lot of our members, as well as the people that are helping underwrite this thing, are super excited about this talent, giving them the exposure they need and giving them an opportunity, um, to learn more about the real world, real world experiences in fintech. And, you know, it’s interesting because when students get exposed to this or young people get exposed to it, they get super excited about it. So I’m delighted to say that individuals by all means people. If you’re if you’re in and interested in in fintech, you should be there. Like I said, it’s not just the people on sTAGe, it’s the people in the room. And those are the people that are going to be able to network with. So, you know, love for you to go online at fintech, Scout.com and get those tickets.

Lee Kantor: And, Jonathan, how do you recommend to your people to get the most out of Fintech South event? Um, is there any kind of do’s and don’ts you recommend for an attendee?

Jonathan O’Connor: Lee I was the first timer last year and I ended up as chairman this year, so anything is possible. And what I would say is that when you walk into the Woodruff Center and the sheer energy on the floor is is what really, really amazed me. You know, the collaboration, as Larry said, it’s it’s student and It’s it’s it’s, you know, it’s it’s middle management. It’s senior management, it’s employees. Everyone’s collaborating on this this really, you know, refined area and people sitting on stairs and you know, so so the atmosphere is is amazing. My only my my advice is, you know, make as much contacts as you can, you know, for your brand and business it’s very important for your network. It’s very important. And you know, you’re going to learn so much from people because we’ve got such amazing topics during the day. It’s going to generate so much debate and great conversation during the breaks. So that’s that’s all the pluses. The only downfall is if you don’t have a ticket, you won’t get the benefit. So I would say definitely get your tickets and be part of this, be part of this experience of collaboration, knowledge transfer, you know, meeting new people. And you know, you know, if we’re going to exceed our expectations from last year and we’re we’re super excited. And for the next two, we get going.

Lee Kantor: So, Larry, if somebody wants tickets or wants to learn more about TAG, what’s the website? What’s the best way to connect?

Larry Williams: I believe the best way is through fintech. South.com. Fintech South. Com which you can always get there through TAG online.org as well. And just go to our events and you can find every way to get registered and get plugged in with this. And I just want to build on something that uh, Jonathan was just saying. And that is, you know, when you get in there, you want to go to our innovation alley, which is like our expo hall. It’ll be 40, 40 plus, uh, exhibitors, sponsors. And that’s where we’ll also talk about, um, the people in our fintech ecosystem innovation challenge. And also, you know, the over 50 university students that are pursuing fintech careers. So you want to be there. You want to be engaged?

Lee Kantor: And Jonathan, if people want to learn more about Synovus and maybe connect with you or somebody on the Synovus team, what’s the website?

Jonathan O’Connor: Absolutely. We are WW, synovus.com. We will also have a a booth and a presence at the event. So we’ll be happy to field any questions, have some conversations, explore even more about how we can help a community level. And there you know we’re very excited to do that.

Lee Kantor: All right. Well Larry Jonathan.

Larry Williams: You’ll be there.

Lee Kantor: Right? Absolutely. We haven’t missed one yet. Well, uh, Larry and Jonathan, thank you so much for sharing your story today. You’re doing such important work, and we appreciate you.

Larry Williams: Thank you.

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

 

Tagged With: Fintech South 2025, Synovus, TAG, The Technology Association of Georgia

How to Build a Sanctuary for Your Soul: Insights from Kate Eckman

August 7, 2025 by angishields

HVR-Kate-Eckman-Feature
High Velocity Radio
How to Build a Sanctuary for Your Soul: Insights from Kate Eckman
Loading
00:00 /
RSS Feed
Share
Link
Embed

Download file

In this episode of High Velocity Radio, Stone Payton interviews author, coach, and podcast host Kate Eckman. Kate shares her mission to help humanity heal through courageous, authentic conversations, drawing on her background in journalism, personal loss, and coaching. She discusses her podcast Rawish, her journey of self-discovery, and the importance of self-care. Kate also reveals her vision for global wellness centers and an animal sanctuary, and offers practical advice on embracing stillness for personal growth.

Kate-EckmanKate Eckman is the host and creator of Rawish with Kate Eckman, a podcast featuring atypical talks for transformation and wellness through truth and storytelling. She is also the award-winning author of The Full Spirit Workout: A Ten-Step System to Shed Your Self-Doubt, Strengthen Your Spiritual Core, and Create a Fun and Fulfilling Life.

Kate’s TEDx talk, The Surprising Secret To Leading With Confidence, went viral, amassing more than half a million views in the first month alone. She works as a keynote speaker, broadcast journalist and TV personality, bringing her expertise in communications, performance, and mindfulness to her practice as a success coach for business leaders and professional athletes.

She earned a B.A. in communications from Penn State University, where she was an Academic All-American swimmer, and received her master’s degree in broadcast journalism from Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism. She graduated at the highest level from Columbia University’s executive and organizational coaching program and is a certified ICF coach (PCC) and a licensed NBI consultant.

Passionate about mindfulness practices for both brain and body health, she is also a meditation teacher and course creator for Insight Timer, the world’s number one–ranked free meditation app. Visit her online at kateeckman.tv and www.thefullspiritworkout.com.

Connect with Kate

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/kateeckman.tv

Twitter: https://twitter.com/kateeckman

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kateeckman/

Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/kateeckman/

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC0VoBWVoygoQ6HpCM0B69yg

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kateeckman/

Episode Highlights

  • Kate’s mission to help humanity heal and evolve through courageous conversations.
  • Her career journey from journalism to coaching and podcasting.
  • The importance of fostering genuine connections and honest dialogue on difficult topics.
  • The impact of personal experiences, including tragedy, on her professional path.
  • The concept and format of her podcast Rawish, focusing on authentic conversations.
  • The significance of coaching credentials and the need for regulation in the coaching profession.
  • The interplay between her roles as a journalist, coach, and podcaster.
  • The challenges of self-worth and the practice of self-care in her work.
  • Future aspirations, including expanding her podcast and creating wellness centers.
  • Practical tips for listeners, such as the “sit and stare time” practice for self-reflection.

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.

Stone Payton: Welcome to the High Velocity Radio show, where we celebrate top performers producing better results in less time. Stone Payton here with you this afternoon. Please join me in welcoming to the broadcast author, speaker, coach and radio host Kate Eckman. How are you?

Kate Eckman: Stone, I’m so great. I’m here with you and your audience. I couldn’t be better. Thanks for having me.

Stone Payton: It is absolutely my pleasure. I’ve really been looking forward to this conversation. I’ve got a ton of questions, Kate, but maybe, uh, maybe a good place to start. How would you articulate mission? Purpose? What are you really out there trying to do for folks these days?

Kate Eckman: I’m really trying to help humanity heal and evolve one courageous conversation at a time. I’ve been a journalist for 20 years by trade, but also have these other careers. But humanity is is my jam and my passion and what makes me tick. And you know, I have felt so disconnected from myself and others at times in my life and felt how debilitating that is. And so I don’t want anybody else to feel alone. And I want us to be able to have uncomfortable conversations as difficult as they can be, but knowing that there’s a positive result. But really, you know, I have not felt good about myself and where I’ve been in my life. And so I know if I have felt that others have and I want to be a source of inspiration and empowerment, and I think we get there by having real, honest conversations.

Stone Payton: So tell us a little bit about the the Journey. It strikes me as incredibly rewarding work if you can get it. I’m sure it wasn’t a straight line, but give us some high spots on the journey if you would.

Kate Eckman: Yeah, I actually graduated from Penn State University. I was a swimmer there. I had an advertising and public relations degree minor in psychology, and I headed straight to Los Angeles. I wanted to work in the entertainment business. I loved movies, and I found myself. I kind of fell into a career as an entertainment reporter as a kid. You know, I’m 22, 23, interviewing the biggest celebrities in the world on red carpets and press junkets. And I again, it just I leaned into my genuine curiosity. I grew up in a house with Tom Brokaw on the news every night, and I would watch him, and then I would go up to my bedroom and and make up the news to my stuffed animals. And so I’ve always just liked to talk. I’ve liked to inform people because I’m just so curious about other people and what makes them tick and why they are the way they are. And, um, you know, of course celebrities get a lot of attention, but I’ve left that career and went to Chicago to get my master’s degree from Northwestern and journalism, and I went from interviewing Tom Cruise and Angelina Jolie to delinquents and the the Cook County jail and court system, and found that to be more rewarding because there was such a need there to talk about deplorable conditions and what was going on. And, you know, I’m a humanitarian at heart.

