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Women in Health: A Bold New Approach to Ending Hunger

April 3, 2025 by angishields

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Women in Motion
Women in Health: A Bold New Approach to Ending Hunger
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In this episode of Women in Motion, host Lee Kantor welcomes Jenny Buettner, CEO of Buettner Global Services. Jenny shares her remarkable transition from the fashion industry to the food service sector, driven by the COVID-19 pandemic. She discusses her company’s mission to combat food insecurity by providing healthier food options and developing a transparent vending program for donations. The episode highlights the importance of innovation, partnerships, and community engagement in addressing food security issues, showcasing Jenny’s dedication to making a significant impact in the health sector.

Buettner-Global-Services-logo

Jenny-BuettnerJenny Buettner is a dynamic business leader, entrepreneur, and strategist with a proven track record in brand development, sales, and market expansion. As the CEO of Buettner Global Services Jenny has been able to assist in scaling brands into Food Service through her connections and partnerships.

Additionally, she has used her expertise to participate in the launch of Aqua beato as their Chief Operating Officer, she has been instrumental in driving growth, securing key distribution partnerships, and positioning the brand as a leader in the **natural alkaline water industry**.

With a passion for innovation and sustainability, she has spearheaded initiatives that bring high-quality, environmentally conscious products to market along with spearheading food scarcity and fatigue through SirVend aiming to combat hunger during emergencies and everyday needs.

Beyond these initiatives, Jenny has built a diverse portfolio of business ventures, from consumer goods and private labeling to strategic brand consulting. She excels in forging meaningful industry relationships, navigating complex supply chains, and creating impactful marketing campaigns.

Her expertise in scaling businesses, breaking into new markets, and leading high-performing teams has made her a sought-after voice in the industry.

As a WBENC-certified entrepreneur, Jenny is committed to empowering women in business and helping others navigate the challenges of entrepreneurship. Her insights on leadership, business development, and innovation continue to inspire emerging entrepreneurs and industry leaders alike.

Connect with Jenny on LinkedIn.

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, 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 on Women In Motion, we have Jenny Buettner, and she is the CEO of Buettner Global Services Corp. And this month, remember we are highlighting women in Health, so I am so excited to be talking to Jenny about her work. Welcome, Jenny.

Jenny Buettner: Hi. Nice to see you. How are you?

Lee Kantor: I am doing well. I’m so excited to learn what you’re up to. Tell us about Buettner Global Services. How are you serving folks?

Jenny Buettner: So, Buettner Global Services has been in the food service industry for the last five years, supporting food banks and shelters and major distributors across the country and helping with food insecurity.

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

Jenny Buettner: Oh, okay. So, this is my backstory. It’s very interesting, considering I did not come from the food industry. My background has been in fashion, and I was in fashion for 12 years, designed and patented fashion solution products, and have been in manufacturing for quite some time. And COVID happened. Everything came to a complete standstill with fashion, you know, the fashion shows, weddings, whatnot, everything just kind of stopped. And I overheard a conversation with Sysco mentioning that they needed food and helping with the MREs, Meals, Ready-to-Eat, for different food banks and shelters across the country and that they had been contracted for. And since they did not have the capability to do small-scale retail, shelf-stable food, everything they did was in large portions like six, ten cans, 20-pound bags of pasta, they needed assistance in finding smaller quantities of food.

Jenny Buettner: So, I overheard a conversation that this is what they’re looking for, and I said I can help you because I’ve been working in that space. And then let me tell you how I worked in that space. So in the fashion world, I made, manufactured my products that I patented, and I sold them into high-end costuming, wardrobing and boutiques across the country. And then I knocked myself off and also brought myself, bifurcated the company and brought myself into discount chains like Dollar Tree, 99 Only, and so forth. So that manufacturing and that scale increased exponentially by being able to go from 600 high-end boutique stores and costume and wardrobing to now, you know, another 30,000 stores across the country by going into the discount retail area.

Jenny Buettner: So, that’s my manufacturing background, being able to perform for all of those different categories. And so, initially I heard that they needed assistance. I told them that I worked with these discount retailers. They asked me if I can assist them through that process. So it got me into the food business. And then I started working directly with manufacturing or different manufacturing companies to assist us in that purchasing.

Jenny Buettner: So, as I started to see the food start to – so, people starting to get food fatigue, you know, with a lot of these food programs. It’s the same food over and over and over again. And you start to see that people who are receiving this do become fatigued with the choices that are presented to them. The choices are not always the healthiest that the government provides to them. And so, I started seeing that there was a need to provide healthier choices to our community. And that’s how I got started.

Lee Kantor: Can you talk a little bit – you kind of went over it pretty quickly, but I’m really curious about the point of you knocking yourself off. And that’s – I find that most companies are afraid to do something like that. I mean, I can only think of Netflix as one of the few that have successfully knocked themselves off to be, you know, a major pivot, but still kind of within the same industry. Can you talk about the thought process there and the steps you took to knock yourself off so you can expand your presence?

Jenny Buettner: Sure, sure. So in that fashion world, my initial products that I patented were designed to go into, like I said, high-end costume and wardrobing, into fashion boutiques, and so forth. And so once I accomplished that, I went that is very limiting. You know, you’re stuck now with just a specific demographic where I really wanted to be able to provide my products to the masses.

Jenny Buettner: And so I created a secondary brand, and I brought it to Dollar Tree and to 99 Only and Dollar General, and like I said, I bifurcated the company and created another network of opportunities for my products that just didn’t sit in a high-end level. So by doing that, I was really able to expand the brand. And that brand is Shibue Couture, and that brand has been doing exceptionally well and still does today.

Lee Kantor: Now, what was – can you just walk us through what was the thought process like? Did you hit a point where it’s like, hey, there’s no – this market’s not big enough for our dreams? We’re going to have to do something. Can you talk about how you went to that point? Because that – I don’t know if everybody would make that same step that you took to, you know, go into a different, you know, whole market, you know, knocking yourself off like you did. Can you talk about kind of the thought process, the trade-offs that you were debating about doing it?

Jenny Buettner: Well, as long as I was not interfering with my high-end brand, then I was okay. And that’s really what I was looking for. I wanted to make sure that – the thought process behind it is how do I be able to increase my manufacturing capability, bring prices down, and hit a wider market? And I was not able to hit a wider market just by sitting alone in a high-end retail, especially with fashion solution products. And that’s what my company, you know, it’s still my company today, Shibue, is that Shibue was designed for fashion solutions, so things that you can’t see, which is – we went from food to fashion. But the whole basis for Shibue was to look flawless underneath the clothing that you’re wearing, without showing panty lines and bra straps and so forth and so on. So that was the concept all behind Shibue, and I felt like there was a much broader audience than just in your high-end retail, that there was a need across, you know, all walks of life.

Jenny Buettner: So by providing those products to the discount chains, you know, I felt like I was giving somebody else a high-end product but at a better offering. And also, I was able to increase my capability of manufacturing at a higher level.

Lee Kantor: And then by building those relationships with those other outlets, that kind of made sense with the food side of the business. Now, you had access to a variety of markets that your food could get distributed into.

Jenny Buettner: That’s right. So it really was when the change of the guard happened. So I went from providing them as a, you know, as manufacturer my products to saying, hey, I need to buy your products for this need. And so, I did. I became, you know, I switched hats and came out to them and said, look, I need to be able to buy these products for Meals, Ready-to-Eat, and I need to be able to buy them at a better price. And I need them immediately. And you have access to it right now, and I need it right now because that’s what happened in COVID. You know, all of a sudden everything was cut off immediately and people were, you know, without a job, without food; there was only so many people that were designated to be – what was the word that they used? We were –

Lee Kantor: The essential.

Jenny Buettner: Essential. We were essential, yeah, you know, who was an essential worker, who wasn’t an essential worker. And so, you know, everybody was pretty much cut off from the food chain or, you know, financing, you know, having money to be able to go out and buy food. So we were picking up the pieces along the lines with some of the retailers that I had relationships with.

Jenny Buettner: And then, as I was utilizing those relationships, I was also creating new relationships in the food industry and started calling and knocking on doors and, you know, reaching out to people who were very seasoned in the industry and that were also needing help. And I became an integral part of sourcing for not only Sysco, but, you know, various other high-end distribution companies and, you know, food banks and shelters. So, we became very essential very quickly.

Lee Kantor: Now, is there any advice you could share for other people when they’re trying to elevate themselves from a vendor to a partner? How did you build the relationships in such a way that that made sense for both parties?

Jenny Buettner: That’s interesting because it wasn’t super easy in the beginning. You know, this industry and the – I could say that about industry, every industry, every industry has it seems to be your good old boys or, you know, people who have been in the business for so long that, you know, they’re an anchor there. And me coming in as somebody brand new saying, look, I want to buy half a million dollars worth of your product. They’re, who are you? You know, how do we know you’re going to pay us? How do – you know. It was – it was quite a challenge. It really was.

Jenny Buettner: I mean, there was, you know, deals that I was making all. You know, I will go ahead and I will confirm that I will buy X amount over this amount of time and really started building up relationships and showing that there were benefits and they could trust me in the business. And that was the biggest part. You know, you have a lot of people, I think, who come to some of these businesses, and they’re looking to make the quick buck and then escape. That wasn’t my plan. My plan was to go in and make a presence and then grow my presence.

Jenny Buettner: Because if I was going to step into something like this, it wasn’t going to be a one-shot wonder. I was going to make something of this, and this is what we’ve done. And as a result, now we are expanding into the way we assist people who are having food security issues or even basic need issues.

Jenny Buettner: That’s become a huge thing as well, as we start to see emergencies happen all across our country. One of the things that we’ve developed and we’re deploying now is our containers with not only Meals, Ready-to-Eat but your basic necessities of aspirins and, you know, laundry detergent and toothpaste and toothbrushes and things like that. All in vending, in vending machines. So that’s a whole nother thing. You and I could talk for hours about some of these programs that we have, but it’s really been expanding the way that we are implementing our food choices and healthier choices to the end user. So we can avoid the food fatigue, avoid the food waste, the labor shortage, and so forth, and really making a meaningful impact.

Lee Kantor: Now, how are you deciding how and when to innovate? Like is – I guess I would imagine in something like vending, you’re getting pretty instant data about, “Okay, this is selling, this is not selling. Let’s do more of this. Less of this.” Is it something that you are from the top down, you’re saying, hey, we need more of this? Or is it from the bottom up, where the people are like, hey, you know, if we had more of this, you’d sell more of this?

Jenny Buettner: So, this is a new program that we’ve just piloted, and we’re just doing it right now in California, in Orange County. And the way that the program works is that our vending is all powered by our wishes platform, which is another exciting thing I could share with you.

Jenny Buettner: It is a platform that you can go in and make a donation and specify it to family members, friends, people who have stories, like a GoFundMe. But the difference is, is when you give your $100 donation and you say, I want it to go to the fire victims and I wanted to go to basic essentials, that money goes into that pool. And then the minute that money is spent, you know exactly where that money was spent and who spent it. So, you know, not a full name and whatnot if it was gone into a pool but you’ll know exactly that data.

Jenny Buettner: And today nobody has that kind of data on donations. And so if you went in and said, I want $500 to go to my son who’s going to college, and I want him to only spend it on food because, you know, we want to be able to track what my son’s spending, now you have that donation and that when your son goes to spend that money on our vending machines, you know exactly where that money’s been spent.

Jenny Buettner: So what we’ve seen and what we’ve uncovered in the last 4 or 5 years during our work with food banks and donations and fundraisers and so forth, that there’s no transparency. When you give that money, you don’t know where that money has gone. You don’t know if it’s gone to food. You don’t know if it’s gone to liquor. You don’t know, you know, or even if the story is that you’ve been told has been properly vetted. You know, I can tell you stories like Scamanda, right, on Netflix today where people were donating and that was a complete farce. Well, everything that we’re doing through our wishes platform and through our Serv-Vending program, you know exactly where every penny has been spent through the donation process. And the data is remarkable. Just the data that we’re able to provide is remarkable.

Jenny Buettner: And we really feel that that’s going to be super meaningful as we move through our pilot and then move across the country with our vending program, because not only are we going to be able to provide – not only are we going to be able to provide, you know, detailed data of how the money is being spent, the food choices that people are making but we’re also going to be able to provide healthy food that is either specific to people’s health requirements, you know, low sodium, gluten-free, that type of thing, high protein, low carbs, healthy, good food that is all locally sourced. And that’s been – you know, this whole program that we’re developed out right now is all about community, working with local, local companies and really being able to provide a missing link in what is going on in today’s world for food security.

Lee Kantor: Now, are you partnering with organizations, school systems, or is it individual people?

Jenny Buettner: No, right now we’re partnering with campuses because we’re recognizing that on – especially on a lot of our, you know, college campuses that there’s a huge insecurity of food for, you know, some of these students that are on campus. We’ve determined just on one campus alone, I won’t mention it, but here in Orange County, the one campus alone, there’s 19,000 students enrolled in the school, but there are 5000 who go without a meal a day.

Jenny Buettner: And so, with our wishes program and with the donations that we’re able to put up into that pool, they’re able to go and utilize our wish card through our Serv-Vending program and utilize that money to be able to buy food, laundry detergent, just necessities, you know, school pen, paper, you know, and you’re starting to really understand where money is being spent and how it’s being and how – and be able to take that data and derive the information that’s necessary for us to be able to take this and pilot it across the U.S.

Lee Kantor: Now, why was it important for you to become part of the WBEC-West community? How did that come about?

Jenny Buettner: So when I started working with Sysco, the amount of projects and, you know, sales that we were doing with them across the country, they asked, they said, “Are you certified through WBENC?” And I said, “No.” And I really didn’t know much about WBENC at the time. And they said, “You know, you really need to get on with WBENC. We would like you to be a WBE.” And I said, “Sure, no problem.” So we signed up with WBENC, and I’ve been thrilled that we’ve been a partner with WBENC because they have been instrumental in really a lot of connections throughout, you know, throughout the country.

Lee Kantor: So, what do you need more of right now? Do you need more strategic partnerships? Do you need more talent, more funding? What –

Jenny Buettner: All of the above, actually, because this particular program that we’re going into is not a small program. You know, FEMA is having a little bit of a challenge today. And I think what we’ve got going on today, nobody is being able to provide the type of data that we can provide. And so growing out this platform and bringing it across the country to all the different schools and campuses and shelters is where we’re going.

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

Jenny Buettner: So, the best way to connect with me right now is jenny@bgs-corp.com. They would be able to reach out to me on my email. And our website is bgs-corp.com. They’d be able to reach out, check out our website there. But that is my what you called me on regarding my food business. Right? This is what we do.

Jenny Buettner: But one of our – it’s our – you know, a subsidiary is our Serv-Vend, which is what we’re pushing out there for the food insecurity across the campuses across the U.S. So, that is the launch of this one. And like I said, our first pilot is going on here in Orange County, and we’re really excited to be able to provide that data and show how we’re making an impact, because today people are, you know, feeling like their donation is making an impact, but they really don’t know what kind of impact that donation is making.

Lee Kantor: Now, the Serv-Vend, does that have its own coordinates? Do you have a website for that? Or is that –

Jenny Buettner: Yes. That’s actually – it was up yesterday and then we just took it down to add all the menus. And so that’s going to be back up on, I think, on Friday. So it’s being all developed out.

Lee Kantor: And then who’s the ideal candidate for Serv-Vend?

Jenny Buettner: So, the ideal candidate is again it’s shelters, campuses, airports, you know, gymnasiums and really doesn’t – there’s no limitations to where our vending machines can go.

Lee Kantor: All right.

Jenny Buettner: In order for somebody to be able to utilize our vending machine, they can use it with their regular card. Or if you are somebody who is having a difficult time and going through a challenging experience, you can go on to our wishes platform, and you can get assigned. You can go in and tell your story. You get assigned a number and then people can donate either up to your story like a GoFundMe, or what they could do is go into a pool like they’re, you know, they can say, you know, I’m in the fire zone and I need help because of whatever. And that money will go into that pool, and where they can go ahead and swipe their wishes card because now they’ll have a wishes ID on their phone, and they’ll be able to use that at any one of our 76,000 retailers.

Lee Kantor: And they can use that just like money.

Jenny Buettner: And they use it just like money. And the good thing about it is, again, they get to go utilize it for what it’s been designated on or designated for, right? So, you know, if I’m donating it and I want it to go to food or I wanted to go to gas or I wanted to go to insurance, the minute somebody goes and they swipes it, I’m going to know where my money was spent as the donor.

Lee Kantor: What an amazing story, Jenny. Such rewarding work. You must sleep well at night knowing the impact you’re making.

Jenny Buettner: Thank you. Well, we are really excited about this program. We’re really excited about being able to make an impact and help people because there is such a need today as we start to see, you know, every time we turn around, there’s something else going on, where we really feel we can help people.

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

Jenny Buettner: Well, I appreciate you having me on and love to share more as we start to grow this program across the U.S.

Lee Kantor: Sounds good. Well, thank you again. This is Lee Kantor. We’ll see you all next time on Women In Motion.

 

Tagged With: Buettner Global Services

Bridging the Gap: How Education and Financial Support Can Change Lives for Marginalized Youth

April 3, 2025 by angishields

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Cherokee Business Radio
Bridging the Gap: How Education and Financial Support Can Change Lives for Marginalized Youth
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Brought to you by Diesel David and Main Street Warriors

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In this episode of Cherokee Business Radio, Stone Payton facilitates a roundtable discussion with Natalie Hutchins, Dr. Angela Coaxum-Young, and Dr. Angelita Howard. Natalie discusses EverFund’s mission to secure funding for small businesses and educational institutions in underrepresented communities. Dr. Young and Dr. Howard highlight the challenges faced by students in the juvenile justice system and the importance of educational opportunities. The conversation emphasizes the need for financial support, community involvement, and partnerships to create transformative educational environments.

Natalie-HutchinsNatalie Hutchins has 23 years of experience in education and community development. Her primary roles and responsibilities have been to oversee federal grant budgets upwards of $55M annually and the development of the Consolidated LEA Improvement Plan (CLIP) and comprehensive needs assessments for the districts she has served.

In 2020, as the world faced unprecedented challenges during the pandemic, Natalie recognized a critical gap in the landscape of grant writing and charitable funding. With small businesses and educational institutions struggling to stay afloat, the realization was that too many dreams were being lost simply because people lacked the expertise to navigate the complex world of funding. This realization led to the creation of EverFund – a venture dedicated to helping individuals, organizations, and communities secure the resources they need to thrive.

She enjoys marrying the politics and the practicality of State and Federal Laws to seek relevant opportunities to fit the district’s needs. As a part of the EverFund team, she aims to bring her wealth of experience to meet the needs of some of Georgia and our nation’s most underrepresented, justice-involved families by bridging the gaps in equity and access to high-quality education.

Natalie began her career pursuing a double major in Biology and Chemistry at GaTech, received her Bachelor’s in Interdisciplinhttps://theeverfund.com/ary Learning and Master’s in English Speakers of Other Languages from Western Governors University, and her Specialist Degree in Educational Leadership from Berry College.

Connect with Natalie on LinkedIn.

Angelita-HowardAngelita Howard is an educational pioneer, author, teacher, mentor, scholar, and servant leader. She serves as the Vice President for Global and Online Learning at Meharry Medical College.

Formally, Angelita was the Founding Dean of Online Education and Expanded Programs at Morehouse School of Medicine, in Atlanta. She served as inaugural Co-Director for both the Master of Science in Biotechnology (MSBT), and more recently over the last 2 years, the Master of Science in Health Informatics (MSHI) and the Doctorate of Health Administration (DHA), which were both established under her direction.

In her current role, Dr. Howard has demonstrated outstanding leadership, teaching, scholarship, and academic achievements. She has successfully launched and overseen several new online programs, including the #1 ranked MSBT. She has also developed and implemented innovative teaching methods, such as the Summer Bridge Pathway Programs, which have helped to increase diversity in the student body.

In addition to her administrative and teaching responsibilities, Angelita is also an active researcher with scholarly activity. More recently, she is a certified clinical research coordinator and has extensive experience in conducting research on educational interventions.

She has published several articles in peer-reviewed journals highlighting these research approaches and has presented her work at numerous national and international conferences.

Dr. Howard is an exceptional and internationally recognized leader of graduate education and online student performance & outcomes research. She is a gifted leader and educator who can connect with students from all backgrounds. She is also a tireless advocate for students, and always willing to go the extra mile to help them succeed.

Connect with Dr. Howard on LinkedIn.

Dr-Angela-Coaxum-YoungOften regarded as an innovative leader, researcher, author, and speaker in education, Dr. Angela Coaxum-Young brings nearly two decades of experience to the field of education.

She is a candid, frank, and resilient educator, committed to disrupting systematic norms that often marginalize or disregard students deemed “at-risk”. Dr. Young’s public trials and triumphs became the conduit of change that ignited her advocacy and discussion around equity in education.

She is an energizing public speaker and challenges audiences to innovate and create new practices that ensure ALL students have a seat at every table.

Dr. Young began her career as a middle school social studies teacher in Miami-Dade County Schools. She continued her career trajectory serving in various roles in school districts across Metro Atlanta including principal, district support specialist, and most importantly, teacher.

