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Family Business Radio, Episode 9: Neal and Sally David, The David Academy

June 27, 2020 by John Ray

The David Academy
Family Business Radio
Family Business Radio, Episode 9: Neal and Sally David, The David Academy
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Neal and Sally David, The David Academy

Family Business Radio, Episode 9:  Neal and Sally David, The David Academy

Neal and Sally David of The David Academy have a passion for creating an environment where students can succeed in their academics and college prep, and that passion shows through in this interview with host Anthony Chen. “Family Business Radio” is broadcast from the North Fulton Studio of Business RadioX®.

Neal and Sally David, The David Academy

Neal David is the Founder and CEO of The David Academy, and his wife Sally serves as VP of Sales and Marketing.

Neal began teaching high school Latin in 2000. After teaching and meeting with thousands of students and parents, he realized he wanted to provide additional services outside the classroom that would benefit and prepare his students beyond those 4 walls. In 2007, he began offering summer Latin camps to prepare his students for the National JCL Conventions every July. In these camps, he prepared students for Latin Grammar, Language, Mythology, History, Geography, Derivatives, Mottoes, etc. for the various national tests, as well as the Certamen (Latin Quiz Bowl) Championship. In 2010, The David Academy was born, capitalizing on the success of the summer camps (our students won numerous national awards and championships), we added SAT Verbal prep to the mix. Over the last few years, we have expanded our services to meet the growing needs we see.

The David Academy now offers Private Latin Instruction, National Latin Exam (NLE) Preparation, AP Latin Preparation, SAT 2 Subject Test for Latin Preparation, AP Language and Essay-Writing, SAT/ACT Verbal and Math Preparation, College Coaching, and General Educational/Life Coaching.

They offer only Private instruction in these areas so that they can properly evaluate the strengths and weaknesses for each student, observe their learning styles, determine their goals, and map out an educational plan of how to achieve those goals. This cannot be done adequately in a group or classroom setting. This personalized approach DELIVERS RESULTS!

For more information on The David Academy, go to their website or call 770-383-1320.

Anthony Chen, Host of “Family Business Radio”

family owned craft breweries
Anthony Chen

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, college coaching, Family Business Radio, Latin, Neal David, private instruction, Sally David, SAT Verbal prep, summer camps, The David Academy, tutoring

Alpharetta Tech Talk: Anas Sawaf, CirrusLabs

June 26, 2020 by John Ray

Alpharetta Tech Talk
Alpharetta Tech Talk
Alpharetta Tech Talk: Anas Sawaf, CirrusLabs
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“Alpharetta Tech Talk,” Episode 17:  Anas Sawaf, CirrusLabs

CirrusLabsIn a pandemic environment, businesses and other employers are suddenly in need of technology and analytics which monitor potential virus spread and help ensure proper social distancing and other risk mitigation efforts. Anas Sawaf, Director of IoT and Analytics for CirrusLabs, joined the show to discuss the company’s technology and analytics solution, PHOTONE4. It’s a fascinating discussion. The host of “Alpharetta Tech Talk” is John Ray and this series is the show is produced virtually by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® in Alpharetta.

Anas Sawaf, Director, Emerging Tech – IoT & Analytics

Anas Sawaf is the Director of Emerging Tech, IoT and Analytics, at CirrusLabs.

The COVID-19 pandemic is a global health and societal emergency that requires effective and accelerated actions by all governments, businesses and communities across the world. Government agencies and businesses have found it challenging to operate in a normal or optimum environment. Many individuals don’t know that they are infected with COVID-19. Social-distancing is not strictly enforced and many people are unknowingly spreading the virus.

CirrusLabsPHOTONE4 is CirrusLabs’ Temperature Detection & Social-Distancing solution. It was developed to enable and enhance risk mitigation efforts. The goal is to help government agencies and businesses detect, alert, & report on human body temperature, social grouping & proximity, in addition to facial personal protection.

CirrusLabs is a fast growing full-service digital transformation company with offices in the greater Atlanta and Northern Virginia areas.  They help clients focus on emerging opportunities, value creation, and innovate on new lines businesses by harnessing the power of their digital framework. They have successfully helped their clients disrupt their business models via their digital strategy, modernizing their technology, and aligning better with their customer needs.

Their services are designed to create Digital Strategies, Agile Organizations, Modernized Technology, Data, Emerging Technology and help their customers launch new innovative products to attain a competitive advantage. CirrusLabs provides customized training for organizations embarking on Digital Transformation through Scrum Alliance, ICAgile, SAFe and other certified organizations. Their clients include start-ups to Fortune 500 companies.
For more information, you can visit the company website. To connect with Anas directly, you can email directly or contact through LinkedIn.
CirrusLabs

Question/Topics Covered in this Interview

  • The focus for many businesses in manufacturing and retail is to prevent infectious diseases impacting their bottom line in the present and the future.
  • What role is IoT technology taking in regards to supporting risk mitigation efforts?
  •  Can organizations protect their businesses from health risks by relying solely on temperature detection methods?
  • What role does corporate safety compliance play in risk mitigation efforts for businesses?
  • How important is proximity detection for preventing the spread of infectious diseases?

About “Alpharetta Tech Talk”

“Alpharetta Tech Talk” is the radio show/podcast home of the burgeoning technology sector in Alpharetta and the surrounding GA 400 and North Fulton area. We feature key technology players from a dynamic region of over 900 technology companies. “Alpharetta Tech Talk” comes to you from from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®.

