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TMB E37: Mary Foote PipelineAZ, COVID-19 impact

May 15, 2020 by angishields

Tucson Business Radio
Tucson Business Radio
TMB E37: Mary Foote PipelineAZ, COVID-19 impact
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Mary Foote, Director/
Partnership for Economic Innovation and Pipeline AZ
1475 N Scottsdale Road,
Scottsdale, AZ
480.205.1568
mfoote@pipelineaz.com
www.c19az.com
SOCIAL MEDIA: Facebook | Instagram | LinkedIn | Twitter |

Mary Foote serves as Director for the Partnership for Economic Innovation, the parent organization of Pipeline AZ. She has been in economic development for more than ten years, focusing on tax incentives, business attraction and retention, innovation ecosystems, and workforce development. Mary is actively involved in her community through board participation and volunteering. She also oversees Valley Leadership’s Jobs and Economy initiatives. She lives in Phoenix and is currently quarantining with her pitbull-mix, Hayden.

About Pipeline AZ

The mission of Pipeline AZ is to connect job seekers with rewarding careers, helping them connect the dots through career exploration, training programs, internships, and apprenticeships made possible through collaboration between Arizona industries and educators.

Right now, Pipeline AZ is working to help alleviate the impact of COVID-19 by aggregating realtime immediate job openings and offering pathways to future careers for all out-of-work Arizona’s, connecting those affected by the crisis with industries in need.

Partnership for Economic Innovation (PEI)

We believe innovation’s next challenge isn’t exponential growth, it’s exponential impact. That’s PEI is investing in community-building technology and R&D designed to make Greater Phoenix more resilient and empower individuals to take agency over change.

Our mission is to transform Greater Phoenix into a top global market for innovation, fueled by world-class research centers, advanced industries, and creative entrepreneurs.

Read more about Our Mission During Crisis | #C19AZ.

Forty-Niner Golf & CC – Tucson’s Hidden Jewel

Tagged With: Mary Foote PipelineAZ, Tucson Means Business

ATDC Radio: Take 5 – Omni Legal, Moonlight Therapeutics, Agency Spotter, Versusen, & Oncolens

May 15, 2020 by angishields

About Your Host

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

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

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

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

Connect with Jane on LinkedIn.

GWBC Radio: Jan Levie with Handy Entertainment

May 15, 2020 by angishields

GWBC Radio
GWBC Radio
GWBC Radio: Jan Levie with Handy Entertainment
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Jan-LevieJan Levie is the CEO and Creative Director of Handy Entertainment, your go-to for exciting event entertainment. Handy Entertainment creates hi-touch, customized activations for social, corporate and promotional events. We are currently offering Virtual Sessions of Tarot, Palm Reading, Handwriting Analysis, and Lip Readings.

Clients include Cirque du Soleil, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta Botanical Garden, the Hay House Museum, Macy’s, and a multitude of marketing, advertising, media, transportation, and technology companies.

Jan earned her B.A. from Indiana University in Theater and Journalism. She has worked professionally in stage, film, television, voiceover, industrials, as a print journalist, and translator. Jan has worked with corporate, legal, educational institutions, and government entities, both in the U.S. and internationally.
An educator at heart, Jan has taught French, German, English, Hebrew, Literacy, and Theater to students of all ages and nationalities.

Jan currently serves on the Marketing Committee of the Greater Women’s Business Council, and is a member of the Atlanta Convention and Visitors Bureau, the Out Georgia Business Alliance, and the Georgia Production Partnership. Jan speaks to professional, civic, and special interest groups on a variety of topics ranging from events and the entertainment industry, non-verbal communications, building your non-profit’s membership and reach, to Networking for the Socially Challenged. She is a regular guest lecturer at Georgia State University’s School of Hospitality.

Jan and Handy Entertainment have been collaborating with the Bobby Dodd Institute since the beginning of March 2019 to create more opportunities and positions for people with physical, mental, and intellectual disabilities in the live events industry.

Jan lives with her husband and family in Atlanta, and was used to spending her free time in traffic.

Connect with Jan on LinkedIn and follow Handy Entertainment on Facebook and Twitter.

Show Transcript

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

Lee Kantor: [00:00:18] Lee Kantor here. Another episode of GWBC Radio’s Open for Business. And this is gonna be a fun one. I’ve got with me today. Jan Levie. And she is with Handy Entertainment. Welcome, Jan.

Jan Levie: [00:00:30] Well, thank you, Lee. It’s really great to be here with you.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:33] Well, before we get too far into things, tell us about Handy Entertainment. How are you serving folks?

Jan Levie: [00:00:39] What we do normally before this is we create event entertainment that is unique to the corporate or social circumstances, and we bring people together.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:52] So, you create events customized to whatever the needs of your clients or do you have kind of standard events that you do that your customer chooses?

