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John Coleman, Author of HBR Guide to Crafting Your Purpose

February 16, 2022 by John Ray

John Coleman
Business Beat
John Coleman, Author of HBR Guide to Crafting Your Purpose
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John Coleman

Frazier & Deeter’s Business Beat: John Coleman, Author of HBR Guide to Crafting Your Purpose

John Coleman, author of HBR Guide to Crafting Your Purpose and Managing Partner at Sovereign’s Capital, discussed with host Roger Lusby his firm’s work investing in redemptive companies. John also covered themes from his new book, including why finding purpose runs deeper than just the “hero’s journey,” the elements of a life that build meaning, why relationships are a cornerstone of purpose, the role of purpose in the workplace, and much more. Business Beat is presented by Alpharetta CPA firm Frazier & Deeter.

John Coleman, Author of HBR Guide to Crafting Your Purpose

John Coleman, Author of HBR Guide to Crafting Your Purpose

John Coleman is an investor, writer, and public speaker. A frequent contributor to Harvard Business Review, John and his work have been featured in Forbes, the Washington Post, the New York Times, the Financial Times, and the Los Angeles Times among other publications. He previously published Passion & Purpose (HBP, 2011) and How to Argue Like Jesus (Crossway, 2009). A frequent public speaker, John has addressed hundreds of audiences on college campuses, at conferences, and for corporations and non-profits.

In January 2022, John published HBR Guide to Crafting Your Purpose. John debunks three misconceptions about purpose at work: that purpose is found, that you have only one, and that it remains the same over time. Packed with tips and advice for how you can cultivate more meaning in your life and at work, this book teaches you how to endow everything you do with purpose each day.

John is a Managing Partner at Sovereign’s Capital, which invests in public equities, private equity, and venture capital. He has prior experience at McKinsey & Company, Invesco, and Bridgewater Associates, among others. He’s active in the community, with current or prior experience on the boards of Berry College, the DeKalb County School System, the Georgia Student Finance Commission, the Georgia Charter Schools Association, and the Georgia Independent College Association. He’s been recognized as a Term Member at the Council on Foreign Relations, a Presidential Leadership Scholar, and as one of both Georgia Trend’s and the Atlanta Business Chronicle’s “40 Under 40.”

John is a summa cum laude graduate of Berry College, where he was the student commencement speaker. He’s an MBA graduate with High Distinction from the Harvard Business School, where he was Class Day Speaker and a Dean’s Award Winner. And he’s an MPA graduate of the Harvard Kennedy School, where he was a George Fellow and a Zuckerman Fellow.

John lives in Atlanta with his wife Jackie, their four young children, and a menagerie of small animals, including a bearded dragon affectionately named “Bruce Willis.”

John’s Website | LinkedIn

Sovereign’s Capital

Sovereign’s Capital provides capital and strategic partnership to values-driven, market-leading companies and funds with potential for outsized returns for all stakeholders.

Sovereign’s has four main practices: early-stage venture capital, lower middle-market private equity, fund of funds, and public markets.

Sovereign’s is distinct in its capacity to match values-motivated entrepreneurs with aligned investors, its ability to hold investments long term, its willingness to customize solutions to owner needs, and the excellence with which it executes through disciplined strategic, operational, and financial partnership.

Company website | LinkedIn

Frazier & Deeter

The Alpharetta office of Frazier & Deeter is home to a thriving CPA tax practice, a growing advisory practice and an Employee Benefit Plan Services group. CPAs and advisors in the Frazier & Deeter Alpharetta office serve clients across North Georgia and around the country with services such as personal tax planning, estate planning, business tax planning, business tax compliance, state and local tax planning, financial statement reviews, financial statement audits, employee benefit plan audits, internal audit outsourcing, cyber security, data privacy, SOX and other regulatory compliance, mergers and acquisitions and more. Alpharetta CPAs serve clients ranging from business owners and executives to large corporations.

Roger Lusby, Partner in Charge of Alpharetta office, Frazier & Deeter
Roger Lusby, Partner in Charge of the Alpharetta office of Frazier & Deeter

Roger Lusby, host of Frazier & Deeter’s Business Beat, is an Alpharetta CPA and Alpharetta Office Managing Partner for Frazier & Deeter. He is also a member of the Tax Department in charge of coordinating tax and accounting services for our clientele. His responsibilities include a review of a variety of tax returns with an emphasis in the individual, estate, and corporate areas. Client assistance is also provided in the areas of financial planning, executive compensation and stock option planning, estate and succession planning, international planning (FBAR, SFOP), health care, real estate, manufacturing, technology, and service companies.

You can find Frazier & Deeter on social media:

LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter

An episode archive of Frazier & Deeter’s Business Beat can be found here.

 

Tagged With: Business Beat, finding purpose, Frazier and Deeter, HBR Guide to Crafting Your Purpose, John Coleman, purpose, redemptive companies, redemptive investing, Roger Lusby, Sovereign's Capital

First Generation Entrepreneurs, with Randy Gerber, Gerber Clarity

February 16, 2022 by John Ray

First Generation Entrepreneurs with Randy Gerber from Gerber Clarity
Inspiring Women PodCast with Betty Collins
First Generation Entrepreneurs, with Randy Gerber, Gerber Clarity
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First Generation Entrepreneurs with Randy Gerber from Gerber Clarity

First Generation Entrepreneurs, with Randy Gerber, Gerber Clarity (Inspiring Women, Episode 41)

First generation entrepreneurs, says Randy Gerber, are the world’s leaders and creators. Randy joined host Betty Collins to discuss how to grow a business with purpose, the unique financial planning needs of first generation entrepreneurs, and much more. Inspiring Women is presented by Brady Ware & Company.

Betty’s Show Notes

This episode is going to be about a topic that I love.

The importance of the marketplace in our country and small businesses. Small business is so important. It’s so important to our economy that it needs to work and work well. Owning and running a successful small business is knowing what you do, finding your purpose, living out your “why.”

I can’t think of a better person to talk to than Randy Gerber, and his company, Gerber Clarity, catch his optimism about the marketplace and what he sees about this coming year.

Randy and his team work primarily with first-generation entrepreneurs. Part of the reason is that first-generation entrepreneurs are optimistic, cup half full, people to begin with. They help them understand how to grow their business with purpose. We talk a bit about his book, The Integrated Entrepreneur: Achieving Happiness in Relationships, Business & Life.

The book came about from his realization of how difficult it is to be “the new guy” in any given market. He recognized that if he was going to really work with these first-generation entrepreneurs, he had to help them with things other than traditional financial planning because they have unique needs and unique perspectives. This realization and experience helped him write the book.

I ask Randy what’s the biggest misconception that business owners have about growing their business?

In my experience, it’s they think they need to grow too quickly, and particularly if the question is rephrased, is what are the biggest misconceptions for small businesses or emerging businesses? I am just convinced that businesses grow too quickly.

How should business owners grow with purpose?

If you could sit down and really understand how you want to live your life. What do you want to do? How do you want to do it? What do you want to do? Who do you want to do it with? Want-based questions versus need-based questions. That will give you a clear map.

What are the top three things that women should be considering or putting in place with their business today? Realignment (not resignation), double-down and become outcome-oriented. Randy talks about what he has learned about being a leader during times of uncertainty with his business, and what he wants business leaders to know?

I think that you really have to be super as a leader, be super cognizant of your culture during times of duress. And one of the things that I’ve preached to our clients all the time, whether you are male, female, doesn’t matter, if you’re a first generation entrepreneur, you’re a unique breed, to begin with. You’re willing to accept variability risk volatility.

Entrepreneurs’ Organization is the world’s only peer-to-peer network exclusively for entrepreneurs. EO helps transform the lives of those who transform the world. Randy talks about his work and time with EO.

This is THE podcast that advances women toward economic, social, and political achievement. Hosted by Betty Collins, CPA, and Director at Brady Ware and Company. Betty also serves as the Committee Chair for Empowering Women, and Director of the Brady Ware Women Initiative. Each episode is presented by Brady Ware and Company, committed to empowering women to go their distance in the workplace and at home.

For more information, go to the Resources page at Brady Ware and Company.

Remember to follow this podcast on Apple Podcasts and Google Podcasts.  And forward our podcast along to other Inspiring Women in your life.