Kate Eckman: So I had that journey. And then from there was a local news reporter all over the country and, um, after, you know, a decade or so of all the death and destruction, I, I pivoted into being a TV presenter on QVC all over the world. And, um, you know, it’s Covid and there was disruptions there. And so I, um, you know, I had worked as a model in New York City and did other TV work, and, um, I lost two loved ones to suicide in 2014 and 2015. And that kind of changed the whole trajectory of my life and career and went back to school to study neuroscience and positive psychology and whole person coaching techniques to work as a coach and and really help people because I was suffering. So I wanted the knowledge and tools to be able to first help myself, but then help others. And, um, you know that I’ve done a several things in the television world and radio world and now podcast world, having my own show with men and, um, have the most fascinating, remarkable, phenomenal guests on my show who are all overcomers in some way, but doing really big things in the world to to help humanity. And first, just by sharing their story. I think we help humanity by by being honest with ourselves and sharing our stories.

Stone Payton: Well, I’m looking forward to diving into this show because I’m fascinated with the kind of work you do. Of course, because I feel like there are there’s some overlap and some of the things that we get to do in ways that we get to, to, to serve people. When you were making that transition from that more corporate kind of existence with the celebrities and all that, I mean, I got to believe it wasn’t just all a cake walk. Did you have the benefit of some mentors along the way? Did you just get you learn from the school of hard knocks and you also, you made the distinct choice to become a formally credentialed as a coach. Speak to that a little bit if you would.

Kate Eckman: Yeah, sure. So I feel like I so much in my career, I have been thrown to the wolves and I’ve had to luckily I’m like a cat. Nine lives and I always land on my feet. But so much of my career, I just took really big risks and it worked out even when it didn’t, and even when it was tough, whether it was financially or, um, you know, there’s a lot of kind of itchiness and the, the on camera world, so I’ll just leave it at that. But, um, but, you know, and you’re a, you’re a broadcaster, so you know, how there can be some, some a lot of competition and a lot of ego that you have to manage? I think really in any career. But I was just kind of throw into it and really just leaned on my intuition and and leaned on my ability to connect. And I’ve always just genuinely cared about others. So I, you know, it was not so much research about someone I was going to interview, as much as just kind of connecting with them. And that always just worked out for me. And I think the key with any transition is believing in yourself and caring enough about yourself to to leave something that’s no longer resonating or or working out and trying something new, even if it’s, you know, you can feel like a failure or it’s not a typical path.

Kate Eckman: Or again, you know, finances might be tight, but I think if you really, truly believe and yeah, you can lean on some people, a support system is certainly really important. I had some great people too, to look up to. Um, and then transitioning into a coach for me, um, you know, therapists, obviously it’s a regulated business. I think coaching should be a regulated business as well, because I think a lot of people are operating and working out of integrity. You know, just because you went through trauma does not make you a trauma coach. And I think credentials are extremely important when you have someone’s well-being in your hands. And so that was really important to me to have the school, the the school, the skills and the tools to go along with my, you know, street cred, if you will, my personal experience to really be able to help people in a meaningful way.

Stone Payton: Okay, you got to tell me about this show. I want to know everything about it, how and why you got to go in the format, who you’re interviewing, what you’re trying to accomplish. Lay that on us.

Kate Eckman: Yeah. So I came up with raw ish. It’s like raw ish, like raw, you know, um, and RW and then ish raw ish because we’re just getting really raw and real. And I think so much media is performative and surface level and it can be superficial and no one’s saying the quiet part out loud. So I wanted my guests and myself, I have to lead by example and start saying the quiet part out loud, which a lot of quote unquote experts don’t want to do because they want to be perceived in a certain way. But I think when we share openly what we’re struggling with, um, the stuff that we don’t normally talk about, which that was the first line in the trailer for my show, is, what’s something you don’t normally talk about? Because I think our secrets keep us sick. They keep us sick. They keep us stuck. Um, they keep us fighting. So I really wanted us to start being more open. And it was really born from a place of disconnection, feeling disconnected from, you know, even immediate family members, um, friends, the world just so much going on. I recognize it’s a really challenging time for all of us. The world is tougher than it was even a few years ago. And so I think people are just at capacity and checked out.

Kate Eckman: So I wanted to kind of bring us back to our core and to our center and, and tell stories that can uplift and inspire and remind people that they aren’t alone. And we’re all going through things and that’s like, you know, I have guests. I had one gentleman recently, Austin Hatch, who survived not one, but two plane crashes that killed his entire family. He was had a traumatic brain injury. Level seven, the worst doctors had ever seen. Um, and he he survived and went on to play basketball at University of Michigan. And you know, that’s just one example. I have all sorts of people who have just really transformed me by hearing their stories and and connecting with them. And so my audience gets to have that experience as well. So I’m clearly very passionate about this work because I’m passionate about people and I’m passionate about people really living up to their full potential. And, um, even if things are really dark there, there is that glimmer of hope and light, and I certainly want to be a beacon of of hope for people and just remind them of their greatness and that it’s their birthright to have the life that they truly desire.

Stone Payton: I find what you’re doing and maybe more importantly, the way you’re going about it, the way you’re doing it to be incredibly brave. And I’m trying to wrap my mind around the the level of trust that you must certainly have to endear in your guest to have that caliber of honor exchange. I wow, how do you do that?

Kate Eckman: I think what’s been really and thank you for saying that. So and I think what’s been really cool for me is, um, which a lot of people haven’t understood. Um, I have not had a straight linear path. Um, but having all the experience as a journalist and so knowing how to ask the questions and hold space as a journalist who’s been asking questions for 25 years, really, actually, my whole life, you know, starting with my stuffed animals, they didn’t have much dialog back, obviously, but even just being curious about their experience, you know, as the Care Bear. Ah, whatever. Um, Cabbage Patch Kids. But, um, I think then going on to become a coach. I don’t know any, any professional journalists who are also professional coaches and vice versa. So having that double whammy of, um, being able to speak, but more importantly, the the skill of listening, which is a very underrated and undervalued skill in our society. But being able to listen on a really deep level, but also being a vessel and someone who can hold space for depth and for people to feel safe and confident enough to talk about things publicly they don’t normally talk about and show emotion to have grown men, you know, three time World Series champions crying on my show. Um, because they feel that safe and comfortable in my presence and their presence. And so that is a gift, um, to be able to really get to the heart of matter, of the matter and really get to know people so much deeper than where you live and what do you do? But who are you? Without all the titles and labels and limitations that are placed upon us?

Stone Payton: So what are you? Because you’ve been at this a while now. What are you finding the most rewarding these days? Because I know in my experience, sometimes that goalpost changes a little bit. Yeah.

Kate Eckman: I, I think it really is. It is. Even right now, like, I just even love connecting with you. Like, this is my Super Bowl. This is my World Series, this is my $10 million paycheck, is connecting with people and feeling your presence and your energy and your curiosity and and you feeling a certain way during and after the conversation. I think it’s that energy exchange and sharing ideas and sharing perspectives and you sharing something, or me sharing something that we’ve never thought or heard of before, that can change the way we go about our day or our life and and and again, it’s the hope. It’s the feeling. You know, I’m mixed feelings. It’s it’s being able to tap into emotion. And the full spectrum of emotion allow ourselves to feel and to grow and to evolve and to just feel alive after. Maybe we’ve been numbing or suppressing for so long.

Stone Payton: I have to believe the way you’re describing these conversations. I have to believe that coming out of any one of them, and certainly many of them, has to make you also that much better as a practitioner to help you solidify and crystallize your own thinking and your own approach to serving people in a straight coaching relationship. Yeah.