Past episodes of “Alpharetta Tech Talk” can be found at alpharettatechtalk.com.

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 approximately $12.9 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.

 

Tagged With: analytics, Anas Sawaf, CirrusLabs, COVID-19, IoT, pandemic, PHOTONE4, risk mitigation, social distancing

IT Help Atlanta with Rick Higgins:  Honey Shaw, DeWoskin Law Firm and Chris McCaleb, Georgia Association of REALTORS

June 26, 2020 by John Ray

Georgia Association of Realtors
IT Help Atlanta
IT Help Atlanta with Rick Higgins:  Honey Shaw, DeWoskin Law Firm and Chris McCaleb, Georgia Association of REALTORS
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Georgia Association of Realtors

IT Help Atlanta with Rick Higgins: Honey Shaw, DeWoskin Law Firm and Chris McCaleb, Georgia Association of REALTORS

On this edition of “IT Help Atlanta,” host Rick Higgins welcomed Honey Shaw to discuss her law firm’s work on behalf of clients, and Chris McCaleb to address the work his association does on behalf of Georgia’s realtor community. “IT Help Atlanta” is brought to you by TeamLogic IT, your technology advisor.

Honey Shaw, Associate Attorney, Dewoskin Law Firm

Honey Shaw

DeWoskin Law firm is a small trial litigation firm based in Decatur, Georgia. They specialize in personal injury litigation but also handle criminal defense and consumer debt defense matters. They serve both Fulton and DeKalb counties as well as the surrounding metro areas. Honey Shaw is an associate attorney at the DeWoskin Law Firm.

Honey earned her Juris Doctorate from Georgia State University College of Law. In addition to her litigious work, Honey is a registered mediator with the Georgia Office of Alternate Dispute Resolution. Prior to her practicing law, Honey earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in International Affairs as well as a Bachelor of Arts in Spanish at the University of Georgia. When she is not working, Honey enjoys pickling vegetables, walking her dogs, and watching rugby.

You can reach Honey by email or visit the Dewoskin website to learn more.

Chris McCaleb, Director of IT, Georgia Association of REALTORS®

Chris McCaleb

The Georgia Association of REALTORS® is the largest trade association in the state, with more than 43,000 members across Georgia.

Chris McCaleb has been the GAR Director of IT since 2014.

Visit the Georgia REALTOR website to learn more or email Chris.

 

About the Show

“IT Help Atlanta” profiles small to mid-market businesses and highlights how those companies use technology to succeed. An archive of previous shows can be found here.

About Your Host

Rick-Higgins-2019Rick Higgins is Owner and President of TeamLogic IT of Dunwoody, GA. Rick’s firm is part of a national network of locally-owned service businesses, providing comprehensive IT services to the small-medium sized business market.

They offer managed service for networking, cyber security, data and email, as well as hardware and software support in addition to a variety of consultation and preventative maintenance services. Rick’s personal and corporate philosophy is simple: Stand up, be bold, and tell the truth.

Connect with Rick on LinkedIn and Twitter, and follow TeamLogic on Facebook.

Show Transcript

Rick: Welcome, everyone, to the “IT Help Atlanta” radio show, the show that profiles, small and medium, mid-market businesses, and highlights how those companies use technology to succeed. “IT Help Atlanta” is brought to you by TeamLogic IT, your managed services technology advisor, specializing in cybersecurity, cloud, and business continuity solutions. TeamLogic leverages cutting edge technology to solve all types of business problems. Go to ithelpatlanta.com for audio archives of this radio show and to learn more about our sponsor, TeamLogic IT.

I’m your host Rick Higgins, and today’s special guests are Chris McCaleb, the director of IT for the Georgia Association of Realtors, and Ms. Honey Shaw, an associate attorney for the DeWoskin Law Firm. Welcome, guys.

Chris: Hi, there.

Honey: Thank you.

Rick: Good morning to both of you. And thank you for being here. We’re gonna do the interview process. We’re gonna start with Chris. And Honey, if you’ll just hang on for a minute or so, and we’re gonna get to you. But Chris, let’s start in with you. Tell the audience who you are, and what do you do?

Chris: Okay, so, I’m Chris McCaleb. Happy to be here by the way. Thanks for having me on, Rick. I am the director of IT for the Georgia Association of Realtors. That’s the state association for anyone that’s a realtor in Georgia. Of course, realtors will have a local association, and then the state. And what we do for realtors is we provide the ongoing education that they need to have to maintain their realtor status, as well as a full set of legal forms and conference opportunities. So, I am the IT director for the association. And it’s actually, even though it’s for the entire state, it is a small business, because I support primarily a relatively small staff. So, that’s what I do.

Rick: So, that’s great, Chris, thanks. Give us the success story. How have you helped folks? And I know you help both, not just the folks that are internal within the Georgia Association of Realtors, but you help the clients as well.

Chris; Yeah. So, I think that one of the big things that we, which is probably common to a lot of companies, is that when I came into it, about eight years ago at this point, it was still kind of in the process. It was still, basically, a very traditional shop. It’s a small shop. It’s just got a lot of giant servers hanging out in a dark server room. And having gone through the process of moving incrementally into the cloud, and then having, you know, having the finance team or the leadership team say, “Hey, do we not have these expenses anymore of this hunk of metal in the closet?” And I say, “No, we don’t. It’s in the cloud.” And of course, there are expenses there. But it just opens a lot of stuff up for us.