Jan Levie: [00:01:01] We customize what we offer for each event depending on its needs. If they want to reach out to more prospects or clients, just increase their revenue, get their message out, or actually bring people together to speak with each other to learn more about each other. And it’s the entertainment that we used to do that.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:24] Now, how did you get into this line of work?

Jan Levie: [00:01:28] Well, apparently, what happened is a journalism and theater background collided. And this is what came out of it.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:38] Now, what was your first event you did?

Jan Levie: [00:01:43] The first event I did, apparently, was throwing off some people who were trying to cajole a friend of mine in Paris and me into joining, and our French wasn’t that good. And I said to them, “Here, let me give you a palm reading.”

Lee Kantor: [00:02:04] So, you start-

Jan Levie: [00:02:04] And-

Lee Kantor: [00:02:04] So, it was through palm reading was your first foray in this?

Jan Levie: [00:02:10] It was. And it was because of my French.

Lee Kantor: [00:02:13] Did you know how to palm read?

Jan Levie: [00:02:14] Not really, not really. So, that’s what was so strange about it. And they were shocked not at what I told them but, apparently, that it was really, really resonating with them, and they left us alone. And I didn’t even remember the story until I heard it from this friend last week.

Lee Kantor: [00:02:38] That’s funny. Now, for your business, historically, I’m sure it’s been a lot of in-person, face-to-face. And now, you, as well as a lot of other businesses, have had to kind of reconfigure your business. How have you adapted during this COVID-19 pandemic?

Jan Levie: [00:02:58] Well, what we’re doing right now is moving our entertainment to virtual sessions for the time being. That means that our fabulous handy beverage or anything you wanted to be squirt with 93 three-ounce test chips is a no go. We can’t use any of those high-touch items that we’ve created over the years – the lip cards for lip readings. And so, we’re creating individual and group handwriting analysis, lip print readings, coffee cup readings, tarot readings, palm and more. And one of the exciting things that’s going on right now is that some large caterers in Atlanta have been reaching out to us and asking if they can attach our menu to their menu, so that they’re not only delivering food for big events, big celebrations around town, but they’re also giving people a way to truly interact.

Lee Kantor: [00:03:55] So, you’re forming partnerships with people that historically you hadn’t been partnering with?

Jan Levie: [00:04:03] I would say that we have worked with them in the past, we just haven’t worked with them in this format. We do get hired by caterers, and event planners, and venues all the time, but they’re looking at ways of pivoting, and we’re looking at ways of pivoting, and this is working out for both sides, I think.

Lee Kantor: [00:04:25] Now, is there any advice you would give other business owners on ways to kind of creatively pivot while still staying in your lane, but you’re still kind of expanding your offering?

Jan Levie: [00:04:38] What I would look at if I were a small business who has operated in one specific area in one specific way over time is to sit down or stand up and write the things that are most important to you, write down the things that are most important to your clients, how you’ve served them, and do a mind map of sorts where you look at different ways to recreate those things that are meaningful to you and to your clients.

Lee Kantor: [00:05:11] And did you have kind of a support to help you do this, or are you doing this by yourself to your partners or advisors?

Jan Levie: [00:05:21] I do have advisors. I do have people that we work with. I have a trusted circle. And what I’ve done, on one hand, is reach out to people, and I’ve created surveys to see what they’re interested in, and trying to really find a way that we can get the people that we’ve worked with over time back on board and involved. And that’s really what’s so chilling about this time is that it’s not that simple. First of all, you’ve got the limited touch capabilities. How are you going to reach someone? How much time do they have? And how can you get all those pieces together for the same time? And that’s what a lot of our planner friends are experiencing, and venues, and caterers in terms of rescheduling or postponing events. There’s nobody who knows what’s coming.

Lee Kantor: [00:06:20] Now, do you have kind of an ideal client? Is there an industry that you serve a lot? Or can anybody hire you or does anybody hire you?

Jan Levie: [00:06:31] We have worked historically with a lot of social events, and we have begun working over the last four years with lots of corporate. And corporate is something that I personally believe is going to come back faster and larger than social because, basically, they have the option of putting things in place, so that they can follow recommendations and provide the resources that, then, people need in order to successfully execute.

Lee Kantor: [00:07:09] Now, let’s talk a little bit about your relationship with GWBC. How have they helped you through this pandemic because they’ve been available for support in terms of education, networking? How have you leverage that group?

Jan Levie: [00:07:27] Well, GWBC has been an incredible boon. I am so grateful for the fact that, initially, before people were even aware of what was going on, and what was happening, what was coming down, and what to expect, they reached out. There were phone calls made, and I believe to all members, seeing what they needed. They fed an incredible resource in terms of education, in terms of networking, in terms of connecting. They’ve gone to extraordinary lengths to include everybody and to make sure that people have the tools that they need as soon as they come up. For example, I believe, Friday evening, they sent out information about another PPP loan server that was available and still had funds, things like that. Last minute up-to-date information that we can rely on. I’m very thankful.