Dr. Young founded Favor Academy of Excellence, Inc. (2009). The non-profit is credited for expanding educational opportunities for underserved youth in communities with limited resources. Dr. Young recently opened the company’s first tutoring and intervention center in Douglasville, Ga.

The center provides intensive academic, social, emotional, and restorative intervention for K-12 students. The center’s signature educational therapy: the Restorative Learning Model (RLM), is committed to ensuring students are academically inclined and mentally well.

Dr. Young is a respected school strategic planner, program/curriculum designer, published author, and culture builder. She has committed her life’s work to establishing educational programs and opportunities for underrepresented student populations. She utilizes her experiences as an educator to develop programs for diverse student groups including Students with Disabilities, Gifted Students, Students with Socio-Economic Disadvantages, and first-generation high school/college-bound students.

Dr. Angela C. Young received her Bachelor’s in Sociology from Bethune-Cookman University, her Master’s in Administration of Educational Programs from Nova Southeastern University, her Specialist Credential from Georgia College and State University, and her Doctoral Degree in Educational Leadership from Georgia Southern University.

Dr. Angela C. Young is married to SFC Travis Young, and they have four children: TJ, Jordan, Joshua, and Jacob.

Follow Favor Academy of Excellence on Facebook and Instagram.

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix.

 

TRANSCRIPT

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

Stone Payton: Welcome to another exciting and informative edition of Cherokee Business Radio. Stone Payton here with you this morning. And today’s episode is brought to you in part by our Community Partner program, the Business RadioX Main Street Warriors Defending Capitalism, promoting small business, and supporting our local community. For more information, go to Mainstreet Warriors and a special note of thanks to our title sponsor for the Cherokee chapter of Main Street Warriors, Diesel David, Inc. please go check them out at diesel.david.com. Also a very special announcement. I’m so excited I can’t see straight. For those of you who have been following our collaboration with Wildlife Action and so many community partners here in the Greater Cherokee area, the SS Freedom Adventure, for all that wheelchair friendly boat that we are going to be taking folks out in fishing, cruising, having a good time, it will be in the water tomorrow, will be booking cruises soon. Please continue to follow us and you can go to ssfreedom.org and stay on top of that. You guys are in for a real treat. Today we have a special roundtable episode. Please join me in welcoming to the broadcast to introduce all of this, set the stage. With EverFund, she’s the owner and executive Director of federal grants and funding for EverFund. Natalie Hutchins. How are you?

Natalie Hutchins: I’m doing so well. Thank you so much for having us.

Stone Payton: What a delight to have you and your crew.

Natalie Hutchins: Oh, yeah.

Stone Payton: Here in the studio. I’ve really been looking forward to this conversation. I have so many questions. I’m looking forward to to learning a great deal and sharing this conversation with our listeners. But let’s start. If we could give us a little bit of an idea of your work, what are you and your team at EverFund really out there trying to do for folks?

Natalie Hutchins: Thank you. Well, at EverFund, we are a small but mighty team and we really have two intents and purposes. Our objectives are to support small businesses, especially those in underrepresented communities, to ensure that they are fiscally responsible and fiscally ready for funding opportunities so that they can grow their own agencies. Right. And on the second side, we have a procurement and grant administration firm where we support charter schools, private schools and public schools under 30,000 students to ensure that when funding ebbs and flows, schools and students and families don’t miss out on the very vital programs that they need to be successful. So that’s really what we bring to the table. We’ve been doing this work for about five years exclusively, but as a team of five between all of us, we have about 200 years of experience in the federal programs world, and we’ve managed between 50 million and $150 million annually. So it’s just really, really great to be able to share our skills within the community and around the state of Georgia and beyond. We’re officially now we have seven programs, two schools, and we’re in nine states. So it’s just really a blessing to be able to do this work.

Stone Payton: Well, congratulations on the momentum and every indication that it’s not anywhere near stopping. It’s only going to continue to scale and grow. Uh, sounds like noble, just and true work, if you can get it. What was your journey? How did you wind up doing this?

Natalie Hutchins: Well, I started off at, believe it or not, as a pre-med student at Georgia Tech.

Speaker4: Of course. Makes perfect sense.

Natalie Hutchins: A double major in chemistry and biology, which was awesome. And I realized very quickly that if you got out of work at 5:00 in the hospital, it really was 9 to 10:00 pm, and the schedule was a little bit hard for me with a bunch of little kids. So I decided to take a break. And I am a bilingual speaker, so I do speak Spanish very fluently, and I was invited to just hang out at school. So I started as a paraprofessional. Then I was a bilingual educator and things just kept going from there. And I found myself in central office in one of the largest school districts in our country for about 20 years. And within that every program had money and had funds. So I had the opportunity to just slow down and learn how to navigate the 32 overarching federal grants that are available in the United States. And now I just do that work for the people that can’t afford it.

Stone Payton: So at this point in your career, what what are you finding the most rewarding? What’s the most fun about it these days for you?

Natalie Hutchins: Well, that’s what we’re going to talk about today. A board that I had been on for about three years, um, the private school has done so well. And in their space and the juvenile justice and juvenile engaged arena, they’re going to be here with us today, or they are here with us today to just really speak about that work. And I’ve transitioned, um, from that role of being on the board to actually supporting them in their Office of Finance, and they’re doing some really, really amazing things, and I’m so proud of them. So I really just want to highlight a really great example of what partnerships can do when you believe in others and give them the support that they need when they need it.

Stone Payton: Fantastic. Well, let’s bring them into the conversation. Introduce our other guests, if you would.

Natalie Hutchins: Absolutely. We have our Executive Director and Founder, Dr. Angela Young. Um, so she’s here with us, as well as her President of her board, Dr. Angelita Howard. Um, so they’re going to take it away and share with us what’s going on. Um, with Favor Transition Academy and Favor Academy of Excellence.

Dr. Angela Coaxum-Young: Um, thank you so much for having me on. I am super excited to engage this discussion, and I hope there’s an opportunity to to merge, um, the value of financial support, um, with missions that are underfunded in communities that are certainly underrepresented. So, um, today we’ll give a little bit of discussion around the juvenile justice, mental health and, um, how we have been able to kind of partner and work together. I want to pause before I get into favor Academy of Excellence and just give some homage to Dr. Howard. Um, allow her to tell a bit of her work and why she is so integral in our success as an organization.

Dr. Angelita Howard: Thank you. It’s such a pleasure to be here and share. And so the three of us came together over the last two years. When we talk about justice involved juvenile justice and partnership and finance. We do understand that if you don’t have financial support, it’s a nightmare. It can be a nightmare. So that’s why it’s really important, the work that Natalie has done and is doing. But beyond that, we also understand how important education is. And so with Dr. Young, she and I are the educational specialists, if you will join team to create opportunities for those who are marginalized, who don’t necessarily have the support and then adding a financial support to that to make sure that students, no matter where they are, no matter their background, have opportunities to success, is what we’re about. That’s the work that we’re doing, and I’m so happy to have joined this team of amazing women on this last few days of Women’s Month, to highlight the work that’s being done to create opportunity, access and impact for young women and men.

Stone Payton: So what are some of the the major gaps, the the unfunded things, or they’re not properly funded things until you guys get involved at a layperson like me may not might not even cross our mind. We might take for granted.

Dr. Angela Coaxum-Young: Um, I’ll start in the K-12 space. So I will also say that Dr. Howard and I represent education from two different lenses. And so we’ll be able to speak to this, um, in a more in a broad way. Um, K-12 specifically, um, has some challenges when we’re talking about dynamic student groups. And so in our case, we are talking about students who are just disengaged. So students who have what we call enter the pipeline to prison. So at some point, their behavior, um, their attendance, uh, their records, uh, criminal records have removed them from the ability to continue their traditional learning in a traditional school environment. And so we look for alternatives for them. What we found to be an issue was, uh, the resourcing for alternative spaces for students like that is just not there. So our partnership was birthed, um, from the idea that this is a student group who needs more, not just for the benefit of educators and for society. These are the group of kids that we certainly want to reform, restore, make sure they are ready to return to our neighborhoods and our communities, um, healed, um, free of all interest and participating in any criminal activity and just create safe environments for everyone. So I was really looking for a thought partner who had some expanded experience. And I came to Dr. Howard, who at the time was working with the college, and they had just created, um, a justice involved care program or. I’m sorry. Yeah. I’m sorry. Um, and she she really blew me away with the work she was doing and how she could expand our vision. So.

Dr. Angelita Howard: So, yeah, you know, that’s the wonderful thing about education is transformative from k through 12 to college. And so even at the institution I’m at now, Meharry Medical College, one of the things this is why it’s so important for we’re talking about, uh, networking and partnerships is because even to your question, even when we think about the needs of those who, again, are underrepresented, underserved, we’ve had we have to have partnerships. We have to have back to finance. We have to have those grants because we’re trying to make sure people have access to education. They have access to to equitable education. And a lot of times, the way that happens, especially in minorities or marginalized populations, are through grants or through grant fundings or through private funding. Some of course, now with everything that’s taking place, honestly, we are concerned because a lot of the federal money is being taken away. A lot of the words, the key words that we in favor Academy have dealt with, you know, if you say those words, you can’t get funded, certain funding, certain federal funding. So that’s a stressful time. And so when we think about partnership with Natalie, then what happens is here she can find opportunities that are not necessarily Really funded by federal grants. It might be private sectors that can help us streamline some of the work that we’re doing from K through 12 private. And then certainly in the college arena.

Stone Payton: Way to go. Natalie, you’re the hero. All right. So kind of break it down again. Kind of at the layperson level. And I’m going to say $100. Check. I know there’s a lot more zeros probably attached to some of these programs. I certainly hope so. But so what are some things you would you tactically invest in once you receive the funds?

Natalie Hutchins: So I would like to just if we think about how much it costs to educate a student. So with our particular program that we are sharing we have a middle and high school program. So that program is a Saturday program that maybe will run about 12 to 16 weeks, where we’re watching students and partnering with our nearby counties to say, hey, we can see that these students based on an early warning system, may be on the trajectory to not being able to complete school or being very close to being just disengaged. So let’s start now. We do with our middle school and our high schoolers. We have a wonderful giveback program. That alone you’ve got teacher, you’ve got a counselor, you’ve got a psychiatrist, you’ve got the therapist. You have the building. Right. So that alone can cost us $25, $40,000 just to run that program.

Natalie Hutchins: So that’s huge. And then on the other side, we have a private school for high schools that is fully accredited. You know how much it takes to raise money for a kid to go to school? We all know what our tax bill looks like, right?

Natalie Hutchins: We’ve talked about the Tax Digest. We’ve talked about those homestead exemptions and what those funds look like. So favor is positioned well to ensure that they have the funding that’s necessary to take care of all of a high school student’s needs and some of our really large endeavors for next year. We recently just put in some applications Dr. Young for some school and sports things. So if you want to maybe share what that looks like, because we are a petite private school, but we’re intentional.

Dr. Angela Coaxum-Young: And so I think it’s important to kind of expand on the understanding around the student group we’re talking about. These would be students that for some can not return to the traditional public school system. Some have already, um, acquired felony charges. Um, some have through school disciplinary measures. Um, been permanently expelled from the school system. Um, what’s in place right now typically for this student group is online learning. And that poses a problem because these are students who are very active already, very connected in communities. Um, and they are kind of left to their own devices, Vices, if you will, to learn independently. Most times they won’t continue their learning, but even if they are more tenacious and they decide to pursue their education, they’re still partnering with people who might have been the very people who led them down the wrong path, and they are free all day to, in some cases, if I’m honest, wreak havoc on communities. And so this is where we need partnership. This is where we need everyone on one accord. We want to have safe communities. We want to have students who are prepared. We want to have students ready to enter our workforce. Um, we have a student group who, if we reform them well, might be, you know, ideal candidates. Um, and so we need to make sure that we get them prepared. So when we think about this school favored Transition Academy in particular, it would be the kids who are already disconnected from the public school would be the kids that we need some oversight or certainly some resources like mental health therapists and etc. to make sure that we deal with the thing that lives inside of them that might be creating some of the behaviors we’re seeing.

Dr. Angela Coaxum-Young: And we certainly need people who are willing to partner with the school to create, to create opportunities for them to get job skills, career readiness skills, etc. and we need advocates. Very strong advocates who are going to say, give the students a second chance. They may look a bit scary sometimes, but like at the end of the day, they are still children and that is something we firmly believe restoration, like giving them an opportunity to restore their communities through righteous and rightful efforts. And so that is the the premise and the basis of this school. And so partnering with Natalie was huge because we kept running into barriers and we attempted everything. We attempted to open the school as a charter school. Charter schools are, you know, in general, schools are very focused on academic success. This is a group that we can’t guarantee. Academic success for. I can’t even guarantee sustained enrollment for, because I am in competition with the very thing that attracts them outside of the schoolhouse. Um, so that that’s problematic. Um, and ultimately, we did not win there. Um, but we kept pushing and again, through partnership and I have to be able to, um, really, really just celebrate Natalie and Dr. Howard. These ladies have continued the fight with me alongside of me breaking walls, connecting, you know, partners and networks as best we could to get us to this point. Um, we are now positioned to open an actual school site. So we have been operating out of our program site for the last a little over a year. We’re now opening a school site coming into the next year. Um, it’s a little scary, but we because.

Natalie Hutchins: What I hear, I, what I hear is, you know, we’re about to get into a building, right? We are looking for.

Natalie Hutchins: And you know what that money looks like. So, um, anyone who has a mortgage, if you, you know, you buy something that’s two, three or $400,000. I mean, now we’re looking at 2 or $3000 a month just for overhead on top of what we just recently talked about with that program. So educating children is a very expensive and fundraising is very important. Um, we’re getting into some spaces now where we’re going to be looking at kind of some adopt the students, um, opportunities so that corporations and of the like can volunteer or at least maybe pitch in and say, you know, if this is the tuition for the student, can you, you know, how many students could you, you know, pay a semester or a quarter, those kind of things? Um, in addition to the, um, the grants, because these families really do need the help and support. But more importantly, like Dr. Young is saying, we all need these students to go through the program and to be successful, it’s for the greater good of our communities, right?

Stone Payton: That’s an excellent point, and it’s an inspiring mission. And I got a ton more questions around it. But I’m thinking just if even just from an enlightened self-interest point of view, I want these kids on this other path than the one they’re they’re on. Absolutely, absolutely. And it also, it occurs to me that it’s great if we can have this, you know, major sea change and, you know, incredible transformation. But even if you just change, the word you used was trajectory. Even if we just move them a few degrees, we’re talking about a very different future.

Natalie Hutchins: And think about the families, right?

Natalie Hutchins: So if you know your grandfather or your great grandfather, think about your life differently today. If your great grandfather made some really bad decisions, you know, how long does it take a family to recover from maybe an accident, an incident, or just being naive. And we are talking about children, and children are children, right? They’re going to do things. They’re going to test the limits, because everybody has had that experience of just saying, I’m invincible. I can do anything because I’m 15, 18 and 20. And then when you get on the other side, you’re like, how did we make it? You know, what were we thinking? But, um, that’s just what we’re here for because we understand, like you’re saying, if we just can get them a few degrees to look the other way or have something else inspire them or catch fire inside of them. The world isn’t going anywhere anytime soon. You know they deserve their grandchildren deserve for someone to step in to help change their grandchildren’s lives. And that’s what we’re here for.

Stone Payton: And the earlier we can get to them and provide some of that positive input. But yeah, I’m thinking just a few early wins and, and the, the psychological benefit of hey, someone you know, something has invested in me a little bit. And now I’ve tried this set of behaviors and I’m getting some positive results, then maybe we can achieve some escape velocity. I asked Natalie the question a moment ago. I’m going to ask each of you because I’m interested in kind of the the day to day, that energy that you must have to have to keep doing this work, as noble as it is, has got to require a great deal of energy. Um, but what are some of those things that you find rewarding? Uh, Angelina, that just push you on to tomorrow? Even if today was a tough day.

Dr. Angelita Howard: Change, change pushes me. And knowing that students, no matter where they are, things can happen. Dr. Jung talked about workforce development, but even beyond there, there are students who will be in her program or who are in her program, who will come to college. They will end up going to college if we get them early enough, if we help them, if we make sure that they have guidance, if they have mentorship, they will come to college. And so then it’s my responsibility to make sure that we have programs for them, aligned for them, so that they don’t feel as if they are on an island by themselves, that we embrace whatever has taken place. For example, in a program that I have run, we had a felon, a person who was in there in prison for 25 years. He’s now graduated from college. He now works for the government. He works for the Department of Behavioral Health. So he went back to the system that had him for 25 years, and now he’s training uh, other, uh, juvenile impacted or justice impacted individuals to do some of the work. The peer specialists that he’s that he has done. So this type of work is what fuels me to get up every single day to make sure that, again, people have opportunity. Because oftentimes in my field and in what I am so passionate and I care about, is to make sure that those who would not have the opportunity, that they do have the opportunity. So that takes a little bit more work, a little bit more elbow grease, because they’re not the ones who normally have a 4.0. They’re not the ones who normally will just get accepted into your Ivy League schools. They are ones that may have, you know, some issues along the way. They may have had lower GPA, they may have had family issues that have stopped them from progressing in the way that they should. And so it’s my responsibility to go and find opportunities, create opportunities for them to be successful, create pathways for them to be successful.

Stone Payton: So does, um. I’ll come back because I want to hear this from you, too. Um. Dr. young, but does healthcare impact this world at all? Because it strikes me. Well, my my wife, who made a very comfortable living and we had Cadillac insurance and all that, she hung up her cleats, retired. I had to go out on the thing, get my own insurance. That was even, you know, in my situation in life, that was kind of a tough transition. But does health care impact us?

Dr. Angelita Howard: Oh, absolutely. Yeah. In fact, at Meharry, where I am now in the School of Global Health, we just built a program focused on not only health equity, but looking at how health equity really is amongst everyone. There are people who are in the jail right now who, you know, they tell them to take one medicine for everybody. It’s like blood pressure medication. Okay, everybody take metformin. But my body is not like the next person’s body. And if you don’t have equity, if you’re not teaching, if you’re not showing, if it’s not building, if we don’t have access to these different types of medicines, these different types of therapies, then people, no matter where they are, are going to suffer. And that’s the that’s that’s the bad thing about, you know, disparities and social determinants of health. And beyond that, political determinants of health. Because if you don’t have access then of course you’re going to suffer. And in again, marginalized community in which we serve, which we know a lot of our kids are from, they have chronic diseases which have stemmed from years and years. Grandpa, grandma, all of those years of of health issues. If they’re not addressed early on or through their process, then they’re it’s only going to get worse.

Stone Payton: Yeah. So Dr. Young, speak to that as much as you want as well. And what keeps you going? What are you really enjoying?

Dr. Angela Coaxum-Young: I definitely want to make the connection. Um, the health care connection with the student group that I serve. Just because we’re when we think about students who are inclined to link up with people who would perpetrate, um, unsavory or they would perpetuate, um, scenarios that are unsafe for themselves and for everyone around them. Um, you have to wonder where the origination of that mindset comes from. And so we find that there is an intersectionality between mental health or mental instability and student behavior. We definitely see that show up in our schools. And I also want to kind of bring this back to just the passionate side of me. Um, I served as a school assistant principal, a school principal, and I happened upon one school, one population of students. It it affected my health care. I’m going to say I’ll start there. Right, right. Um, I don’t think I’d ever come across a set of students who who had such a hopelessness. It was such a buried hopelessness that it was hard to describe. And I remember driving to work for the first year on the job, just wondering when and how could we ever get a student to be so angry? How could they wake up angry? How could they wake up so aggressive, so ready to fight the world and attack anyone that that stepped into the space that they were holding on to their life for. Um, and so slowly I began to unpack that. But as we moved into the pandemic, I started to see what a lot of educators saw.

Dr. Angela Coaxum-Young: Um, there was a rise of violence, um, in schools, there was a rise of violence in the communities. The kids had had some time to be home. Um, that created this for some, this interest in isolated environments. And so, of course, when we brought them back into the school with hundreds of kids, anything and everything could set them off. Um, I shudder to think. Um, for some of the things I’ve engaged in, I won’t be as colorful as I could be for some of the things I’ve engaged, some of the experiences I’ve had as an educator and students I’ve had to kind of come alongside of and help turn the bus around. Um, I shudder to think of a society that would be laden with large amounts of students who operate with that level of hopelessness. It’s scary. I’m. I’m saying it from someone who has seen it, who does not separate myself, who does not categorize myself in a specific race. And I don’t want to paint a picture that’s untrue. This is scary. Some kids are scary. There is danger. No one wants to deal with that group. The only way we could get to that group is if we put them in the prison system. There has to be an alternative, because it could take us 20 years to catch a kid and put them in a prison system. They’re running around doing who knows what. In between that time. So this is a very hard thing, which is why it isn’t a one that you see every day.