And it’s ideal for what we are, for the smaller company. And still in the process of doing it, but…and to my happiness, they’re very open for that kind of change, too. So, that’s been a good experience.

Rick: You guys do normally, during normal times…you know, here we are, it’s June 24th, or some 16 to 17 weeks into the COVID situation. We’re not fully shut down here in Georgia, but we’re trickling back. I think that was the word you used earlier, are trickling back into work. And we’re seeing that in our client base as well. Are you guys at all back in your classroom for the in-class stuff?

Chris: We’re not. And it’s been an interesting transition, just like for everybody in the world. But for a company that essentially puts on events, you know, whether they’re education events or whatever, and like a lot of other companies, we have become experts in Zoom. I mean, Zoom has made…you know, the video conference company that we’ve centered on and they’ve made it incredibly easy. And, you know, the professional development team at our company has…frankly, they’ve always been on the forefront of that kind of thing even before me.

And so they were ready to pivot very quickly. There’s some regulatory stuff around it, around, you know, whether the continuing education credits will apply if you’re not in person, but they’ve navigated that. So, we’re not yet in the classroom fully yet. We’ve just done a couple of one-off events where people are spaced out very, you know…with a lot of distance, but…and I think that will be how it’ll continue for a while. And it’s also been interesting, too, to get the feedback from members who have said, “Wow, this really works out. We could have been doing this all along.”

You know, and, of course, there’s no substitute, of course, for…or it’s not the same, of course, as in person. But you know, this technology has been there for a long time. So, maybe that will be a very slight silver lining out of all of this.

Rick: Have you seen that your, and I know you guys watch this pretty closely, have you guys seen your roles, your membership roles, increase, decline, stay steady? What are you seeing on that?

Chris: I don’t think we’ve seen any kind of decline yet. It’s probably a little early to tell because, you know, just kind of the cycle of things like this. But it’s one of the things that, you know, we’ll be watching very, very closely, and of course, it’ll depend on the market, and that kind of thing, too. But leadership has been really working, you know, around every cycle to try to make sure that we can pivot to do what we need to do during these strange new times that we’re in.

Rick: So, that kind of covers your client base, and that they’re not back yet, quite yet. But what about your staff, your internal staff, what’s that process of coming back to work look like for you?

Chris: So, what we’re looking at right now, for the last two or three weeks, we’ve had skeleton staff in the office. And they have sort of staggered our hours. I think even down to the point where, and I was speaking to you about this earlier, of trying to kind of do the calculation of whose office is physically in proximity to another one. So, let’s not have two neighbors come in on the same day. So, we’ve been staggering just…either the head of the department, or one member of the department. And about two days a week, you know, depending on what the thing is. I’ve been working from home. I mean, it feels like 30 years, but I guess what has it been, 3 months? I don’t know.

Rick: I know.

Chris: Yeah, I’ve started to go in two days a week for the last I guess, whatever month. And, you know, I’m met at each door with masks and hand sanitizer, and we have a sort of a set of protocols. But we’re planning to open up a little bit more in July and, you know, have had a lot discussions around that. And there’ll be more people in. But leadership has, you know, made it clear that they want people to be comfortable, you know. And so yeah, it’s been a positive experience in terms of how they’ve set it up for us, I have to say.

Rick: You know, you said that you guys were able to pivot very quickly for remote with both your classroom activities and your staff. But, you know, that’s a credit to you, Chris, for the work that you’ve done. And, you know, full disclosure to the listening audience here, Chris is a client of ours, and we’ve known each other for some four years or so. You know, and the work that you did to prepare for that, did you find that you yourself and your project scopes, did you have to pivot at all on your projects? Did you have to bring something new in and change your mind? Or did you just continue to keep doing what you’re doing?

Chris: You know, I’m really lucky that I have the position that I do. I’m a one-man show. And I’m lucky that I have the position that the staff are very self-sufficient. A number of them were already working remotely. We have a government affairs staff, for instance, that primarily do work, you know, down at the capital and that kind of thing. So, they are, basically, remote already. So, my projects end up being sort of a lot of support, and development of sort of the web applications we have.

So, you know, that’s continued as it’s gone. What I found is that I have to do a lot of checking…just like anybody, I have to kinda do a lot of checking in online with people to make sure they’re doing okay. And then, of course, they do the same with me. So, I’ve been very lucky, and it hasn’t had to be a huge pivot to do that. Pretty much we were kind of on the road to do that, just kind of goose the accelerator a little bit on it.

Rick: Gotcha. So again, Chris, we’ve known each other for a while now, and I know a little bit about your background. I know that in your past, you’ve worked for very large companies. But the Georgia Association of Realtors, at the end of the day, really is a small business. How do you like the difference, or I should say this…I should ask you this way, what do you like about working for a small business compared to the big business environment?

Chris: Yeah, it won’t surprise you I bet to learn that you get to, not only because I’m the head of the department, but because it’s smaller, you can move a lot quicker. You can pivot a lot quicker, and you have because you know…and the needs are a lot smaller. So, there’s a lot less meetings, with your team, around an initiative that might be going on. And if you learn of something that’s a great idea, that you wanna bring on, or something that you need to phase out, you can move on it fairly quickly. And I’m extremely lucky that I have, like I’ve said, management that is…they trust me, and I’m also lucky that I’ve found some, to give you guys a plug, some really good allies.