Lee Kantor: [00:08:25] Now, if you were to kind of encourage a woman business owner to get involved with GWBC, how would you kind of make them aware of the organization and maybe share some tips that you use to leverage it?

Jan Levie: [00:08:43] In terms of getting a third-party certification as a woman-owned small business, I personally believe that GWBC, as a part of the greater women’s … I’m sorry, the Women’s Business Enterprise National Council is uniquely positioned to really help women take their businesses to a national and international level. The breadth and the depth of the contacts, the conferences, the networking opportunities, the ability to really engage top executives in all different markets and bring them together is extraordinary. I’m privileged right now to serve on the marketing committee for the Greater Women’s Business Council, and I get the acronyms mixed up sometimes. And the people I’m working with are amazing. I’m really, really … I’m shocked. I’m shocked at how great they are at what they do. And I’m really happy, really honored to work with them.

Lee Kantor: [00:09:49] Now, going through this crisis, have you learned anything about yourself? Has anything you’ve done surprised you in terms of kind of rising up to handle this crisis?

Jan Levie: [00:10:01] One of the things that I see happening, not just for me, but for people around me is that things come in cycles. And I think that resilience is something that is really an American trait and that we have an abundance of resilience. For me, I go through moments where I think, “Oh, my gosh, I’m starting all over again.” And then I think, “Well, okay, that’s that’s an opportunity.” And it’s that grounded optimism, I think, that for me has been essential and that I see reflected by so many of my really valued, trusted colleagues.

Jan Levie: [00:10:49] And we’ve reached out to each other, whether we’re women-owned businesses, whether we’re minority businesses, whether we’re just colleagues or friends. And people are really supporting each other in all different ways, sharing information about government forms, about timelines, about regulations, about business opportunities. It’s just it’s been a great coming together that I wouldn’t have ever expected in this mass and as quickly as it’s happened.

Lee Kantor: [00:11:22] So, now, through this pandemic, have you developed any superpowers you want to share?

Jan Levie: [00:11:29] Well, this is really not on point, but I’m not a gardener, and I finally found myself ripping ivy out by the roots, tons of ivy. And I was sort of shocked that I was out there weeding. And I realized that when my daughter asked me, “Why are you doing this?” I said, “Well, it’s it’s really finite. And I can see my progress. I can see what I’m doing, and where it begins, and where it ends, at least, until the next rain.”

Jan Levie: [00:12:03] And the other superpower I have is being able to reach out to people. And that’s what I did a lot of at the very beginning. I called friends, and acquaintances, and community members who were elderly and sick, or alone, or caring for someone else. And just just doing that, for me, really gave me an incredible amount of strength. And really, it helped me just find some happiness in really scary moments.

Lee Kantor: [00:12:35] Now, what could we be doing to help you? Is there anything that you need in order to help you grow your business through this difficult time?

Jan Levie: [00:12:45] Which we are we talking about?

Lee Kantor: [00:12:48] Just the listeners.

Jan Levie: [00:12:51] Listeners. What I would love for people to do to the extent they’re able is to support small businesses, which most people are already doing by ordering food through them directly or finding a way to patronize your local businesses, if you can, safely to purchase things. For me, personally, I’m going to put some links in the landing page out this week, and I would love to help people find their happy spot with palm readings, and lip readings, and tarot readings, and handwriting analysis. That’s something that I would really love to do.

Lee Kantor: [00:13:37] Now, if somebody wanted to learn more, is there a website?

Jan Levie: [00:13:40] Yes, there is, www.handyentertainment.xyz.

Lee Kantor: [00:13:52] That’s handyentertainment.xyz.

Jan Levie: [00:13:57] Yes, and it’s a www in front of it because I transitioned from one platform to another recently.

Lee Kantor: [00:14:06] Now, do you think, is there a silver lining when we all get through this? Is there anything you’re gonna be able to take that you’re doing now during your pivot that you might still continue doing after the pandemic’s over with?

Jan Levie: [00:14:22] I am sure that there are so many things that not only I am doing but that other people are doing that will prove to be really great blessings, that they will show us ways to do things better and in a more meaningful way, and that it won’t be over in just one day, or one week, or one month. A lot of the changes are the kinds of changes that better creative destruction. If you look at how the world has changed over time, there are always going to be things that are successful and things that fade away. And the question is, how can we use this to learn things that really help bring people together even when they can’t be together?

Lee Kantor: [00:15:11] Well, Jan, thank you so much for sharing your story today.

Jan Levie: [00:15:15] Thank you so much, Lee, for having me. It’s been a real pleasure.