Dr. Angela Coaxum-Young: You’ll you may see one school dedicated to students who have some very advanced and significant negative behaviors. Um, in every community, I’m going to say in every county, maybe. Um, but they are very few and far between because this is hard work. Even as we open the private school, we’re opening it with the idea that we want to keep it small. We have to grow, you know, in concert with what we’re seeing. Because we don’t know what we don’t know. I don’t know if I bring the wrong set of kids together, what that’s going to look like in a school building, I don’t know, but what I do know is I have to staff it with enough mental health support. I have to staff it with enough teachers that are not just, you know, able for to be able to teach the curriculum, but they have a passion that exists beyond what their degrees have prepared them to teach. Because that’s what you need. You need someone willing to go the extra mile for this group of students. And that wakes me up. The idea that I’m not just changing a life because that’s important to me. I have to be purpose driven. That’s that is definitely motivating. But the fact that every life I change changes the lives of so many others. You when you drive into our county, because there’s a favorite transition academy, there may be an incident you never experienced because we existed. And that’s important to me.

Dr. Angelita Howard: So and you see why we love it? Do you see why I follow her? Do you understand now why we follow her?

Stone Payton: Absolutely.

Dr. Angelita Howard: We’re connected.

Stone Payton: Well, and you said you don’t know. There’s a lot that you don’t know right now. I applaud your your efforts for so many reasons, but the your willingness to throw your hat over the fence. Because what you do pretty well know is what’s going to happen if you don’t do anything.

Stone Payton: If you’ve got some real not just anecdotal evidence. You probably have even some hard data on what’s going to happen, what’s going to continue to happen. And I’m sure, Natalie, I’m sure it’s everybody’s doing a high five in the parking lot when we get like an injection, you know, a company, an organization steps up and provides some money, or you win this big grant from a from the federal government or something like that. But what you really I suspect you need this ongoing, you know, consistent funding to make this work. Right. That’s got to be on your mind.

Natalie Hutchins: Absolutely every day. So we’re just like a stool. Any client that we work with or we support, you know, we talk to them about those three legs, you know, what are your private sales? What’s happening? What are your donations? What is foundational, what is philanthropic. And, you know, what is federal, state and local. And I know those are a lot of things, but we’ve got to decide what those three prospects are and really be steadfast and consistent. We had a conversation on our way over. Um, as we were driving up today, just going, okay, so we’re looking at this building. What is this going to cost? What do we have in the pipeline? When is the next thing over? How many opportunities do we have in the waiting? What’s pending, what’s next? And it’s just that everyday grind of it all because like, um, Dr. Young said, you know, I have to come alongside her. And when she prompted and she was sharing this and I said, wow, I’ve never thought about what happens with the children that because every district is trying to raise their API. And we can do that by saying, you know, this kid’s a little bit too rough for our our building, but also protecting the students that we do send to school. Right? So you have those students who are not coming to school traumatized. We don’t want them to leave traumatized, right?

Natalie Hutchins: So what do we do in the interim? What do we do for the child who needs a different safe space? What does that safe space look like? I remember years and years ago. I believe it was either cut or racetrack. But I want to say cut. And of course, like now we all see the blue lights, right? That’s the thing. I love the fact of thinking like Favre as that blue light. We knew that if we rode past a cut and it was 2 a.m. and something was happening, and we used to tell our children this because we’re all educators, you know, I’m in the K-12 space as well. So we always tell our students, if you ever have a, you know, a situation or you can’t find your mom or there’s a fire, or we worked with lots of homeless students in our district at the time. You know, if you can find that blue light, they will feed you. They will give you a snack. I mean, you can walk into that and say, I don’t know where my mom is. Call. They have someone on staff. And that was huge work that you think a gas station like, why would a gas station do that? A gas station understood that it is common to loiter at a gas station. That’s where people are. So if you’re having an emergency, there is always a gas station. So they took it upon themselves 15, 20 years ago to say, hey, we’re going to create safe spaces and you’ll see the little yellow. This is a safe space. Next time everybody’s going to go to sh and a racetrack and be like, I’ve never known this space, right?

Natalie Hutchins: So we used to really talk to our parents about that and talk to our students about having that safe space. And that blue light is explicitly what that is. It’s like, hey, if you’re homeless and you need food, that’s why we keep fresh food and fresh vegetables. You guys always we can walk into sh and you see that little basket. That’s one of their selling points.

Natalie Hutchins: They don’t make any money off of that. They want people to be able to come in and grab that. If you have an emergency or if you need something. So I feel that same way about favor. I feel like that is the the blue light that is really shining on that side of the county. And we look forward to their growth and their efforts. I love that they are so intentional and so thoughtful about the student group in a way that I’ve never seen. And so for me, I was like, let’s do it. Let’s just find the funding. I know that this is important not to just us, but other people, because we want everybody to be in their community safe. We want you to be able to go to the grocery store and not worry about the teenager who can no longer go to high school, who’s doing nothing all day. Right. Um, and Faber has been really instrumental in building partnerships with barbershops and places like KFC and Taco Bell, so that students actually can work during the day and do classes in the evening, which may not be very traditional, but it’s excellent for our population of students because now, instead of you going to school for only seven hours a day, now, you know, we’ve kept you occupied for 12, 14 hours a day, which again, is that, you know, reentry into society. And it is our community responsibility. So that within itself, it just takes a ton of money to do it. Um, and I’m here for it. So I’m going to my you know, papa always said that, um, you know, it’s easy to tell a man to pull himself up by his bootstraps. But what about the man with no boots? Right.

Natalie Hutchins: Well, we’re boots on the ground. Boots on the ground.

Stone Payton: So I want to talk more about these sponsorships, because now you’re starting to touch my world a little bit. We do a lot of work with with small business, of course, and they want to try to contribute in any way that they can. That’s why we have a community partner program here in Cherokee County for our little operation. Um, but I got to tell you, you know, as a, you know, a middle aged, rich white guy, I am going to make a point of doing more business at the county on my way when I go hunting and fishing.

Stone Payton: And, you know, because it just that makes me feel I would rather buy my coffee and beer, buy my coffee there, and I gotta believe a lot of folks would, would feel that way, even if they’re not as educated and all. So I’d like to hear more about the partnerships, and then I’d like to hear a little bit more about how you’re educating, you know, people like me and people with a lot more power and influence than me to try to to help you guys?

Natalie Hutchins: Absolutely. I will get straight to the money and then I’m going to turn it over to, um, Dr. Howard because she is all about that. Um, I will tell you that the tuition for a student is $7,000. So any partner that wants to say, hey, I’ll cover a kiddo for a year, that would be lovely. And a semester is 3500. Super easy math. Um, and that’s a lot cheaper than what it costs to on our tax dollars, because our tax dollars are about $25,000 a year to house an inmate, even at the juvenile level. So you can pay $25,000 a year off your taxes or, you know, ask your boss for some cash.

Speaker4: Right? I like that framing. Yeah, absolutely.

Natalie Hutchins: 7000 is nothing. That’s a third of the cost. Um, and if a kid goes to high school for, you know, four years and you’ve kept him out of that, then you know, that return on investment for community people, we will we will feel that in our pockets when we’re not building more and more prisons. Right. Because that is it’s very costly. So, um, that’s, you know, our pitch. If someone wants to adopt a student, we would be more than grateful for you to be able to do that. And then we have those Saturday programs where the students are actually reinvesting into the communities that they’re tossing. Right. So that’s really important to us that we say, hey, we are going to be community builders and not community wreckers. So what Dr. Young has going on is every Saturday, those middle and high schoolers that we kind of see on that trajectory, we keep them in small groups, but they are doing community service oriented projects. So if you ever want to donate any amount that helps us with community service, as we look at a building, we’re going to need to get paint. And the inside of the building is great, but the outside of the building we’re going to need some work on. So we’ll be definitely hitting up Home Depot and your fellow friends if you want to come out and help us and bring some. You know, I love the cow manure. So bring it. Bring the plants, bring some trees, bring the flowers and let the kids, you know, make that building their own as we begin to, um, really set that in motion over the next couple of months and be ready to open our new building in August.

Stone Payton: Well, and here again, it would just it would feel good to contribute to something like that in whatever fashion we could like as the Business RadioX network or something like that. Um, but again, it’s everybody wins in that equation, right?

Natalie Hutchins: Absolutely.

Stone Payton: Everybody wins. So at the, um, Dr. Young, um, at the school level, like if you identify a kid or maybe you Angelita as well, um, that has an interest. I’ll just make this my little tiny world. But you got a kid that’s interested in media or broadcasting or, you know, they they think so. Like to give them opportunities to come and hang out and do, like, how cool would it be to have the a kid sitting right here running the board, right. Or.

Dr. Angela Coaxum-Young: Absolutely. That’s a huge part of our school, um, model.

Dr. Angela Coaxum-Young: Um, the students aren’t always earning money at jobs during the day. It is internship. What we’re trying to do is occupy a large portion of their awake time. And so.

Dr. Angela Coaxum-Young: It is getting them connected to career fields that they thought were just off the table for them, for their past, you know, commitments. Um, and so partnering with people who say, I understand this is going to be a student that I might have to work with a bit, I might have to kind of coach up and maybe, um, through redundant practices, teach and reteach again. But I am committed to making this student ready and prepared to consider this as a viable career option for us, because that’s the first part of restoration. They have to see the potential.

Stone Payton: And they got to believe that there’s there’s light at the at the end of the tunnel. And you know, my example may be very pedestrian, but how cool would it be for that kid who in that environment may be, you know, they’re there. They really like the rap music. And they see all the stars and the flash and all that stuff. Um, and, you know, maybe we can’t put them in a limo and make all that happen for them, but how cool would it be if the raw audio from this interview was sent to the that kid and and he’s on a computer, you know, doing all the the magic to the audio and he’s he’s part of the industry just again those little moves.

Dr. Angela Coaxum-Young: It would be life changing.I think it’s life changing for them if they see that what they’ve done is a part of something great, it’s a part of something useful. Yeah. When you hear negativity all the time.

Dr. Angela Coaxum-Young: You start to believe that. So when you and you’re able to put something out there, product, anything. I mean, if they paint a wall and someone walks in and says, this wall is gorgeous, there’s a pride that lives inside of them that is hard to contain. And so that’s what we want. We want to inspire that feeling all the time, because then they’re more inclined to move in this direction than this. Because now this one also comes with finances, Answers, praise, adoration. People like me here, over here, not so much. And I want to really get away from this, this level, this lane and live in this one. And so it’s it’s exposure. It’s access. It’s all the things we’ve talked about today. And when you asked about community education, that was one of the reasons we initially partnered with Dr. Howard. Um, so they were doing a justice involved care program. They were training people who were very interested in working with justice involved people, not just juveniles, adults as well. And I was in love with their life coaching model because it’s a whole child, whole person effort. And there are some things that as an educator, a veteran educator, it’s more than the social studies. I can teach you what’s going on right here. I need to be able to take the the titles off and just be your aunt for a second.

Stone Payton: I love that, I love that.

Natalie Hutchins: And, Dr., um, Howard, talk to us a little bit about the film festival. That was a great segue, Stone. So talk to us about the film festival, which was our most recent, um, program project.

Dr. Angelita Howard: The film festival.

Dr. Angela Coaxum-Young: I think she’s talking about the act, but but I do want her to piggyback on, um, the program that she did with, uh, the justice involved care and what you all were doing with that and how we got to. Because it was all.

Natalie Hutchins: And I’m calling it a film festival because it was just really awesome. And I was a guest, and it felt like a film festival to me. I mean you know.

Natalie Hutchins: I mean, the kids did an amazing job, and you, I was like, wow, kids edited this.I’m just trying to, like, figure out how to turn on my cell phone. Right. And I walk in and these kiddos were just did some really amazing, amazing things. Um, under her, her support and her leadership.

Natalie Hutchins: That was a part of that care program.

Dr. Angelita Howard: So, yeah, that was the menopause that just happened.

Dr. Angelita Howard: Like, that was a menopause moment.

Dr. Angelita Howard: I’m like film.

Speaker4: Festival because.

Dr. Angelita Howard: We know, honestly, this team does so much all the time because in this world, in the world that we serve. You don’t stop. You don’t get a chance to stop. You rest, and you wait for someone to kind of hold your hand up while you’re resting and then you jump back in the game. But so this film festival we had, oh my goodness, one one, one little young lady, she stole my heart. But we had people, children, youth that came and gave projects. They were given a title to work within, but they took it and transformed it to another level. It was held in Douglasville somewhere not far, uh, in a convention center. Uh, the team had done such a amazing job. Back to what Dr. Young said. Providing them an opportunity, giving them this is this is what you can do. And so they took their film. They put it on like a YouTube, if you will. They created they had all these segments that they were able to do based on a justice involved, if you will, or an issue and how to go through that issue like one of the issues dealt with absenteeism, frequent absenteeism and how to overcome those things. Some of these students, unfortunately, have had some of the worst home life, upbringing, sex trafficking, you name it. It was it was so difficult to to know their background, but then it was so rewarding to see how they pushed through, how they wanted to push through.

Dr. Angelita Howard: But then even more, when they saw the adults cheering for them, clapping for them, praising them, and really saying, you know what? I really can do this. I really can be something different. I can go and I can shift or pivot because somebody invested in me. Somebody saw me today. Someone looked at me today and saw that I was not just a piece of meat, or I was not just a piece of, uh, a story that I had this or I had this or this background. And so that was one of the changing moments for even our school for favor, because we knew then it was we it was unspoken. It was really unspoken. But we knew then we had no other choice but to push forward with all of the what we believe were setbacks. I believe they were set up for something greater. We didn’t need we. Not that we didn’t need, but at the time that we were trying to go through the charter schools and go through that, those rejections, they were certainly they were needed because we wouldn’t have been able to experience what we’re experiencing now if it were not for the rejection. So each one of us have had rejecting moments and workforce over the last 2 or 3 years that if I were to talk about it, about it, I think we would all cry.

Dr. Angelita Howard: But the rejection that came as a result of us losing. But God said, we’re going to win on the other side. And so because of rejection that she had. It’s been greater for her because the rejection that she had has been greater for me because of the rejection that I had, has been greater for all of us. And that is absolutely why we cannot not have a favor. We cannot favor is on our lives. And we didn’t see it then and we didn’t understand. Each one of us did not understand why we lost. We lost our jobs. There were jobs. There were people who, um, and not before. And I hope they don’t mind me sharing. But we we lost even with my last employer, you know, not giving the things that I simply asked for. And when we talk about going hard, going hard for we are all 200% workers, not 100% not 99. But we had to transition in order to transform. And so what you’re seeing now is transformation. You’re seeing transition. You’re seeing hurt. People heal. You’re seeing heal people going to heal others. And so we’re excited about the work.

Stone Payton: Well, I’m glad that you’re invested in this work because you could be out making a ton of money as a keynote speaker. I feel like i just went to a big corporation keynote talk, and I will, from this day forward that it’s it’s not a setbacks or set ups.

Speaker4: Yeah, absolutely.

Stone Payton: You’re going to if you’re if you listen to any more of our program, you’re going to hear me say that. And I’ll try to remember to credit you in the early.

Speaker4: Going and then.

Dr. Angelita Howard: And then it’s.

Speaker4: Yours.

Stone Payton: Over time, it’ll be like I always say.

Speaker4: Yeah. That’s right. There you go.

Natalie Hutchins: I feel like we all need t shirts.

Speaker4: Yes.

Stone Payton: Oh, you guys are doing such important work. Okay, let’s make sure. Before we wrap, Rap. Let’s leave our listeners with whatever coordinates or ways to connect continue to tap into your work. I want to make sure that, you know, maybe they can have a conversation with you guys, go to websites, LinkedIn, whatever is appropriate. But let’s, uh, let’s make it easy for them to, to tap into this.

Natalie Hutchins: Well, I just want to say thank you so much for having us, um, for trusting us in this great work and allowing us to share just a small piece of our story with the community and the listeners at large. Um, we appreciate you. We appreciate your support of Stone and what he has going on at Business RadioX. And just all the people out there doing what they know needs to be done and filling the gap for someone else. So for that, I’m just so very grateful. At EverFund. We have lots of different spaces that we’re in. So, um, we’ll be on the road here for the next 3 to 4 months. Um, we have some campaigns with KSU Small business, UGA Small business as well as Grameen America with Bank of America. So we’re going to definitely be on the road. Um, just really supporting entrepreneurs and making their for profits and nonprofits steadfast and give them a really good foundation so that financially they can, you know, do what they need to do because it takes a lot of money to, to make people’s dreams come true. So that’s where we are. And as far as favor is concerned, I’ll hand it over to Dr. Young. Um, there will be a there is a link to be able to donate. Um, on the website. But, you know, I’ll give you her cell phone number if you guys want.

Speaker4: To.

Natalie Hutchins: Support a kid, like I don’t mind. Um, you know, giving you the direct bat phone. Um, but we’d really appreciate, you know, any type of corporate or individual sponsors. Uh, we have a goal of ten students next year. Um, so that’s $70,000, right? Like, it’s seven grand a kid. So we need a budget of about 125,000 to make that happen. And that’s, um, that’s our charge. So, Dr. Young.

Dr. Angela Coaxum-Young: Um, yes. Um, they can follow Faber News on Instagram, on Facebook, on Twitter. Um, our website is Faber Academy of Excellence. Org. The school in particular is Faber Transition Academy. Org. Um, we spoke a little bit about our program, our restorative program. We are in Douglasville, Georgia, but we are a Georgia nonprofit organization. So I certainly want to be able to say we are mission minded. Um, doesn’t matter where the student lives, if you have a student that would benefit from partnering with us, if you feel like this would be a program that could exist in another community, I avail our organization to you. We have written our own curriculum. Um, we certainly train on justice involved care. We’re operating under a grant right now and we are able to reduce tuition for students for next school year. And so, um, I just encourage everyone to please reach out to us if you, um, just for students. And so if you have a neighbor next door who you feel like needs to be connected to someone yesterday, do not feel like because we’re in Douglasville, we would close the door because we are mission minded and this is important work. Wherever the kid is, however we can help them, we will help them.

Dr. Angelita Howard: And if you’re interested in anything around healthcare, especially health care law policy, health law policy, how the policies work, how leadership works from going to advocate, we talked about advocating and making sure people have a voice. And so sometimes people need a voice, but you’re their voice. So if you’re interested in health law, policy management or healthcare equity, health equity, political determinants of health, we certainly have those Opportunities available at Meharry Medical College in the School of Global Health. They’re online so you don’t have to move. You can stay right here in Georgia or wherever you are. And that’s Meharry Global. Org. And I’m so thankful to be here.

Speaker4: Thank you. Thank you so much.

Stone Payton: Ladies. It has been an absolute delight having you in the studio. You’re doing such important work. And keep it up. And we want to continue to follow your story. And we’re going to try to figure out how to help you any way we can. So thank you so much. This has been fantastic.

Speaker4: Thank you.

Natalie Hutchins: Thank you so much. We appreciate.

Speaker4: You.

Stone Payton: My pleasure. All right. Until next time. This is Stone Payton for our guest today. And everyone here at the Business RadioX family saying we’ll see you again on Cherokee Business Radio.

 

BRX Pro Tip: Guy Kawasaki’s 5 Tips to Becoming Indispensible

April 3, 2025 by angishields

From Employees to Owners: The Journey of Transitioning Your Business

April 2, 2025 by angishields

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From Employees to Owners: The Journey of Transitioning Your Business
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Brought to you by Diesel David and Main Street Warriors

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In this episode of Cherokee Business Radio, Joshua Kornitsky discusses employee ownership with Marie Davis, executive director of the Georgia Center for Employee Ownership, and Keith and Kevin Young from Young K9. Marie explains the center’s mission to help small businesses implement employee ownership models, highlighting benefits like increased engagement and productivity. She shares her personal motivations and success stories. Keith and Kevin discuss their dog-walking business, Young K9, and how employee ownership has positively impacted their operations. The episode underscores the transformative potential of employee ownership and the importance of early guidance in the transition process.

GACEO-logo

Marie-Bell-Davis-bwMarie Davis is an Atlanta, Georgia native. She currently serves as Executive Director of The Georgia Center for Employee Ownership (GACEO), one of 24 State Centers created by the Employee Ownership Expansion Network (EOX).

After obtaining a Social Work degree at The University of Georgia, she served as a foster care coordinator for the State of Georgia, certifying foster parents and working with foster care children. Obtaining a Series 7 and 63 financial license, she worked with a private financial firm as Assistant to the President.

While raising her two children, Marie worked for a local developer, forming relationships with County and State officials. Moving to Florida for ten years, Marie served as a Targeted Case Manager with Children’s Home Society of Florida and a certified tutor for autistic children.

Marie also served as the Director of Mentoring for Center Point in Hall County Georgia, recruiting and training mentors for several school systems. She also served as a Technical Assistant for the National MENTOR program, working with mentor programs across the country with direction and development and served on the Georgia Mentor Provider Council For 6 years.

Follow GACEO on LinkedIn and Facebook.

Young-K9-logo

Keith-Young-bwKeith Young, owner of Young K9, is originally from Ohio. He has a background in Psychology and ABA therapy, which is applied behavior analysis for kids with autism. He has worked in the school setting, as well as the clinic setting.