You know, so I know that if I have gotten myself into a corner, or in over my head, I know who to call. And it’s just easier to do all that when it’s a smaller company. And, you know, it’s been a fantastic professional experience to come to something small from something big, because I’ve been in organizations that are global, and there’s so many advantages to that. But a lot of the decision making, a lot of the, you know, the big picture is just completely out of my field of vision. And you know, I have my own little hat, my own little corner of the world to deal with.

But coming into a smaller company after that, and sort of having been prepped for it, for being a generalist, I should say, I do everything from…I met somebody whose desktop to figure out why Excel is not working, and then I’m also, you know, developing web applications for the company. So, the large company gave me a very good background to come into a small company. And it was…you know, it’s been very good. It’s been very good to be able to try stuff out that I want to try out and get to do it very quickly.

Rick: That’s great. And thanks for the plug. Chris, what’s an aspect of your business that people don’t generally think about, but that you wish people would ask you about?

Chris: I think that, you know, when we had talked about this question earlier, I came at it from the perspective not just of this business, but I guess all of support. And this is to kind of focus on sort of the level…the part of it that I’ve been interested in is…you know, I love the geeky stuff, but I also love being able to just kind of help somebody personally out. That’s kind of help somebody out with their job. And the thing that I wish that people would ask me about, in a general sense, more is am I doing, whatever this process is that I’m doing at my desk, is there some way I could be doing it differently?

I think everybody kinda comes to working on a computer in a different way. And I’m kind of I’m always astounded at sort of like the assumptions, and sometimes the really strange labyrinths that people put themselves through to get some basic tasks done. And sometimes I think maybe I should just kinda sit behind them in their office for a while and watch how they do things. And some people are very savvy with computers, some people are not. And I wish, this is not a very high-level answer, but I wish people would say, “Hey, how can I be doing this better? Do I really need to go through 32 steps to create this spreadsheet or is there something simpler?”

Because there’s nothing better…to me, the best thing is when you’ve provided somebody with an answer or a tool that is just gonna make their job easier, so they can actually do their job and not have to worry about the tools of their job. So…

Rick: I think that is a high-level answer because you’ve just told us how you are fulfilled in your work. I mean, what’s [crosstalk 00:14:30]

Chris: Absolutely, yeah. And, you know, the people I work with are… When somebody is grateful to you for something that kind of is you didn’t even think it was, you know, an obstacle, it’s a really nice feeling, too. And you know, and some people…but some people just have their own process, too. And that’s okay as well. You know, you just wanna be there to help them if they need it.

Rick: Yeah. Yeah. Okay, great. Well, Chris, I wanna wrap up with you. But tell the audience how to get in touch with you. What are the best avenues for that?

Chris: Sure. If they wanna get in touch with me for any reason, the best thing, and just I won’t make anybody memorize an entire email address now, but our website is garealtor.com. That’s for Georgia Realtor, it’s garealtor.com. And I’m right there in the staff section. Can’t miss me. I’m the only guy in the IT department. And if you ever have any questions about any part of it, I’d love to answer them or get you to somebody that can.

Rick: Chris, thank you so much. I’m gonna wrap up with you, and pivot over to interview with Honey. But before I do that, I wanna read our commercial blog…blurb one more time. “IT Help Atlanta” is brought to you by TeamLogic IT, your managed services technology advisor, specializing in cybersecurity, cloud, and business continuity solutions. TeamLogic leverages cutting edge technology to solve all types of business problems. Go to ithelpatalnta.com for audio archives of this show, and to learn more about our sponsor, TeamLogic IT. So now, Miss Honey Shaw, the associate attorney for the DeWoskin Law Firm. Honey, tell the audience who you are and what do you do?

Honey: So, as you said, I am an associate attorney for the DeWoskin Law Firm. We’re based out of Decatur. We are a small trial litigation firm. We serve mainly DeKalb and Fulton Counties. But we go all over the metro area. And we handle three main practice areas. Our specialty is personal injury law, which I’ve been working in for about the past three years, three and a half years. And we also handle criminal defense cases and consumer debt cases. But mainly, we practice in plaintiff’s personal injury.

Rick: Honey, how do you guys find your clients, or how do they find you, I should say?

Honey: Well, I am lucky enough that the founder and partner at my law firm is one of the most popular men in DeKalb County, I would say. We can hardly walk into a courthouse, restaurants, you know, sometimes even the sidewalk, and everybody knows who Dan DeWoskin is. So, that’s a big contributing factor to our client base. But there’s three attorneys that make up our firm. We all network very heavily, and we try to, you know, put as much stock into the clients that we are currently seeing so that then those turn into more referrals. So, a big part of our client base is, you know, client to client referrals.

Rick: Gotcha. So, give us a success story. It doesn’t have to be anything recent, just something that you’re really proud of where you helped somebody.

Honey: Oh man, one of my first cases, one of my first criminal defense cases, was a juvenile case. And a big part of that, you know, you’ve got scared kids, you know, maybe made a mistake, and then definitely concerned parents. So, parents worried about college admissions, obviously, you know, maybe even jail time, but it’s just a lot of anxiety in those cases. So, I really appreciated the fact that I was able to get in and not only calm down, you know, the juvenile who was being charged with a criminal, you know, citation, but to also, you know, be able to be with his mom, both in and out of the courtroom and, you know, let her know that everything was gonna be fine.