Kate Eckman: Yeah, I think it’s really important to understand people, uh, mostly in the world. And it’s a conversation I just had with an upcoming guest about understanding people instead of judging them. But first we have to understand ourselves. Understand our childhood. Understand our trauma. Understand what we like and what we don’t like, who we are, who we are and what we stand for, what we don’t stand for. And so yeah, I just, I like to be able to, um, really get in there with, with myself and others. But it first starts with, with me being able to, um, understand myself. So then I can, you know, in coaching too, we learn it’s it’s what our client is saying. It’s what they’re not saying. And then it’s kind of the meta, like what’s the what’s the noise and what’s the voice and meaning. Um, on a deeper on the collective. So um, again, listening is a very good, good skill to have. I forget your original question because I’m just so lost and describing it, I’m getting lost in these conversations that I’m having with people and it’s keeping me going. You know, I’ve I’ve gone through some challenges, like we all have. And these conversations, even what you and I are doing here right now, this is this is what keeps me going.

Stone Payton: Well, I can tell. I can see it in your eyes. I can hear it in your voice. Uh, no, I was just suggesting that with the coaching and the speaking and doing the show, that they. Surely they all serve each other, right? You learn something in one arena and you bring it to the other. And I gotta believe it makes you a stronger practitioner, which probably makes you a stronger writer, which probably makes you a better speaker. Like all of that. Serves everything. Serves everything, doesn’t it?

Kate Eckman: It does. And I one of my favorite quotes I don’t know who said it, but it’s nothing is wasted. And I think sometimes people fear, you know, making a big change in their life, whether it’s career where they live, a family, a divorce, whatever it is, and nothing’s wasted. You know, we get so much from each experience. And I think for me, I remember a time even when I put the journalism and TV broadcasting on hold and I was working as a professional model in New York City because, candidly, it paid a lot more, and I wanted to have that money to invest in my entrepreneur journey. And I had this photographer from my TV news career send me a snarky message and say something to the effect of, good to see you putting your journalism degree to good use. You know, mocking me, working as a model. And all I could do was was laugh all the way to the bank, because that modeling career really, first of all, it brought out all my insecurities. So I grew as a person, but it really gave me some money to to start my my practice as an entrepreneur and pay for grad school and things like that. So, um, I think it’s good. All of our experiences, if we allow them to be catalysts for transformation and make us better. And then you could, you get to combine different tasks and skill sets to make you that much better.

Stone Payton: When you when you become this invested in other people. Do you find sometimes there may be a risk of losing a little bit of yourself or neglecting a little bit of yourself? Is that something you have to work consciously to keep in check? Maybe.

Kate Eckman: Who are you? Intuitive? Um, yes. This has been a practice because I have always been very others focused, and that has gotten me into some relationships with some narcissistic types. And as an empath and, um, just how I was raised, and I think a lot of us, especially as women, we think our value is and how much we’re giving to other people, and then we forget to pour back into ourselves. We don’t feel worthy of it. We want people to like us. We are people pleasers. Um, you know, we don’t we don’t have that, that self-worth. Sadly, even if on the outside it appears that we do, um, to really give back to ourselves and we want to be liked. Right. So this has been a season of pouring back into myself and even recording a solo episode where there was that part of me that’s like, well, what if nobody cares or watches this, or you’re not enough to sign your own, you need a guest. And those have been my most popular episodes, and the one I did in Portugal, you know, with crappy lighting and all this stuff and, you know, frizzy hair from the ocean and all of that. But it’s just like, I don’t even care if anyone’s listening or watching, like, I’m doing this for myself. And that was that was one of my my most popular episodes. So I think it kind of proved the point.

Stone Payton: It made me a little bit of an unfair question, and I certainly don’t expect an accurate answer. I won’t hold it to you the next time we get the chance to visit on air, but I’m going to ask anyway what feels like is next or, you know, 18 months out, two years out. Is there a little bit of a of a beacon out there that you’re kind of moving toward?

Kate Eckman: I’m moving toward signing a really big contract with a partner that can help me really expand my vision and this show so that we can impact more lives. And I just want to keep doing that. And I have a lot of ambition and dream really big. But my coach recently said, you need to dream even bigger. And when I think of dreaming even bigger, I think of, you know, rush healing centers all over the world and, you know, gathering all of my favorite practitioners, many of whom have been on the show and just helping people prioritize their well-being mental, emotional, spiritual, physical. And so, you know, healthier people are happier people, and they’re able to fulfill their unique goal and purpose and mission, um, in an easier, better way. And so I want to be that like, it sounds so big, but instead of everybody being sick at the hospital, we had these big hospital like facilities where people are, you know, really into their health and well-being and going out and kicking butt in the world.

Stone Payton: Well, it does sound big. It sounds audacious, and I have a great deal of faith and confidence in you. I think you’re going to make great strides in that direction. You’re so passionate about this work. This may be a mundane or off topic question, but I often ask I’m going to ask you to, and I don’t even know when or where you’d find the time. But are there other little passions, pursuits, hobbies, interests kind of outside the scope of this that maybe you do pursue in the white space a little bit now and again?

Kate Eckman: You know, I’m absolutely obsessed with animals, and so I can’t believe I don’t have any animals in my own right now. It’s because I’m in transition and I don’t want to be a bad parent. But another dream, speaking of that would be to have a big farm or a piece of land where I could have just rescue a ton of dogs and horses. So I think mainly focus on rescue. I’d get some of my own to, but rescue horses and pigs and goats and sheep and cows and dogs and cats and just had it be a sanctuary for wellness for animals. Because animals need wellness too. I just saw something this morning that 75% of dogs are depressed, and that made me really sad. But instead of dwelling on it, I think, okay, and you know, what I’m thinking of doing too is just going down to the shelter. And if I can’t adopt, I can foster. And even you can take the dog for the day and take it to the beach and, you know, let it sleep in bed with you and give it really good food. And so, um, I’m really passionate about animals. I think they are just pure loving energy.

Stone Payton: I am so glad that I asked.

Kate Eckman: Why don’t you like that vision and me on the farm with all the animals? See, and thanks for letting me say that, because it’s my my lips to God’s ears. That’s my other big, my big dream. And there’s a woman that I know who’s doing something similar. So she’s been a good template and inspiration that, okay, I can do that too.

Stone Payton: At the risk of reducing your work to a cosmopolitan article, which is the furthest thing from my mind. Before we wrap up and we’re going to make sure that people have your contact info and know how to get to your show. Um, but I’d love to leave them with a couple of pro tips and things to be thinking about or reading to kind of have them live a little more into this Rausch mindset, if you would, if anything comes to mind.

Kate Eckman: Yeah, it’s something counterintuitive. A lot of people probably aren’t going to like, but it’s the practice that I call my sit and stare time. And you do just that. You sit and stare straight ahead out the window. No cheating. We’ve got no devices on, no music, no TV, no phone, no you, no social media app, no book. Even you can have a journal. But I really invite people to just sit quietly in a room alone, which sounds awful to a lot of people. It’s one of my favorite practices. And then you just get to tune in to your truth, to your higher self, to God, spirit, universe, whatever you believe in, and you get to listen to your heart. And in those moments, that’s where I got a download to even create this show and to come up with the language for it. And, um, if I have a problem in the past, I would just call up a friend and what do you think? And I’d be all stressed out. And now I just, I sit and stare and I invite in the guidance and I think, oh, that’s interesting. And I think we’re all so overstimulated and overcapacity and exhausted and stressed and anxious that this just gives you your body and your nervous system and your mind and your heart a chance to just take a deep breath and connect with yourself and just listen to what’s going on. And we’re so wise, and I think we’ve forgotten how wise we are. And we’re looking to everything and everyone else for the answers, but they’re all within. And it may sound cliche, and you’ve probably heard it a million times, but have you practiced it a million times? And I think that’s that’s the difference.

Stone Payton: What marvelous council. And I am going to take advantage of it, because as soon as you and I are done, I’m running out to the boat.

Kate Eckman: Oh, my gosh, that sounds fabulous. So you asked about hobbies. Being on a boat? I think with some animals. Maybe not horses, but being on a boat with a dog is is my greatest pleasure in life. So good for you.

Stone Payton: I love it. All right. What’s the best way for our listeners to begin to tap into your work? Uh, get to where they can listen to this show, maybe read your work. Let’s give them some coordinates.