Lee Kantor: [00:15:18] All right. This is Lee Kantor. We will see you all next time on GWBC’s Open for Business.

About Your Host

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

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

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

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

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

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

Connect with Roz on LinkedIn.

About GWBC

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

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

Dayton Business Radio: Valerie J Lewis Coleman with Pen of the Writer

May 15, 2020 by angishields

valerie-2
Dayton Business Radio
Dayton Business Radio: Valerie J Lewis Coleman with Pen of the Writer
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valerie-2Best-selling author and award-winning publisher, Valerie J. Lewis Coleman serves professional speakers and experts to magnify and monetize their message by publishing quality books. With over fifteen years of experience in the book business, she has published over 130 authors and helped thousands of writers navigate the challenges of self-publishing.

This expert divulges industry secrets on avoiding the top five mistakes made by 95% of new authors, pricing your book to sell and identifying shady publishers. Valerie hosts citywide book events, which have connected almost 700 authors to avid readers. Her dynamic presentation and knowledge of the business takes writers from pen to paper to published as they master self-publishing to make money!

Follow Pen of the Writer on LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter.

Katie MacKenzie with Open Hand Atlanta

May 15, 2020 by angishields

Open-Hand
Atlanta Business Radio
Katie MacKenzie with Open Hand Atlanta
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Onpay-blue

Brought to you by OnPay. Built in Atlanta, OnPay is the top-rated payroll and HR software anywhere. Get one month free at OnPay.com.

Katie-MacKenzieAs a key member of the Resource Development Team, Katie MacKenzie works primarily with upper level individual donors to Open Hand Atlanta, maintaining a special focus on developing, identifying, cultivating, soliciting, and stewarding Major Gifts to ensure philanthropic goals are met.

Open Hand helps people prevent or better manage chronic disease through Comprehensive Nutrition Care™, which combines home-delivered meals and nutrition education as a means to reinforce the connection between informed food choices and improved quality of life.

Connect with Katie on LinkedIn and follow Open Hand on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

What You’ll Learn in This Episode

  • What Open Hand is
  • The growth of the organization over the years
  • The nutrition programs and services Open Hand offers
  • The impact on the local community
  • How individuals or groups can get involved with Open Hand

About Our Sponsor

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

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

Follow OnPay on LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter.

Tagged With: community, nutrition program, open hand

TMBS E84: Ritika Gunnar, IBM’s Top Women Leaders in AI

May 14, 2020 by angishields

Tucson Business Radio
Tucson Business Radio
TMBS E84: Ritika Gunnar, IBM's Top Women Leaders in AI
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IBM Recognizes Top Women Leaders in Artificial Intelligence.

http://ibm.com/watson/women-leaders-in-ai

Ritika Gunnar is the vice president of data and AI expert services and learning at IBM. She and her team work with clients on their transformation journey through a data-and AI-first methodology and help implement data and AI solutions using deep knowledge-based skills to accelerate the adoption of data and AI enterprise capabilities.

Previously, Ritika was the vice president of offerings for IBMWatson, where she was responsible for all of Watson’s Data and AI portfolio, defining the portfolio strategy, execution of product offerings, and driving business results; she was vice president of IBM’s worldwide cloud and cognitive GTM organization, drove IBM’s mission to apply deep cloud, data, and AI expertise to its clients’ most pressing needs.

She was the vice president of IBM’s data and analytics business, where she was responsible for setting the strategy and execution of IBM’s data platform, data science, and analytics practices. She led and managed IBM’s master data management and information integration and governance business and IBM’sdata warehousing and analytics business; she joined IBM as a software engineer in 1999.

Ritika holds a bachelor’s of science in computer science and an executive master’s in business from the University of Texas at Austin. She currently resides in New York.


Tagged With: Ritika Gunnar, The Mark Bishop Show

SBBV E17: Pam Crim,Southern Arizona Better Business Bureau

May 14, 2020 by angishields

Tucson Business Radio
Tucson Business Radio
SBBV E17: Pam Crim,Southern Arizona Better Business Bureau
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Pam Crim, Executive Director
Southern Arizona Better Business Bureau m,klp[-=
120 N Stone Ave Ste 200,
Tucson, AZ 85701
(520) 888-6161
pcrim@tucson.bbb.org
www.bbb.org/
SOCIAL MEDIA: Facebook | LinkedIn |

Since 1952, the BBB of Southern Arizona has helped consumers find and recommend businesses, brands, and charities they can trust. Fast forward 68 years and the BBB is headquartered in Tucson with employees who now handle 24 phone lines, digital inquiries, and mail, and over 2,000 calls a week. The BBB of Southern Arizona serves consumers and businesses in the Arizona counties of Pima, Cochise, Santa Cruz, Graham, and Greenlee. Sonora, Mexico is also a part of the BBB’s service area. There are thousands of free and subscription websites that offer a range of information, but the BBB is the one place where you can find it all. More than 3,200 SouthernArizona businesses have earned the coveted Accredited Business Seal,a trusted symbol of a company’s commitment to integrity, ethical business practices, and customer service.