Kids and animals are definitely Keith’s two passions. He’s been working in the pet industry since 2013, from selling dog food to walking dogs. With over 10 years of experience servicing over 500 clients and multiple breeds of dogs, he really enjoys what he does.

​Growing up Keith had turtles, rabbits, fish, and is currently the doggy dad to a German Shepherd Pyrenees mix named CoCo.

Kevin-Young-bwAt 25 years old, Kevin Young is a proud graduate of Jacksonville State University, where he earned a degree in Communications, graduating cum laude with a 3.6 GPA.

Kevin’s passion for storytelling and connecting with audiences has shaped his career path, leading him to diverse experiences in both media and pet care. He previously worked as a sports journalist covering the Atlanta Dream, where he honed his skills in reporting, content creation, and audience engagement.

Currently, Kevin serves as both a dog walker and Social Media Manager for Young K9, a professional pet care company based in Atlanta. In this role, he combines his love for animals with his expertise in digital marketing, helping to build the company’s brand presence while providing high-quality care to clients’ pets.

Follow Young K9 on Instagram.

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix.

 

TRANSCRIPT

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

Joshua Kornitsky: So welcome back for another exciting episode of Cherokee Business Radio, where we help business leaders get the word out about the important work they’re doing to serve their market, their community, and their profession. I’m your host, professional EOS implementer, Joshua Kornitsky, and I am here today with Mary Davis of the Georgia Center for Employee Ownership, and Keith and Kevin Young from Young K9. Let’s get started. So good morning, Marie, if you would. Let’s start with you.

Marie Davis: Good morning.

Joshua Kornitsky: So I understand that you’re the executive director of the Georgia Center for Employee Ownership, and I can I can read what that means. And you’ve explained it to me in the past. But tell me so that people can understand. What do you do? What does the Georgia Center do?

Marie Davis: Okay, well, the Georgia Center is one of 24 state centers that were created as a way for small business owners like these guys who are with us today to find information on how to set their business up for success. And by that, I mean thinking of their employees engaging their employees. It might not be the employee ownership model, but we can help you figure out what to do with your business. Seasoned businesses, young businesses, entrepreneurs. We just want them to have the information about how they can do this wonderful model.

Joshua Kornitsky: So is this you said that it’s across the United States in different states that you’re heading up the one in Georgia. How many employee owned businesses are there across the country?

Marie Davis: You know, and I also neglected to say that we have a parent company called Employee Ownership Expansion Network, and they are the ones that created all these state centers. Most of them, some of them have been around for 40 years, like, I believe the, um, Ohio State Center that’s at Kent State has been around a long, long time, very solid state center. Um, well, so what.

Joshua Kornitsky: Uh, so across the country, I was wondering, are there a lot of employee owned companies?

Marie Davis: Oh, sorry about that. That’s okay, I got distracted. So there are nearly 7000 employee owned companies, and we would really like to see that. I’d like to see it quadruple, because in the last few years, when I have moved up from launch manager at ten hours a week, uh, to program director to an executive director, I have seen and talked with so many businesses that have done this and are just so successful, and it changes lives. It absolutely changes lives.

Joshua Kornitsky: So you mentioned in, in your overview of what the Georgia Center does, that there are very, you know, businesses of various size, various stages. If in a perfect engagement, when would you engage with an organization to advise them on this? Is there a lot of pre-planning that goes into it? You know, what’s the ramp? Time to get ready to turn a company into an employee owned company.

Marie Davis: So I’ll say that if you do go on my website. Org you will only get me. It is just me. And so most of the calls we get are people who this is not right for them or it’s not right for them yet. I got a very exciting call. It’s been well over a year now from a company that already knew about employee ownership, and was extremely excited about the prospect of finding information out front before they had to go hire somebody. So the process for them is we immediately, uh, I put them in front of my executive national executive director and talked and said, oh, you know. And I knew that they were perfect for employee ownership model and they knew it too. So rather than rush them, we had them talk with other employee owners, sort of in the same field, uh, about the same size, so that they would know what the process was going to be like. And that was well over a year ago. They have some big events coming. I can’t tell you anything about them, of course, but I will tell you that they are. It’s going to be very exciting. And so they met with those employee owned companies, and then we introduced them to the service providers that do this kind of work. And unfortunately, they had already paid. And this is this is a big point to make for companies. Don’t go pay a trust attorney. Don’t go have a business evaluation done until you talk to us.

Joshua Kornitsky: Wait, wait, how much does it cost to talk to you?

Marie Davis: It doesn’t cost anything. I should have said that. We’re all nonprofit. We are funded.

Joshua Kornitsky: A big deal.

Marie Davis: It is a big deal. Eocs, our parent company, is funded a lot by some of these service providers, but also by very, very happy founding owners. I’m pointing at these guys across the room since this is on radio and you can’t see me, but they will sent their business, put their business in an employee stock ownership plan for their employees, and they made a ton of money. And so they’re very happy about how their business prospered and their employees prospered. So they give back to employee ownership expansion network. Sometimes it trickles down to the state center, some sometimes it doesn’t, but it doesn’t cost anything. And so going back to this company that gave me the call right after they they had already paid a trust attorney, unfortunately, and had that business evaluation and that probably cost them, I don’t know.

Joshua Kornitsky: A bunch of.

Marie Davis: Money, a bunch of money, I’m going to say upwards of $50,000. Ouch. And it doesn’t apply to what we’re going to do with them. We don’t actually do any of the work, and I will stress that. So we won’t ever charge you a penny. So we put them with different service providers and we’re actually still doing that. And then they choose the one that clicks with them. Because when in a in a Esop transaction, there’s a lot of people that have to be involved, especially right at first. And you need to like you might not like working with your brother if that was the case. And you might want to choose Joshua to work with you get the idea. There’s clicks and there’s personalities.

Joshua Kornitsky: Well, sure, anytime you’re making introductions, you’ve got to make sure that it’s an introduction that resonates for all the parties involved in order for everybody’s interests to get served. But it’s great to know that this is a service that’s available to a business owner, and they can get guidance and advice that has no bias, has no leaning one direction or the other. It sounds like you just give them the information and help them find the right match. Is that.

Marie Davis: We do. And so you I didn’t finish answering your question because again, I keep seeing something shiny over there. But, uh, when a company decides to become employee owned, they can do it in less than six months. It might take a year. It depends on whether they’re already an S Corp, if they’re an LLC or a C Corp, and they want to move to an S Corp, that might take time, might take time to work out the funding of paying off whatever percentage the owner wants to put into the employee fund. And by the way, that can be 10%. Most companies now are doing 100%.

Joshua Kornitsky: So it sounds like there’s it’s and I mean this in a good way. It’s not a one size fits all. And it sounds like it can be customized to fit the the transitioning out owner, what their goals are.

Marie Davis: Exactly.

Joshua Kornitsky: And if I can ask only because you had shared this with me in a previous conversation, what are the some of the benefits? Understanding that obviously it depends on the circumstance in the situation? Are there are there specific benefits for the owners in order to make this transition that they see, in addition to handing their their legacy to people that they know, trust, love and respect? What other benefits potentially are there for an employer?

Marie Davis: Well, hopefully they’re going to do it before they’re ready to walk out the door and they’ll still be involved so they can watch that company explode. And they can watch their employees learn to become employee owners. They can watch their retirement plan grow. They can watch their company, their legacy, remain forever, hopefully. You know, sometimes people buy employee owned companies. It just depends. That happened right here in Woodstock. Uh, the last time I was on this show, I had a lady from Erb Industries here, and, uh, it was on. If you all remember, the, um. I’m only doing this because it’s Cherokee wood, uh, Business Radio. But if there was a water tower right down here near the technical group, right here in Woodstock. And it said Erb industries proudly, 100% employee owned. They sold, but they negotiated that that stay there on that water tower. No one lost their jobs. No one fired the management and they just recently sold. There’s a new name down there, and they took it off the water tower.

Joshua Kornitsky: But that’s.

Marie Davis: Okay. That’s because the company’s become so. Powerful so quickly. Um.

Joshua Kornitsky: Strong and passionate in what they’re doing.

Marie Davis: They do. So for a founding owner to realize that they’re that water tower is going to be there as long as they want it to be there. That’s pretty exciting.

Joshua Kornitsky: That is cool. But you had mentioned to me that there may be some tax benefits. Oh, there’s.

Marie Davis: Wonderful tax benefits. So for the for the founder he can defer his capital gains. And that’s really important. And again that I’m not the technical person. But last time we were on here we were very technical. But um, it depends on what form. If they’re an S Corp or C Corp and that’s kind of getting in the weeds. Really anybody can do it. But there are more benefits if you’re an S Corp for the founder. They’re still going to be deferred capital gains. And you know, if you sell your business or move your business into an employee ownership plan, that is critical.

Joshua Kornitsky: That’s great. So thank you for letting us know that. And before we’re done, we’ll make sure people know how to get Ahold of you to to learn more about it. Uh, and obviously, it’s important to share again that there’s no cost in asking questions. Um, so tell me, Marie, how did you get involved with all of this?

Marie Davis: Well, I was, um, in Gainesville, Georgia, and wanted to move this way and had to have a knee replacement. Couldn’t drive that distance there. So, um, I was looking for a job, and it said something like, like, what the heck is a launch manager? It didn’t say anything about employee ownership. And so when I did the interview, uh, my now executive director said, uh, well, um, I see you had your series seven and 63. What do you know about employee ownership? And I said, well, I said, we had our own Esop attorney. I said, I haven’t heard that name in a long time. And then I told the story of my parents business that, um, my parents had a business on Buford Highway for almost 50 years.

Joshua Kornitsky: Oh, wow. What type of business?

Marie Davis: It was a landscape business. My dad was a landscape architect and horticulturist. He’s been gone a long time. He’d be 104 now, but he, um, got on the, uh, just out of. He got after World War two. He got a double major back when a major’s like a doctorate now. And he came to Atlanta and started his own business. And this is before Lowe’s. This is before Home Depot. All this, you know, people doing yard work now. So, uh, it was very successful. It was a huge place about the size of a small Walmart.

Joshua Kornitsky: Wow.

Marie Davis: And then a big nursery and right next door. And I love to tell this story is where Mr. Pike started Pike’s nursery. And they were great friends, so they both went completely different directions. My father had two locations and as you know, Pike Nurseries has many, which by the way, 100% employee owned.

Joshua Kornitsky: Good to know.

Marie Davis: Yes, and that’s another story. But we probably don’t have time for that. So you got to have me back. But anyway, I’d love to do that just to have employee ownership stories to tell.

Joshua Kornitsky: We’ll talk more about that then.

Marie Davis: That’d be fun. People really like that. But, uh, so he at one time had 41 employees. He had two crews, and he had a couple of management people, mainly my mother, who worked her whole life. They worked together. And when my dad got sick now he was still working at 78 every day, seven days a week. But he got sick and sorry. So we just had to sell the land. I mean, the business was him. There was no handing it over to his management team. Nobody was prepared. His three daughters. I’m the baby. Um. We’re not in that business at all. Sure. And so he ended up losing the legacy that now nobody knows who Atlanta Garden Center was, which everybody did. Um, my dad was, you know, president of the Farmers Club, which doesn’t sound that big, but it was.

Joshua Kornitsky: Well, there’s a lot of land that has houses and subdivisions and shopping centers on it. And in the modern Atlanta area, that all used to be farms.

Marie Davis: Exactly. And so everybody knew who. Atlanta. My point is, is that his legacy is totally gone. It’s in my head. And people my age probably came over there and bought their mother a rose for, for Mother’s Day or bought the fertilizer there. And I was pulling the little red wagon with the cow manure in it. I did grow up doing that kind of stuff. But when he died, and this is what’s really sad, I went to clean out his drawer. The drawers in his cabinet. My mother just couldn’t do it. And there were envelopes of money with his key employees name on it. One was his head guy that ran the group. That was his idea of saving for them. And so there was literally envelopes of money because he even though he was a very smart man, he didn’t know how to help his employees other than that. Had he gone?

Joshua Kornitsky: The mechanisms that you teach and show now didn’t exist. But it’s it’s great you’ve ended up helping others now maintain that legacy for their families and generations to come. That’s fantastic.

Marie Davis: So when I told that story, one of our board members, uh, and my boss, Steve Sorkin, looked at me and said, can you tell that story to other people? Can you talk about that? I said, you bet I can. What?

Joshua Kornitsky: What an incredible backstory for someone who didn’t grow up thinking, gee, one day I want to be the executive director of this.

Marie Davis: Yeah.

Joshua Kornitsky: That’s fantastic. Well, I know we were talking, Uh, before that, you’ve got some events that are coming up. I think the first one is, is this month in Macon, right?

Marie Davis: Yes. On, um, April the 11th at the Macon. Well, it’s not at the Macon chamber, but it’s at a business in Macon. You could go to the Macon chamber, and it’s going to be a really great team, a panel. It’s their morning group called brew. They’re just getting to go again.

Joshua Kornitsky: Okay.

Marie Davis: And it’s going to be two employee owned companies from Macon. One is Sheridan Construction. They’re all over Georgia. The other one is B and D industrial. And they’re going to be there to talk about what it’s like to be an employee owned company and also score. If you know what score is through SBDC, they’re going to be there. Now, the story behind this is that the absolutely fabulous president of the Macon Chamber, Jessica Walden, used to be very involved with the SBDC. So she knows what it’s like for businesses to be looking for information. And she wanted to do a panel on employee ownership. So I’m going to be very challenged to be sitting there. I can’t say any boo boos with two employee owned companies there. It’s going to be great.

Joshua Kornitsky: That’s awesome.

Marie Davis: So that’s at 830 okay.

Joshua Kornitsky: And that’s in Macon. You said they could go to the Macon Chamber of Commerce website to get the details on where. And then you’ve got something coming up in May in Athens.

Marie Davis: And. Okay. And so we have a grant to work in my favorite town in Georgia, sorry, Atlanta, Athens. And I was born in Atlanta. So we have a grant to work there. And so I have a joint venture with the Athens SBDC. And if you don’t know this, the Georgia SBDC is also headquartered there, and I hope they’ll be there. And the small businesses, the SBA, the Small Business Administration, and we’re going to be at the Delta Innovation Center from 9 to 12. We probably won’t be that long, but we hope it’s going to pack it out. None of these are going to be online because we want people to come and mingle with other business owners, meet the SBA, meet the SBDC, and get involved with them because it doesn’t matter what size your business is. One of the best sbdcs in Georgia, I’m going to call them out is in Kennesaw and they’ve been around, uh, Drew Tonsmeire who runs that one? He’s he’s led some amazing companies to where they are now. And one is anybody with kids knows elf on the shelf. They came right through the Kennesaw.

Joshua Kornitsky: Really?

Marie Davis: Yes they.

Joshua Kornitsky: Did. The elf on the shelf was born in Kennesaw.

Marie Davis: Uh, I’m assuming so because they came through the Kennesaw SBDC.

Joshua Kornitsky: We’ll have to talk more about that and let’s see if we can get them to to come tell us more about it. And then last I know you’ve got something bigger happening. It’s an annual event in October, right?

Marie Davis: Yes, in October. And I don’t have my date yet, but it’s, um, we’ve. This will be our fourth year. October is employee ownership month, and I’m very proud that one of my first things I did with my boss poking me say, do it, do it, do it, was to ask Governor Kemp to declare the first one, the first time it’s been celebrated in Georgia. So we have the governor’s proclamation every year. We’ve done this, and we’ve held it every year at 100%. Well, okay. The first year is Choate. That’s a very Georgia Choate construction. We had it there. There 100% employee owned. The last two years we’ve had it at J.E. Dunn Construction, which is not 100%. They may never be because they’ve got 5000 employees. But the point is, is to have the new employee owned companies in the room and give them awards. And two of the better known ones from last year, you’re going to know these names Woodstock Furniture Outlet. They we gave them an award last year, and Georgia Spa Company, which was berthed right near Athens. And they’re very well known names. And so we had a lot every year. We’ve had a long list to give awards to for becoming 100% employee owned. And let me tell you, there’s some happy companies.

Joshua Kornitsky: That’s wonderful to hear. Well, before we wrap up the segment, I do want to ask. I like to ask a question of of all the guests. That’s just a little bit thought provoking. Uh, as you look back along your family path, your professional path to what brought you to here, what’s the most valuable piece of advice you were given that you would share with others?

Marie Davis: Um, it has nothing to do with business, really. So my background and I’ve been here before is the mentoring world and give back. Absolutely. Try to help somebody. And I know every time I’m mentoring a lady through the University of Georgia mentoring group now, and she’s a grown woman, she’s teaches me things every day. And I always have to say, oh, Marie, you know, you don’t have anything to share. You don’t know anything. But you do. You do. And so whatever age you are, give back. Go read to a kid at school. Whatever it is, give back and it will grow your business and it will grow you. And you will touch a life that you will never, ever know how far that reaches, but it will.

Joshua Kornitsky: That’s great advice. Well, thank you again. Uh marybelle. Davis, executive director of the Georgia Center of Employee Ownership. Marie, what’s the best way for people to get Ahold of you?

Marie Davis: Well, I’m going to give them my phone number because it’s on everywhere anyway. It’s (400) 432-7255 four. Nobody’s worn that out yet. All right. Marie at g a CEO. Org. Or if you go to the website you can pull GA CEO. Well go to the Georgia Center for Employee ownership because there’s another great company called GA Georgia CEO. That’s film company. So Georgia Center for Employee Ownership. And you click on a contact me button and there is no one else. It will be me. All right. So any of those things I’d love to.

Joshua Kornitsky: Chat one and only. Well, thank you again for your time. I hope you have the ability to hang out and stay with us as.

Marie Davis: Oh, I want to hear about these guys. I’m watching them. I can’t wait to hear.

Joshua Kornitsky: So thank you, Marie. All right, well, switching over, uh, we have with us both by special arrangement, Keith Young and Kevin Young from Young K9. So I know that Keith, you’re the founder of the company, correct? Tell us, what is Young K9?

Keith Young: Hey, guys. Good morning. Um, young canine is a dog walking, dog training dog sitting company. So we help busy professionals take care of their dogs while they’re at work. Um, they’re out of the country. Or if they just got a new puppy and they need some training.

Joshua Kornitsky: So you do training as well?

Keith Young: Yes.

Joshua Kornitsky: Oh, wow. Okay. So what other kinds of services do you offer that maybe other dog walking companies don’t.

Keith Young: Um, so right now I just got a company van. So we pick up dogs, we do group walks, and then also for people that have, uh, big backyards that don’t want to pick up their own poop, we actually do poop poop pick up as well. So that’s something.

Marie Davis: I live right down the road.

Keith Young: Yeah. So that’s something we just recently added. Um, but we have a couple people that, you know, need the Arcs picked up, so. Yeah.

Joshua Kornitsky: Well, so how did this get started?

Keith Young: So during the pandemic, I used to work for a company, um, for about 4 or 5 years, and I had to kind of make a decision. Um, well, let’s back up. My background is working with kids with autism. Oh, okay. I was a behavior therapist, and, um, I had to kind of make a decision. Do I want to work with kids or do I want to work with dogs? And like I said, when the pandemic came, it kind of made me shift my focus. I’ve always had a passion for working with, um, dogs. And the company I worked for, they went under because of the pandemic. And then that kind of just jump started everything.

Joshua Kornitsky: So. So you had this opportunity that just presented itself? Yes. And so and and you’ve got your brother working with you?

Kevin Young: Yes, sir.

Joshua Kornitsky: So how’s that?

Kevin Young: Well, one thing I will say is, uh, growing up, like, you know, when we were younger, we did have our like tussles and fights and stuff like that. But one thing I will say is we always been close and tight. So just being able to work with my brother, that’s probably like one of the best things in the world. So like I get a kick out of it most definitely. Because like, you know, growing up we would talk about like toys and all kind of like kid stuff. And now it just comes to a point to where now we’re talking about business. And hey, um, how do you feel about this? How do you feel about this idea? How do you feel about that idea? So I still get a kick out of it, because I still look at us as ten and five years old. So like I said, I most definitely get a kick out of this.

Joshua Kornitsky: Okay, so Kevin, what else do you do other than walk dogs there. So young canine.

Kevin Young: So my background, um, I recently graduated from Jacksonville State in 2022. Thank you. And, um, I graduated with a communications degree. So like, by communication being so broad from broadcasting, um, running the teleprompter, social media. So that’s what I’m, that’s what I pretty much do as far as, um, with young canine, I run the Instagram page so.

Joshua Kornitsky: Nobody likes looking at pictures of dogs online.

Kevin Young: I mean like literally so literally all day, I’m just, you know, just coming up with ideas on, you know.

Joshua Kornitsky: This is what you do all day is just take cute pictures of dogs.

Kevin Young: Like, that’s what that’s what we all like, literally like, um, that’s a part of the business. So, um.

Joshua Kornitsky: That’s awesome.

Kevin Young: So as we’re walking the dog. So most of our walks are from 30 to an hour walks. And during that time that we’re walking the dogs, we’re taking pictures of each dog like, um, we’re taking a picture of, like, just different areas, like cute pictures of the dogs and everything. And we’re sending messages to the owners like, hey, your dog did a very good job of, you know, literally, literally, like, we’re just sending like, messages.