TRANSCRIPT

[00:00:00] Betty Collins
Well, this podcast is going to be about something that I love, which is the importance of the marketplace in our country and the small businesses, when those employers, you know, can have employees. That means there’s households taken care of and those households have provision. And then that, you know, forms our communities. So small business is so important that it works and that it works well and there’s more than just provision as well, right? There’s it’s it’s finding what you do, finding your purpose, finding living out that why and I can’t think of a better person than Randy Gerber with his company, Gerber clarity. I mean, he is an optimistic person and loves the marketplace. And the last time we were together, he was so optimistic about twenty twenty two and what we’re going to go into, and I think we need to hear more optimism out there. So I wanted to really have a time with him where we could talk about, Hey, let’s be optimistic. Let’s look at what the opportunities are out there for small business owners, because that’s who he works with. And he really is about living out his why. And he’s really about leading with great passion. And he works hand in hand with those clients and understands not just their business, but what do they want out of life, and he puts a holistic approach to things. So Randy, welcome to my podcast. I’m so glad that you’re here today, and I’d love for you just to talk that 30 seconds to a minute about about your company and the Gerber team.

[00:01:32] Randy Gerber
Sure. Well, first of all, Betty, thank you for having me. I’m flattered by the introduction and super happy to be here. And yes, I am very optimistic about 2022. Our team we work exclusively with and I really did try to say primarily used to stay exclusively. We have a few exceptions now, but with first generation entrepreneurs. And part of the reason why is, you know, first generation entrepreneurs in my experience, which you know, spans 30 years now, are optimistic cup half full people to begin with. And we really helped them understand how to grow their business with purpose. And obviously, that word purpose can be defined several ways, and we do define that several ways deliberately. So it’s fun. It’s exciting. It’s it’s the baseline of of America, as you said, and these are people that are moving the needle for us every single day.

[00:02:31] Betty Collins
Yeah. And in and what I don’t think people, you know, they underestimate that small business owner and what it means and people think that business is all like Apple or big. And that’s really a small segment in our marketplace. And so those that first generation that goes and takes the risk, yay to them, right? It’s always

[00:02:53] Randy Gerber
Good. And you know, we’re living in a period of time right now of of great opportunity. I mean, you know, this is really, truly the fourth industrial revolution we’re living in right now with the amount of innovation and change that’s happening. And you know, I think a year ago, people kept saying, you still hear it, but people look the same when COVID hit or COVID induced this. And I really been thinking about this a lot lately that I don’t I think COVID just just it actually exposed the fundamental issues that have been out there in our economy and our society have been lingering for a while. We needed a catalyst. So. So COVID was a catalyst. And so I think that that, you know, the amount of people are willing we were changed, was induced upon us, was forced upon us because of COVID and we all got comfortable to some degree with change. And so you’re you’re seeing people make tons of changes. And one of those dynamics is investment and innovation, which is that it’s staggering what’s happening right now and exciting. And I think it’s going to be it’s going to be very, you know, great for our country and our society. And in fact, I think that a lot of the social issues that we have will get solved via innovation and change as well versus government and politics. And it’s going to take a little time, but there’s just so much happening right now. It’s it’s impressive, right?

[00:04:29] Betty Collins
And you don’t want to miss the opportunity. You don’t want to miss what you can seize right now. And you know, people ask me all the time, what’s a great client for you, one who’s engaged and if there is an engagement is so prevalent everywhere right now, people are engaged on what’s going on and what should they be doing. And that makes your in my job as professionals so much easier when you have that. But we don’t want them to miss opportunity. But you’ve done some amazing things and one of them is you wrote a. Look, can you give us some insight on why you wrote the book and let’s do a plug for it’s the integrated entrepreneur achieving happiness in relationships, business and life. Can you talk a little bit about that?

[00:05:12] Randy Gerber
Sure. Yeah, I wish I had a really exciting story to why I wrote the book. I should. I should fabricate one. But the the truth of the matter is that when I made the, you know, when I started my business back in 1991, I was doing general financial planning for anybody. And the distinction? I’m not from Columbus. So I had to really work hard just to make introductions with people and cold call and et cetera. And so anybody was a client. And then, you know, in 2000, 2001, 2002 really had for a whole bunch of reasons that from having our first child to 911 to market crash that really examined who I wanted to work with as clients, and I realized I had a real affinity of working with entrepreneurs. And then after a few months of consideration, it was not just entrepreneurs, people who start the businesses. And and so, you know, the recognition was that if I’m going to really work with these first generation entrepreneurs, I have to help them with things other than traditional financial planning because they have unique needs and unique perspectives. And so and this is, you know, like people kind of forget this, but you know, back in, oh, one, 102, two 03, Google wasn’t quite so prevalent back then and the amount of content and research available on first.

[00:06:38] Randy Gerber
If you if you were spending the time to research first-generation entrepreneurs, there just wasn’t much content out there. And so, you know, I became committed in my head to that marketplace and said, Well, look, if I’m going to understand these people and I’m going to help them grow their biggest asset, I really need to understand them. So we ended up. I decided, you know, naively, I suppose, to the best vehicle to do the research and organize it as a book. And so, you know, started to outline the chapters of what I wanted to talk about. And it is primarily relationships with, you know, your parents, your siblings, your children, your friends, your employees, et cetera. And and we hired a woman out of Houston to do all the research. She actually was a child therapist, research expert. And so we felt like she had the background to do the research. And so she did. And we, you know, interviewed a ton of our clients and she interviewed a ton of people. And so we started and we started paying attention, you know, asking once we had a series of questions that we wanted answered.

[00:07:48] Randy Gerber
We started paying attention more and more in society itself. The I mean, the good news, bad news. I don’t know which one it is still, but we started the book in 05 and I finished it last year in 2021. So and and with the exception of about three or four year period in there, I did work on it all the time. From what I mean by that is I was evolving my thoughts and being more refined and what we were writing. So I do feel that it’s a, you know, reasonably long period of time, a thought. So it wasn’t like we wrote the book in six months and published it at all was, you know, and you know, we went back and some of the things I wrote in 06, 07 08 we modified and I’m using that word deliberately modified. So it wasn’t abandoned the change, but rather modify and refine some of our thinking. And so as I reread it after it was in print form and an actual book, I feel really good that what was written is how we feel today, and there’s really no changes to it. But it was an accident. It’s a long story.

[00:08:51] Betty Collins
Well, no, it’s I mean, to write a book. I look at anyone that does that with a lot of admiration. I know what it’s like to try to write a podcast, and I and I, you know, go I whine and and cry over that, you know, let alone writing a book and going through that process and getting your thoughts down. So and then someone edit and change it, and it’s a process. But I it’s a great, great something for someone to read. The integrated entrepreneur achieving happiness in relationships, business in life. You should check that out by Randy Gerber. So let’s let’s talk a little bit about, you know, businesses in general. But what’s the biggest misconception that business owners have about growing their business?

[00:09:34] Randy Gerber
In my experience, it’s they think they need to grow too quickly, and particularly if the questions rephrase is what are the biggest misconceptions for small businesses or emerging businesses? I am just convinced that businesses grow too quickly and the I was asked. Recently by a CPA firm, which I thought was really an interesting question, he said, yeah, what percentage of your clients are lucky and what percentage of your clients are strategic? And I thought about it for a second and thought, You know what? That’s a wrong question. Um, the question is, what percentage of my clients are permanent grinders? What percentage of my clients are lucky and what percentage are strategic? And I think the answer to that is that in the beginning, everybody is a grinder because you have to be. And in that in that grinding process, I think entrepreneurs, the misconception is they have to grow very quickly to have to chase revenue. And I think and then there’s, you know, there’s certain certain entrepreneurs that get lucky for sure that the right place right time for a whole variety of reasons and their business propels because they’re lucky.

[00:10:49] Randy Gerber
But the ones who really, really figured it out are the ones that they can transition to strategic thinking. And so they really begin to understand that, hey, we we need to grow properly. We need to grow the right rate. We need to grow profitably as quickly as possible. And so to me, that’s the biggest misconception. And I think there’s, you know, when people are starting businesses or early in stages in business, they actually they seek counsel from lots of folks. But in my experience, not the right people. They’re not talking to folks who literally had done it themselves, whether they were successful or not. They talked to business community business leaders, but it is such a unique, a unique journey to be to start a business from scratch. And then, you know, get it to a point where it’s sustainable that there’s very few people have done it and you really need when you’re in that stage, you need to identify those folks and try to get. In my experience, most first generation entrepreneurs are very happy to help others who are in that same, you know, on that same journey.