Kate Eckman: Yeah. So if you just go to Kate Ekman k t e s, man, I’m Kate Ekman on all the social medias. My YouTube is Kate Ekman TV, it’s Rausch with Kate Eckman. Everywhere that you listen to podcasts, my book is the full spirit workout. But if you do go to my website, all of this information is there because I just threw a lot at you. But I would love to connect, as you can imagine and Um, and just hear what’s going on with you, and maybe we can address it on some shows or in my next book. And, um, I just I wish everybody well because it’s it’s hard out there these days.

Stone Payton: Well, k, it has been an absolute delight having you on the show. Thank you for your insight, your perspective, your your enthusiasm. And you really are having a meaningful impact on so many. And we sure appreciate you.

Kate Eckman: Thank you so much for having me. This has been such a blast.

Stone Payton: My pleasure. All right, until next time. This is Stone Payton for our guest today, Kate Eckman and everyone here at the Business RadioX family saying we’ll see you in the fast lane.

 

Absolute Heating & Air: A Blueprint for Success Through Appreciation and Integrity

August 7, 2025 by angishields

HVR-Brian-Jackson-Feature
High Velocity Radio
Absolute Heating & Air: A Blueprint for Success Through Appreciation and Integrity
Loading
00:00 /
RSS Feed
Share
Link
Embed

Download file

In this episode of High Velocity Radio, Joshua Kornitsky interviews Brian Jackson, founder of Absolute Heating & Air. Brian shares his journey in the HVAC industry, the growth of his company, and the core values—appreciation, education, teamwork, mentorship, and integrity—that shape its culture. He discusses prioritizing employee well-being, fostering career growth, and hiring for attitude over skills. The episode highlights Absolute Heating & Air’s commitment to exceptional service, community support, and empowering employees, offering insights into building a values-driven, people-centered business that stands out in the industry.

Absolute-Heating-and-Air-logo

Brian-JacksonBrian Jackson is a 35-year veteran of the HVAC industry and the Founder and Visionary of Absolute 2020 Inc. and Absolute Heating & Air, serving Morgantown, West Virginia, and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

With a passion for creating a positive impact on people, Jackson attributes Absolute’s award-winning success to a company culture rooted in authenticity, gratitude, and empowerment of the Absolute Team through meaningful opportunities to thrive – both professionally and personally.

Beyond his business ventures, Jackson and his family are avid travelers who seek inspiration through art, music, and cultural experiences. Together with his twin flame, Evelyn, Jackson is now embarking on a new journey – the creation of a nonprofit foundation dedicated to expanding access to wellness resources, educational opportunities for personal growth and behavioral transformation, and programs that foster creative expression and spiritual growth.

Follow Absolute Heating & Air on Facebook, YouTube and LinkedIn.

Episode Highlights

  • Brian’s background and experience in the HVAC industry.
  • The journey of starting and growing Absolute Heating & Air.
  • The importance of core values in shaping company culture and customer service.
  • Employee care as a foundation for customer satisfaction.
  • The significance of hiring based on values and attitude rather than just skills.
  • The company’s core values: appreciation, education, teamwork, and mentorship.
  • The impact of a supportive and growth-oriented environment on employee performance.
  • The role of transparency and accountability in building trust with customers.
  • The integration of community service initiatives, such as the “Hope and Heat” program.
  • The philosophy of prioritizing employee well-being to enhance overall business success.

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 High Velocity Radio. My name is Joshua Kornitsky. I’m a professional iOS implementer and the host of today’s show. I have with me Brian Jackson, the founder of Absolute Heating and Air. Hey, Brian, how are you?

Brian Jackson: I’m doing phenomenal. Josh, how about yourself?

Joshua Kornitsky: I’m doing pretty good myself. It’s been a good day so far. Uh, nothing but wonderful dynamic conversations. So, Brian, tell us. Ah, Jackson, is what you’ve told me to call you just so that anybody listening doesn’t get confused. He’s told me to call him Jackson. Jackson, tell us a little bit about absolute heating and air.

Brian Jackson: So absolutely, heating and air is a business that I started back in 2013 as a side hustle. I was uh, you say having an early midlife crisis working for a company in Pittsburgh. Going back to school for psychology at 40 plus years old. Because I had recognized in business that that was my my passion was psychologically, you know, how to inspire people, how to engage with clients, things of that nature. And I returned to Morgantown, West Virginia, which was close to where I was born and raised, to finish my degree at West Virginia University and started. Absolutely. It was originally an absolute area, which became absolute heating and air as a means to pay my bills while I went back to college.

Joshua Kornitsky: So did you have previous experience in in air conditioning or HVAC?

Brian Jackson: Yes. So, uh, I was working for electrician first thing out of high school. I had had mechanical experience in high school, uh, working with my dad on some projects, uh, for our church also, um, uh, had a Billy construction class in high school, which I performed a lot of electrical work in. And so I pursued electrical work out of high school rather than going to college. Even though I had a desire to go to college, I wasn’t sure what I wanted to do. Figured enter the workforce first and figure that out, and ended up in the Washington, D.C. area, working for a apartment management company that sent me to school for heating and air conditioning. I returned to West Virginia in 2 or 1994 to start my first heating air conditioning company. I was 21 years old, barely knew shit about what I should have known starting that business, but I had, uh, I think maybe it was a naivete that took away any fear. Does that make sense?

Joshua Kornitsky: Sure, sure. You don’t know what you don’t know, so it’s hard to be afraid of it.

Brian Jackson: Right. And so, because I didn’t have a fear for starting a new business at 21, I didn’t have a fear for, uh, getting into aspects of heating and cooling that I had never done before. I navigated through that with confidence somehow at that early age.

Joshua Kornitsky: And so that was 1994.

Brian Jackson: That was.

Joshua Kornitsky: 1990. Okay. Go on. I’m sorry.

Brian Jackson: So I had that business for 12 years. Uh, obviously starting at a young age without the business background, with only three years of HVAC background. I made a lot of mistakes. Uh, as I grew that company but still reached a level of success that was that I can be proud of in 12 years. That a lot of people my age would not have been able to do.

Joshua Kornitsky: And 100%.

Brian Jackson: Yeah. It’s. And so it was a learning experience where after I sold that, then I made some more, uh, let’s say inappropriate life choices. That took me down a different path.

Joshua Kornitsky: But then we all take those steps, and it’s the only way we learn.

Brian Jackson: Then, uh, return to HVAC by working for a contractor in Pittsburgh that had been friends with. Yeah. So it was, uh, I recognized that the company that I was working for in Pittsburgh was basically limiting my growth, not just professionally, but I think in other aspects of my life, it was causing some friction. I was already going back to school to pursue a degree in psychology, so I decided to return to Morgantown, West Virginia, which was close to where I was born and raised, and finished my degree in psychology at Western University. Uh, my son at the time was going to Fairmont State University in West Virginia for business degree, and so he was working for me part time, uh, basically running apps to air as a side hustle, to provide income, to pay the bills while I was getting this degree in psychology. But, uh, the people in Morgantown knew me and, uh, some of the surrounding area because of the business I had previously. And word got around quickly that I was back in town. And so organically, we were growing the business with almost no marketing. And because of, you know, at the time, I didn’t even really appreciate the full scope of how important infusing the culture and mindset, the core values of what I had into the company as a whole. But it was almost happening naturally without even having that understanding from a larger perspective.

Brian Jackson: And one of the most important things that resonated with me as we started to hire employees was something Richard Branson said. Richard Branson, being the founder of Virgin Records, Virgin Mobile, Virgin Airlines and probably my favorite billionaire in the world. He just seems like a fun guy and I hope to meet him someday. But, um, he said that the customer is not the most important person in your business. The employee is. And if you take care of your employee, you will never have to worry about your customers. That resonated with me on a deep level, because I was always hypersensitive about customer satisfaction in my previous business. And so as we grew and I treated my employees like my customers, and because I did that and took care of them, I appreciate them. I engaged with them on a level beyond just what the work was or what their career was, but actually cared about them. That they in turn cared about the customers. I didn’t the amount of time that would be taken for me to engage with a customer who was upset was insignificant, because I had infused that culture in my team that day to take care of the customers. And so that, I think, is the core of how we were able to grow. Absolute error successfully.