Joshua Kornitsky: So that brilliant idea that is.

Kevin Young: Yeah, like we’re literally sending them messages. So at the end of the day, we’re making them feel better and more comfortable. So, you know, we’re getting more clientele and stuff like that. Like, oh yeah, these guys took really good care of my dog. And you know, that’s how the more clientele starts coming in and everything.

Joshua Kornitsky: That’s a really great differentiator. What else do you guys do that that kind of sets you apart from what others do in this space.

Keith Young: Um, we also set up meet and greets. So some dogs during the pandemic, um, they weren’t socialized properly. So they don’t like seeing new people, or they’re used to certain people. They don’t like people that wear hats or they don’t like, you know, taller guys. They don’t like women. So we do meet and greets just to kind of have the walker feel comfortable, have the client feel comfortable, and also get a better assessment of the dog. And even just to see if it’s a fit, because there might be a case where this dog really doesn’t like a walker and it’s just not a fit for us. So that’s why we like really.

Joshua Kornitsky: So it goes down to that level of detail. But I guess that kind of aligns with what you’re saying. You want to make sure that you’ve got the right person working with the right animals.

Keith Young: Yes, because we’ve had it happen. We’ve had a couple clients, um, do a meet and greet, and the dog just didn’t care for the walker. It was nothing the walker did. It was just it just wasn’t a mesh. So then we got another walker and it worked out perfectly well.

Joshua Kornitsky: So. And you had shared with me because it’s not just about the the dog and the walker. It’s also about the client. And without asking for anything confidential, uh, you had shared that you have some kind of high profile clients. So you work with, uh, people who’d rather not be named?

Keith Young: Yes. So we work with doctors, lawyers, um, all types of business owners around Atlanta. So the biggest thing they want to know is like, can we trust this person coming in? So that’s why we like to do meet and greets so they can get a better, better understanding of who’s coming into their house. Because we’re getting access, we’re getting codes, we’re getting all this personal information from these high end people. So we just want to make sure, like this is a perfect fit.

Joshua Kornitsky: So that that makes great sense. And it must go a long way to putting people at ease. And and like with all things in business, the the more business you do, the more people will grow to trust you. Yes. So that’s fantastic. And, um, going back to what you were saying about social media, do you are you utilizing things like Google reviews and other ways? How do you get the word out?

Kevin Young: Um, so pretty much what I do is, um. Excuse me. Yeah. Um, pretty much what I do as far as with the social media, is I, um, I post on my Instagram or I. Yeah, I post on the Instagram page, but then I also post on my separate Instagram. So like, we get more people to view and just participate in certain things that we do. And then also as well, um, I send stuff out to like Facebook. Okay. To get people to because we got a lot of clientele from Facebook, just from, you know, me reposting things and hey, I seen you guys on my Facebook. You know, um, the only thing that we’re working on now to get more people is, like the other social medias, like the TikToks, the Snapchats, the Twitters, maybe. So once we get that aligned, I feel like we’re going to get like even more so. But just as of right now, we’re just sticking to like, one thing. So like, you know, we’re just staying consistent with that one thing. And then as we continue to grow, that’s when we start adding more other like.

Joshua Kornitsky: Well, and so that brings up an interesting point that I’d ask both of you. What are some of the other challenges that you guys run into.

Keith Young: Um, I would say the biggest challenge, um, would be funding, because we’re still a new company. Um, we’re about to be two years in July. So, yeah, we’re about to be two years in July. So sometimes getting funding and having banks actually see that we’re a legit business can be a struggle. Um, and also scheduling.

Kevin Young: I was about to say scheduling. You can most definitely you can.

Keith Young: Touch.

Kevin Young: On scheduling. So the biggest thing with scheduling is we feel like that most of the clients book at the same times and.

Joshua Kornitsky: Breakfast, lunch and dinner.

Kevin Young: Most definitely. But like our prime time is really between like that 1130 to that 130, uh, time frame because it’s like the afternoon, it’s lunch time or whatever. And we only have so many walkers and it’s like, you know, trying to like, you know, decide who’s going to walk which dog or on that time. And, you know, just it can be a lot. And then also too, whenever a walker is out like an emergency or Anything. It kind of throws a lot of things off, and that’s when we kind of have to, like, step in and do as much as we can.

Joshua Kornitsky: It sounds like you guys are pretty adaptive and cover all the bases, which is important for people to know that, that the doggie’s not going to be left at the door.

Kevin Young: No, no.

Joshua Kornitsky: So did you guys grow up with dogs? Animals of any kind?

Keith Young: So it’s funny you say that. So, uh, we had every animal but a dog. Uh, really? Until I went off to college.

Joshua Kornitsky: So what’s on the list?

Keith Young: So we had bunnies, we had fish, we had turtles. And I’ve always asked my dad, like, can we have a dog? Can we have a dog? He’s like, it’s too much responsibility. And I’ll be stuck handling.

Joshua Kornitsky: Wait, wait, do turtles fetch?

Keith Young: Turtles are actually faster than what you think. Really? They don’t play fetch. Okay, but I used to let it out in the grass, and then I would look up. I’m like.

Joshua Kornitsky: Where’s the turtle?

Keith Young: Where’s the turtle? Turtles on the sidewalk. Wow. Yeah. So they’re actually faster than what you think. But, um, I didn’t have my first dog until, uh, I went to college in 2013.

Kevin Young: Sophomore year?

Keith Young: Yeah, my sophomore year. And I’ve had her ever since. She’s ten years old now. Her name is Coco. She’s a German shepherd. Pyrenees mix.

Joshua Kornitsky: Oh, wow.

Keith Young: She goes everywhere with me.

Joshua Kornitsky: Super sweet. And and in fairness, she is not in the studio only because we didn’t have a microphone.

Keith Young: And two, I don’t think we have space for her. She’s a big dog. Oh, yeah?

Joshua Kornitsky: Well, she’s she’s welcome for her outdoor. When we do a remote event, please bring her along.

Kevin Young: Definitely will.

Joshua Kornitsky: Um, so what are the. Well, wait a minute before. Before I ask that question, what on earth is March Wagner?

Keith Young: I’ll let Kevin tell that it’s been so much fun, but. Yeah.

Kevin Young: Um, so pretty much this was. When was this? February when we talked about it. Yeah. Um, like I said, we’re just always just jotting down things. We’re sending each other ideas like, hey, how do you feel about this? How do you feel about that? And I’m a big basketball fan. Okay.

Joshua Kornitsky: So I just there’s something going on in March, isn’t there?

Kevin Young: March madness just. Yeah, literally March Madness. So I just thought I’m like, Keith, how do you feel about, uh, we do like a tournament for the dogs? Uh, and we do like, a march madness. And I was like, how? How about March Madness? How does March Madness sound? He’s like.

Joshua Kornitsky: You know what? With brackets and everything.

Kevin Young: Uh, yeah, we have brackets. Um, it was we start off with 32 dogs because this is our first time doing it, and we just wanted to see how it was going to go the first time. And it’s been going pretty good. And we even have like four different regions. So one region is Mutt Town. You have, uh, what is it? Hollington, Howell’s town. Um, it’s like two others. It’s, uh I’ll have to get back to it later. But yeah, we pretty much just separate them all in different regions, like a march madness tournament. So.

Joshua Kornitsky: And and are these all your your clients dogs?

Kevin Young: Yep. All the clients.

Joshua Kornitsky: Dogs. Does the winning dog get a ring or something? What happens?

Kevin Young: Uh, they get they pretty something in that line. But, um, we’re gonna, like, arrange, like, a gift basket. So, like, it’s going to be nothing but, like, a whole bunch of treats. Toys. Just like a little gift basket like that.

Joshua Kornitsky: So I’m telling you, by next March, you’re going to have clients beating down your door. Just trying to get there.

Kevin Young: We’re going to have a full 64 next year. I guarantee you.

Keith Young: We already have clients. Like, why wasn’t my dog on there? We’re like, hey, we’re just testing it out.

Kevin Young: Can you use more than 64 dogs?

Keith Young: But we had to kind of test it out this first.

Joshua Kornitsky: It’s got to be like college football. You got to explain the playoffs.

Kevin Young: Yeah, literally. Like, we literally have to break down the whole process how voting is and everything. So but yeah, for the most part it’s been very interesting. And we just text each other like, man. Like, you see, uh, goose is in the lead right now or Bansky’s in the lead right now. Like, this is crazy.

Joshua Kornitsky: Based on on people’s submitting their their vote for it.

Kevin Young: Yeah. So, um, how we get people to vote? Um, we, um, I set up a poll on the, uh, on our IG story. Okay. And I have, like, the, uh, the first seed dog against the eighth seed dog, and it’s like a, um, a poll at the bottom, and they just literally just click to see who they want. So.

Joshua Kornitsky: So where are we now? Have we reached the finals?

Kevin Young: We’re in the finals. Okay. We’re in the.

Joshua Kornitsky: Finals. Are we down.

Kevin Young: To. So we have, uh, moose Most of the third seed. And we have, um. Clark. He was the second seed.

Joshua Kornitsky: Okay, so where do people go to see this?

Kevin Young: Um, they go to our, um, Instagram page. Our Instagram page is the real young canine. And, um, we have, like, highlights set up to where, um, you can pretty much just look at the whole recap of how the tournaments been going on from start to finish. I think we already even had like the first, the first tournament or the first round. We had like maybe like 4 or 5 upsets, like we had a couple number one seeds get kicked out really, which was pretty shocking.

Joshua Kornitsky: I’m like, that’s that’s what makes it a game.

Kevin Young: That’s what Mark Wagner is all about. So like because we love Mark, because.

Keith Young: You would literally look at the votes at like lunchtime, you’re like, okay, such and such is winning. And then by dinnertime you’re like, wow, they’re beating them by like 25 votes. So it’s it’s amazing to see.

Joshua Kornitsky: Yeah. Maybe next year you can move this into YouTube as well. Yeah. Tiktok. You were.

Kevin Young: Saying.

Joshua Kornitsky: Yeah that’s fantastic. Well, so as I asked with Marie, if you guys don’t mind, I want to ask this of both of you. Um, I like to ask one question that kind of makes you think a little bit towards the end here. Uh, for each of you individually, if you don’t mind. Uh, Keith, then, Kevin, what’s a mistake you guys have learned from whether personally or professionally, kind of along the way, that that’s changed the way that you’re doing things.

Keith Young: Um, I would just say, like, just communicating a little better. Um, when it comes to this business, sometimes you’ll do things because you’ll do it, but sometimes you got to put your, uh, your, your perspective in, in the other person’s hands because people deal with so much on a daily basis. We got to have more, uh, empathy for people rather than sympathy, because there’s so much going on in the world. We’re so quick to, you know, lash out or we’re so quick to judge or we’re so quick to, you know, be mad about a certain situation. But like I said, as we grow and and we develop, like I said, just having more empathy for people and just communicating a little better.

Joshua Kornitsky: Do you think and I’m not being funny. Do you think you obviously your background with behavioral understanding. But do you think working with with animals has also helped you be more patient?

Keith Young: Yeah, honestly. And also working with kids too.

Joshua Kornitsky: I didn’t want to draw comparisons.

Keith Young: I mean, I hate I hate to say it, but sometimes there are some, some similarities with kids and animals. Um, especially working with kids with autism, you might have a kid that’s nonverbal and he can’t properly talk to you. So just like with animals, they can’t speak to us, but their body language. Certain things that they do, um, just gives you a heads up of like, okay, like that’s what you want. Okay.

Joshua Kornitsky: So you learn to be intuitive. And with that, we’ll we’ll switch back over to the guy with the communications degree. What’s what’s a mistake you’ve made and learned from.

Kevin Young: Um, I made a few mistakes. Like more. Okay. More. So just just dog walking, I made mistakes. So, um, it was a situation to where, um, like I said, like the clients, they most definitely trust us. And, like, one mistake that I made was, um, I was kind of, like, in a rush. It was a lot going on as far as, like, picking up other people’s schedules and stuff like that. So I probably had like, ten dogs that whole day. And one mistake that I had made was, um, just pretty much just like, um, leaving the doors unlocked. One day I left the door, like, open, like kind of wide open, not even paying attention. And the dog was across the street or whatever. So it was just little stuff like that that I kind of like made mistakes and but the good thing about it that like, you know, mistakes happen, obviously. And like the clients, they, you know, just one time.

Joshua Kornitsky: And checklists.

Kevin Young: Literally. So just like little things like that. So and like I said, that’s whenever trust comes into into play as well. So.

Joshua Kornitsky: Well and I appreciate your honesty. That’s that. It’s the only way any of us learn.

Kevin Young: That was a that was a one time thing guys too, by the way. That was a one time thing. One thing about.

Joshua Kornitsky: Me I wasn’t worried about that because like I said, you learned from.

Kevin Young: It literally. So like.

Keith Young: I’m sorry, just because he’s my brother, I’m hard on him too, because when he told me that I, I was, I was furious.

Joshua Kornitsky: I was no nepo baby stuff.

Keith Young: No.

Kevin Young: Yeah.

Keith Young: No. Like I told him.

Kevin Young: Shout out LeBron and Bronny. But yeah.

Joshua Kornitsky: That’s right. Discipline and accountability.

Kevin Young: Yes.

Joshua Kornitsky: That’s what we need to know for sure. All right. Well, uh, Keith Young Kevin Young, thank you both. What’s the best way for people to find you? Thank you for sharing the Instagram. But how do they find you? What’s the best way to reach you if I. If I’ve got a dog that needs to get walked?

Keith Young: Yeah. So if you can go to our website at Young Canines, or you can give us a call at (404) 476-4985.

Joshua Kornitsky: Well, Marie White, Marie Davis pardon me, Marie bell Davis, Kevin young Keith Young, thank you guys for joining us today. Uh, we will have all of your information posted up onto our website. And, uh, this has been another episode of Cherokee Business Radio. I appreciate everybody listening.

 

Tagged With: GACEO, The Georgia Center for Employee Ownership, Young K9

BRX Pro Tip: How to Get People to Find You, Not What You Do

April 2, 2025 by angishields

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BRX Pro Tips
BRX Pro Tip: How to Get People to Find You, Not What You Do
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BRX Pro Tip: How to Get People to Find You, Not What You Do

Stone Payton: Welcome back to Business RadioX Pro Tips. Lee Kantor and Stone Payton here with you. Lee, let’s dive into this idea of getting people to find you. What are you learning on that front?

Lee Kantor: Yeah. You know, we deal with a lot of business coaches, and I think this is really appropriate for business coaches specifically, but a lot of entrepreneurs, in general, when people are searching for a solution to their problem, you want them to choose you. You don’t want them to choose business coach. So, if you’re a business coach, you don’t want to be found in a pile of other business coaches because that’s not going to help you. If they just search business coach, and a hundred business coaches show up, that’s probably not going to help you.

Lee Kantor: So, how do you get your brand and what your superpower is kind of locked into what it is they’re searching? So, that, to me, is much more powerful and that’s a better marketing objective than it is to be just found as a business coach. So, you want people to search for you specifically and associate your name, your brand, and your unique approach to whatever it is the solution that you’re delivering is. And that’s when you have a chance to build something that’s really special.

Lee Kantor: So, how do you make this happen? So, the way to make this happen, some of the steps you can be taking today to make sure that people are knowing who you are and what your superpower is tomorrow is you have to show up. You got to show up consistently, you have to be visible, you have to be engaged, and you have to be present, so people get to know you. And when it seems like you’re everywhere, they can’t help but think of you first when they need help. So, that’s an important to kind of create that level of being always there when your prospective partners need you.

Lee Kantor: Second is you want to build a personal brand that’s not just a business. Building a personal relationship is so much more important than building an anonymous audience. So many of the people out there are just building kind of this generalized thought leadership, and they’re not really building relationships with the people who matter most to of them. I would argue that it’s much more important to have lots of people know who you are and what you do way more. That’s way more important than it is for just the internet to know, “Oh, that’s business coaching content.”

Lee Kantor: So, ask yourself, how can I show up today in a way that makes me the one person that people remember? And do this individually. You got to relentlessly meet people and serve people, so they connect you with the problem that you’re trying to solve.

Lee Kantor: And if you’re having a problem in this area, if this is an area, a weak spot in your business, this is where Business RadioX can really help because we specialize in helping our clients build that authority and reputation, so that they can stop chasing clients and instead have them come to them like a magnet where people are excited and they want to know our clients. And we have systems in place that can help people really separate themselves from all the other people doing work that may look similar, but it’s really not.

The Evolution of Intelligence: How SCIP is Shaping the Future of Data Utilization

April 1, 2025 by angishields

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In this episode of Association Leadership Radio, Lee Kantor is joined by Paul Santilli, CEO of the Strategic Consortium of Intelligence Professionals (SCIP). They discuss SCIP’s mission to promote effective data use for organizational growth and personal development. Paul highlights SCIP’s evolution from a focus on competitive intelligence to encompassing broader disciplines like economic and social intelligence. The conversation covers the impact of COVID-19 on data utilization, the challenges of distinguishing valuable data from noise, and the importance of critical thinking. Paul also emphasizes the role of education and global collaboration in building a robust intelligence community.

Paul-SantilliPaul Santilli is the Chief Executive Officer and Executive Advisory Board Chair Emeritus of the Strategic Consortium of Intelligence Professionals (SCIP) organization and is active in several advisory roles to academia, business, and government organizations.

Paul presents worldwide on Intelligence, Innovation, and Strategy in keynote and executive coaching capacities, and has published numerous papers in industry and academic journals related to Intelligence Modeling, Innovation, Disruption, and Strategy.

He is a recognized thought leader in this space and chairs multiple Executive Customer Councils and Industry Advisory Boards globally.

Paul is also Founder and CEO of Strategence LLC, a company that provides proprietary advisory and business insights & analytics to companies for intelligence-based business growth strategies.

Prior to his current role, Paul was a long-term veteran of Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) and most recently headed up the HPE Worldwide (WW) Industry Intelligence & Strategy Organization for the Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM) Solutions Business. scip-logo

Paul also contributed at Apple Computer in various leadership roles around Quality, Operations and Product Development.

Paul has a Bachelor’s degree in Engineering from the University of Michigan, and a Master’s degree in Engineering and Business from Stanford University.

Connect with Paul on LinkedIn.

What You’ll Learn in This Episode

  • What is SCIP and what they do
  • Why Data and Intelligence is important
  • How SCIP works with individuals and organizations to expand the role of Intelligence
  • Some of the globalization efforts SCIP is doing
  • How to become a part of this “Consortium”

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix.

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios in Atlanta, Georgia. It’s time for Association Leadership Radio. Now here’s your host.

Lee Kantor: Lee Kantor here, another episode of Association Leadership Radio. And this is going to be a good one. Today on the show, we have Paul Santilli, who is the CEO with Strategic Consortium of Intelligence Professionals, SCIP. Welcome, Paul.

Paul Santilli : Thank you Lee. Pleasure to be here.

Lee Kantor: I am so excited to learn what you’re up to. Before we get too far into things, tell us about SCIP. How you serving folks?

Paul Santilli : So SCIP, Strategic Consortium of Intelligence Professionals. We are the world’s largest global intelligence association. We’re a nonprofit community. We have over 25,000 individuals in 120 countries. And our mission is really to promote, develop, share knowledge around data, the use of data, and how data can be transformed into intelligence and insights that can be used to build organizational growth, improve personal development, improve societal issues and things of that nature. So we are an institution that has a lot of thought leadership, that provides that sort of value and content to a greater population.

Lee Kantor: So what was the genesis of the idea? How did this come about?

Paul Santilli : Actually, SCIP’s been around for many years, over 30 years as a nonprofit, and it’s been traditionally in what we call the competitive intelligence platform footprint. Really looking at what are your competitors doing, how are they performing, what are their customers and products and pricing and marketing strategies and all those kinds of things, and use that information then to develop your own competitive positioning and how you can compete better in the marketplace and, and hopefully get your products to sell and gather market share and so forth. Over the last few years, I’ve taken leadership of SCIP. I’ve been affiliated with SCIP for a long time on the board of directors and so forth. But now, as a leadership position with SCIP, I’ve realized the importance of the fact that you have to really go beyond just the competitive intelligence landscape that is forever critical, absolutely critical in any intelligence modeling effort, but we want to build off of that to include other data driven intelligence disciplines, such as economic intelligence and social intelligence and human intelligence, and all the other types of applications anywhere there’s data generated. For example, the electric car gets anywhere from generates anywhere from 4 to 20GB worth of content, terabytes, I should say, of content every day. Now that data that’s being used there is being used by many, many different people downstream. A lot of the advertisers and the manufacturers of the tires and and all of these sorts of things in terms of how they use that data to create a strategy to promote certain elements in your lifestyle, or to promote a business development plan or whatever the case might be. So this use of data is critical and very important for all individuals to really understand how to use that data to create a strategy that can help you and your organization grow.

Lee Kantor: Well, I think your associations more and more important, especially in an age we’re living in now with the with AI and large language models and machine learning, it seems like what you’re doing goes hand in hand with that effort.