[00:11:55] Betty Collins
Absolutely. I find that all the time and you and really you should be connecting those people together with your client because it can be so beneficial, so beneficial. But one of the things when we talk about the misconceptions and growing your business, I like that you use the word purpose a lot. So you know, how should how should business owners grow with purpose?

[00:12:18] Randy Gerber
Yeah, I mean, in my I’m going to answer this question very literally. And of course, I need to disclose I’m a, you know, I’m completely biased in my answer. And so and it is rooted in my experience. So it may not be for everybody as my point, but I really, you know, in our experience, what we’ve figured out is if you could sit down and really understand how you want to live your life, you know what? What do you want to do? How do you want to do it? Where do you want to do? Who do you want to do it with? And you can be vulnerable and honest with yourself. You get, you know, we can. Then you know, we know what that’s going to cost you. We know it’s going to cost you, whatever, $10000 a month or $20000 a month in 2022 dollars. And once you understand what the economic needs are of the way you want to live your life and these are all very much this is an important distinction. Want based questions versus need based questions? I think all of us are are able to or most of us are able to make adjustments in our lives if we need to. But but you know, again, first generation entrepreneurs being optimistic and and cup half full, you know, the question is really good in how do you want to live your life when you understand that we can, we can identify what that cost looks like and then we can say, OK, this is what you want, then you need your business to look like this, whatever, whatever that is, $20 million of sales, 12 percent net income that that we can craft, that looks like.

[00:13:48] Randy Gerber
So now you have a clear map of, OK, I need to get from point A to point B and then the purpose part of it gets into because, you know, if if you’re I mean, if you’re single, no kids, that’s a little different. In our experience that people like that are generally wrapped up in the business, that’s it. We have a few of those clients and that’s good. And you know, eventually most folks end up wanting to have a partner, get married, have children. And so the purpose question gets much more, much more relevant because now you, you know, people want to have, you know, most people, I think, want to have a happy marriage and they want to they want to be in an apparent relationship with their children that they enjoy and they want their kids to respect and enjoy them.

[00:14:34] Randy Gerber
So when you start thinking about that, you know, time becomes part of the equation. So. So you know, what’s your relationship with the business at that stage? And that’s really where we can help our clients understand what needs to happen economically, you know, from a from a pure math perspective, then also, how do you evolve your relationship with the business to be happy and peaceful and be present and positive for your spouse and your children and your friends and your parents, et cetera, et cetera? And again, based on how you want to live your life, in my opinion, my experience, I think if you’re willing just to work your rear end off and just really. Grind it out, you can be financially successful, you might be miserable, like miserable, miserable, but you’ll you’ll you’ll achieve financial success. And I think most successful, we define in our client base successful entrepreneurs as people that, first and foremost, are happy at peace. Secondly, they are leaders in their their existing market space. And third, they’re financially successful. And so, you know, I do feel that entrepreneurs that are enlightened that way, it really the purpose question becomes very relevant, right?

[00:15:49] Betty Collins
It definitely does. I mean, I’m a person who loves to go to Naples, Florida, and I love to live someone else’s life for that seven to eight days, right? But I certainly would never want to work that hard to have to live that life. And so I think it’s really important that you understand it, even though they’re all driving boats to dinner because they go from their yacht club over to here. But but you have to really know what that would mean to have that life and and and the purpose thing is so behind it. So that’s really, really good, right? We just had a phone go off. So we’re OK. So so let me take us a little bit further because this is about inspiring women and women. Business owners are the ones who are starting more new businesses than anyone and pushing forward. But in terms of innovation, because you are, you are so correct right now is a time for a lot of innovation and people are really pursuing it. What are the what are the top three things that women should be considering or putting in place with their business today?

[00:16:56] Randy Gerber
Excuse me. You know, so I think, you know, from my vantage point, I think women entrepreneurs have always been empathetic to the needs, the unique needs of women. I think it became much more pronounced during COVID. I mean, the last I looked, which is probably been a few months that six million women left the workforce through COVID, primarily due to childcare issues. And you know, now what we don’t know is how many left permanently, how many left temporarily, how many left and a part time basis. But you know, one of the things that is more important than ever is flexibility. You know, the press right now is calling the the mass exodus of people leaving their jobs a great resignation. And I think that what’s going to change and in fact, this podcast inspired me to write an article on this topic. It isn’t the great resignation. It’s a great realignment. And I think that people are really aligning where they want to be and how they want to go, where they want to work, how they want to work, what they want to do. You know, all that, et cetera, et cetera, with women entrepreneurs, specifically the number one. I think it’s, you know, double down on your values and your company because because in this alignment, you want to find people who are aligned with you.

[00:18:29] Randy Gerber
And in my my opinion and more importantly, my experience direct experience that people want to find homes where they’re working. And, you know, we were able to do that where we had folks that were aligned with our values at a reasonable level. And when COVID hit and people ask those deeper questions, we realized they weren’t as aligned as we hoped. And they’re not here anymore. And we’re. But we were able to find replacements that very much were aligned at a very deep rooted level with our values. And so I think it’s not necessarily an innovation, but I think it’s a practice that every entrepreneur needs to drill down on it and women specifically understanding that they have. There’s a unique problem that women face in the workforce and particularly in small businesses, because you don’t have the luxury of extra bodies to help do the work. And so the innovation I think that has to happen is really focus on outcome oriented results versus time based solutions. So what I’m saying is, you know, invest in your systems and very clearly and there’s, you know, there’s lots of these technology solutions out there, such as Salesforce as one example that was unattainable for small businesses five years ago in terms of cost.

[00:19:54] Randy Gerber
That is very affordable today, relatively speaking. And so I think investing in systems to transition your business to be outcome oriented versus time oriented is an enormous and it sounds simple, but it’s not. Yeah. And when you like, you know, our whole pay, our whole pay. Systems based on hours, right, 40 hours a week, you make an hourly rate, you work so many hours. You know all that it’s hours oriented and that outcome oriented. So it’s a massive shift in thinking. And I think along with this and the great realignment, and we definitely have evaluated ourselves as, you know, who are you serving as a, you know, in a business? Who exactly are your customers? And more importantly, who are your best customers? And how do you double down and making them, you know, really making that relationship even stronger? So I know that I’m seeing this with our client base across the board, that the technology solutions are out there and they’re staggering. And so, you know, from an innovation perspective is really figure out what is available and strategically, what’s the best, you know, what are we, you know, what do we execute? What are we initiate? What do we adopt technologically to make us more efficient and make it a better business?

[00:21:08] Betty Collins
Yeah, I mean, and you just said a lot. I’m going to recap two things that really stick out, though I love the realignment, not resignation. Love that. And I wish. I mean, that’s how we need to be thinking, you know, because resignation immediately is negative, right? And realignment is, no, we have opportunity. And second, we double, you know, doubling down women, business owners double down because time is one of those things that they struggle with. And so becoming that outcome oriented. But boy, what a massive shift. We could do a whole podcast on that right, for sure.

[00:21:48] Randy Gerber
So we just picked up a we just picked up a really great new employee. It’s interesting, you know, and and she was with a nice company here in town that grew exponentially. And, you know, I just got lost in the shuffle and I don’t I don’t identify with this company anymore. And she literally she got referred to us and we interviewed her and two weeks later, she’s starting, you know, and it’s just and we did we did her a normal interview process, which is extensive and just actually she’s itching to get here. And I’m excited, you know, so I really think it is a realignment, not a resignation, right?

[00:22:23] Betty Collins
And you also are looking at I mean, the employers who are looking at flexibility is first and foremost because that’s what people are looking for are not having the shortages. You know, some some industries are just having shortages and it’s going to take its time. But but flexibility is really huge in that and you probably were with her. But there is that lost in the shuffle business, especially when you aren’t connected because you’re not going into an office and it’s big and all of that.