We were working hard. She had a good kid. You know, we were able to sit down with the solicitor and his case and get everything cleared up for him. Everything dismissed. And I got a thank you card from both him and his mother. And a thank you card from, you know, a teenage boy was unexpected, but probably one of my favorite things that I’ve received to date from many of my cases because it just kinda shows that despite the results that we get, we do really put in the time for our clients, and we want them to feel that we’re paying attention to their case from point A, you know, to Z. And so just being able to be a resource and a calming presence for his whole family when he was going through that was one of my favorite, favorite stories to tell.

Rick: I’m really glad you picked that story to share because it profiles something really important about you, and that is that you don’t just do personal injury work, but you do criminal defense work as well.

Honey: Right. We like to say, we do specialize in personal injury, but we do like to say, “You know, if you wanna sue somebody, just give us a call, see what we can do for you.”

Rick: Yeah, I have a list of about 30 people I want to get with you after this call. I wanna sue [crosstalk 00:20:35]

Honey: Okay. We’ll do that.

Rick: No, I’m just kidding. Did you always wanna be an attorney?

Honey: I actually had no idea. I would say maybe even up until my third year of law school, I wasn’t sure. I definitely did not think that I was going to be a litigator. I was handling tax matters. When I was in school, I was working as a student attorney, and I was settling cases with the IRS. But even before law school, I thought I was gonna go into some sort of policymaking. And I think that I made the pivot from maybe legislative, government, or politic work when I was in that third year of law school after I’d finished constitutional law, and then when I had, you know, gotten a couple years of working in a law firm, working, you know, settling cases for people.

And getting that face to face interaction, I think is really what made me want to become an attorney is, you know, talking to people about, you know, for example, their tax issue. And then being able to interpret the law was just so incredible to me, because it seems like this, you know, almost, you know, other language to some folks? Because it is. I mean, it’s confusing. We call it legalese. And so I think it’s really great to be able to take somebody and say, “You know, you’re not stupid for not being able to understand this. You know, I still don’t understand a ton of the law that I don’t specialize in.” But being able to be that resource for people, really is what changed my mind, and made me want to pursue a career where I was working with people and, you know, advocating for their positions.

Rick: So, great answer. I know from some pre-interview work that you and I did, that you also work in mediation. How is being a mediator different from being an attorney and which kinda work do you prefer to do?

Honey: Oh, that’s a tough question. To answer the first one, mediation is entirely different from being an attorney, because you are not advocating for either party. You don’t represent a party, and you are not a decision-maker. So, a mediator is completely separate from an arbitrator. You know, you are effectively a go-between for parties to negotiate a, you know, mutual settlement. I really enjoy alternate dispute resolution. I think that it is a growing trend in the legal field. I think there used to be a lot of attorneys who would dig their heels in at the, you know, mention of mediation because you don’t have the opportunity to, you know, do all of the drama in the courtroom that you’ve been working so hard towards.

You know, you don’t get your day in court, and some clients really want that. But in some cases, and you know, as we see more today, especially in personal injury cases, you know, most of our clients, I would, you know, almost say, all clients are really not looking for that billboard $1.5 million settlement. People are looking, you know, to have their injuries taken care of, and not have to worry about some hulking, you know, hospital bill. And mediation is a really great tool to get both parties in and to say, “You know, look, this is what they’re dealing with. We only need this amount of money to cover this.”

And I think it just takes a big contentious factor out of, you know, negotiations. You lay eyes on people. You’re not just negotiating over the phone. You know, you’re talking to one another about what the actual stakes of that civil suit are. And then you’re able to reach a common, you know, decision, and it just takes a lot of that anger and emotion that can kind of come out in a trial out of it. And I do appreciate that part of mediation. But I am a bulldog when I need to be for my clients. So, it doesn’t mean that I don’t love litigating.

Rick: How has COVID affected you and your work? I know that you said you like to be, you know, in the room with people and, you know, working with people and looking them in the eye. But have you been able to do that here in the last 15, 16 weeks?

Honey: We have adapted very smoothly I think, and there’s the beginning when, you know, the supreme court order in Georgia has been extended twice now to keep courthouses closed. So, although we’re not able to do a whole lot from a filing and, you know, actually going to hearing standpoint, we are utilizing FaceTime, Zoom, Houseparty, every sort of visual communication tool that we can find, and making that work with our clients. And we’re also, you know, very kind of surprised at how everybody else has transitioned. You know, we just took a video call from the jail yesterday.

And we do miss the people part of it. I think that we could say for our whole firm, you know, people are the main reason why all of us do what we do. But we are making as many efforts as we can to, you know, keep in touch with our clients. And that has been one of the benefits, I think, is for all of us to, you know, get together on all of our cases. And although we do work very closely, on a lot of our cases together, you know, some things I handle myself, other things my partners handle, you know, on their own. So, this has been a kind of interesting and great time for us to get to know some of our clients that maybe we weren’t working with as much.

Rick: Great. So, DeWoskin Law Firm is, at the end of the day, is a very small business in terms of employees. What do you like best about working for a small business?