About Your Host, Stephanie Rising

Stephanie Rising

A business coach and author, Stephanie Rising has helped over 100 small business owners achieve greater proficiency, profitability, and sanity. She specializes in navigating the complexities of family-owned companies and partnerships with 5 to 25 employees. An expert small business advocate, she provides objective problem solving and accountability that has led many of her clients to award-winning achievement. Her clients have represented a total of over $60M in annual revenues and 1,000 employees.

Stephanie specializes in DISC behavioral analysis and her book, DISC: Leverage Your Nature, Increase Your Sales, is available on Amazon. She outlines step-by-step tactics for building a marketing plan that is sustainable for each reader’s personality and speaks to their specific target market. Stephanie has led numerous well-received workshops on DISC-based marketing and applying behavioral analysis in business.

As an extension of her belief in promoting an educated and healthy community, Stephanie is a monthly sponsor of Youth On Their Own, which provides stipends, supplies, and mentorship to Tucson teens who are homeless through no fault of their own.  She also supports Temwani Children’s Foundation, which provides education, food, and hope to orphaned children impoverished by the effects of HIV/AIDS in Lusaka, Zambia in Africa.

Stephanie’s podcast, Small Biz, Big Voices, is broadcast monthly on Tucson Business Radio X. Show notes, interview questions and additional coaching tips can be found on her small Biz, Big Voices Facebook page.

Stephanie is available for executive team coaching, strategic planning retreats, and public speaking.

 

 

Tagged With: io: Small Biz Big Voices

GWBC Radio: Nadine Rubin with Adam Bryce

May 14, 2020 by angishields

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GWBC Radio
GWBC Radio: Nadine Rubin with Adam Bryce
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NadineRubinNadine Rubin is the founder and Managing Director at Adam Bryce. A highly experienced and insightful executive search leader, Nadine brings natural aptitude to supporting companies through rapid change and growth. Over the past 5 years, she has focused on developing clients such as IBM, Teradata, Wolters Kluwer, RMS, Deloitte, Fujitsu, Nielsen and Viacom. She is focused on understanding the clients’ business and partnering with the leadership to identify key needs and the strategy in support of filling these needs.

Assignments worked on have been in the Americas, EMEA, Japan, Singapore, and Hong Kong. She is known for combining insight and action to benefit her clients and aid their navigation through the ever-changing demands placed on their firms. Throughout her career Nadine has had the opportunity to serve startups to Fortune 100 companies and prides herself on being a strategic and trusted advisor.

Personally, Nadine is passionate about building equality and diversity in the workforce, particularly in disciplines surrounding STEAM. She believes that in order to accomplish equality and true diversity, we as a society must focus on engaging girls and minority groups as early as possible in their education, and exposing them to the career possibilities available to them.

She has worked with three organizations in support of this goal: Girl Rising, The Queens Foundation and Dress for Success. She also started a not for profit, Papilio, which is an organization whose members are senior level female executives in STEAM. The purpose is to build a strong network of women that can collaborate and discuss issues faced in the workplace and to support young women rising in the field.

Follow Adam Bryce on LinkedIn.

Show Transcript

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

Lee Kantor: [00:00:18] Lee Kantor here. Another episode of GWBC Open for Business. And this is going to be a fun one. I have with me today Nadine Rubin. And she’s with Adam Bryce. Welcome, Nadine.

Nadine Rubin: [00:00:30] Thank you. I’m excited to be here.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:33] Well, before we get too far into things, tell us about Adam Bryce. How are you serving folks?

Nadine Rubin: [00:00:38] Okay. So, Adam Bryce is an executive search firm. We’ve been in business for many, many years. Basically, what we do is we help organizations hire key executives in emerging technology, strategy, and innovation. And we focus on diversity in the workforce, predominantly female diversity.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:00] And then, is your work changed because of the coronavirus? Has things changed for you?

Nadine Rubin: [00:01:08] Oh, my goodness. Yes, it has. And it started changing many months back.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:14] And what was-

Nadine Rubin: [00:01:15] Would you like me-

Lee Kantor: [00:01:16] Yeah, what was the first change? We’re all in suspense.

Nadine Rubin: [00:01:21] Yeah. So, basically, when you think about what we do, we get executives from one company to consider going over to a different company and doing a job. So, the process is very heavily laden with face-to-face interviews and a lot of travel. So, many months back, when signs of COVID came upon us, and we work globally, by the way, clients started putting travel bans in place, particularly for non-essential work. So, interviewing was considered that. So, a lot of the interviewing practices that we used previously, which were face-to-face, and multiple interviews, and panel type interviews got changed to telephone interviews and video interviews. The travel was cut out. So, we had to scurry in the beginning to make a lot of different plans, and cancel a lot of things, and change a lot of things up. And as you can imagine, the human element is a bit more difficult to evaluate and to get your hands around if you’re not in a face-to face-situation. So, we had to work with our clients and our candidates on how to project themselves, and their needs, their personality, their want verbally without actually being in the room.