[00:22:51] Randy Gerber
So, you know, it’s interesting. The flexibility is even more complicated because when you say flexibility, that means different things to different people. And I’m really beginning to see now that, yeah, my team wants flexibility, but my team wants other people on the team that are committed to the cause we’re on. And so, so with with that in mind, it’s not unlimited flexibility. And there’s definitely one of the one of the challenges small businesses have is that, you know, the perception that working for Google and Apple and all these big, huge tech companies, there’s, you know, it’s vacation every day on Google campus and it’s it’s ultimate flexibility. You can come and do what you want to do and you want to do it. None of it’s true, but that’s a perception, right? And and so small businesses specifically get get whacked with that. And I think in this alignment that you really, really need to have your team want the same type of flexibility, right? Because it’s different. Different people have different dynamics. And we had two employees that, you know, were willing pre-COVID. You know what their, you know, worked hard they’re supposed to do.

[00:23:56] Randy Gerber
Covid came along and they both really did didn’t want to work more than 35 hours a week, but they wanted all the benefits of full time. And sure, you know, but they just didn’t want to work that much anymore. And that’s not the flexibility that we needed. And so we’ve really we’ve been we’ve certainly continued to add more and more flexibility to our relationship with folks. And when I say I work only 35 hours a week, they it was a time, but they weren’t concerned about their outcomes, either. They they, you know, they they were only going to work so much time and the outcomes didn’t matter to them. And so, you know, and now today we have we replaced those folks with full time. We also have more permanent part time people who definitely want flexibility, but they’re very outcome oriented. Mm hmm. Right. So when you’re building your team, you’ve got to have like minded people around that term of flexibility and wanting, you know, great results for your customers, right?

[00:24:50] Betty Collins
The outcome is the bottom line. And in many respects, and what I tell my team is your flexibility is right in there, but it cannot cost chaos to the team.

[00:25:02] Randy Gerber
That’s that’s a great way to

[00:25:03] Betty Collins
Articulate, you know, and so how do we make that work? How do we make that work? And so we talk about that through quite a bit because there just needs sometimes to be this flexibility. But the outcome has to be the same. The chaos cannot. There for the client or your peer, so. Right. But let’s go into the question. Everyone asked this question a lot and we always need it, and I heard you refer to you and you started your business in ninety one, then you went through nine eleven, then you went through 08 nine time period. And now we’re in a pandemic time period. But what have you learned about being a leader during times of uncertainty in your business or, you know, the world in general and and want business leaders to know what from your perspective?

[00:25:48] Randy Gerber
I think that it. Um, in hindsight, in hindsight, when I think about the leadership and particularly as an entrepreneur, particularly, you know, I view the shareholder as the fiduciary of the business, right? And I think that it’s really making sure that the culture is current. And I see I see too many people entrepreneurs who who get sloppy with the culture let go of it. I mean, admittedly, we we start we struggled a little bit during during COVID, where I lost sight of the culture for a period of time and it gets hijacked. And I think that I think that you really have to be super as a leader, be super cognizant of that culture during times of duress. And one of the things that I’ve preached to our clients all the time male, female doesn’t matter is again, if you’re a first generation entrepreneur, you’re a unique breed. To begin with. You’re you’re willing to accept variability risk volatility. Uncertainty unknown. You’re OK with it. And in fact, some people embrace it, right? Ninety nine percent of the people out there do not. And so, so, so even though you might be okay with it, you have to, from a cultural perspective, really be thoughtful around providing certainty and safety to your, your, your team, your company. And so I think during times of difficulty, times of uncertainties doubling down on your culture to provide that certainty and safety to your employees the best you can.

[00:27:43] Betty Collins
Yes. And I think that’s where there’s there’s a tremendous amount of people love and being at home and they’re in their sweats with a nice shirt on for a Zoom call. And they love not having the stress of the morning with kids or the pickup and on and on. But they are missing a culture and an atmosphere by by being secluded. Now, culture is more than just being in your office, but I think that’s where you can easily lose sight or we have lost sight in this pandemic. And and then when you don’t own something and are connected and you’re not going to be engaged, it’s kind of like when you when you use a rental car, you never wash it because you don’t own it. You return it, right? So culture is kind of that same thing when it’s not kind of we own this. This is who we are. I’m engaged with this and and I think it’s really easy to lose culture right now with the disconnect of not having community, but just my opinion. Maybe it’s because I like being in the office too, and that helps me be with my, you know, my people, is what I call it. So. But but leading during these times is so important and the advisors like you and myself getting our clients through this is so crucial to to the the stability of the country. I just look at it that way. So but but I know that you’ve had a lot of success with that, and I will tell you if if I worked for Gerber, I would go to work because you have the coolest office I’ve ever seen. I love your office in your view. It’s very, very good there. But you had so many takeaways today, so many great questions. But what would you want to leave the audience with? You know you’re you’re so optimistic. You really see, twenty twenty two is an amazing year and we’re going to have some opportunities. What would you want to leave my audience with today?

[00:29:41] Randy Gerber
You know, I think this is one of these unique times in the world, in America where you know the old adage make hay when the sun shine, and I think it’s time to make some hay. And I think this is I think this is a really unique opportunity. I’m not going to say it once in a lifetime that could be too aggressive, but I really do believe that we’re living in unusual times and this is a time you can improve the foundation of your business. Really, really engage your customers and clients, improve your product. If you’re a manufacturer or something and and really just just get the best people on your team because because I mean, that’s a I guess the number one is work hard to get the best people on your team because they’re out there and they’re available and people want to associate with greatness. I mean, there’s all sorts of proof around this that the reason why a person goes to work for the company, first and foremost, the mission the company’s on the mission, the company is on a line with them. Number two is the quality the people they work with. They want to work with great people. And a great great people and work with great people, and so the third is the respect they get from the company and their manager and forth as compensation, and those top three things are in play right now in a way that we just may never see. And so I think embrace it as a short answer.

[00:31:09] Betty Collins
No, that’s great. And if you’re an entrepreneur out there and you’re struggling with what he just talked about, I would replay that and write it down because because that that can just make or break how you’re going to navigate through all the opportunity that’s there. So but the last thing I would like to bring this up. You know, you volunteer for the Columbus chapter of entrepreneurs, organizations. You want to just do a plug for them.

[00:31:36] Randy Gerber
Yes. You know, you know, it’s one of the best things that I have ever done personally and professionally. It’s, you know, being an entrepreneur is a very lonely thing. It’s a lonely place. There’s not many out there. You know, it was a group of all entrepreneurs, and Columbus chapter has somewhere in the 80 to 90 member range. And it’s super interesting, exciting people. And I think it’s just a great way to really get your arms around where you’re going and why you’re going and with really great people around you.

[00:32:08] Betty Collins
Yeah, it sounds. It sounds like a cool organization. Everybody should be involved in something, especially if you’re a professional adviser to business owners. You should be in something that connects you to to your community, for sure. Randy, we just want to thank you for being here today. You know, you’re a busy guy. You took the time to be here and and give us your insight. And to my audience again, I would check out the book The Integrated Entrepreneur Achieving Happiness and Relationships, Business and life. Learn from somebody who has a lot of success and that would be randy. So again, thank you for being here and come to my podcast the next time.

[00:32:44] Randy Gerber
Thank you for having me. I really appreciate it. It’s been fun.

Automated transcription by Sonix www.sonix.ai

Tagged With: Business & Life, First Generation Entrepreneurs, Gerber Clarity, small business, The Integrated Entrepreneur: Achieving Happiness in Relationships

Julie Zweig, MD

February 16, 2022 by John Ray

Julie Zweig, MD
North Fulton Business Radio
Julie Zweig, MD
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Julie Zweig, MD

Julie Zweig, MD (North Fulton Business Radio, Episode 432)

Julie Zweig, MD joined host John Ray to discuss her specialties of sleep issues, hormone optimization, wellness, functional medicine, and allergies. Dr. Zweig left a large practice after twenty-one years to open her own practice so she could spend more time with her patients, enabling her to utilize all her areas of expertise and offer more integrated answers for her patients’ health issues. Dr. Zweig discussed the dangers of sleep apnea, how allergies and the gut are related, what functional medicine is, and much more. North Fulton Business Radio is broadcast from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta.