Joshua Kornitsky: So this lesson from Richard Branson of of treating your employees well so that your customers are treated well by your employees, was was the foundation of that in your previous business that you discovered that or was it just sort of inherently who you were? Because that’s a pretty profound realization. And it certainly seems like as as you’ve explained, your your growth has been positive and strong. It seems like it’s made a really big difference.

Brian Jackson: Yeah, I would have to say my own core personal values in relation to customer service comes from obviously my parental upbringing, a spiritual aspect of my upbringing. Um, I would even say there was some genetics involved in that. Um, so it came very naturally to me to want to have my customers be happy. It was very natural for me to want to always do the right thing and do the best possible job, even when I was inexperienced. And I can even think today. You know, looking back 30 plus 35 years ago, I can see jobs that I did at that young age, 21 years old, starting my first HVAC company that look absolutely terrible. Well, and it still bothers me today because I can see that image in my mind. I was like, I wish I knew more then so I could have made that look more beautiful and or maybe work more efficiently, whatever the case might be. But it’s like, that’s just my natural desire to always do the best possible job for somebody. And so it may not come natural to everybody. So that’s a very defining line in our culture today with absolute human error is if somebody doesn’t have that as a core value, that they appreciate a client enough to do that, or they appreciate a team member enough to, uh, help them out and gain that knowledge and ability to perform that way, then that person is not going to fit the culture absolutely well.

Joshua Kornitsky: So that, to me, brings up the concept or the thought that I get that, you know, what the right thing to do is? And I get that you’re hiring people that understand your perspective to the best that you can convey it to them of how important things are. But how hard is it to teach people to understand what the right thing to do is? And are you able to if if you’ve got a technician that’s in the field, if they don’t know, do they know who to call to get guidance?

Brian Jackson: That’s important. Yes. And I think the core values we have at absolute are are the initial point that helps to resolve a lot of that. Uh, we have guys that come to us who have a fear based mentality from places they’ve been before, like, if I do something wrong, I’m going to get yelled at, okay? Or if I get put into a place where I’m challenged, I’m not going to have support. And we see that. And when they come to absolute error, it’s like a a breath of fresh air for them, because now if they do something wrong, they’re coached.

Joshua Kornitsky: If they not just smacked right.

Brian Jackson: It’s like.

Joshua Kornitsky: Metaphorically.

Brian Jackson: Uh, and we proactively try to fill in those gaps ahead of time. But of course you can’t fill them all in. So when a mistake is made, there’s no, uh. Strong. There’s no, there’s no there’s definitely no yelling. There’s no, uh, this demeaning type of discipline. It’s about coaching, mentoring and lifting that person up so they can know what to do in that situation next time. What? They face a challenge where they need support. They’re not wondering, do I have something to rely on? They have a chain of command they can go to that. They’re going to have somebody that can support them through that challenge.

Joshua Kornitsky: And I think it’s critical, because I don’t want to lose sight of the fact that that I’m going to go on a limb here and say, you install heating and air systems, right? That’s the primary focus of the business. If if I’m a customer or a potential customer listening to this, it tells me that if if you’re who I engage, well, obviously we want all of our technicians to do work without error. If there is an error or if a problem manifests. That wasn’t part of the initial understanding. It sounds to me like you’re going to do what’s right for for the customer, as well as for the employee.

Brian Jackson: And the the opportunity that opens up to do the right thing and satisfy customer when they don’t even know is happening is huge. Because if you’ve got a technician who’s made a mistake, he can. Maybe he knows he can put a Band-Aid on it and nobody will ever know he made that mistake. But he knows eventually that could come back on the company.

Joshua Kornitsky: Right?

Brian Jackson: They have worked at places where they’re fear based. Um, and situation is going to allow them to Band-Aid it because they know they’re not going to work there forever. So they don’t care what happens to that company when they leave. So when you instill an environment of a place of safety where that employee knows that when they make a mistake, they can call their supervisors, say, hey, you know, I messed up, uh, I put my foot through somebody’s ceiling. It’s in this area where they don’t know it’s at. I could probably patch it. They’ll never see it. But that’s not how we work. It’s like we’re going to proactively go to that customer and say, hey, I hate to tell you this, but I put my foot through your ceiling. I’ve already called my boss about it. We’re going to get a painting and drywall contractor out here in the next couple of days to take care of this for you. It’s like. That’s once our new team members, our new hires, recognize that that’s how we operate. That changes the entire dynamic.

Joshua Kornitsky: So it certainly sounds like the culture first model makes a gigantic difference in really what impacts how well you satisfy your customers 100%. And in doing that, can you help us understand what is it you look for when you’re looking for, uh, technicians or employees to help them to make sure you’re aligned and that the people who you service your customers will ultimately have their expectations fulfilled. What is it? How do you how do you sift for that?

Brian Jackson: So ultimately, um, and you might be able to help me with this. It’s the, the idea of, Uh, filling a seat with who? And not with a skill set or a idea. It’s about who is the right person as a what are the values? You know, what are what do they think of when it comes to their fitting in within our team? So obviously, as a HVAC company, skills are important and certain aptitudes and abilities are important. But the most important is what is that person’s attitude and their desire to grow and get better. Right? That’s that’s that’s the who of what we look for is who fits that model. So we might be looking at a technician with 20 years experience that knows everything that needs to be done mechanically. But if they aren’t willing to be a mentor, if they aren’t willing to own up to their mistakes, if they aren’t, uh, an honest person of integrity, they are not going to survive it. Absolutely. And so when we look for that. Who? That person who adheres to our core values or at least aspires to. We recognize that not everybody’s perfect, especially when we bring new people on. And they’ve had negative experiences in the past with employers. We’re going to have to make sure they understand what those values are and help them work towards that.

Brian Jackson: And so, I mean, this sounds like a great time to just share the core values, if it’s at least if you please, if we could do that. So, um, as you know, we’ve been working with you, uh, through this process of, uh, really redefining our core values. We had one set of core values that was customer facing and a slight variation of that that was internal that we use for the team, and we found success in using that. But, uh, within the past year, we’ve recognized the need to really enhance that and to combine the two so that we’re really giving the same message to our clients that we are to our own team members. That’s great. And, uh, we were actually getting ready to launch, uh, or present these new core values to the team next week. So this is pretty exciting to be talking about here. Share with us. So the first one is absolute appreciation. And so obviously appreciation is something that we can all appreciate as a core value. But absolute gives it like this higher level in my opinion. Obviously that’s the name of the company. So that plays a part of as well. But um, absolute appreciation to me means you are not just thinking of the appreciation. You’re not maybe even just expressing in words, but you are now showing appreciation by what you are doing with your behavior, right? So if you appreciate your team members and you see they’re struggling on a job, they don’t have to ask you to jump in and help you.

Brian Jackson: Just proactively know you’ve got to get in there and help them. Or at the end of the day, you finished your job and you know there might be some other team members out there still working. And instead of just going home because, you know, you can, you call the office and say, hey, is there anybody out there that needs some help? I’ve got an extra hour here. I can jump in on the job if you need me to. That’s showing true appreciation for your team when you proactively look for those opportunities. Same with the clients or the community that were communities that were involved in. When you start to really appreciate what these customers are doing for us, allowing us to grow as a company and what each individual team member is able to do because we have such a great client base, then we show appreciation for that. We give back to the community because we appreciate that we exist in that community and that we have this opportunity of growth within that community. So obviously we want to show that appreciation.

Joshua Kornitsky: So it sounds like you’re encouraging them to to sort of live that appreciation model and to demonstrate it and show it at all times. Um, it’s a pretty spiritual approach to, to an HVAC company, but I think it’s fair to point out that I. It’s borne of you. Correct?