Honey: So many things. I love the other two attorneys that I work with and work for. They are two of the greatest attorneys I’ve ever met. They both have phenomenal backgrounds that I think really provides, you know, kind of rich background for our firm. And I fit really nicely between the two of them. So, it’s great that, you know, as I’m in the beginning of my legal career, that I have such phenomenal resources that I can work so closely with on, you know, a ton of variety of cases. And that’s also the benefit to our firm is that we can be a little more picky when we want to in choosing cases. And then we can, you know, choose what sort of things we want to bring to the firm.

And that was very early on expressed to me, you know, like, “Hey, we want to see you succeed, and we want you to help our firm succeed. And you know, if you think that this is gonna be successful, then speak up. So, it’s definitely a groupthink sort of environment. And I appreciate that we bring everybody into our, you know, discussions about strategy and how to approach things, you know, and our paralegal keeps us all running. I mean, she’s the greatest and the best and we would be nowhere without her and, you know, our office manager as well. So, it’s just everybody who is here is contributing an equal amount, you know, to our successes, and then everybody is there to, you know, share in the failures, and then to regroup and get back on the horse. So, it’s just a very kind of positive environment.

Rick: Yeah, failure is not about getting knocked down. It’s about getting back up because no one goes through life undefeated.

Honey: And especially not in my field.

Rick: Right, right. What is…? This is my favorite question, Honey. I always ask this question. What’s an aspect of your business that people don’t tend to think about, but that you wish people would ask you about?

Honey: I think that, you know, a lot of people forget to kind of ask who their attorneys are. I think that it’s just kind of like, “You’re an attorney. And that’s your only character trait.” And like I was just saying, you know, I wish folks would, when they came to do consults with us, you know, want to get to know kind of who we are without us throwing it in their face. And you know, because we don’t want it to come across as, you know, listen to all of our accomplishments and accolades.

But I think it’s a very important factor to consider when you’re choosing an attorney, you know, what sort of background does this person have? What are their specialties? What have they done, you know, previously? And I think that’s why we are such effective attorneys and advocates for our clients is because of the experience that we all bring, you know, by the other partner, Alex Merritt, is a former ADA for DeKalb County. So, he brings a total, you know, different perspective to criminal defense cases, than, you know, I would have. And Dan is a former and is still post certified sheriff’s deputy. So, you know, he brings an interesting perspective to things as well.

So, we have all of this kind of… And Dan and I were both in the same Georgia State mediation clinic. He just…I think 15 years before me. But we have that sort of background that helps us, you know, make decisions in our cases. And when you ask your attorneys what they have done previously, it kind of sheds light on maybe who do they know? Are they going to be in a… You know, are they familiar with this courthouse? Have they mediated before? You know, have they even taken other cases to mediation? So, just getting to know your attorney, I think, is just a wildly important thing. Because you’re gonna be working with them for a really long time. And that’s another thing that people don’t realize is how long litigation actually takes. And it’s a couple years. So, if you hate your attorney, or if you didn’t know something about them because you didn’t ask, it’s gonna make that process much more difficult for the both of you.

Rick: Well, I think that that aspect, that you just mentioned, is your number one biggest competitive advantage in this world, Honey, because nobody hates you. Everybody loves you.

Honey: I want you to follow me around everywhere, Rick. Tell everyone that.

Rick: And I’m not saying that to be funny. I’m genuinely saying that to the listening audience, and I compliment you on that aspect of your personality because you really are a genuine person.

Honey: I appreciate it. Thank you. Right. I do try my best, and I would definitely say the same for you.

Rick: Thank you. Honey, tell the audience how to get in touch with you.

Honey: So, it’s very easy. My email is honey@atlantatrial.com. But as our listeners can hopefully tell, now, I do love to talk. So, you can always call my office at 404-987-0026.

Rick: And the domain for the website of the company [crosstalk 00:33:04]

Honey: And it is atlantatrial.com. Very easy.

Rick: Okay, atlantatrial.com. No hyphens, no underscores.

Honey: No hyphens.

Rick: All right.

Honey: No nothing.

Rick: Right. Honey, thank you so much. So, that’s a wrap for the interview part of the show. Folks, go to ithelpatlanta.com for the audio archives of this radio show, and other radio shows that we’ve done in the past and to learn more about our sponsor, TeamLogic IT. For my guests, Chris McCaleb and Honey Shaw, I’m Rick Higgins, and join us next time on “IT Help Atlanta.”

Tagged With: Chris McCaleb, DeWoskin Law Firm, Georgia Association of Realtors, Honey Shaw, IT Help Atlanta, Rick Higgins, TeamLogic IT

Steve Rawl and Craig Dowdy, United Community Bank

June 26, 2020 by John Ray

United Community Bank
North Fulton Business Radio
Steve Rawl and Craig Dowdy, United Community Bank
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United Community Bank

Steve Rawl and Craig Dowdy, United Community Bank (North Fulton Business Radio, Episode 249)

What happens when you’ve just left your megabank employer and a pandemic hits? You get busy serving the market by helping business customers who can’t get timely help from their own bank with PPP loans and you build relationships. At least that’s what Steve Rawl, Craig Dowdy, and their commercial banking colleagues did when they started work at United Community Bank in March. Steve and Craig joined host John Ray to tell their story, and it’s a good one. “North Fulton Business Radio” is produced virtually by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® in Alpharetta.