Julie Zweig, MD

Julie Zweig, MD, Integrative Sleep & ENT

Julie Zweig, a physician in Alpharetta, is Board Certified in both Ear Nose and Throat Surgery and Sleep Medicine. She also has advanced training in aesthetics, hormone optimization, and Functional Medicine. Dr. Zweig had been practicing with a large group for over 21 years but has recently started her own solo practice.

Dr. Zweig grew up right here in Atlanta Georgia. She received her undergraduate degree from the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, her Medical Degree from Emory University, and her Specialty training at the Eye and Ear Institute in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania. Dr. Zweig enjoys spending quality time with her husband David and has three children. When she is not with her patients, Dr. Zweig loves to hike with her two very energetic Standard Poodles. She also loves Horseback riding and traveling. Unfortunately, she just lost the last of her 15 chickens.

Dr. Zweig is one of only a few Integrative Sleep and ENT physicians in the entire country, and to her knowledge, the only one in the southeast.

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Instagram

Questions and Topics in this Interview:

  • Why did you leave your big practice that you were with for 21 years?
  • Tell us a little bit about your practice and what you offer?
  • Tell us why you got interested in Sleep Medicine
  • How does it work when a patient comes in to see you for snoring or a sleep problem?
  • How do you treat Snoring and Sleep Problems?
  • I understand you have expertise in hormone optimization. Why Hormones… what are they? How do they help with sleep?
  • Can you explain what Functional Medicine is and how it related to Sleep and ENT?
  • What happens during a Wellness appointment?
  • There are quite a few Ear nose and throat and sleep physicians in the area as well as functional medicine doctors. Can you tell us how you are unique?
  • How can people find out more about your practice, both the more traditional side as well as the Wellness side

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

RenasantBank

 

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

 

Special thanks to A&S Culinary Concepts for their support of this edition of North Fulton Business Radio. A&S Culinary Concepts, based in Johns Creek, is an award-winning culinary studio, celebrated for corporate catering, corporate team building, Big Green Egg Boot Camps, and private group events. They also provide oven-ready, cooked from scratch meals to go they call “Let Us Cook for You.” To see their menus and events, go to their website or call 678-336-9196.

 

Tagged With: A&S Culinary Concepts, CPAP machine, Dr. Julie Zweig, ENT, functional medicine, John Ray, Julie Zweig MD, North Fulton Business Radio, renasant bank, sleep apnea, wellness

Golden Retrievers, the Need for Approval, and Pricing

February 16, 2022 by John Ray

Golden Retrievers, The Need for Approval, and Pricing
North Fulton Studio
Golden Retrievers, the Need for Approval, and Pricing
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Golden Retrivers, The Need for Approval, and PricingGolden Retrievers, the Need for Approval, and Pricing

The need for approval is hardwired in all of us as humans. You might call it a “golden retriever tendency,” and unless we’re always aware of it, it can get mixed up–to our detriment–with how we approach pricing and the clients we accept. The Price and Value Journey is presented by John Ray and produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®.

TRANSCRIPT

John Ray: [00:00:00] And hello again, everyone. I’m John Ray on The Price and Value Journey. My wife and I have a Golden Retriever who is in constant need of chest rubs. Yes, chest rubs. I’m convinced he’s got an alarm clock in his head, which measures intervals between pettings because he’ll appear seemingly out of nowhere ready for his fix.

John Ray: [00:00:24] I won’t even get into the Dachshund in our home who has an advanced case of separation anxiety. We’ve got a cat, on the other hand, who, while happy to be part of the tribe, is quick to go her own way. She’s okay to be petted and she likes to play, but only on her terms and in her good time. She receives enough contact from us to be a satisfied cat.

John Ray: [00:00:50] If you’re a professional services provider, one of your most vulnerable acts is to price your services. There are moments like when you slide that proposal across the table that it feels like you’ve got a price tag right on your forehead. Will this person with the shopping cart stop, pick you up, and take you home? Or will they just leave you laying there?

John Ray: [00:01:16] The need for approval is hardwired in us humans. We are all seeking validation for who we are and what we do. As professional services providers, we often let that need for approval overpower our good sense when it comes to pricing and the clients we take on. We’ll take on clients at a low price because the subconscious need we have to scratch the itch of affirmation can be overwhelming.

John Ray: [00:01:45] To be successful in professional services, you must become comfortable with the idea that you’re not the best fit for everyone who comes your way. You must almost thrive on a certain number of rejections because, you know, if you’re communicating your value well, that those rejections are a sign that your pricing is where it should be.

John Ray: [00:02:09] You must internalize the idea that sending a poor fit client on to someone else is better both for that client and for you. Their needs will be better handled by someone else, and you won’t have a piece of business which will exasperate you in time. You must be self-aware enough to know when your hardwired need for affirmation is getting in the way of running a successful practice.

John Ray: [00:02:36] If our Golden Retriever was a professional services provider with his own firm, he’d price his services so that none of his proposals ever got rejected. He’d have a lot of clients and would carry an aura of success, but he’d be pricing too low, working too hard for too little money, and probably wouldn’t even know it. If he did understand what he was doing, he would still be happy because his need for affirmation would be fulfilled.

John Ray: [00:03:04] Our cat, on the other hand, wouldn’t have as many clients. The clients she did have, however, would be great fits for her service capabilities. They’d be paying fees which reflect the value she delivers, and all concerned would be content. In practice, we’d all rather be the cat, right? But to get there, we must be cognizant of our innate Golden Retriever tendencies which constrain our professional services practice.

John Ray: [00:03:37] I’m John Ray on The Price and Value Journey. If you’d like to know more, go to johnray.co. Or get in touch with me directly, john@johnray.co.

 

 

About The Price and Value Journey

The title of this show describes the journey all professional services providers are on:  building a services practice by seeking to convince the world of the value we offer, helping clients achieve the outcomes they desire, and trying to do all that at pricing which reflects the value we deliver.

If you feel like you’re working too hard for too little money in your solo or small firm practice, this show is for you. Even if you’re reasonably happy with your practice, you’ll hear ways to improve both your bottom line as well as the mindset you bring to your business.

The show is produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® and can be found on all the major podcast apps. The complete show archive is here.

John Ray, Host of The Price and Value Journey

John Ray The Price and Value Journey
John Ray, Host of “The Price and Value Journey”

John Ray is the host of The Price and Value Journey.

John owns Ray Business Advisors, a business advisory practice. John’s services include advising solopreneur and small professional services firms on their pricing. John is passionate about the power of pricing for business owners, as changing pricing is the fastest way to change the profitability of a business. His clients are professionals who are selling their “grey matter,” such as attorneys, CPAs, accountants and bookkeepers, consultants, marketing professionals, and other professional services practitioners.

In his other business, John is a Studio Owner, Producer, and Show Host with Business RadioX®, and works with business owners who want to do their own podcast. As a veteran B2B services provider, John’s special sauce is coaching B2B professionals to use a podcast to build relationships in a non-salesy way which translate into revenue.

John is the host of North Fulton Business Radio, Minneapolis-St. Paul Business Radio, Nashville Business Radio, Alpharetta Tech Talk, and Business Leaders Radio. house shows which feature a wide range of business leaders and companies. John has hosted and/or produced over 1,100 podcast episodes.

Connect with John Ray:

Website | LinkedIn | Twitter

Business RadioX®:  LinkedIn | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram

Tagged With: approval, John Ray, Price and Value Journey, pricing, professional services, professional services providers, solopreneurs, value

Michael Horwitz, Transworld Business Advisors of Atlanta, Nancy Pridgen, Pridgen Bassett Law, and Dr. Jaeson Courseault, Trif3cta Sports Medicine

February 15, 2022 by John Ray

Dr. Jaeson Courseault
Family Business Radio
Michael Horwitz, Transworld Business Advisors of Atlanta, Nancy Pridgen, Pridgen Bassett Law, and Dr. Jaeson Courseault, Trif3cta Sports Medicine
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Dr. Jaeson Courseault

Michael Horwitz, Transworld Business Advisors of Atlanta, Nancy Pridgen, Pridgen Bassett Law, and Dr. Jaeson Courseault, Trif3cta Sports Medicine (Family Business Radio, Episode 29)

Financial and physical health is the focus of this episode of Family Business Radio. Michael Horwitz with Transworld Business Advisors of Atlanta discussed the need for clean books and sound preparation in advance to prepare for a sale. Nancy Pridgen of Pridgen Bassett Law discussed ERISA law and employment issues, including mask mandates. Dr. Jaeson Courseault with Lifehope Medical described his holistic approach to healthcare with his practice of non-surgical orthopedic medicine, prevention and wellness, and helping his patients get better by looking at all the factors that may be impacting their health. He describes his ideal patient as people who are active or want to be active who need help doing so.