Brian Jackson: True. And it’s been enhanced through other I mean education. In fact, our previous, uh, internal, uh, core values are really centered around education involved teamwork, education, appreciation and mentorship. Those were the four core values of our internal team up until now. And so appreciation being one of those original four, is now the one of the top of the current and new, um, core values. Um, and so one book that I would like to recommend to the listeners is, um, conscious capitalism. And uh, it’s written by, I think it’s John Mackey, uh, who was the founder of Whole Foods and another economist. I can’t remember his name off the top of my head, but that book really spoke to me in how you need to infuse a spiritual ideal into your culture of your team so that you are, In fact, it also reminds me of the book Good to Great, where you have a level five leader who puts other people first, who doesn’t seek the attention that they’re they’re the ones that created all this and made all this happen, but they’re giving that credit to their team. That’s conscious capitalism. It’s like you’re looking at the spiritual perspective of how does the community, uh, how does the value of the community benefit this business and how we operate the employees, the investors, even the vendors? That’s something I see a lot of contractors, you know, they’ll beat their vendors up for the lowest price. They they, uh, get upset with them, uh, just put a lot of stress on that relationship. Whereas I’ve approached my vendor relationships where I appreciate them, too, and I’m not necessarily looking at the lowest price for my vendor. I’m looking at who is the vendor that’s going to treat my customers and take care of me the way I need to be taken care of, to take care of my customer. Sure.

Joshua Kornitsky: And so, I mean, that translates to A happy customer who has been well served by someone who is conscientious in the work that they’re doing.

Brian Jackson: That’s even how we set ourselves apart when it comes to a sale process, that when we can speak about our vendor in a selling process, that why we chose the equipment we sell. Uh, one example is, uh, client A, their air conditioner goes out on a Friday afternoon when it’s 90 degrees.

Joshua Kornitsky: That never.

Brian Jackson: Happens. You get family coming into town because they’re having the birthday party, the house on Saturday afternoon. We call our vendor and tell them the situation and ask if we can get a piece of equipment delivered to the house Saturday morning so we can get this accomplished for them. I know for a fact previous vendors that I’ve used may have said something like, well, we’re going to have to charge you $200 and you’re going to have to drive here to get it. And, you know, you got to be here right at this time to get it. And or others that may say, well, you’re out of luck. You gotta wait till Monday. But this particular vendor that, um, I’ll mention their name and you can edit out later if it’s.

Joshua Kornitsky: If it’s up to you, as long as you’re good mentioning it, then we’re happy to.

Brian Jackson: Have a Hamburger Corporation as the vendor I’m speaking of. And specifically, uh, uh, their location in Clarksburg, West Virginia. Uh, who? The manager there, Scott Yates. Shout out to Scott and the regional manager. Um, CJ uh oh. Luke CJ’s last name. He’s going to hate me for that. We’ll never tell Cameron, CJ, Cameron love both of those guys. And then our, uh, our territory manager Adam, it’s like those guys genuinely care about taking care of people. So they take care of us, which empowers us, take care of our client better. And so that example of I call hamburger and tell them, hey, this is our situation. This is the client situation. They proactively offered to bring that piece of equipment to our job site on Saturday morning and meet us there at 8:00 so that, uh, we have that client’s AC up and running. I think it was like by 1231 in the afternoon, so that when their birthday party started later that afternoon, now their house was starting to return back to a cool conditioned area. And it was like, that is an example that I relate to people when we’re talking about why we are setting ourselves apart, because the equipment we choose is not just because of the name on the equipment, it’s not because of the features of the equipment. It’s because of the value that that distributor brings to the table. If you, as a client and using a homeowner has a problem, they have our back. They’re going to go above and beyond, not just for us, but for you as the homeowner.

Joshua Kornitsky: You know, Jackson, it sounds like, uh, that the secret you’ve uncovered is, uh, honestly an ancient business concept called dignity and respect, right? Where you treat your vendors and your employees with dignity and respect, and in return you receive it. It’s it’s somewhat golden rule like, but clearly it’s making a difference because it’s. Yeah, because of the level of care you’re demonstrating internally and externally. Your organization continues to grow.

Brian Jackson: And again, it goes back to that same book that I mentioned earlier that I read prior to starting this business. I read it while I was in college for, um, the psychology degree. I was actually in a sociology class. I read this book. And I’d highly recommend that for anybody who appreciates how culture, core values, and a thread of spirituality within a business can help it thrive and be sustainable and even self multiplying. I mean, all those things, in my opinion, require that thread of spirituality and that this conscious aspect of capitalism within that business. And I think it’d be a very valuable read to anybody who is in tune with that thought.

Joshua Kornitsky: And how does it translate to customer satisfaction. Are your customers happy customers? Do you have a couple of good reviews?

Brian Jackson: Oui, oui. 5.0 in the Morgantown area with. I think we’re just now about to hit 1000 reviews, which is only strongly with more than we have. Yeah. And, uh, we have A+ rating with the Better Business Bureau. We’ve been voted by the community as the best in Morgantown five years in a row. Um, it’s constant positive feedback from our clients. And, you know, a lot of times an owner, uh, or even a higher level manager within the HVAC company, a lot of times taken with resolving customer unhappy customer issues. Right.

Joshua Kornitsky: Right. Somebody dedicated full time to solving that.

Brian Jackson: And that’s very rare for us. Um, it obviously happens. We’re not perfect. But even my my management team is so capable of handling that that it never has to come to me as an the owner, I might notice I get all the, uh, the emails every time somebody leaves a review so I can catch a, a low review if one happens to come in, which is rare, but as soon as I see that it’s boom, it goes out to a thread for all our managers to see, and somebody is on point to take care of that situation.

Joshua Kornitsky: And pretty quick mitigation.

Brian Jackson: I would say. I would say it has to be at least two years or more since I’ve ever had to personally talk to a client about a negative situation, because my team is so well equipped to handling those situations and the. So I’m in a privileged position where I now only have to have the positive experiences with my clients when I’m in a community activity or a fundraiser or things of that nature, and I’m engaging with people that use our services and get to hear all that positive feedback of how happy they are with our what we do.

Joshua Kornitsky: So it sounds like, uh, you, you don’t win your business by being the cheapest in town. You simply win it by being the best.

Brian Jackson: Right. Um, I’ve it’s like I almost don’t even think about price, which obviously you have to be conscious of it and and fortunately, I got, uh, uh, my key sales and, uh, finance, uh, director. And he’s also a business partner, and it’s like, uh, he’s very aware of the price structure and keeping that, you know, a great value for our clients. But I’ve always felt like if I’m focused on keeping my employees happy and they keep the customers happy. You know, there’s obviously a cost to that. Of course, if we’re going to maintain a high level of, uh, skilled people that fit our culture, they’re going to expect good benefits, good opportunities, good pay scale. Uh, and so we provide that. And for and using customer in their home, some of them, most of them appreciate that there is they’re not going to get the cheapest price and get the highest quality. In fact, I’ve always said that there’s only three things you can get when you make a purchase, and you have to pick two of the the most important to you because you can almost never have all three.

Joshua Kornitsky: What are those three?

Brian Jackson: You can get a high quality product. You can get high quality service of that product and you can get a low price, but you can never have all three. So you might have a low, uh, good quality product at a low price, but maybe that company is the one that doesn’t call you back when you need service, right? Right. Where they get their for service and they really don’t know what they’re doing. There’s a lot of good companies out there on the install side, but on the service side there’s some things to be desired. And so we like to be around where we can encompass both all aspects of what we do for our clients. But the point being that client has to choose really what is important to them. Do they want a quality product? Do they want a reliable service where they know that their equipment is being taken care of to where it’s running at peak efficiency? So they’re saving energy. Their air is being cleaned so that they have less dust in the house. Their kids are getting sick less. Those are the aspects that a lot of times customers aren’t aware of. And that’s where the education part of our culture is educating the customer what those choices are, so that if they need a lower price, there are options, but they understand you know what they might lose as far as efficiency your air quality is concerned, or if they want to invest in the higher level and have all the bells and whistles, they can do that. But it’s important that we’re educating the client about what those options are, not making the decision for them and educating them so they can make a confident decision, knowing where the right company for them.

Joshua Kornitsky: Well, and it sounds like the motivation behind the education is exactly that. You want to give them the option to make the decision. It’s not just the top price. Every time. It’s it’s you have choices.

Brian Jackson: We can segue that right into our second core value, which is empowering people. It’s like some some, uh, when you hear that empowering people right from the jump within a company situation, you think empowering your employees to to grow in their careers? Possibly. But we define empowering people also with our client base in community as well, because when we educate a client, we are empowering them to make a better decision about their home and their investment.