Lee Kantor: [00:02:52] So, those were kind of new skills, or you were kind of …  When you’ve been spending a lot of your career helping people perform in person face-to-face. And now, there’s slight changes. Okay, now, you have to create that same amount of charisma and confidence virtually. So, there’s some tips or tactics that you can share to help someone try to present themselves more effectively virtually?

Nadine Rubin: [00:03:19] Absolutely. I think that by being virtual, you need to project a lot of your voice, and you can’t rely as much on eye contact and body language, even though you may be using video. The camera catches you at an angle. So, if you don’t have it perfectly positioned, you’re really not looking in somebody’s eyes. So, you need to be more cognizant of facial expressions and aware when somebody wants to interject or make another comment. And take a pause between sentences and gives somebody else an opportunity to speak. It is different. It’s very different. You have to have more content. You can’t fluff it. You can’t lose somebody over just with your personality. You have to have the good because, otherwise, you’re not going to hold somebody’s attention. It’s pretty hard to hold some attention for an hour. That’s another thing we adjusted a bit too.

Lee Kantor: [00:03:19] You adjusted, you give them some strategies, so that they can create kind of a compelling conversation?

Nadine Rubin: [00:04:30] Yeah. We had them do a lot of homework. So, an executive should do this regardless by the way that they present the information that changes. When you are interviewing, you need to be selling yourself. And most people rely, as I mentioned previously, on personal interaction to sell. When you’re selling remotely, virtually, video phone, you have to do it in smaller snippets to hold somebody’s attention, be more content-laden, and your cadence of speech needs to change.

Lee Kantor: [00:05:11] Now, has there been any silver linings? Do you see any of the things you’re doing now, are they going to be able to transfer after this pandemic has kind of played out?

Nadine Rubin: [00:05:21] Yeah, I do. I think that not only in the interviewing process. And quite honestly, I took this assignment. I looked past the interviewing and on to the onboarding and the actual working environment, I think, as workers today, we will start to be more concise in our conversations, more content-laden. I think our cost of interviewing will go down dramatically because we’re learning that you can gather a lot of information in other ways besides getting on a plane and being in person. And I think that transcends the interviewing process. I think it goes and spans the entire life cycle of employment to the onboarding to actually the work environment.

Nadine Rubin: [00:06:12] A lot of the people that we get jobs for are on the product or services side of the business, heavy travel jobs, heavy customer interface jobs, engagement, relationship management jobs. And people are learning how to do that without living on a plane and traveling 80%-90% percent of the time. I also think people are learning how to work remotely, and how to engage your team, and keep a cheap team feeling that they’re not isolated and alone during this time. We’ll be able to use those skills to allow people not to go into the office so much. It will save on office rents. It will save on commute time. It will improve efficiency and it will decrease cost.

Lee Kantor: [00:07:01] So, you’re finding that clients are becoming more comfortable with remote workers as opposed to maybe previously, they used to have everybody come in. They’re getting more and more comfortable with working virtually. And like you said, that opens up a lot of disruption later on if they do decide, “Oh, I need less office space,” or “We need less travel budget, because we can get the job done virtually.”

Nadine Rubin: [00:07:30] Yeah. And it’s also changing the way people sell. And that’s important as well. What we’re seeing is the selling tools and methodologies are turning more towards using technology and innovation as an assistant, as an enabler. And for the people that we mostly focused on, that’s great because it’s more demand on their skills, and people are looking to understand, how do I sell through a mobile channel or a digital channel as opposed to going face to face? How do I service my clients without being on site?

Nadine Rubin: [00:08:15] I was speaking to a client just maybe an hour ago. They put devices on site to monitor their customers’ responses and they had a major outage in a data center that was remote, and they had to repair it remotely, and it tested their skills, but they did a fabulous job. And their technicians had spent 100% of the time on the road installing these devices are now parking within a safe distance of the customer, logging into the wireless, and remotely managing the devices through the wireless without going on cram and utilizing the customer skills to do some of the work on site for them.

Nadine Rubin: [00:09:06] So, we’re changing the way we do business. And I don’t think it’s such a bad thing. And don’t get me wrong, COVID is an awful thing. This pandemic is something I never thought that I’ve experienced in my lifetime. But I think there’s always a silver lining and good things come out of every situation. And this is forcing us to use other skills.