All three guests reflected on the ways a client can identify the red or green flags that signal they may need a business broker, an ERISA attorney, or a holistic doctor.

In Anthony’s closing comments, he echos the guidance that the best time to reach out to a financial advisor is when major changes are occurring. Family Business Radio is underwritten and brought to you by Anthony Chen with Lighthouse Financial Network.

Michael Horwitz, Business Broker and M&A Advisor, Transworld Business Advisors of Atlanta

Michael Horwitz, Business Broker and M&A Advisor, Transworld Business Advisors of Atlanta

Transworld Business Advisors is the world leader in the marketing and sales of small and lower-middle market businesses. Whether you represent an acquisition-minded corporation or are personally interested in owning your own company, Transworld offers the professional services that successfully bring buyers and sellers together.

Michael is a Business Broker and M&A Advisor with Transworld Business Advisors of Atlanta. He has been helping people buy and sell small and lower-middle businesses for over 5 years. His years of experience run the gamut from senior management roles in Fortune 500 corporations to leadership positions with venture capital-backed high-tech enterprises. Michael also brings small business knowledge through his seven years of owning an independent bicycle shop.

Michael has been in the north Atlanta area for over 25 years now. He grew up in Cleveland, OH, and received his undergrad degree from Case Western Reserve University. After ten years in the workforce, he went back to receive his MBA from Capital University in Columbus, OH. Michael is an avid cyclist, kayaker and backpacker.

Company website | LinkedIn

Nancy Pridgen, Attorney and Managing Member, Pridgen Bassett Law

Nancy Pridgen, Attorney and Managing Member, Pridgen Bassett Law

Pridgen Bassett Law is a boutique law firm situated in beautiful historic downtown Roswell, Georgia, but its attorneys handle ERISA and employment disputes literally across the nation.

Pridgen Bassett Law’s attorneys combine some 40+ years of litigation experience to offer legal strategies and solutions tailored to each client’s unique situation. Clients include employees and employers, private and public businesses, and ERISA plan sponsors and fiduciaries. Pridgen Bassett Law equips clients with cutting-edge ERISA and employment law strategies and a wide range of legal options and offers modern answers for modern benefits and employment issues.

Pridgen Bassett Law attorneys have spent many years at Alston & Bird and King & Spalding representing sophisticated top-tier clients in complex ERISA litigation and employment matters. Pridgen Bassett Law was created to make that experience accessible to a wider range of clients. ERISA and employment matters require knowledge and experience.

Employees, executives, businesses, plan sponsors, and fiduciaries should have access to that resource — no matter the size of the matter or the size of the business. Pridgen Bassett Law is that resource.

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook

Dr. Jaeson Courseault, Trif3cta Sports Medicine, A Lifehope Company

Dr. Jaeson Courseault, Trif3cta Sports Medicine, A Lifehope Company

Lifehope Trif3cta Sports Medicine provides non-operative sports orthopedic services for patients with muscle, bone, or joint pain. The practice also has a mobile component that will go to the patient’s home or other location.

Lifehope specializes in regenerative injections like PRP (platelet-rich plasma) injections, umbilical product injections, Amniotic fluid injections, cortisone injections, and hyaluronic acid injections.  They also provide COVID testing, either in-house or at your location for personal use or group testing,  with results in 10 minutes.

Their goal is to make you feel better as safely and as quickly as possible in the comfort of their brand new office or their State-of-the-Art Mercedes Benz Sprinter converted to a mini medical office, which is sterilized after each visit. They also offer IV hydration therapy and other recovery treatments.

They are proud to provide a safe, modern-day, high-quality level of care, medical experience, and commitment to all of their patients, as trusted by professional athletes.

As an Atlanta native, Dr. Jaeson Courseault received his Bachelor of Science degree in Psychology Pre-Med from Morehouse College on a full academic scholarship. While at Morehouse he played cornerback for their football team and graduated with Summa Cum Laude honors. With roots in New Orleans, LA, he went to medical school at Tulane University and completed a Family Medicine Residency at LSU.

He completed his fellowship specialty training in Sports Medicine in Waco, TX. For the past 5 years, he served as Team Physician for several high schools, 2 junior colleges, and Baylor University Men’s Basketball Team and Track/Cross Country Teams. Dr. Jaeson Courseault left his practice in Texas and returned to Georgia in October 2020 to serve his home community.

After such an awesome experience in Waco, TX he decided that it was time to be closer to family. He enjoys golfing and spending time with his wife Brittany and his baby daughter Xoé. His Christian faith drives his love for people through medicine. Part of his daily prayer is that his patients see the high level of care that he has for his patients. He prides himself in having an excellent bedside manner.

Company website | LinkedIn| Facebook | Instagram

Anthony Chen, Host of Family Business Radio

Anthony Chen, Lighthouse Financial, and Host of “Family Business Radio”

This show is sponsored and brought to you by Anthony Chen with Lighthouse Financial Network. Securities and advisory services offered through Royal Alliance Associates, Inc. (RAA), member FINRA/SIPC. RAA is separately owned and other entities and/or marketing names, products or services referenced here are independent of RAA. The main office address is 575 Broadhollow Rd. Melville, NY 11747. You can reach Anthony at 631-465-9090 ext 5075 or by email at anthonychen@lfnllc.com.

Anthony Chen started his career in financial services with MetLife in Buffalo, NY in 2008. Born and raised in Elmhurst, Queens, he considers himself a full-blooded New Yorker while now enjoying his Atlanta, GA home. Specializing in family businesses and their owners, Anthony works to protect what is most important to them. From preserving to creating wealth, Anthony partners with CPAs and attorneys to help address all of the concerns and help clients achieve their goals. By using a combination of financial products ranging from life, disability, and long term care insurance to many investment options through Royal Alliance. Anthony looks to be the eyes and ears for his client’s financial foundation. In his spare time, Anthony is an avid long-distance runner.

The complete show archive of “Family Business Radio” can be found at familybusinessradioshow.com.

Tagged With: Anthony Chen, business broker, ERISA Law, Family Business Radio, Jaeson Courseault, Lifehope Trif3cta Sports Medicine, Lighthouse Financial Network, M&A Advisor, Michael Horowitz, Nancy Pridgen, orthopedic medicine, Pridgen Bassett Law, sports medicine, Transworld Business Advisors of Atlanta

Renasant Roots Entrepreneurial Success Series, with Antonio Henson, Renasant Bank, Mia Martin, Modern Creatif, and Trenton Carson, TC Productions

February 14, 2022 by John Ray

Renasant Roots
North Fulton Business Radio
Renasant Roots Entrepreneurial Success Series, with Antonio Henson, Renasant Bank, Mia Martin, Modern Creatif, and Trenton Carson, TC Productions
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Renasant Roots

Renasant Roots Entrepreneurial Success Series, with Antonio Henson, Renasant Bank, Mia Martin, Modern Creatif, and Trenton Carson, TC Productions (North Fulton Business Radio, Episode 431)

The Renasant Roots Entrepreneurial Success Series is a capacity-building program designed to assist small business owners with business development, marketing, networking, and many other benefits. Two participants in the most recent Atlanta-based cohort, Mia Martin of Modern Creatif and Trenton Carson of TC Productions, joined Antonio Henson of Renasant to discuss how the program came to be, their experience with it, the benefits they have realized, and much more. North Fulton Business Radio is broadcast from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta.

Renasant Roots Entrepreneurial Success Series

Renasant Bank is proud to introduce the Renasant Roots Entrepreneurial Success Series to the Atlanta market. The capacity building workshop is a four-week program customized to help small business owners sharpen their business development skills and fill gaps in their knowledge and experience to make their enterprises stronger. Renasant Roots was created in partnership with the Birmingham Business Resource Center four years ago.