Steve Rawl and Craig Dowdy, United Community Bank

Steve Rawl and Craig Dowdy are senior executives in the Commercial Banking Division of United Community Bank.

Since 1950, United Community Bank has been known for excellent service. They are a service-first organization; it is part of their foundation and is one of their guiding principles. It’s who they are.

Banking is a people business. Their growth has, and will, lie heavily with the strength of the people of their bank.

United is a bank, but they’re more than that. They use attentive service and the right mix of products to bring solutions that don’t just impact the bottom line—they strive to make a meaningful difference. No promises or pledges are necessary, it’s just what they do.

Culture is not just what you say, it’s what you do. It must be authentic and it has to start at the top. Together, they create their culture. As an organization, they believe in the power of coming together for good. Whether that is to help their customers, develop their team or support their community, they believe in coming together for a positive outcome.

Their business is not about money—they understand you can deposit that anywhere. And, it’s also not about service, as every bank can promise to do that better. To them, it’s about knowing what they stand for and living it.

They’re committed to being there, for good. For the good of their customer, for the good of the community, for the good of each other. They are honest. To them that means, they’re consistently genuine, trustworthy and authentic. Customers can count on them to take time to understand their needs and to have their best interest at heart. They never forget that it isn’t about them, it’s about their customers and our community.

To best understand them, it’s often helpful to compare them to what they are not. They are honest, but not harsh. They are clear, but not stiff. They are familiar, but they do not make assumptions. They are positive, but not unrealistic. And, they are proud, but not selfishly so.

In addition to personal consumer banking products, they offer lending for renewable energy, medical, dentistry, franchises, owner-occupied commercial real estate, manufacturing and more. Their goal is to add one new line of business a year. In 2018, they introduced United Community Bank’s Navitas Equipment Financing Division. This subsidiary allows their customers to purchase the essential machinery or tangible assets needed to run their business. Their Commercial Business Solutions lines of business are fully staffed with industry experts who work together with their local community bankers to meet the lending needs of their customers while also originating independently nationwide.

Over the past 30 years, the banking industry has seen an increase in consolidation – around 63% of banks have disappeared. The least happy customers are ones that are digital-only. The happiest customers are ones that use a combination of digital and in-branch services. They are actively investing in assessing and meeting the digital needs of their customers while also prioritizing security. In a world where banking can get complicated, they talk like humans do—they are personable and approachable. They want to make banking and finances easier to understand.

They have been recognized as one of America’s Best Performing Banks by Forbes magazine for seven consecutive years.  In 2019, they were ranked one of the Best Banks in the World by Forbes, and #5 in the country. They have a strong presence in the growing perimeter communities of Atlanta and are well positioned in this rapidly growing market. They have added multiple new team members who will lead expansion efforts into the city.

Points of Contact:

Company website

LinkedIn URL:  https://www.linkedin.com/company/united-community-bank/

Facebook URL: https://www.facebook.com/unitedcommunitybank

Questions/Topics Discussed in this Show

  • Profile of United Community Bank and their operating philosophy
  • What sets the bank apart
  • PPP loans and how they approached and handled
  • How honest, timely communication set them apart from larger competitors
  • Clients they serve in UCB’s Commercial Banking Division

North Fulton Business Radio” is produced virtually from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® 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, iHeart Radio, Stitcher, TuneIn, and others.

 

Tagged With: business banking, business loans, commercial banking, Craig Dowdy, equipment financing, John Ray, North Fulton Business Radio, PPP loans, Steve Rawl, United Community Bank

Joe Noonan, Southwestern Consulting

June 25, 2020 by John Ray

Joe Noonan, Southwestern Consulting 
North Fulton Business Radio
Joe Noonan, Southwestern Consulting
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Joe Noonan, Southwestern Consulting 
Joe Noonan, Southwestern Consulting

Joe Noonan, Southwestern Consulting  (North Fulton Business Radio, Episode 248)

Joe Noonan, Southwestern Consulting, joined host John Ray to discuss time management, his sales and leadership coaching practice, and much more. “North Fulton Business Radio” is produced virtually by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® in Alpharetta.

Joe Noonan, Certified Sales & Leadership Coach, Southwestern Consulting

Southwestern Consulting is the professional sales training division of the oldest direct sales company in the US, The Southwestern Company. Our philosophies & principles are derived from our parent company, Southwestern Company which:

• Was established in 1855 • Currently employs 10,000+ active salespeople • Owns 22 sales-driven companies across multiple unique industries

• Houses the #1 Raymond James office worldwide (financial services), a 9-time Pinnacle Producer (executive search), the largest school fundraising company in the world, multiple New York Times bestselling authors (training and personal development) and 2 past national board members of The Direct Selling Association of America

• Has trained over 280,000+ sales professionals, sales leaders and executive leaders since its inception

• Is most famous for its 160+ year old college internship program, Southwestern Advantage, where students sell educational children’s books door to door and make a combined 1 million sales presentations every year Our division, Southwestern Consulting, is the fastest growing professional sales training / coaching company in America. There are  140+ team members who have been in over 11,000 offices in the last 12 years.  They conduct large sales training conferences, provide one on one sales and leadership coaching, and deliver ongoing customized sales consulting. Southwestern Consulting loves sales, the selling profession, and helping salespeople grow their business on average 25.1%!