Joshua Kornitsky: 100%.

Brian Jackson: I educate them when we educate the community about. In fact, one thing that we have at Absolute Error is a program called Hope and heat. So every fall we look for individuals within the community that might be in need of a better heating system, but they don’t have the resource to get it. And so a lot of times we’ll partner with another organization like United Way is one that we partner with on this to identify who those people are and provide quality heating systems for them at no cost. And so we partner with vendors to do that. And so we are now empowering the community to be better for the individuals living there. Because of that aspect of what we do as a company.

Joshua Kornitsky: I mean, that’s making a difference in your community. It doesn’t get much better than that. So and what’s the next one?

Brian Jackson: Integrity in action.

Joshua Kornitsky: Um, Integrity in action. In action. In action.

Brian Jackson: In action.

Joshua Kornitsky: In action.

Brian Jackson: Okay. And I felt it was very important to establish the inaction part of that. Because if you just say we’re a company of integrity, that can be very generic. Anybody out there can say we have integrity. You should use us because you can trust us. We’re we’re an honest company. Those are words, right? Yes. What is integrity in action? That means we are proving that we have integrity when and that’s that’s where it comes down to the accountability, owning our mistakes, being upfront with the customer. Um, one example is, uh, we have, uh, a policy of a lifetime workmanship guarantee. So if if there’s a problem at any point in the future of a system that we’ve installed that we recognize as a result of something we did incorrectly when it was installed, we will cover that, whether that’s 10 or 15 years down the road. But it doesn’t matter.

Joshua Kornitsky: That’s pretty unique in the industry.

Brian Jackson: And that’s I mean, that’s that expresses our confidence that we’re going to do things right to start with. Right. We know that the likelihood of something like that happening is so minimal because of the quality of our service and products and because of the culture that we had, that guys want to do things the right way, and they know they have a space to reach out for support when they’re unsure of something that we have that confidence that what we provide for that client is going to be a lifelong investment that they can rely on. And so in the rare occasion that we have to follow through on a lifetime workmanship guarantee, we’re okay with that because it’s it’s it’s.

Joshua Kornitsky: Very who you are.

Brian Jackson: Very likely that’s going to happen. The only way I can think of that stands out in the moment was one where, um, we had installed new air conditioning system for somebody, and about a year later there was a leak on one of the braised joints that our technician had raised. We covered that repair for free. That’s normal. It was like within the first couple of years. But the technician that braised, it did not do a very good job of braising it. And about year 4 or 5, at least again, now it’s outside of the standard labor warranty, right? They never would have known that this was a problem that was a result of the original deficiency on how that joint was braised, but we just owned it. It’s like we could charge that customer whatever we needed to and said, you know, you have a leak. It needs repaired. Here’s the cost and do the work and get get paid. But we proactively go to that customer and say, hey, look, this is actually the same leak you had three years ago. Our guy must have not did that great of a job repairing it, unfortunately. We’re going to take care of this for free. Normally it would have been, you know, $1,200. Whatever. They present the price and say we’re going to waive that for you because this is a result of our workmanship guarantee. That’s so you can you can see where that can. Clients can be frustrated when their AC doesn’t work, obviously. And when you come to them and say, hey, you don’t have to pay for this repair, even though it’s our fault. They mean at first, the first thought, maybe I’m irritated because you guys should have fixed this right three years ago, but now you’re telling me they don’t have to pay for it? They never would have known otherwise. It was our fault. And we’re. That’s that’s true. Integrity in action.

Joshua Kornitsky: Couldn’t agree more. And and it’s interesting as we’ve gone through your core values, uh, this is a nontraditional way of demonstrating why you excel at what you do and why people should pick up the phone to call you when they have a need for install, repair, maintenance, or any of those things around heating or air, because you’re putting your your integrity on the line, saying these, these are the things that are mattering to us and therefore they will translate into excellent service and good value, ultimately long term for the customer. So integrity in action. Is there another core value.

Brian Jackson: Yes. So we have four. And the fourth one is progress with purpose.

Joshua Kornitsky: Okay.

Brian Jackson: So obviously um anybody that an employer has on their team, they want to see them progressing. I would hope all employers are that way.

Joshua Kornitsky: Ideally, but some are not. And I’m sure that you’ve seen that through your time in in industries that electrical and HVAC, not everybody’s appreciated.

Brian Jackson: Right. And I think my biggest reward as the owner of Absolute Heating and Air is seeing young people come into the business at entry level and grow and excel in their career wherever that takes them. In fact, uh, one example is a young man by the name of Paul Barlow, and I’ll send this to Paul so he can see it later. So Paul was one of the original Numbers to absolute error. In fact, I’ll flash back to 2013. Actually, this would have been 2014. So, um, I’d started the business in 2013 when I went back to the college at WVU and Paul was also at WVU. He went to high school with my son. They were good friends. So Paul’s in college, friends and college. Paul’s working at Lowe’s. Uh, and he would help us out on occasion with jobs. We needed extra hand. But then once my son graduated, I asked him, I said, uh, you want to dissolve this business that we’ve been working on here, or do you want to grow it? Because I was fine with either one at the point in time. My my interest was in psychology. Heating and air conditioning was my background. And I wanted to move forward with something in the psychology field. And I was fine with moving to the other side of the country if I needed to. But he said, you know, I got to think we got something good going here. Let’s grow this. And so I’m basically have moved forward, creating a legacy for my son that has now evolved into a legacy for every individual that works for us. So I’m flashing back now to May of 2014, and it was the Tuesday after Memorial Day of that year. I just remember this very distinctly, and we had five of us sitting around my dining room table. There was myself, my son, Paul Barlow, I just spoke about, and then two other guys that had just recently started working for us. And that was the true what I believe, the true onset of what absolute error was going to become. And I just realized I saved the wrong year. That was 2019.

Joshua Kornitsky: No, no one knows. But, you.

Brian Jackson: Know, 2018. But, um, 2013 was when we started in 2018 is when my son was graduating college and we were having this conversation. And then at that dining room table there, Paul Barlow was part of that original foundation of what became who we are today. And I remember at the time, Paul, you know, just out of college, he had some mechanical background. His family was in a construction business, so he was had some skills. But one of the first jobs I had him on, uh, he had, uh, a piece of conduit he was about to cut with a reciprocating saw over top of this, just newly installed, uh, laminate flooring had barely any space between that saw and the flooring.

Joshua Kornitsky: Something bad was going to happen.

Brian Jackson: And of course, he stopped in there. A week later, he somehow cut through the court of a reciprocating saw, a circular saw he was using. So just to show you the, the, uh, the green level Paul was on when he started for us back in 2018. So by 2024, Paul was without a doubt our top technician. Top selling technician. Um, he was on track to make $200,000 in 2024 Because he hit 100 K by the end of June. He was extremely valuable in the growth of our business, not only in what he was producing for the company as a service technician, but as a mentor for others and what he could show other people as they grew. And it kind of got blindsided in July when he told me that he was leaving to start his own business. And in prior years, if that would have happened, I would have been stressed out. Losing a top guy like that. It’s a big producer and a good mentor for our team, but I always knew that Paul had that ability and I don’t want to hold anybody back. And this is why that fourth core value progress, uh, with purpose is very important. I’m not going to hold back anybody from pursuing their career. In fact, back when some companies were having people sign non-compete agreements. Of course, they’re not legal now. But back then, when a lot of companies were doing that, I would not do that. It’s like, what if I can’t provide the space for you to thrive? Why am I going to prevent you from thriving somewhere else?

Joshua Kornitsky: Right.

Brian Jackson: Makes no sense to me.

Joshua Kornitsky: I couldn’t agree more. So you gave him that room to grow?