Paul Santilli : Yeah, absolutely. See, the the intent here is, I think what’s happened over the last few years, especially with Covid, has really come to make organizations and individuals realize the importance of data. You know, the use of data to digitally transform. You might have used that. Heard that term used before in the industry. Digitally transform your organization to be one by which they use the data to be able to understand customer behaviors. Using data to improve your infrastructure. Using data to improve how you market and price and position your products in the marketplace. And Covid, a lot of organizations because of all the restrictions that were put on on companies and individuals. Many companies failed because they didn’t have this data centric mentality in the organization. Now, from the learnings from that, we’re able to to have a pretty comprehensive understanding of how data can get you into this digitally transformed, 21st century type of a company that is so crucial to be able to compete in today’s world.

Lee Kantor: Now, do you find that we’re getting to the point where so much data is being, um, captured that without a strategy on how to learn from it, it’s kind of you’re just doing something. It sounds like you should be doing. But if you’re not kind of learning from it or connecting dots from it, it’s kind of a silly pursuit, right? Like, if you’re not able to do anything with it, then why are you doing it?

Paul Santilli : Absolutely. And that’s the whole crux of what SCIP is all about. We help individuals understand the fact that the data is there, you can collect it, but it’s how you analyze it and how you use it in order to make it a growth enabler for you and your organization. And you mentioned AI earlier. Um, you know, interestingly, AI has been around for at least 50 years. I took an AI course in college 100 years ago. So that tells you how old this AI has been around, right? The reason why it’s really taken off over the last few years is because of two things. One, the fact that we have the data because we didn’t have the data enough for the models to learn from, and B we have compute power, the compute technology, in order to run these algorithms, you know, very effectively and quickly. So with that now in play, you’re able to have these AI algorithms as as tools in your toolbox to analyze the data, to come up with behaviors and experiences and hopefully get to a point where you can project future situations. We call this scenario planning or futures planning, and understand what the future may hold for a different organization. You know, doing extrapolations and in roadmaps and technology trends, and vertical market trends and things of this nature, and then come up after that, really a prescription of how the organization needs to behave in order to respond to this sort of scenario that’s been painted by AI.

Lee Kantor: Now, how do you help or advise people to kind of separate signal from noise and to know what are the metrics that matter? Because there’s so much data, it might be easy to see something, but it may not be the thing that really matters. Like just because you can capture something easily or you can count it doesn’t mean that it’s, you know, worth counting. Like, how do you is that an area that you help your members with?

Paul Santilli : Well, without a doubt. I mean, it’s, you know, I call it trying to extract the golden nuggets of information from that vast population of noise out there. And if you look at different sources, I mean, social sources, for example, has a tremendous amount of noise. But there are golden nuggets you can extract around customer sentiment and behaviors and things of that nature, uh, structured data that comes out of, um, you know, corporate environments or, or public domain content. There’s always information to pull from that. And again, the tools you use and the way you’re able to interpret the content that these tools generate the content from are really the way that you need to do that. And the key to this is employing not only the technology around AI and all the other sophisticated knowledge management tools out there, but it’s also the human intelligence element that’s a very critical component to help eliminate bias and help eliminate hallucinations in your AI algorithm and help eliminate, you know, the the the trends that are strictly data centric when in fact society has accepted a different perspective. They may not be representative of the factual data that comes out of out of the AI information. Many times in history, we have instances where the societal acceptance of a perspective is what dictates the future trends, and that may not be based on the actual data that comes out of the research. So you have to be able to differentiate and know which one do you want to use as the data source for your strategy and growth? Uh, opportunity for you and your company now?

Lee Kantor: Yeah, absolutely. And I think it’s so important to have this knowledge and the ability to think critically about all of this because it’s it’s permeating every aspect of our, our world right now. And if you don’t like if we can’t agree on certain things as facts, it’s hard to have conversations about data. And, um, and the importance of it and what’s true and what’s not true and what’s a hallucination? What’s not a hallucination? If we can’t all agree with this, it gets really challenging.

Paul Santilli : And it’s that’s, you know, that’s a whole nother podcast episode that’s probably at least two hours long, to be honest with you, Lee. Uh, I talk in this topic quite often, and, uh, it is certainly a challenge to, uh, What I like to call the the intelligence professionals out there. Um, this expanded perspective of using data around all types of things that are intelligence based. You know, competitive, as I mentioned, with all the other types of intelligence, even intelligence and sustainability and social responsibility. This is something that SCIP is active upon and using and educating individuals and organizations how to use your data and intelligence to create what we like to call, uh, a consortium for the betterment of people and planet. How do you use this data to to improve your infrastructure, to improve societal, uh, challenges and behaviors and things like that? And the, the, the aspect around SCIP is really these individuals who understand the need of intelligence. And also SCIP is comprised of experts in the field, people who understand and have the tools to be able to analyze this. So we are a consortium of this intelligence, thought leadership and intelligence subject matter experts that are able to educate and train and show people how to use data in order to create this better environment we’re trying to get to.

Lee Kantor: Now, under your leadership, you mentioned you’ve kind of, um, made the tent larger, maybe, and or including people in other areas in other industries that maybe weren’t first part of this.

Paul Santilli : That’s absolutely yes. We call this expanded perspective. What I like to call the intelligence ecosystem. It’s really that expansion of all things generated from data. And so this again applies to many different applications. But we’ve not only expanded the reach of where data can take us and intelligence can take us, but we’ve also expanded ourselves significantly in the global sense. And what I mean by that, we’ve expanded our major events that we have around around the world. We used to be primarily North American focused. We’re now in Europe, Asia, Africa, um, putting one in South America, uh, Japan, so forth and so on. So we’ve expanded our international conferences, but we’ve also put together what I, what I call these intelligence centers of excellence, iQOS. These are regional communities that are extensions of Skype that reside all over the globe to talk about the regional data and intelligence needs and challenges. How does the intelligence and data management and the maturity of the intelligence model exist over in Africa versus Indonesia versus, you know, Romania versus Silicon Valley? And as you can imagine, the maturity levels between those areas are going to be very, very different. So it’s not a one size fits all in the intelligence business. The the having these intelligence centers of excellence all over the globe allows us to get a footprint of how the intelligence model behaves in these other regions so that we collect the information from all these regions. And now we can disseminate best practices to everybody so that everyone can get up to speed, and the learning curve becomes that much faster for those organizations and countries that have a very low maturity model, for example.

Lee Kantor: Now, since doing this effort and expanding the participants as well as the reach, have you had those kind of serendipitous connecting the dots that maybe no one had connected because there hadn’t been that many disparate individuals doing, you know, disparate things all in one place now, but now they have kind of a, a common playbook that maybe they can all, you know, there’s now a more common language that you’re you’re connecting the dots between people that maybe hadn’t really maybe they had been siloed previously.

Paul Santilli : Yeah. So I referenced these intelligence centers of excellence. We started this a little over a year ago. Uh, we we kicked it off with eight locations around the globe. We currently have 22, and we’re going to probably have 30 or so in the next 3 to 4 months. That’s how much traction we’re getting in the international community. So these are areas that are hearing what we propose and what we want to do and are in dire need of being able to understand the value of data in today’s environment, especially around, you know, countries around Africa, countries of Southeast Asia. These are emerging markets that really need to have a better understanding of how to use data. Now we coupled that also with what we call our affiliate program. Now our affiliates are partnerships with other international and local um intelligence organizations that have a similar but different sort of intelligence mission and focus. For example, there’s there’s um, several of them in Africa we’ve dealt with where we only US based, um, intelligence organization that has partnered on a, on a grand scale with a number of different African intelligence communities. We have intelligence relationships and affiliates with several different universities around the world who are helping us develop our educational content that we put together. Um, so these affiliates have, have are starting to fill in the gaps in the overall intelligence ecosystem model that I painted and are really helping us to become much more broad in our intelligence applications. As I mentioned from this, uh, data centric perspective that I painted.

Lee Kantor: Now, I would imagine that in certain places they’re just hungry for this type of interaction and this type of education and this type of sharing. It must be so rewarding to be able to give these people a place to go and a community to become part of where where everybody is kind of talking the same language and really passionate about the same, uh, things.

Paul Santilli : It’s without a doubt. And, you know, there’s one thing to build an organization, but to do it for the right reasons and to have a, a, a, a, um, global impact, uh, and have an impact on societal behaviors and organizational behaviors. And underdeveloped countries like we’re working now with Africa, uh, is truly rewarding. And I think that’s the real value you get from this. It’s not only the, you know, the ability to create a strategy for your business grows better and you make more money and so forth. But it’s also to help those organizations that are underdeveloped in infrastructure, you know, helping them use data to understand, you know, what is needed to put sanitation systems or water water cleanliness system or help to, you know, eliminate, uh, the destruction of native native habitat and so forth and so on. These are very rewarding things that are part of the model to use data and intelligence, as I say, for the betterment of people and planet. So it is very, very rewarding in that sense.

Lee Kantor: So who should become a member? Who are the people that you want in this ecosystem? And you mentioned a variety of groups and industries and and organizations. But who should consider being becoming a member of SIP?

Paul Santilli : Yeah. So the beauty of this is, you know, the question to ask is what individuals or who are the individuals that use data to make informed decisions and to create intelligence to make informed decisions in the workplace or even in their individual personal lifestyle or whatever. And it’s hard to say hard to find somebody who doesn’t or shouldn’t use data. And that’s the whole context here is the fact that, you know, we call these I call these people intelligence professionals. Well, they’re more of people who can understand the value of data and how to use that not only to you can grow your your organization, but to provide a skill set for yourself as an individual, to be more knowledgeable and better equipped with tools and the way you look at data and analyze information, the logic applied and the intelligence you can derive from that, and how to implement and take action on these things to make a change rather than, you know, sitting on your hands and kind of waiting for everyone else to do it. So the door is open. We have a very broad membership community portfolio you can join for free and be on the receiving end of a lot of very valuable content, or for a nominal fee. Every year you can get access to literally thousands of pieces of assets webinars, papers, podcasts, all different kinds of things we generate that can be used as, um, content to equip you with the knowledge that you need. Plus the training. We offer very broad education program and access to workshops and webinars and and all kinds of things in that space to get you more equipped. As you know, again, it’s adding the tools in your toolbox and increasing your brand as an individual with the intelligence knowledge that will help you, uh, be better in industry and in life in general.

Lee Kantor: So in a given business, um, who is typically the like, what’s the title of the person who is the member in an organization?

Paul Santilli : Well, it could be anywhere from a data analyst. Uh, there’s, there’s people who are in the competitive intelligence role in different industries, but it can also be folks in marketing and sales and product development and strategy. You can have mid-level and upper level management who are looking at supply chains and logistics and, and even all the way up to C-suite. And we have a C-suite program in development right now, um, an advanced Education degree program in intelligence and data management. This is something we’re developing because it’s so important to have the leadership of your organization be data driven and understand the data requirements that organizations must have, that digital transformation mindset that organizations must have in order to to create a culture that uses data within all of its decision making context. And once you have that at the top level, you know, the the trickle down effect within the organization that much more efficient and more usable for other people to then gain that knowledge and make it a priority in their everyday efforts.

Lee Kantor: Now, what about for the young people out there? Uh, is there a career path or a, um, maybe a like what? What would be their major? What would be their, um, kind of the direction they should go in in order to really, uh, learn more and get more involved in data and intelligence.

Paul Santilli : There’s a number of, uh, universities around the world that offer intelligence, uh, career path intelligence curriculum, I should say. Um, one of them we partner with, they’re an affiliate as well as a provider of curriculum for our education program. And I’m going to give a plug here to Mercyhurst University out of Pennsylvania. They’re very much advanced. And one of the world leaders in the intelligence development, business, community development, education and curriculum. So for young people getting into the into this environment and getting into this industry, it’s really you can start it at the, at the education, you know, school level. And then you can take that as a part of SCIP to help you nurture it along within your career all the way through to, you know, senior management type levels of applications. So there’s really a a groundswell, but there’s also an executive swell that’s happening simultaneously. And when you have both of those growing, you know, they’re going to then encompass the entire, you know, Ecosystem of of of the range of people that are affected then by in organizations by this whole data centric perspective.

Lee Kantor: Now, do you have any advice for other association leaders that would like to expand the reach and expand the types of members of an organization? That was probably a big lift, and it was probably took some negotiation to even get the board and everybody kind of on the same page of, hey, we used to do this, but now let’s aim higher. Let’s think about this more holistically. Um, can you share some strategies or some ways you were able to kind of get everybody on board with this?

Paul Santilli : Certainly challenges and there’s setbacks, but then there’s, you know, two steps forward, one step back, sometimes three steps back. It depends. But it all begins with a vision. It’s all begins with how you want to paint the world. And once the you know, from a leadership standpoint, when you have the vision, the next part of your your, your responsibility as a leader is to garner the troops around to follow that vision and support them every step of the way to achieve the, you know, not only the trajectory, but to achieve that vision over time and that that involves trust and and support and behaviors. Um, that’s the sort of thing that I, that I think is a critical element for anybody trying to take an existing organization, um, and kind of expand the box or get out of the box to create a different environment. Today’s world is so small, and the data has made it that way, such that if you try to stay within some sort of a niche geographic or product or services niche, I think you’re going to be limiting yourself in terms of the longevity and your ability to compete.

Paul Santilli : Now there’s exceptions, of course, but I’m talking about, you know, the the world being so small, the globalization effort is, is really, I think, where there’s opportunities and that’s happening all around us. Mergers and acquisitions and, and, you know, different perspectives to being taken on from a, an international, um, business relationship standpoint and, and all of the things happening in this context. I think the the ability to bring in partners, you know, the consortium we’re building has grown significantly over the last two years. And I’m very, very excited and happy about that. But to me, this is still scratching the surface. I’m trying to create what’s called what I call intelligence gravity, where as you build more and more of an intelligence consortium, you tend to draw more and more intelligence related entities into your consortium such that you have this gravity effect. And I think organizations in general have to really reach out and try to determine how do they affect this sort of gravity behavior of other organizations to build that sort of consortium model to have an impact, especially in the areas that we’re trying to focus our energies at.

Lee Kantor: So if somebody wants to learn more about SCIP or connect with you, what’s the website? What’s the best way to connect?

Paul Santilli : Yeah, obviously LinkedIn profile, you can reach out to me by all means. I’m more than happy to have a have a frank discussion with anybody who’s interested, but our website’s websites. Wwe. Has all the content there you can join for free if you’d like. Or as I say, you can pay a nominal fee and get all the great content, literally thousands of pieces of information and access to a ton of other content that can really help you develop as an individual and also help you develop the tools needed to help your organization grow and be a part of the consortium. So that was how I would recommend reaching out and connecting.

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

Paul Santilli : Lee. I appreciate the opportunity. I had a great time and uh, hopefully, uh, you know, we can make a difference out here. So thank you again for the opportunity.

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

 

Tagged With: SCIP, Strategic Consortium of Intelligence Professionals

BRX Pro Tip: Two AI Prompts for Better Sales Prospecting

April 1, 2025 by angishields

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BRX Pro Tip: Two AI Prompts for Better Sales Prospecting

Stone Payton: And we are back with Business RadioX Pro Tips. Lee Kantor and Stone Payton here with you. Lee, I know you’ve really been diving into AI, artificial intelligence. What’s the latest, man? And how can we apply it?

Lee Kantor: I think that one of the things that every business leader should be doing nowadays is playing around with AI. I think that one of the places you play around with AI are, you practice, and you use different prompts, and then really test the limits to what AI can be doing for you in any given area.

Lee Kantor: Here’s a couple of AI prompts that might be able to help you when it comes to sales prospecting. These are power user level prompts. This is designed to help you dig a little deeper, and maybe really understand the level of detail you have to put into a prompt in order for the prompt and the AI to help you get the outcome you desire. So, it’s important that you keep that in mind that prompting, it’s not a Google search. It’s more like you’re trying to get a friend or an expert to help you get what you want. So, in order for them to help you or give you the outcome you want, you have to be able to ask it specifically exactly what you need.

Lee Kantor: So, if you’re serious about using AI to supercharge your sales prospecting, try this prompt. Number one, in quotes, the word analyze. “Analyze.” And then, in parentheses, your LinkedIn profile, your website or recent content. So, you put the word analyze, and you put in the actual URLs, either LinkedIn profile or website or recent content of, and then you put your prospect’s name there. And then, you ask the AI to identify their key business challenges, goals, and pain points.

Lee Kantor: So, when you ask AI and you give it the data it needs, so you include that LinkedIn profile, that website, the recent content of that specific human being, and then you ask the AI to identify what they think that the key business challenges, goals and pain points that this person is having are, it should be able to give you some information that you’re going to be able to draft a compelling, highly personalized cold outreach message, and you can even ask it to.

Lee Kantor: So, once AI has given you that general information about your prospect, you can ask it. You can say, “Draft me a compelling, highly personalized cold outreach message that demonstrates how my business coaching services can help them achieve their specific goals.” And then, you should tell it. You have to say things like this, keep the tone friendly, or formal, or funny, or warm or whatever personality you have. And then, you should also include, “And include a clear non-pushy call to action.” Like the more specific you are in these areas, the better response you’re going to get. So, that’s prompt number one. I would try that with a prospect, see what you get.

Lee Kantor: Number two is ask the AI to analyze the following data from my past coaching clients, and then put a bunch of testimonials, case studies, sales data that you have. Then have the AI go through that, and you ask it to identify common success patterns, identify demographics and psychographics of my most profitable and coachable clients. And then from that, generate a refined ideal client profile and a new outreach strategy tailored based on these findings. Do that, you’re going to get interesting results. Keep tweaking, keep playing. But every week, you should be getting into an AI platform and playing around and asking it to do stuff for you.

Unlocking the Secrets to Sustainable Business Growth in Office Technology

March 31, 2025 by angishields

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In this episode of Greater Perimeter Business Radio, host Ramzi Daklouche interviews Phil Van Gelder, co-founder of AOT Office Technologies. Phil shares his unconventional journey into the office technology industry, initially aspiring to be a professional athlete and later a broadcast journalist. He discusses the founding of AOT Office Technologies, which provides enterprise print management solutions to small and medium-sized businesses. The conversation covers the importance of hiring the right people, customer retention, and the challenges of marketing. Phil emphasizes the value of focus, perseverance, and building strong client relationships for sustainable business growth.

AOT-logo

Phil-Van-GelderPhil Van Gelder, co-founder of AOT Office Technologies, oversees sales and new business development.

AOT is an Atlanta-based, locally owned and operated, office equipment and automation company. The founding members of AOT have over 150 combined years of industry experience.

Since our inception, we have witnessed exponential growth throughout the entire USA, serving more than 1,600 clients in 44 states. The success of AOT is not derived from a secret formula or unmatched wit, but rather, simple principles that continue to not only produce results, but a world-class customer experience.

AOT is focused on offering powerful solutions, in really simple ways, around these commercial technologies:

  • Copiers and MFPs: We work with clients that have one machine, and others that have a thousand
  • Printers and Managed Print Services: We take the headache of managing these units off your plate
  • Software: Print management software, document retention and workflow software, intelligent scanning
  • Wide Format Printers: We bring construction and engineering to life with these units; up to 48” wide
  • Thermal Printers: We provide the label and shipping printers to the e-commerce, logistics and warehouse industries
  • Audio/Visual: Interactive touch panels, video conferencing, noise cancellation, and microphones/speakers

What makes AOT different?

  1. We hire service and support staff, before salespeople. We know we’re good enough to earn your business, but we want to be great enough to keep it! You’re not going to call us to tell us we’re doing a great job. You’re calling because you have a problem. We never want a client to wait for their need to be addressed. Staffing to that need is critical to differentiating our business.
  2. We are debt-free. Operating a business that holds a strong liquidity position is vital to the longevity of that business. Furthermore, we see it as a responsibility to our clients. We need to have every element of our business fully-stocked and ready, so that nothing is ever delayed due to limitations in our credit worthiness.
  3. We have size and scale. We are a dealership, which means we buy our products from the manufacturer and then sell and service that product to and for our clients. Our size allows us to have incredible influence with our OEM partners, helping to ensure industry-leading prices and top-notch support. We believe our clients deserve that.
    We operate AOT with a mindset that, “Bigger is not better. Better is better.” It’s not that we don’t want to grow, but rather, we want to make sure that we’re growing our business in a fundamentally sound way. That requires profit and reinvestment, not just more zeros on the topline.

Follow AOT on LinkedIn and Facebook.

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix.

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: Broadcasting live from the Greater Perimeter. It’s time for Greater Perimeter Business Radio. Now, here’s your host.

Ramzi Daklouche: Welcome to Greater Perimeter Business RadioX, where we highlight the innovators and leaders driving business forward. I’m your host, Ramzi Daklouche. Today’s episode is sponsored by VR Business Sales of Atlanta, trusted advisors and business sales, mergers and acquisitions. With over 20 years of real world experience. VR helped business owners maximize value and exit on their terms. Learn more at world.com or call (678) 470-8675. Joining us today is Phil Van Gelder, co-founder of AOT Office Technologies. Phil leads sales and business development for a team serving over 1600 clients nationwide with smart, scalable technology solutions. Welcome, Phil. How are you?