With the program having great success in the Birmingham market, Renasant’s Birmingham team and the BBRC are sharing the Renasant Roots template with the Atlanta Renasant team to share with small business owners in Atlanta. “We are excited to bring the Renasant Roots program to the Atlanta market. After watching the success and growth of the program in Birmingham, we decided that it would be a great opportunity to share these business resources with the Atlanta community as well,” said Zennie Lynch, Atlanta Market President. “In addition to the skills development and powerful information these participants will receive, they will also be provided with a small business development grant of $2,500 when they complete the program.”

The workshop will focus on business development and planning, marketing and branding, accounting principles and tax preparation, funding options, and resource development. Speakers for the sessions will be provided by Invest Atlanta, Access to Capital for Entrepreneurs, LiftFund, and Atlanta Black Chambers.

There is no cost to participate in the program other than committing 10 hours over five weeks. 10 participants will be selected through an application process.

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook

Antonio Henson, MBA, First Vice President – Community Lending Relationship Director, Renasant Bank

Antonio Henson, MBA, First VP- Community Lending Relationship Director, Renasant Bank

Antonio Henson has over twenty years of experience in business and banking. He has facilitated training sessions for staff aimed at enhancing product & credit knowledge and regulatory procedures.

Antonio has structured project financing designed to spur neighborhood revitalization efforts in the low-income communities throughout the State of New Jersey and Metro Atlanta. This action involved community outreach and working with elected officials, government agencies, quasi-public agencies and the private sector to promote revitalization and commercial development.

He has provided expertise and assistance to various community-based organizations, to assist them with meeting the financial needs of their respective organizations.

LinkedIn

Mia Martin, CEO, Modern Creatif

Mia Martin, CEO, Modern Creatif

Modern Créatif was founded in 2013 by Mia D. Martin because of her passion to educate and help professionals position themselves as subject matter experts with their professional brands and businesses. Mia worked in sales and marketing for a Fortune 10 Consumer Package Goods company for 14 years. During her professional career, she developed hundreds of employees throughout the country and managed thousands of retail and wholesale relationships.

Mia is passionate about taking her professional experiences and transferring it to her clients through effective strategy development for marketing, branding, and professional presentation.

Modern Créatif takes pride in not just providing deliverables but also effective education and strategy development. To date, Modern Créatif has served hundreds of Atlanta entrepreneurs and entrepreneurs throughout the country. Modern Créatif is passionate about workforce development in Atlanta and has provided free online training resources through our free Agency Academy. We have also developed educational resources for Access to Capital for Entrepreneurs to service the NPU-V and developing businesses.

Our Mission is to provide premium-level services that empower entrepreneurs to best represent their business and brand.

Mia has worked with SBDC UGA at GSU, SCORE, the Women’s Entrepreneurial Opportunity Project, General Assembly, Atlanta Business League, 21st Century Leaders, The Network of Executive Women, The Commerce Club-Marketing Club, Georgia Power Supplier Diversity Council, and more to help educate entrepreneurs and professionals on Professional Presentation, and Branding and Marketing Strategy as a strategist and professional speaker.

Mia is a proud member of the Harvard Business Review Advisory Council and a board member for the Kettering Executive Network.

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook

Trenton Carson, President, TC Productions

Trenton Carson, President, TC Productions

TC Productions Video Production Company is a full-service video production company that partners with marketing executives and business owners. They develop and execute highly customized video marketing campaigns focused on driving leads, awareness, brand loyalty and retention. Their focus is in Branding, Marketing and Testimonial video production.

The two areas their company specialize in:

They produce videos specifically for your intended audience – Video Production.
They get those videos in front of your intended audience – Video Marketing.

They have helped their clients:

*Build brand awareness and establish an influencing presence online
*Effectively use video as a tool in their marketing strategy
*Create evergreen content that enhances their marketing message
*Become comfortable with the growing demand the market has for videos

What they learned:
Stories are in everything you do. Your brand and the story it tells impacts people, what they believe, how they feel, and the decisions they make. The combination of visuals and sound evokes emotions more effectively than text alone. If you want to draw your viewers in, connect with them emotionally, and move them to take the next step, working with TC Productions to produce your next video will make you the company hero.

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Instagram

Questions and Topics in this Interview:

  • Antonio Henson
  • Renasant Roots and how it started
  • Mia Martin and Modern Creatif
  • Trenton Carson and TC Productions
  • Applications for the next Cohort

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

RenasantBank

 

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

 

Special thanks to A&S Culinary Concepts for their support of this edition of North Fulton Business Radio. A&S Culinary Concepts, based in Johns Creek, is an award-winning culinary studio, celebrated for corporate catering, corporate team building, Big Green Egg Boot Camps, and private group events. They also provide oven-ready, cooked from scratch meals to go they call “Let Us Cook for You.” To see their menus and events, go to their website or call 678-336-9196.

 

Tagged With: Antonio Henson, digital marketing, Mia Martin, Modern Creatif, renasant bank, Renasant Roots, Renasant Roots Entrepreneurial Success Series, TC Productions, Trenton Carson, video production

ATL Developments with Geoff Smith: Roxie and Michael Hernandez, The Hernandez Group

February 14, 2022 by John Ray

The Hernandez Group
North Fulton Business Radio
ATL Developments with Geoff Smith: Roxie and Michael Hernandez, The Hernandez Group
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The Hernandez Group

ATL Developments with Geoff Smith: Roxie and Michael Hernandez, The Hernandez Group

Host Geoff Smith welcomed Roxie and Michael Hernandez with the Hernandez Group. They discussed the current real estate market, how they work together as a couple, staying nimble amid uncertainty, the role of the buyer’s and seller’s agents, and much more. Regular episodes of ATL Developments with Geoff Smith are broadcast from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta.

The Hernandez Group

The Hernandez Group, a team of specialists out of the Keller Williams Consultants office, serves real estate buyers, sellers, and investors in the Atlanta Metro Area. Since 1995, Roxie and Michael have been dedicated to building relationships and are committed to providing the highest level of service by being honest, loyal, understanding, and attentive.

They strive as a team to ensure a smooth and seamless transaction from start to finish as well as make every effort to be proactive and limit surprises. They are committed to always exceeding our clients’ expectations that they always think of and recommend the Hernandez Group to friends and family for any Real Estate needs.

If you know of anyone who needs help buying or selling Real Estate, Roxie and Michael would love the opportunity to earn their business!

Company website | Facebook 

Roxie and Michael Hernandez, Agents/Brokers, The Hernandez Group

Michael and Roxie Hernandez, The Hernandez Group

Roxie is a native Texan and moved to Atlanta in 1990 where she met her husband, Michael. They have 3 beautiful daughters. Roxie sits on the board for the Foster Care Support Foundation and Michael also sits on the boards for Roswell First Responder Foundation as well as the Roswell Rotary board since 2000.

Both are leaders and mentors in their communities. Roxie and Michael have been selling real estate full-time in the Atlanta metro area since 1995. They are deeply passionate about giving back to the communities that they serve and live in.

Roxie’s LinkedIn | Michael’s LinkedIn

Geoff Smith, Host of ATL Developments with Geoff Smith

Geoff Smith, Host of ATL Developments with Geoff Smith

ATL Developments with Geoff Smith covers all things economic development in the Atlanta Metro area. From everything inside the Beltline to Avalon and beyond, Geoff Smith interviews the movers and shakers making the ATL one of the best places to live, work and play. An archive of past episodes can be found here.

Geoff Smith is a mortgage banker with Assurance Financial working with Real Estate agents and homebuyers to help them get happily to their closing table. Geoff is an authority on the latest economic development trends shaping the Atlanta Metro area. His interviews reveal an inside perspective at how things get done in the ATL.

Geoff is an active member of his community serving on the Board of Directors of the Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce, as well as holding the position of chairman for the Chamber’s Education Committee. He is also Secretary of the Roswell Youth Baseball Association and coaches his sons in football, baseball and basketball. Geoff enjoys golf, camping and traveling with his wife and two sons. He is a graduate of the University of Georgia.