Brian Jackson: Yeah, I gave him that room to grow. Uh, we had a very amicable separation. He started his own business. Uh, we refer work to him. Sometimes he refers work to us. Sometimes. Uh, and there will always be a door of opportunity for him to return if he ever desires to do so. Um, and so a lot of respect there for Paul as an individual, how he handled the situation and how he’s growing as a family man and a father today. And, uh, I and my son’s the same way. You know, obviously, my son, uh, as, as, uh, this part of the legacy that I’m leaving to him, he’s he’s a solid part of absolute air. And he’s, you know, that top technician I’d say on a lot of aspects. Brandon, my son, um, exceeded Paul on, like, the customer service level, the understanding of our culture and the how we’re infusing that across the board. Paul had his own niche where he was just very focused on customer satisfaction within the home and how he performed in the home, and he excelled at that. So it’s like you got to start appreciating every aspect that every person brings in that business, and how you can help them to progress to their place in their career with purpose.

Brian Jackson: And one way of doing that is identifying unique abilities. Sure. Um, and it’s like we’re not trying to put round pegs and square holes. We’re looking at, you know, if somebody comes to us as a service technician, I’d say the more likely example, somebody comes to us on the installation side of the industry, right? But they have a desire to be a technician. We’re not forcing them to stay as a installer. We’re going to start to phase them into opportunities to taste what it’s like to be a service technician and see, that’s right, that’s right for them, or even within the office environment if somebody in a customer service role, but they feel inclined to pursue something more on the HR level or accounting level. We want to open up those doors of opportunity for them, because ultimately, the way I define a unique ability is something that you have passion for. You love doing it and you’re good at it, right?

Joshua Kornitsky: Absolutely.

Brian Jackson: So and you can have things you’re good at, but you just don’t like doing them. You have things that you really love to do, but you’re not good at it at all. And maybe you just don’t have the.

Joshua Kornitsky: Capacity.

Brian Jackson: The capacity to ever do it in an efficient way. And so once you identify that thing that you have passion for, that you love and you’re actually good at it. That’s what we want to help you to identify so that we can create your career path in line with that. So you’re not just thriving financially with the rewards we can provide. Absolutely. But you are thriving mentally and emotionally that you’re coming home from work in a better mindset to engage with your family. You’re able to spend a more relaxed weekend because you’re not stressed about what occurred during the week. It’s like that’s the kind of environment we want to provide for our team.

Joshua Kornitsky: So all of this leads me to one final question. Are you hiring because it sounds it sounds so. So what are you looking for? And I’m joking, but not right. You’ve laid out why absolute heating and air would be a fantastic place to work. What is it you look for? For the folks that that join your team?

Brian Jackson: So with the release of these new core values, these enhanced core values, next week, they will become part of our hiring process.

Joshua Kornitsky: That’s great.

Brian Jackson: We we will share these core values and how meaningful they are to us as a company in that interview. And we will ask that person, do you feel you have these values or share these values, or at least aspire to have these values? And if they hesitate with that, that doesn’t mean that they wouldn’t. Maybe they’re just. They want to be sure, but that they could even answer that question. Um, with a with a fake. Yes. But they’re not going to come back to us when we when we really present this core values with passion, that this is who we are as a company. This is our culture, and they know they don’t fit that box. I don’t anticipate they’re going.

Joshua Kornitsky: To know I agree with you. They’ll they’ll self-select out.

Brian Jackson: Right.

Joshua Kornitsky: And because it’s a very clear and persuasive argument that this is who we are.

Brian Jackson: Right. And so that’s the first thing we look for is does this person have the ability or the aptitude, the the mindset to fit our culture. Then we’ll look at what skills they have that can be used within the purpose of what we’re hiring them for, or what their aptitude is to an ability to learn that skill set in a short period of time. Um, so it really comes down to, you know, the who. Uh, of who fits the culture, who fits the values. And then we figure out what position within the company makes sense for what might align with their unique abilities.

Joshua Kornitsky: It it sounds like it would be a great opportunity for anybody at any stage, because there’s room to grow and and not just room to grow, encouragement to grow.

Brian Jackson: So and we’re we’re on that path. So every truck we get wrapped now is that we’re hiring on it. All the, uh, ads that we have for recruiting, they’re running consistently throughout the year. Because of that culture we’ve established, we’re now naturally attracting quality people.

Joshua Kornitsky: So if somebody is interested in applying, how do they where do they go? Who do they call?

Brian Jackson: Uh, go absolute Eircom is the website, and there’s a link on the homepage to a careers page. And they can either upload and submit a resume through that link. Or they can just fill out an application, either one. Um, so that would be step one. Um, that’s how to find us.

Joshua Kornitsky: And if we are interested, if someone listening is is interested in, uh, having you come out to install, repair, maintain. Same thing, same website. Go. Absolutely there. Uh, is there a website?

Brian Jackson: There’s. I think every page on the website has a submission form where they can, uh, have a digital request for somebody to call them. There’s also a link on the website where they can actually just go ahead and schedule the appointment without even calling the office. Or they’re always welcome to pick up the phone and give us a call. So, um, in fact, uh, if just to put this out there, we do have a, uh, a toll free number eight, three, three in the number four absolute. So just eight through three four absolute. And they can hopefully remember that and give us a call. But, uh, get the, uh, in respect to the hiring and our growth. Uh, we’re based in Morgantown, West Virginia. We’ve always done work in southeastern Pennsylvania. Uh, but we are growing closer to Pittsburgh. We’re looking for some quality people in the Pittsburgh area as well because we want to. We have intentions of launching a marketing campaign in a select portion of Pittsburgh in October of this year, and we’ll need some people to, uh, start generating that growth there as well.

Joshua Kornitsky: That’s fantastic. Well, Brian Jackson, founder of Absolute Heating and Air, I cannot thank you enough for what, for me was an incredibly inspiring discussion around your core values and why it makes your organization not only a great place to work, but a great place for your customers to seek service because they’re going to get unbelievable attention to detail and an incredible experience working with a company that seems to genuinely care.

Brian Jackson: Can I make one last comment?

Joshua Kornitsky: Absolutely.

Brian Jackson: Core values. This is where this goes back to our original conversation about taking care of the employees, who they take care of the clients and empowering them to do so. When our technicians or our installers or our customer comfort advisors in a home and they encounter a situation that maybe they haven’t encountered before, and they’re looking for how to make a decision for that client that’s in the best interests of the client and the company. These core values are structured so they can reflect on that. They they consider. What is absolute appreciation mean? What does it mean to empower people? What does it mean to have integrity and action and progress over purpose? And when they reflect on what those values mean, that should give them the tools to make that decision without having to reach out to a manager, unless it’s something beyond the scope of what they feel comfortable with. So they always have the resource of the team to reach out to. But we’re our intention with these core values is that gives empowers our team to make better decisions on the spot that are of value to the client and the value of the company, without having to wonder or be concerned about whether or not they’re making the right decision.

Joshua Kornitsky: It seems like it is a fantastic organization to do business with, because you’re giving your folks the autonomy to do what’s right, and it doesn’t get any better than that.

Brian Jackson: Thank you for recognizing that, Josh. That’s definitely what we’ve been trying to build. And as each day we’re not perfect, but as each day progresses, I feel just getting better and better all the time.

Joshua Kornitsky: Again, thank you. Brian Jackson, founder of Absolute Heating and Air. I’m Joshua Kornitsky, one of the hosts here at High Velocity Radio. We look forward to having you join us next time.

 

Tagged With: Absolute Heating & Air

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 19
  • 20
  • 21
  • 22
  • 23
  • …
  • 556
  • Next Page »

Business RadioX ® Network


 

Our Most Recent Episode

CONNECT WITH US

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Our Mission

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

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

Sponsor a Show

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

Partner With Us

Discover More Here

Terms and Conditions
Privacy Policy

Connect with us

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

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

© 2025 Business RadioX ® · Rainmaker Platform

BRXStudioCoversLA

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

BRXStudioCoversDENVER

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

BRXStudioCoversPENSACOLA

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

BRXStudioCoversBIRMINGHAM

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

BRXStudioCoversTALLAHASSEE

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

BRXStudioCoversRALEIGH

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

BRXStudioCoversRICHMONDNoWhite

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

BRXStudioCoversNASHVILLENoWhite

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

BRXStudioCoversDETROIT

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

BRXStudioCoversSTLOUIS

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

BRXStudioCoversCOLUMBUS-small

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

Coachthecoach-08-08

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

BRXStudioCoversBAYAREA

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

BRXStudioCoversCHICAGO

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

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