Phil Van Gelder: I’m good. Thanks. I feel like now I’ve got to live up to what you just said. Oh, I feel they. What did they say? Your reputation precedes you. I’m like, wow, this sounds a lot better than I ever imagined.

Ramzi Daklouche: So it’s really not 1600. It’s like more than 12. Round, 1200 rounding up. Fantastic. Well, listen, Phil, you’ve been in this business for 20 years. What originally brought you into Office Technologies and how has that journey evolved?

Phil Van Gelder: Well, I would probably tell you that I didn’t dream about doing this when I was a little kid. I didn’t fall asleep thinking, oh, if I could just sell copiers or printers in life.

Ramzi Daklouche: You were not playing with printers when you were young?

Phil Van Gelder: Not so much, I thought. I thought I was going to be a pro athlete, much like any young guy, and fall asleep in my uniform and dream about big money and lots of opportunity. I actually came out of school with no, no real professional endeavor that I was going to go do I. I didn’t have anything defined for myself. I got a I got a degree in broadcast journalism, so I was going to be on TV. That was kind of my goal.

Ramzi Daklouche: Well, you’re on radio now. You use your talent. Use your talent.

Phil Van Gelder: Uh, so. So this was not at all what I thought I was going to get into. Didn’t ever take a job in the industry. I found out it was terrible for family life. And it was important for me that I was going to be able to be available to my future family and my future kids, etc. but I had a buddy that was in sales technology sales, which I found out was copiers and printers or print management, and he said, hey, we’re looking for salespeople. Would you be interested in this? I said, well, I don’t know anything about this. I mean, I can spell it, but that’s about as far as it goes. And he says, come on in. He said, do an interview. Did an interview, still didn’t fully understand the capacity of what we were trying to sell. But I learned that everybody I was talking to was making money. And I thought, okay, I’m money motivated. Like, this is an opportunity where the harder I work, the luckier I get. That was my introduction to copier sales 20 years ago, as soon as I got out of school and never done anything different.

Ramzi Daklouche: Same company, same place, same everything.

Phil Van Gelder: Not so. I came right out of school, worked for an Esop company that had about 250 employees at the time. They were probably about $40 million a year and enjoyed that. It created some golden handcuffs. I learned a lot about how the intricacies of a business works and what motivates people to stick around, but ultimately, you hit your cap pretty quickly in an environment like that. And I got recruited away by Xerox, which was the biggest brand in the industry at the time. Big opportunity from a sales leadership standpoint and had really grown to love the industry, figured out how to make money. Not just that you could, but the the way the sausage was made figured out. Okay, this is how I can lead a team and perhaps help more people do what I’ve already gotten the chance to do. And I found out really quickly I was not cut out for corporate America. Um, I wasn’t good at the bureaucracy, the red tape, the politics. Uh, it was way I’m more of a black and white person. Um, and it was, it was far more about, are you pleasing the right people? Are you making decisions based on maybe a publicly traded shareholder or what this senior manager wants? And as a VP, I still felt kind of hamstrung.

Phil Van Gelder: And, um, so I got two guys together that I really trusted. And we spent about two years talking of starting a business. And the culmination of that ended up being Aot. And we were going to buy somebody. So we said, hey, you know what? It’s a lot easier to just to acquire a small business, invest our know how into it and blow it up really quickly. Um, it’s math, not magic. And a lot of small business owners think their business is worth more than it really is. We went through due diligence about a half dozen times with different companies throughout the southeast. Um, we were coming from Indianapolis. We wanted to get away from the snow. And, um, the last guy we looked at was here in Atlanta, and we didn’t come to an agreement on that. We just said, hey, you know, this is probably a tale of two cities. We’re going to go our separate ways. And we decided then and there we were just going to start from scratch. So that was a little over ten years ago, uh, Aot became a reality with no customers, no revenue. All my money in the middle of the table and a 50% pay cut. We said, there you go. Let’s go chase the American.

Ramzi Daklouche: Do it right. Yeah.

Phil Van Gelder: No skeletons in the closet. But also, uh, no money in the bank.

Ramzi Daklouche: So did you have kids, young kids to deal with at that time? Because that’s usually the worry about small business startups.

Phil Van Gelder: Uh, it’s definitely a motivation I had, uh, I’ve got three total girls and a wife. And at the time we had two of our girls and my wife was due about three months later with our third and our final. And, um, there’s nothing that makes you throw the covers off and get out of bed like people wanting a paycheck every two weeks. And for people that are depending on you to provide. And so, um, you get a couple sleeves of business cards and, uh, your partners together and you say, let’s go tell the world about who we are.

Ramzi Daklouche: Great. Later in the in the broadcast, we’re going to talk about, you know, uh, you know, what kind of help can you offer and lead with, you know, for small businesses, because I think it’s very important that, you know, at some point people need to know what does it take, what’s at stake, and what does it take to really succeed in small business? Because it’s very hard. It’s not as easy as people make it out to be, sometimes easier to be corporate, uh, employee. Even though if you don’t like it, then a small business. But the small business is very rewarding as well.

Phil Van Gelder: I think if people knew exactly what was going to be involved, they’d never do it. It was like, yeah, no way.

Ramzi Daklouche: Yeah. So for those new to Aot, what exactly do you offer and what type of businesses do you serve?

Phil Van Gelder: Great question. The simplest way I would tell you is we offer enterprise print management solutions. Now, that’s even a fancier way than I would probably tell somebody. But we sell and service commercial office equipment, things like copiers, printers and audio visual solutions. Um, we like to affectionately say that everybody needs what we sell, and no one likes dealing with it. Uh, it’s, uh, a generic but also a requisite part of any kind of business environment where people are putting black and colored dots on white paper. Uh, the illustration I’ll use a lot of times is an average piece of paper is worth a penny or less. It’s not a valuable commodity. However, you print a contract on that piece of paper, it could be worth $100,000 to your business.

Ramzi Daklouche: I never thought of it this way, but yeah, that’s absolutely right.

Phil Van Gelder: And when you when you need somebody to sign on that dotted line. I know DocuSign exists and we use that a lot too for contracts and things like that. But if you print a contract out and you need somebody to sign that contract, that can be a life changing amount of money to your business. And when you need that printed out, you got to have dependable equipment and company providing that to you so that you can get it out on time. So that’s probably the most simple way I could describe what we do is help move and manage information around people’s offices on a daily basis.

Ramzi Daklouche: Great. And what size business do you guys serve? Like what’s your is there a sweet spot or you serve an office of five to office of a thousand 2000. How does it work? Sure.

Phil Van Gelder: I tell people I use an analogy or metaphor. Um, everyone likes cake, and a three layer cake is really good because there’s usually icing in between each layer. But when you think about that three layer cake, the bottom is probably the people that have the smallest type of business, right? And the people spending the least amount of money will waste the most amount of your time. Those are those 0 to 5 employee type practices. Um, they tend to stress a lot about things and they can kind of slow. They oftentimes can slow down the sales process. The top layer of that cake is the enterprise. Let’s talk chick fil A, UPS, Delta, uh, Home Depot. We’re never going to go after those kinds of people. Those people want the sun, moon and the stars and they don’t want to pay anything for it. And it takes a cast of thousands to support an organization like that. We love to be in that middle layer of the cake. That’s the small to medium sized business owner. Hopefully they’re locally based so that we can shake hands, press flesh and be able to service them. They understand and appreciate value because they’re doing the same thing for their client. Their value proposition is probably not hey, I’m the cheapest, so you could just go with me. They understand they need to make a profit in order to support their organization. And we love partnering with people that do that if they have locations across the country. Fantastic. The DNA profile of that is paper intensive environments. Typically, if you want to cut something out of the market, I would say it’s that 25 to 500 employee organization that’s paper intensive, that’s printing contracts information on a daily basis.

Ramzi Daklouche: That’s awesome. Very good. So most companies, as I was reading a little bit more about your company, most companies hire a lot of salespeople and figure out the rest later. It seems to me you guys got it wrong or they got it wrong. So you hire. I mean, you really go after service and support team first and then you hire salespeople after that. Explain that to me because that’s different, you know? Yeah. Way of doing business, I don’t know.

Phil Van Gelder: So, um, I’m a big baseball fan. Now, in this part of the country with Atlanta and the Braves, um, I’m a Dodger fan. I was born and raised in Los Angeles.

Ramzi Daklouche: I stopped right now.

Phil Van Gelder: I was just going to say the Dodgers are a big deal to me. So I’m going to use a baseball analogy. Sure. Uh, the the evil empire were the New York Yankees of the 90s, and they would overpay for all the greatest talent. And by overpaying for that talent, they’d have a stacked lineup. But they won World Series by doing it. Now, it’s not always the way to do it. We have taken a similar approach. Bigger is not better. Better is better. I can hire 12, 15, 20 different sales reps, and the majority of the time you’re going to have a bottom third that’s underperforming that you either need to performance improve or you need to get out of the business. You’re going to have that top performer who’s that top third that’s really producing, paying for themselves, making lots of money, and they’re happy in the same breath. You got that middle third that’s kind of hiding there hoping you don’t get. They don’t get called out or they don’t have to try and step up and meet the demand. And we just made a conscious choice that we’re going to we’re going to make sure that we get the best of the best, and we don’t need as many people to get the results we want, because we’ve got that talent and we’re willing to overpay for it a little bit. And by doing that, you get a really predictable outcome. It helps you manage your cash flow better. Your business ultimately grows, and then as a byproduct of that or bifurcating that, you have the opportunity to reinvest in a greater capacity with your service and support people. Because I’m not having an SG&A or sales expense line item on my business that is sucked up by 20 or 30% more salespeople than I really need.

Ramzi Daklouche: Yeah, there’s a couple of things you said that are very, very important. Because really, if you just keep a big group of people selling for you or whatever, whatever department, and you don’t kind of weed out the people that take up a lot of your time, just like the customers that take up a lot of time. Sometimes we all have that. You end up spending a lot of time on, on stuff that you really shouldn’t be spending time, right. Unproductive stuff as as the owner of a company.

Phil Van Gelder: 100%. And it becomes sideways energy. So we are a very renewal based business. So our contracts are typically 3 to 5 years long. Um, so although you’re signing up in a transactional format, you’re signing a contract, you’re implementing a solution, um, it becomes a marriage. I am then tied to that business for three, 4 or 5 years.

Ramzi Daklouche: Right.

Phil Van Gelder: So the expression I like to use a lot is we are good enough to earn your business, but we’re great enough to keep it. And the whole idea there is, everyone’s going to tell you that they’re going to provide great customer service, because that’s how they differentiate supposedly over that 3 to 5 year period. I get the opportunity to prove that to you, and you’re going to find out whether or not, because I can guarantee you over a 3 to 5 year period, something’s going to go wrong. And hopefully we get the chance to prove just how good we are.

Ramzi Daklouche: And in industry, you can measure it. If they renew after three five years, you can measure that. So you churn numbers probably if they’re low that means you’re doing something right. If people want to can’t wait to get out of that contract, you’re doing something wrong.

Phil Van Gelder: So we maintain about a somewhere between a 95 and 96% retention rate.

Ramzi Daklouche: That’s incredible.

Phil Van Gelder: Um, and even then, a lot of that, uh, a lot of that washout or attrition is really attributed to acquisition, divestiture, uh, going out of business or something like that, a true organic loss of client just because they went with someone else. Uh, does not happen terribly often.

Ramzi Daklouche: Yeah. You talked also about finding the best people, which is in, uh, small business because they’re competing with big business sometimes. And their employees, uh, it’s very difficult. How do you guys go about that? Because having the right people really makes a difference for a small business. Very much so.

Phil Van Gelder: Uh, I’d be on a beach somewhere if I had the perfect answer to that, because I’d just turn around and sell that same practice to everybody else. Uh, I would tell you, it’s it’s a science. It’s really more of an art. Um, the best way I could describe it would be higher hard and give people reasons to stay. If I do enough good vetting on the front end of things I know I’m acquiring, or I’m partnering with the right person and they know what they’re getting into. And in the same breath, once they’re on board, you’ve got to do everything you can to ensure and help them understand they’re a valuable component to the team or the overall outcome.

Ramzi Daklouche: Right.

Phil Van Gelder: And that you are putting things in place that create an opportunity for them beyond what they were originally hired. And the best, the most concise way I can say that is we have this expression we use internally. If I lie to you, I expect you to quit. Because if you lie to me, I’ll fire you. And the whole idea there is we have to have a base or core level of trust that operates beyond all of our relationship. And the reason I say that is if if you sit down across from me, I know you’re not here for spiritual reasons. You’re here to make money. This is a job for you. You’re trying to feed your family. You’re trying to pay your mortgage, whatever the case may be. And I’m hiring you for this particular role. But then beyond that, I know you’re going to want to make more money. You’re going to get promoted. You want to have more responsibility? Potentially. Some people have ambitions, some don’t. But if I know you want to move your career forward, you want to make more money. I’m hoping you do it here with me. And so if I make you a promise that if you accomplish X, Y, and Z, you’re going to get this opportunity.

Ramzi Daklouche: Yeah.

Phil Van Gelder: If I don’t follow through on that and you do the things I’ve asked you or told you to do, you’re never going to trust me. So you should leave because we’ve broken that promise. And in the same breath, I know that if we make a mistake, that’s okay. Let’s own up to it. We’ll spend a $10,000 to prove a $1,000 point. As long as you’re honest with me, as soon as you tell me. Oh, yeah, I took care of that. Don’t worry about it. But then I find out that that wasn’t the case. Now, I can never trust you further, with more responsibility, more money, and more stake within my business. So as a result, it’s a two way street. And when people have that level of clarity, they understand that everything you’ve told them is the honest truth. And everything they’re telling you is the honest truth. We’re pulling on the rope to service our customers as best we can.

Ramzi Daklouche: I do believe in any role. It doesn’t matter small company, medium company or enterprise. Clarity is very, very important. Sometimes it’s lacking, but the clarity is really very important to kind of get people to work as a team, right.

Phil Van Gelder: Oh my.

Ramzi Daklouche: Goodness. We want everything else. We want money.

Phil Van Gelder: Yeah. We went through this book at church. It was called I said this. You heard that. Oh yeah. And it’s like the whole concept of communication is like, we may sit here and we both nod and say, oh yeah, I got it. And they walk away with two different messages. And if that’s the case, it’s again a tale of two cities. Those, those will never meet.

Ramzi Daklouche: Now tells you why I love to do this radio broadcast. Because it’s very clear. We listen to each other. We’re actually looking at each other, listening to each other. So very good. Okay. How do you market your business? Because it seems like you guys have a lot of competition. I mean, this is very competitive market. I mean, it is. Yeah.

Phil Van Gelder: Um, it’s difficult. Uh, so everything, anything and everything we do is organic. It’s all internal. Uh, we don’t outsource any of that business development, any of the marketing, messaging, communication that we, um, cultivate or generate on behalf of Aot. It all comes within our four walls. Um, I don’t know if that’s by default or by design, but the reason that that’s important to us is that there’s a chain of custody, that if we’re making a promise or a commitment or we’re messaging something to a client, it didn’t come from somebody else. It comes from our ability and our know how industry knowledge to be able to deliver on what we’re telling. Um, the if I could give you an idea of how we market, it’s primarily done through our salespeople. Our salespeople are involved in their community. They’re involved in associations, um, particular groups, whether that’s networking or, uh, closed environments where people have strategic focuses or best practice sharing. But the best way I could probably analogize it would be what I described a little bit off air before we began today, which was so much of our industry is push marketing. People are knocking on doors, sending emails, making phone calls, trying to tell this customer or this prospect, hey, you want to do business with me? Call me back. This is a good time. Let’s talk about this now.

Ramzi Daklouche: I have something that’s gonna, you know, give you 70% growth in your business.

Phil Van Gelder: I’m gonna cut cost and increase efficiency.

Ramzi Daklouche: These text messages and emails all day long.

Phil Van Gelder: Yeah, yeah, we like to say, hey, there’s more sizzle than there is steak, but you got to call me back. This is a great thing. That’s push marketing. And we’ve just tried to develop and create and we have to do that. That’s a requisite part of the business. We have tried as best we can to create a pull marketing strategy when it comes to doing business with Aot. And what that means is you’re watching us from a distance, hopefully in some facet or capacity, and you notice those guys, those folks there are doing something different or they’re doing it differently. And this is all derived from a podcast I listened to many, many, many years ago, which it described. The human brain has a very difficult time determining when something is better than something else. So if I tell you, oh, you know, the the best steak in town, you’ve got to go here. Well, that’s my subjective opinion. Your ability to decipher whether that steak is better or this steak over at location B is better, you’re going to struggle with that. But if I tell you how one restaurant or one product and service is different than another, the human brain has a really easy time determining or deciding that’s different. And that’s what we’ve attempted to do with our marketing, is not just telling you we’re better than everybody else, because that’s a really indecipherable thing. But if I tell you how we’re different, people can hold on to that quicker.

Ramzi Daklouche: Yeah, I think I got to go back to one thing that works for small businesses. And I hear a lot about, you know, people waiting by the phone or making phone cold calls. I was talking to somebody today. I’m doing cold calls. What do you get out of it? Well, you know, it’s probably eventually work. It doesn’t work anymore, right? People want face to face, especially in small business. Sure. And they try to impact the world where they all have to try to impact your zip code, how to impact, you know, just a block around your house if you can, before you try to impact the world. So there’s a lot there. And I believe networking. And you said that, you know, closed group networking or networking in general, right. I think for small business to medium business is very, very important to do.

Phil Van Gelder: You got to create zealots for your cause. Um, everybody’s so wrapped up in what they’re trying to do. I mean, you know, they go to a networking event and sure givers or gainers and that kind of thing. But the reality of the situation is everyone is there thinking about their business, their practice, their focus.

Ramzi Daklouche: Yeah.

Phil Van Gelder: And it’s very difficult to create zealots for what you’re trying to penetrate the market with. But the more that you can create, um, that swirl, that, that centrifugal force that pulls people in to going, hey, I don’t even know if these people need what you offer, but you just approach things the right way. I got to at least introduce you guys. You guys are. You guys are gals. You are two great professionals. I think you should really spend time together, because I think there’d be a mutual benefit. That and you can do that all you want on your own cold calling, handshaking, etc. but if you all of a sudden have 35, 40 people in a group that believe the same thing about you, your chances of success go way up.

Ramzi Daklouche: And even going to a group, take for example, you know, chamber or BNR or any of these groups, if you just go and show up for that 45 hour. You’re wasting your time. It’s like going to church but not never praying again, that I go to church on Sunday. Well, what else do you do? I really don’t. You’re not going to get anything out of it.

Phil Van Gelder: My Bible study teacher likes to mean on Tuesday mornings. He likes to say no one’s getting changed in 52 hours a year.

Ramzi Daklouche: No it’s not. You know, some of us listen to that. You have to put the time into it. You got to go meet one on one, talk to people, let them know exactly what you do, understand why they do the things you do. Because the experience that they got to remember, it’s not the like you said, I’m going to remember you because the experience, you know, you provide and all that stuff. So awesome. Very good. So with 1600 plus clients, what’s your approach to customer retention on ongoing service.

Phil Van Gelder: From a sales perspective? So one thing that I don’t know how people necessarily divide these responsibilities up within their organization. When we talk about sales, sales is all encompassing. So if I acquire a client, let’s say the average sales rep has 150 to 200 clients at their servicing. In that scenario, they’re acquiring that client they are then managing and doing ongoing support for that relationship in that 3 to 5 year period. It’s not, hey, we set it and forget it. I don’t I don’t hunt and kill and then throw it over the fence to an account management team like that. Customer service experience is really the tip of the spear as that salesperson, because maintaining that relationship allows that renewal to be that much easier. So I would say that’s probably the primary focus. That’s the immediate point of contact. The other differentiator I would give somebody else is if you call our number during business hours, a live person picks up the phone, you’re not getting a prompt system. And the reason we say that is because you’re not calling me to tell me I’m doing a great job. You’re calling me because you got a problem? Yeah. And so the last thing you want is press one for this, press two for that. Hold here. Wait for this. You want to call? You want a live person to pick up the phone? In the event that there is an issue, that person on the phone can address that issue by placing a call through dispatch. While you’re on the phone, you get a call from a technician within the hour. They’re on site within less than four hours for business hours. Ours, um, that that chain of custody, that ownership of problem resolution or problem solving is probably the secret sauce as to why people can understand there’s a value in doing business, because the more someone is up on a daily basis, the more chance they have to print and produce documents.

Ramzi Daklouche: Yeah. And you know what? You said something that’s so very important is that a human voice at the other side? And a lot of enterprise companies, medium sized companies, can abandon this or farming that out to people that don’t know what they’re talking about. Not that, you know, but I’ve not seen a good solution where I can go through it and they use bots and all the stuff, and it’s confusing as confusing can be. I don’t get it. I don’t get it. Yeah. We have the same, you know, strategy. We pick up the phone, everybody, even my my, you know, my office phone rings on my, uh, mobile. So I pick it up anytime. So. And that really helps my business because I don’t never know when it’s not complained. I don’t know when it’s a sale. Even you know.