Tagged With: ATL Developments, Atlanta Real Estate, Geoff Smith, Michael Hernandez, North Fulton Business Radio, Roxie Hernandez, The Hernandez Group

Becca Goldsberry, Southwestern Coaching

February 14, 2022 by John Ray

Becca Goldsberry
Business Leaders Radio
Becca Goldsberry, Southwestern Coaching
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Becca Goldsberry

Becca Goldsberry, Southwestern Coaching

Becca Goldsberry with Southwestern Coaching joined host John Ray to address why a coach can be indispensable for a business owner or executive as they strive for their professional and personal goals. Becca discussed the role of a coach in providing accountability, the value of coaching at all stages of a career, success stories, how she works with clients, and much more. Business Leaders Radio is produced virtually from the Business RadioX® studios in Atlanta.

Southwestern Coaching, a division of Southwestern Consulting

Southwestern Consulting’s story actually begins with another member of the Southwestern Family of Companies—Southwestern Advantage. Established in 1855 in Nashville, Tennessee, The Southwestern Publishing House published and sold Bibles door-to-door, allowing young people to not only learn the sales profession at an early age, but also to earn money to pay for a college education. Southwestern Advantage was developed out of that model, and today, Advantage continues to thrive as the Family of Companies’ core entity, with college-aged entrepreneurs around the world selling and promoting educational study systems.

One of those savvy entrepreneurs, Dustin Hillis, saw the opportunity to take the skills he learned in Advantage and teach them to other sales professionals and leaders, elevating the perception of sales to a true relationship-building profession. Thus, Southwestern Consulting was born. Co-founder and CEO, Hillis, along with other top-producing Southwestern Advantage alumni founded the company on the principles of sales and leadership coaching, establishing the first division, Southwestern Coaching. In the coming years, those principles would be expanded to the newer divisions, elevating events with high-quality, engaging speakers, and empowering people to reach their true potential.

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Instagram

Becca Goldsberry, Elite Sales and Leadership Coach, Southwestern Coaching

Becca Goldsberry, Elite Sales and Leadership Coach, Southwestern Coaching

Becca is an Elite Sales and Leadership Coach and an expert at recruiting, lead generation, and business development. She has led a large organization with over 300 team members. As a leader, she is recognized as a top recruiter and loves developing team members to help them achieve their goals and dreams.
She has worked with her family’s five businesses, which included a 65-year-old excavation company, a lake management and treatment company, and a farm management company. While working with the family businesses, she helped develop a family foundation, sat on numerous boards, and helped with business plans and strategies on how to incorporate the third and fourth generations.

Becca worked as a family therapist and school counselor for six years prior before moving into sales. While in sales, Becca has held sales positions focusing on new business development, territory management, recruitment, and retention.

Becca graduated from the University of Louisville with a master’s in social work and an undergraduate degree from Concordia University.

• Was in the Top 50, out of over 10,000 sales associates
• Former top producer in business development by increasing new business sales by over 170%
• Experienced merchandiser for several large Fortune 500 companies including the world’s largest retailer
• Former certified corporate trainer and trained hundreds of new consultants

You can find Becca volunteering her time raising money for cancer research, The Junior League of Indianapolis, volunteering with Church charities, traveling around the world when she can with her husband and kids, cooking up awesome meals for her family and friends to have some quality time together. Becca is an avid parrot head and you can find her at Jimmy Buffett’s concerts when they come into town.

Becca’s mission and purpose is to help others see their greatest potential and pursue their dreams. She is committed to helping people to believe in their ultimate potential in life and inspires them to live a life of excellence, joy and success.

Website | LinkedIn | Facebook

Questions and Topics

  • What is a coach, why should people in business or salespeople have a coach?
  • The Power of Perspective
  • How do you maintain perseverance and focus?
  • Becca’s passion for helping clients find their why, purpose, and passion for what they do.
  • How connecting your vision with your day-to-day activities makes you unstoppable
  • The importance of daily motivation
  • The various ways Southwestern Consulting can serve companies.

Business Leaders Radio is hosted by John Ray and produced virtually from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® in Alpharetta.  The show can be found on all the major podcast apps and a full archive can be found here.

RenasantBank

 

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

Tagged With: Becca Goldsberry, Business Leaders Radio, business owner coaching, Coaching, John Ray, leadership coach, leadership coaching, renasant bank, Sales, sales coach, Southwestern Coaching

There’s Value in Consistency

February 14, 2022 by John Ray

There's Value in Consistency
North Fulton Studio
There's Value in Consistency
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There's Value in Consistency

There’s Value in Consistency

Clients and prospects value consistency. There’s not much of a revelation in that statement. What’s interesting, though, is that clients and prospects value consistency so highly that it can show up in odd or even negative ways. Here’s a story to illustrate the point. The Price and Value Journey is presented by John Ray and produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®.

TRANSCRIPT

John Ray: [00:00:06] And hello again. I’m John Ray on the Price and Value Journey. Consistency is important, even when it’s negative. Consistency is a trait we must cultivate as professional services providers because it’s so important to our clients. It’s so important for us to be consistent, as consistent as we possibly can in the work that we do on their behalf and just showing up and doing so on a regular basis. Not only though, with our work, but in what we ask of our clients to help bring about their transformation.

John Ray: [00:01:02] I joke with some of my clients that when they hire me, I’m their mother, and I will bug them about what’s needed and what we need to have to keep everything moving along. Consistency is so important that even when the issues are negative, the client values that consistency.

John Ray: [00:01:38] Years and years ago, as it seems, I was a securities analyst with a major regional investment firm. My clients were institutional funds, and I regularly made trips to see them, to update them on the various bank stocks, because that’s the industry I covered, that they were owned and that they were interested in. I remember being in Boston visiting a fund manager, and we were in his office talking. And we were well into the meeting when his secretary opened the door, rushed in with a note, and someone was on the phone for him.

John Ray: [00:03:00] He looked at the note and he said, “Sorry, John. Just a minute. I really need to take this call.” He took the call and listened. He didn’t say much. He just said, “Yes. Yes. Okay. Yes. Thank you,” and concluded the call. And he looked at me, and apologized, and he said, “This is someone whose call I always take. So, thank you for allowing me to do that. It’s not that he’s always correct. In fact, he’s never right. He’s never right about any of the calls or predictions that he makes. Period. But there’s value in that. So, remember that, John, there’s value in consistency.”

John Ray: [00:04:19] So, even when the situation or the circumstances aren’t favorable, there’s value in consistency. Clients value consistency.

 

 

About The Price and Value Journey

The title of this show describes the journey all professional services providers are on:  building a services practice by seeking to convince the world of the value we offer, helping clients achieve the outcomes they desire, and trying to do all that at pricing which reflects the value we deliver.

If you feel like you’re working too hard for too little money in your solo or small firm practice, this show is for you. Even if you’re reasonably happy with your practice, you’ll hear ways to improve both your bottom line as well as the mindset you bring to your business.

The show is produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® and can be found on all the major podcast apps. The complete show archive is here.

John Ray, Host of The Price and Value Journey

John Ray The Price and Value Journey
John Ray, Host of “The Price and Value Journey”

John Ray is the host of The Price and Value Journey.

John owns Ray Business Advisors, a business advisory practice. John’s services include advising solopreneur and small professional services firms on their pricing. John is passionate about the power of pricing for business owners, as changing pricing is the fastest way to change the profitability of a business. His clients are professionals who are selling their “grey matter,” such as attorneys, CPAs, accountants and bookkeepers, consultants, marketing professionals, and other professional services practitioners.

In his other business, John is a Studio Owner, Producer, and Show Host with Business RadioX®, and works with business owners who want to do their own podcast. As a veteran B2B services provider, John’s special sauce is coaching B2B professionals to use a podcast to build relationships in a non-salesy way which translate into revenue.

John is the host of North Fulton Business Radio, Minneapolis-St. Paul Business Radio, Nashville Business Radio, Alpharetta Tech Talk, and Business Leaders Radio. house shows which feature a wide range of business leaders and companies. John has hosted and/or produced over 1,100 podcast episodes.

Connect with John Ray:

Website | LinkedIn | Twitter

Business RadioX®:  LinkedIn | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram

Tagged With: Consistency, John Ray, Price and Value Journey, professional services, professional services providers, reliability, solopreneurs, value

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