Lee Kantor: [00:09:28] Now, let’s talk about the people that you are looking, like … what do you call them? The candidates. Like how does a candidate stand out, so that they can be found by someone like you? What are some of the things they can be proactively doing to bubble up to the top when you are searching for an executive?

Nadine Rubin: [00:09:50] It’s again, social media, and evangelizing. People need to publish. People need to do speaking engagements. People need to get their opinion out there and make sure they’re visible. They can’t hide behind their desk. If they want to be recognized, they have to put thought leadership out there, so they catch people’s attention. And they can’t do it just by sitting behind their desk and doing their job.

Lee Kantor: [00:10:22] So, the days of being-

Nadine Rubin: [00:10:24] They have to promote themselves.

Lee Kantor: [00:10:24] That’s not going to work. So, the days of being a good kind of soldier just in the background, doing everything you’re told, that’s not going to work if you want to really kind of future proof your career?

Nadine Rubin: [00:10:37] No. And especially if you’re working remotely, because nobody’s going to know. Unless you affect change outside of your individual role that impacts other areas in the business or other people, people won’t know. People only know when something is broken, or you promote it, and you tell them what you did well. That old adage that what bubbled to the top. So, if you just do your job and everything is status quo, people take it for granted. You need to differentiate. And you don’t want to differentiate by having a problem. That always comes to the top executives’ attention. You want to differentiate by doing something well, or doing something good, or being innovative, and you might have to do some self-promotion.

Lee Kantor: [00:11:27] Now, what are some things a person who says, “I don’t feel comfortable tooting my own horn either. It sounds like I’m bragging,” how do you help them get over that kind of limiting belief?

Nadine Rubin: [00:11:41] Well, you have to start thinking a little bit differently. It’s not bragging. It’s sharing, sp that other people can take the benefit of the work that you’ve done. So, if you had built this terrific collaborative tool or installed this terrific collaborative methodology, so that customers could engage more effectively with your sales team, you aren’t going to say, “Oh, look at what I’ve done to make you gain more revenue,” but you can say, “This is an opportunity for you to engage with your customers in a different way. Let me share with you how you can use it.” And the fact you’re introducing it, you’re not bragging on yourself, you’re sharing with them, you’re helping them, you’re helping them to learn new things. Even if it’s one-on-one, you’re moving the needle forward, you’re making yourself known. So, by no means am I suggesting that people should go out, and pound their chests, and talk about how great they are. I think they need to talk about what they’re doing and think about the impact it has on others and share that information, so others can take advantage of it, and then they’ll remember them.

Lee Kantor: [00:13:02] Now, I’d like to talk a little bit about maybe negotiations, salary negotiation. I read a study, I don’t remember the details, but it was that women don’t negotiate or pushback when it comes to salary as much as men do. Do you have any insider tips you can share for the woman executive?

Nadine Rubin: [00:13:21] Oh, my God. I suffer the same problem. So, I don’t know what it is. But this may be popular, unpopular with our audience. Women and men are not the same. That’s why diversity is so important. We have different DNA. And there’s things that we can do the same, there are things we can do better, there are things that we don’t do better, and that tends to be an individual thing. But there is something to say about genetics, right? And women don’t promote themselves as effectively as men do. And I’ve seen this throughout my career.

Nadine Rubin: [00:13:59] And one of the things, and it’s not to every person, is negotiating for themselves. They’re great at negotiating for others, they’re great at negotiating contracts, they’re detail-oriented, but when it comes to themselves, I don’t think, for most women, that’s the thing they think about first, I know for me, when I’m put into a situation that I need to negotiate, I’m always taken aback when somebody wants to pay me less, and they say, “Well, oh, if I had to pay you that much money, I could hire Korn Ferry or Heidrick.” And I say, “Well, then, go ahead,” whereas, years ago, I’d say, “Oh, really? Am I going to lose the deal?”

Nadine Rubin: [00:13:21] Women just have to realize that they’re worth it and recognize that they should be paid for the job that they do. And if they don’t ask, they won’t get. I think women tend to assume, “They’ll be fair. They’ll pay me what the job is worth.” And in most instances, that is the case. But again, if you don’t ask for it, you’re not going to get it. So, you have to realize what you bring to the party, how relevant it is to what that individual needs to have done, and what the market is paying for those skills, regardless of what you’re earning today, and ask for it.

Lee Kantor: [00:15:30] Great advice. Now, where you going to look for inspiration during this time? Do you have some go-to resources that help you kind of battle every day?

Nadine Rubin: [00:15:43] I actually really do. I look at other senior executives, I look at, for example, David Kenny at Nielsen, who I think is a wonderful leader, is the CEO. I look at many other leaders of big corporations to see how they are managing, how they’re doing their business. I look at Johnson Controls. I look at Protiviti.  These are all kinds of minor. And I ask them, how are you managing during this? Are you going to be furloughing people? Or what are you doing to assure people their jobs? How are you looking at the future? Are you concerned about losing people? Are you not going to be hiring? And I listen to them. And to a person, I’m hearing from the leaders, “We’re going to keep our staff in place. We’re doing other things that will allow us to save money to offset the costs of the employees during this downtime.”