Phil Van Gelder: Well, in the same breath, if there is a problem. Yeah. We like to say that problems create opportunities. So if somebody’s calling with heartburn or they’ve got an issue with something, don’t look at that as like, oh man, I want to try and avoid this. I’d rather not have to talk to this person. You have no idea what hangs in the balance of an opportunity that’s presented to you in that way. And you kind of intimated this a little bit earlier. Nothing new under the sun. Everything comes full circle when email, text, voicemails and all that stuff was new or first coming to the marketplace. It was cool. Like everybody wanted to get a text message, everybody wanted to get an email. Now everybody avoids it. What old? What was old is now new again. Yeah. If you compress the flesh, you can give people a human experience. It’s different than what they’re probably used to.

Ramzi Daklouche: Yeah, absolutely. 100% agree with you. So one thing I know about the company that you guys are debt free and maintain strong liquidity. You know, some people may say, well hold on. You got to reinvest. How do you guys manage that? What’s the idea behind that?

Phil Van Gelder: Um, this might not be the case for most companies and even most companies our size that are in different, let’s say, a services space, that’s all intellectual property. They don’t have to maintain a warehouse. Um, it’s not it’s not nearly the same cash intensive type business that we are, right? We are incredibly laden with the responsibility of having supplies, equipment available at any given time. We’re running trucks every single day. We’re delivering both equipment and supplies on a daily basis. As a result, we have discounts available to us with cash if we do a cash with order position. So all that to say, we maintain a very strong cash position and debt free status. And the reason for that, it gives us a couple of things that differentiate. It allows us to buy equipment in bulk, which create greater discount opportunities for us. By buying in bulk and creating discount opportunities. We have equipment at more aggressive rates than a competitor may, so that we can be as cost efficient as possible for a client when our when we’re creating an offer of some sort or a proposal and you say, well, what does that help? How does that help our client? When you contact us, we’re going to be able to turn around and install something quicker than anybody else, depending on what your schedule is. We can do some. We’ve done stuff even same day, but it’s going to be a lot quicker than most individuals because our inventory is in stock and available for.

Ramzi Daklouche: So you keep your inventory in stock. That means you have narrow focus on. You don’t have the width of printers that others would have. Or do you focus on specific printers? Specific. And I’m saying printers, but you guys do a lot more than printers, of course, equipment to have that service level, otherwise the cash would be an issue if you’re going to carry brands that are not as popular.

Phil Van Gelder: The best analogy I can give you there is, um, let’s say you have a Honda Accord that you drive and you want that serviced. Now let’s pretend it was a little bit more difficult, and it wasn’t quite as obtuse as servicing a vehicle. You want to take that to somebody that’s factory trained by Honda has the parts, the OEM requirements available that when you pull in it’s up on the rack, it’s fixed quickly and you’re back on the road, and it’s mitigating any sort of downtime or inconvenience to you. You take it to a jiffy shop of some sort and that technician is servicing Honda. It may be a Lexus the next time. Here comes a Ford. Chevy’s pulling in VW right after that. He may be a Swiss Army knife, and he may have a lot of intellectual know how, but that’s when you get the call that says, hey, Ramzi, good news, bad news. We figured out what’s wrong with your engine. It’s this, this and this. We don’t have those parts on hand. It’s going to be about 3 or 4 days before they arrive. We don’t have any loaner vehicles, so you’re going to have to either Uber. You can come pick the car up if it’s drivable. You have to wait a little bit. None of that happens when you’re dealing with us.

Ramzi Daklouche: I call that Cousin Joe that doesn’t know anything about cars.

Phil Van Gelder: So yes, to your point, we’re very micromanaged and we’re extremely focused on the products we do offer and ensuring that we have all the elements in stock and available to be able to fix and turn those as quickly as possible. So we have technicians that drive around the city, the of the state, the country on a daily basis, and in doing so, their stock and inventory within their cars is inventoried every 90 days. So the machines, the machines that are in the field, that they’re servicing, we know that they’ve got the arrows in their quiver to fix whatever they come across when they’re out there on a daily basis.

Ramzi Daklouche: What a great lesson for small businesses, especially when they start up, because they try to get, you know, revenue any way they can. So they try to be jack of all trades and carry everything. Yep. And soon they found out I’m out of money because I’m way overspent on product or inventory or, you know, time. They just don’t have time to kind of focus on my core. So that’s very, very important.

Phil Van Gelder: Everybody wants to talk about diversification, multiple streams of income, all this different.

Ramzi Daklouche: Stuff that way.

Phil Van Gelder: And I would tell you there was a study that was done by Forbes. This was a handful of years ago. They interviewed, interviewed about 200 billionaires, and they were looking for personality traits that all of them shared in common. And of course, there was a lot of bleed over and cross over between those individuals. But the one thing that came up most common as it related to success was focus. Yeah. And the whole idea is do something that’s challenging or difficult for like 20 years. And if you’re not successful, you should probably try something different. But I guarantee you, if you give all your focus and effort to a singular idea or singular focus, you’re probably going to get the outcome you’re looking for.

Ramzi Daklouche: I tell you what, I can’t tell you how often I get that because influence social media, right? Everybody talks about I got to diversify. I got to do.

Phil Van Gelder: Those streams of income.

Ramzi Daklouche: Right. They have. And I have to explain to them, are you really good at what you do? Have you reached a peak at what you do? The peak could be local. Could be national. Whatever it is. Have you reached where you want to reach? No, no, but I have this business that’s running. But I have to be there 100%. So I really need another business. And so are you. Debt free in this business? Like, where do you think you are first before you go do anything else? Because they look at athletes like they have. They play basketball and they have seven different businesses. They really worked hard to be really good at basketball first before they did anything else. And I think people miss this. Oh my goodness, really good at one thing. And just do it. And don’t think national. Don’t think global. Even if you’re not that you know you don’t have the infrastructure. Just think locally. There’s enough local for you to worry about. Don’t worry about bigger things.

Phil Van Gelder: Make that impact on a micro level basis. Because if you can do that, you’ll become the best at what you’re doing. Money is certainly important, but the modern day currency is busyness. How busy am I? And I understand that everyone wants to feel like they’re important. They’re needed, they’re busy. But I would tell you focus a lot more on being productive.

Ramzi Daklouche: Yeah. Yeah. And by time. By by time, you can. So, um, what’s the vision and the and the outlook for the industry in general? And, you know, and now especially for you guys, I would have to believe and I again, I haven’t done any research on it. I have to believe it’s picking back up again, because people have to go back to work and the offices are filling up. I know in my building where I am, the office is filling up really fast. I hate it because I have to wait to go to lunch and. But parking? Yeah, parking. How does it look for you guys? What’s the outlook for 2526?

Phil Van Gelder: Every time you think you’ve got something figured out, it seems like the old analogy or the metaphor is the pendulum swings. Yeah. Um, for for the longest period of time, people have been talking about the paperless office. And as soon as everybody says, oh, here it comes. And Covid was an accelerant to that, everybody thought, this is the end of the corporate office, the physical environment. Um, and the pendulum swung pretty far. And here we are just a few years later, five years post Covid. It swung back the other way. And everybody says coming back into the office when people are in the office, documents get printed, documents get produced. Right now, I would not be naive enough to sit here and tell you that our industry is completely up and to the right. I’m extremely sober about the reality that people will print less and less. We’re probably still two generations from that being kind of a common occurrence. And in that period of time between now and then, I don’t need this to last in there 60 years. I’m not that young. But it gives us the opportunity to ensure that, uh, the greatest number of people that need this in the marketplace, we have availability to go capture that business. We built the business starting with zero. So I like my chances of being able to maintain a growth trajectory in this marketplace, which is a very pro-business environment. If we were in different parts of the country, I might have more concern, but there are 168,000 registered businesses in greater metro Atlanta area. I like my chances of that continuing to grow as we maintain our status of being the most pro-business state in the country.

Ramzi Daklouche: Absolutely. So ten years now in the journey you guys have grown, you have great reputation in Atlanta market. Have you thought of acquisitions or do you want to grow organically?

Phil Van Gelder: Really good question. And we’ve debated this back and forth. Um, what would they say. The hunted have become the hunting. Have become the hunted. Um. We have been both approached about selling the business.

Ramzi Daklouche: I’m pretty sure you have.

Phil Van Gelder: And we have had several opportunities where people have asked if we’re interested in buying their business. To this point, we have not made any acquisitions. Are we open to that? We are. And we’ve entertained a few of those. Um, the real rub we have goes back to staying true to our roots debt free. If we did make an acquisition, it’d probably be a cash acquisition. We don’t want that burden. Borrowers slave to the lender. We want to maintain our agility and kind of the DNA of who we are. Um, so it would be extremely strategic. I’ve always heard that acquisitions should be done in two for two specific reasons vertical integration or geographic expansion. Yeah. Um, and most of the time at this point, it’s been geographic expansion that we’ve considered. Um, we haven’t been able to land the plane on those. But the thing that’s also kind of difficult is we’ve grown on an average, uh, probably about 22 to 23% over the last 4 or 5 years, and it’s difficult to justify spending money for additional growth when we’re doing that kind of double digit growth on an annual basis without having to acquire anybody. So I think once the trend of growth slows down, it may become something we’re more serious about. But we’ve been kind of laissez faire and casual about it, and we have no plans to sell the business. We’re all too young to do that.

Ramzi Daklouche: So yeah.

Phil Van Gelder: At this point it would be the opportunity to buy somebody and we just haven’t gotten to the altar yet.

Ramzi Daklouche: Fantastic. And I think acquisition is not going to go anywhere anytime soon. There’s a lot of opportunity to be acquired or acquire somebody. It’s just happening all the time. So question for you with and you know, I’ll be remiss if I don’t ask a question with I know everybody talks about AI a lot. I would say 80% of people don’t even know. They talk about don’t even really know what AI is or how it works. Not at ChatGPT level, but in general. How does it impact your industry, or do you see now more Our technology service business with AI built in.

Phil Van Gelder: Yeah. Um, the first kind of creep we saw. Well, let me answer it this way first. We don’t know yet. It’s a little bit too early. But the first couple of iterations I could give you that have been kind of how it’s creeped into our industry. Um, was the first was the idea of the Internet of Things. So every if we, if we’ve got plus or -10,000 machines in the field, those devices are reporting back to us about every 30s. So each of those has kind of an automated beacon that’s running on the device. It’s reporting its diagnostics to us. And our dispatch, our coordination team is watching those. It’s receiving alerts and it’s either dispatching technicians or it’s sending supplies proactively to respond to that. Um, one way in which the AI has alleviated some of that human burden, we used to have to have human beings watching those alerts in order to turn around and execute on a supply order. We now have the ability to put an automated system in place. It receives the alert from that Internet of Thing beacon. Once that alert comes in, it places an order automatically for itself with the dispatch and fulfillment center in our warehouse. That order goes out the same day and arrives in the next UPS shipment. All of that happens without human intervention.

Ramzi Daklouche: That’s incredible.

Phil Van Gelder: And how how that morphs in the future, how that becomes cancerous to the operational side of our business. We don’t know yet.

Ramzi Daklouche: But can I give you a suggestion?

Phil Van Gelder: Sure.

Ramzi Daklouche: As somebody who actually owned a print shop. Yeah. If they can come up with a small robot that takes care of the of the paper.

Phil Van Gelder: The paper.

Ramzi Daklouche: The paper jams or breaking inside a machine. Right. That would be phenomenal. That would. They would win.

Phil Van Gelder: Hey, you and me both, brother, let’s come up with an idea.

Ramzi Daklouche: That is probably. I’ve been on, like, I feel like I was on the cars, but it’s a printer. Actually. Just trying to figure out where a7 B is. I have no idea.

Phil Van Gelder: And I guarantee you it’s going to happen at the worst possible time.

Ramzi Daklouche: Oh, absolutely. Yeah. We used to print catalogs and, you know, you know, with the the binding. The binding. Oh, my God.

Phil Van Gelder: Always the worst time.

Ramzi Daklouche: Yeah, we spent a lot of nights taking care of that. Okay. Well that’s great. So I have a question for you. So now I’ll be also remiss if I don’t ask questions. A lot a lot of new businesses open every day, right. You know, ten years in the journey, at some, once you pass the five years, the success rate, you know, and you already mentioned that it gets really, really higher, right. What’s your advice? I mean, just give advice to new business owners that will be listening to this on how what to do the first year, what to do the first six months to really help them build, you know, a structure built on not built on sand. Right. Built on concrete.

Phil Van Gelder: Uh, well, at the risk of sounding repetitive or repetitious in the process, I would say two things I would probably tell them. The days are long. The years are short. And when you’re starting a business, it is everything. You eat, sleep and breathe, right. You wake up thinking about it. You go through your day thinking about it, and you go to bed at night thinking about it. It’s very difficult to be present in your personal life or your family or what have you. But what I would tell you is when there is a little bit of extra money, or you do start to taste a little bit of success, your immediate human innate desire is to taste some of that and say, oh, you know, we just had a great month or things went really well. I want to pull some of this out to go do x, y, and z. And the thing I would encourage you to do is if you’re in it for the long haul, reinvest. Don’t take that. Proceed. Don’t take that opportunity and put it in your own bank account. Keep it in the business. If you reinvest in that business, it will pay you back tenfold. And then the other thing I would couple with that is again, to be repetitious would be the idea of focus. It is going to feel you’re going to go through lots of different periods and seasons where you go, this is failing. Like this is not working out. But if you’re at a minimum maintaining what you’re doing, fundamentals never lose. Hustle never loses. I would say keep your head above water and keep keep kicking because there is an industry. You’re in some sort of industry and there is a business opportunity within that industry. And if you keep running hard enough, most people quit on the fundamentals and that’s when you start to taste traction.

Ramzi Daklouche: Do you think there’s a difference? I mean, you start with two other partners. You said and probably were in the industry as well. Maybe not, I don’t know. But do you think there’s a difference when some, uh, entrepreneurs, new business owners trying to do it themselves versus. And what do you advise them. Because I believe they need they need a team behind them. They it’s very difficult on your own.

Phil Van Gelder: I that’s one of the things I’ve learned the most about probably in the last ten years is I have seen so many businesses fail because the partners couldn’t get along. The business was successful. The idea was working. The fundamentals were there. The the cash was there, the the financing was there. Business owners couldn’t get along. You know, I want to do this and you want to do that. I’m incredibly blessed. My two business partners, Matt and Bill, have we have complete alignment as it relates to how we want to do things. And at times, if we do start to feel like there’s a divergence in some sort, we’re able to come together. We’re talking about the pros and cons of things, and we always go back to some of those core principles that we established from the beginning, kind of that we’re not a big mission and vision type company, but there are some loose things that we’ve done by default, not necessarily by design, but default that we are going to be as a company. And that has helped us maintain our identity and not start to waver or get left of center. And I would tell you, that has been what has kept us on the right path in this to this point.

Ramzi Daklouche: That’s incredible. Yeah, I know Matt. I thought he was an upstanding guy and he’s he’s I don’t know, he’s, uh, driven differently, so. Very good. So anything that you want to talk about Aot or the industry itself that I didn’t ask or talk about.

Phil Van Gelder: Oh, wow. Um, you’re right, it is an incredibly competitive industry. A lot of the one thing I would say I probably pride myself, not myself. I would pride myself regarding Aot above all is we can easily be put into that commodity space. Yeah, everybody needs what we sell. And there are, like you mentioned earlier, 38 competitors in town that do the same thing. Um, being able to deliver value in a very commoditized space is a real badge of pride for us. Um, and so when it’s one of those things where you go, well, I’ve got to have somebody do this for my business. If you can tell somebody I actually like the company I work with that I do that, that, that does that for me. I feel like that’s a badge of honor that most people don’t get to have.

Ramzi Daklouche: Yeah, that is true. I could tell you from experience that you can buy Xerox from minolta, you know, big time machine anywhere, and you can do it online as well. It’s a service that you need, and if you have the bad service center helping you, especially when you have when you you know your business depends on it or if it’s a piece of paper that ends up with $100,000, you know, there you go. Signature on it. It changes how you think about printers and what printers do for you and all that stuff. Great. So if people want to get in touch with Aot or with you, how do they do it? Just kind of like to wrap this up.

Phil Van Gelder: Yeah, absolutely. You can go to our website. It’s your Aot Y-o-u-r Dot-Com. Um, I’m on social media, LinkedIn. We do have Facebook pages. We’ve got a Twitter account. Um, all the typical places you’d find somebody.

Ramzi Daklouche: Can you talk a little bit about before? I’m sure. And you just have to find Aot online and Google it. Great. So tell me a little bit about your, your your, uh, YouTube YouTube channel. You talked about it earlier today, but I really want you to plug it because I think it’s important to for people to if they can learn from it, great. If they can connect with you through it, that’s great too.

Phil Van Gelder: Um, I like to say that what I do for a living is not anything that really comes up at a barbecue. No one’s talking about their copiers and printers at a barbecue. Oh.

Ramzi Daklouche: I’m shocked.

Phil Van Gelder: And so it’s not like, hey, where do you get your taxes done? Or do you have a guy that can do what.

Ramzi Daklouche: Kind of printer do you. And they don’t talk.

Phil Van Gelder: About not at a barbecue. We we’re kind of like the fly at the barbecue. You want to try and get us out of your face? Um, so it’s not something that comes up commonly. However, I realized a couple years back, it was important for me that I was building a personal brand that somebody says, I don’t even know what this guy does, but I enjoy spending time around him, or he’s investing in other people. He’s promoting their business. I wonder what he does. Um, again, going back to that whole marketing. And so I started this podcast that, uh, about 18 months ago. Um, it’s highlighting local business leaders, their stories, how they do things. I call it on assignment. Um, I think one of the worst things you can experience over the course of your career is being successful in something that you don’t feel is like the right assignment for you. And I just like to find people that feel like they really are where they’re supposed to be, and they’re fulfilling their purpose. And we try and highlight that. I put out an episode a week. It’s a video podcast, and, um, I take the 45 minute conversation. I put it into 6090 second clips so people don’t have to invest a full 45 minutes. You can go kind of pick and choose from your a la carte menu. What what it is you want to learn about. I try and title the videos so that it tells a little bit about what’s in that clip. Um, and it’s been.

Ramzi Daklouche: And you do all the production yourself.

Phil Van Gelder: I do uh, it is uh, let’s say let’s call it a labor of love, because I had no idea what I was doing when I got started.

Ramzi Daklouche: That’s a lot of give back.

Phil Van Gelder: Well, um, it’s not without an intentionality tied to it. Um, if you give somebody something of great value and you don’t ask anything in return, they typically feel indebted and say, how can I help you?

Ramzi Daklouche: Absolutely fantastic. Well, Phil, thank you very much for being you.

Phil Van Gelder: This was great.

Ramzi Daklouche: Thank you. Appreciate it. I learned a lot. Thank you very much.

 

About Your Host

Ramzi Daklouche is Principal at VR Business Sales. His mission is to facilitate seamless transitions for business owners looking to sell or scale. The organization’s four-decade legacy in managing transactions, from modest enterprises to extensive mergers, resonates with his expertise in mergers and acquisitions. Our collaborative approach consistently unlocks the true value of businesses, ensuring sellers’ peace of mind throughout the process.

His journey began when he left corporate world to venture into the challenging realm of entrepreneurship. After running their own business for several years and earning accolades for their dedication to service and quality, he decided to establish VR Business Sales Mergers and Acquisitions Atlanta. Their mission is to provide unmatched value through transparency, security, diversity, service, and experience.

At VR Business Sales Mergers and Acquisitions Atlanta, they empower business owners and buyers with clear, honest guidance and exceptional service throughout every step of the transaction process. While their office is based in Atlanta, they offer their services nationally and globally, embracing diversity and engaging with a broad spectrum of communities and businesses.

With decades of industry expertise, they aim to build lasting relationships based on trust and excellence, enabling their clients to achieve their business goals with confidence and peace of mind. Whether they are transitioning from owning their business or moving toward ownership, they’re here to support every step of the way, navigating the vibrant landscape of Atlanta’s business community and National & Global markets for remarkable success.

Connect with Ramzi on LinkedIn.

 

Tagged With: AOT Office Technologies

BRX Pro Tip: When You’re Stuck, Lean on Something New

March 31, 2025 by angishields

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BRX Pro Tips
BRX Pro Tip: When You're Stuck, Lean on Something New
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BRX Pro Tip: When You’re Stuck, Lean on Something New

Stone Payton: Welcome back to Business RadioX Pro Tips. Lee Kantor and Stone Payton here with you. Lee, what do you do when you’re feeling stuck?

Lee Kanto: Yeah, this happens to everybody. Everybody goes through this kind of ebbs and flows and plateaus in their life, and they feel like, “Oh, why am I doing this? I’m not making enough progress.” And it’s easy to kind of feel sorry for yourself and to say, you know, “Why bother?” So, when you’re stuck and having those kinds of thoughts, I think it’s really important to kind of step aside and maybe start thinking about learning something new. Just dive into some new skills, strategy, or even a different approach. Shift your mindset. Open doors that you didn’t even know existed. Embrace curiosity and willingness to learn. This is going to turn your roadblocks into stepping stones.

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