Nadine Rubin: [00:16:50] For example, their go-to market strategies are changing. The cost of going to market for a lot of these organizations was extremely expensive because they would have multiple people selling to the same client. And going there, and wining, and dining them, that’s changing. And believe it or not, that’s a blessing in disguise because that cost is paying somebody’s salary. So, I’ve gotten some suggestions from other clients, I’ve asked them what they’ve done to keep their people from feeling isolated during these times, and they’ve increased the amount of videos. They’ve also started having virtual happy hours, and virtual lunches, and virtual open forums. So, people are being creative. They’re also meeting in smaller groups, and they’re spending more time thinking about what they need to communicate.

Nadine Rubin: [00:17:54] I had an example given to me today that you’re in a big meeting, and you have a little question. You grab that person for a few seconds after that meeting, and you get your question answered. Well, you can’t do that at the virtual meeting, can you? So, instead of shooting from the hip so much, people are thinking through their questions and qualifying whether they really need to be discussed or not before they take somebody’s time, and then they’re reaching out. They’re using tools like Skype, and WebEx, and Zoom to get to people. They’re chatting on text, using Facetime, but they’re being more judicious about using other people’s time is where they spend their time. And I think people are getting more efficient.

Lee Kantor: [00:18:43] Yeah. Humans are very resilient and we adapt pretty quickly to whatever’s in front of us. So, it’s exciting time. And there’s change happening and people are doing the best they can. And I’m optimistic that we’ll get through this. I’m sure you are as well. Is there a website that someone could reach out to you and have more substantive conversation about your work or talk?

Nadine Rubin: [00:19:11] We do have a website, but I do want to make one other comment that I think is very, very important. One of the things that I’m seeing is happening during all this is people are becoming more human. They’re relating to people on multiple levels rather than just the business level. They are in their homes. Their children are around. Their dogs are around. Their spouse is around. They’re gardening. They’re walking their dogs when they talk. People are becoming people. They’re humanizing their roles. And I think that is going to help a lot in building relationships and getting work done in a collaborative way.

Nadine Rubin: [00:19:51] So, as far as reaching us, we do have a website and it’s adambryce.com. If you’d like to reach out to either myself or one of my colleagues, first name, which is Nadine, or go on the website, and you can call Nick, or June, or Patrick. It’s nadine@adambryce.com. I return all my emails. I do not link to anybody I don’t know. So, if you ask me the link, expect me to say, “Okay, but let’s have a conversation first.” And I welcome you to reach out to me.

Lee Kantor: [00:20:30] Now, before we wrap, Nadine, can you talk about the GWBC? How has that organization helped you?

Nadine Rubin: [00:20:38] Well, it helped me to see what other senior women are doing, and how they’re getting out there. I am the subject of my own criticism. I tend to focus very heavily on my world and don’t reach outside of it enough. And I’m finding that this type of organization is making me look outside of my world into other people’s world and making me more aware of business and how business is done.

Lee Kantor: [00:21:09] Good stuff. Well, Nadine, thank you so much for sharing your story today.

Nadine Rubin: [00:21:14] You’re welcome. And thank you for having me.

Lee Kantor: [00:21:17] All right. This is Lee Kantor. We will see you all next time on GWBC Open for Business.

About Your Host

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

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

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

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

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

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

Connect with Roz on LinkedIn.

About GWBC

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

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

Tagged With: diversity, executive search, innovative, STEAM, Technology, Transformation

Alexander “Pepper” Kaufman with Pepper Boxing Atlanta

May 14, 2020 by angishields

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Atlanta Business Radio
Alexander "Pepper" Kaufman with Pepper Boxing Atlanta
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Brought to you by OnPay. Built in Atlanta, OnPay is the top-rated payroll and HR software anywhere. Get one month free at OnPay.com.

Alexander-Kaufman-Pepper-Boxing-AtlantaAlexander “Pepper” Kaufman is the Owner of Pepper Boxing Atlanta.

Pepper Boxing is a guided workout that pairs high-energy music with elements of boxing and weighted bar exercises that promise an invigorating full-body workout. Because their layout is in a circle, their athletes will never lose sight of the instructor or their guidance.

Alexander lives by one basic motto: The Goal Is Always More, Not Less.

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What You’ll Learn in This Episode

  • Where and how Pepper Boxing started
  • What separates Pepper Boxing from other fitness studios
  • Community + culture
  • Current promotions
  • Plans to expand

About Our Sponsor

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

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

Follow OnPay on LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter.

Tagged With: Pepper Boxing atlanta

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