Points of Contact for Joe Noonan:

Company website

LinkedIn URL:  https://www.linkedin.com/in/JoeNoonan99

Facebook URL: https://www.facebook.com/joenoonan99

Questions/Topics Discussed in this Show

  • Joe’s history and what led him to professional coaching
  • His clients’ response to the Covid-19 business environment
  • Joe’s work as a professional speaker and Certified Sales and Leadership Coach
  • Types of clients served
  • Time management
  • Client success stories

 

North Fulton Business Radio” is produced virtually from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® 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, iHeart Radio, Stitcher, TuneIn, and others.

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: Joe Noonan, John Ray, leadership coaching, North Fulton Business Radio, personal development, sales and leadership coaching, sales coaching, Southwestern Consulting, time management, training

GNFCC North Fulton Economic Recovery Forum: Sales, Marketing, and Promotion

June 25, 2020 by John Ray

North Fulton Business Radio
North Fulton Business Radio
GNFCC North Fulton Economic Recovery Forum: Sales, Marketing, and Promotion
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Clockwise from upper left: Kali Boatright, Bonnie Mauldin, Ben Cagle, and Lisa Tilt

GNFCC North Fulton Marketing Forum: Recovery Sales, Marketing and Promotion (“GNFCC 400 Insider,” Episode 44)

GNFCC CEO Kali Boatright moderated a panel of three top-notch sales, marketing, and promotion professionals in the last in a June series of Economic Recovery Forums sponsored by the Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce and Roswell Inc. The PowerPoint deck associated with this webinar can be found here.

The host of “The GNFCC 400 Insider” is GNFCC CEO Kali Boatright, and the show is presented by the Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce and produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®. Business RadioX is the Media Sponsor for this series of Economic Recovery Forums.

Forum Panelists:

Bonnie Mauldin, The Mauldin Group

Bonnie Mauldin

Bonnie Mauldin is the Founder and CEO of The Mauldin Group.

The Mauldin Group is a professional web design and digital marketing agency, that specializes in branding and lead generation for small business. The goal of The Mauldin Group is to offer small to mid-sized corporations creative, results-driven, lead generation and branding solutions.

Since its founding, The Mauldin Group has continued to grow, establishing itself as not just a leader in the Atlanta market but as an international company. Through Bonnie’s revolutionary internet marketing practices and savvy networking skills, TMG has grown to a team of twelve.

Bonnie was named a Business Person of Excellence by the Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce in 2019. The Mauldin Group is the proud recipient of the Forsyth Chamber of Commerce Business of The Year Award, Best of Atlanta by the AJC, and ranked as one of the Top 10 SEO Agencies in Atlanta by Expertise.com.

Ben Cagle, Cagle Consulting Partners

Ben Cagle

Ben Cagle is Managing Partner of Cagle Consulting Partners (CCP), an advisory firm focused on accelerating growth, driving innovation, and building/scaling organizations in technology, professional Services, and other industries.

Cagle Consulting Partners currently serves global enterprise, mid-market, and technology startup clients.

Prior to founding CCP, Ben served on the executive leadership team for a Global 100 Enterprise with full P&L responsibility for a $450M global business unit and led an industry consolidation initiative (with McKinsey & Company).

Transitioning from “industry” into global management consulting, Ben served in various Consulting Partner, Practice/Industry Leader, Solution Innovation, and Thought Leadership roles. Ben’s global enterprise consulting leadership experience includes positions at HP Enterprise (formerly EDS), DXC Technology (formerly CSC Consulting), and Hitachi Consulting.

Ben also has led various NASDAQ, VC-backed Software/SaaS, and entrepreneurial companies focused on advanced data analytics, market insights, and brand/marketing strategy.

Ben graduated from the Georgia Institute of Technology and currently resides in Alpharetta, Georgia with his wife, Sara.

Lisa Tilt, Full Tilt Consulting

Lisa Tilt

Lisa Tilt is the Founder and CEO of Full Tilt Consulting.

Full Tilt Consulting was born from the idea that a marketing firm can be both big picture and roll-up-the-sleeves tactical, strategic but approachable, and level-field collaborative to the degree that the best idea always wins, no matter where it originates. Its team of senior-level marketing, communications and digital experts is always in pursuit of accomplishing great work that achieves outstanding results while enjoying each other’s company. This formula has propelled Full Tilt and its clients forward since 2006.

Full Tilt provides counsel and custom marketing programs to a robust roster of clients in a variety of fields. Through constructive partnerships, it determines where clients are in their business life cycle, identify their goals, and create plans to capitalize on opportunities and solve challenges through communications.

About GNFCC and “The GNFCC 400 Insider”

Kali Boatright, President and CEO of GNFCC

“The GNFCC 400 Insider” is presented by the Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce (GNFCC) and is hosted by Kali Boatright, President and CEO of GNFCC. The Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce is a private, non-profit, member-driven organization comprised of over 1400 business enterprises, civic organizations, educational institutions and individuals.  Their service area includes Alpharetta, Johns Creek, Milton, Mountain Park, Roswell and Sandy Springs. GNFCC is the leading voice on economic development, business growth and quality of life issues in North Fulton County.

The GNFCC promotes the interests of our members by assuming a leadership role in making North Fulton an excellent place to work, live, play and stay. They provide one voice for all local businesses to influence decision makers, recommend legislation, and protect the valuable resources that make North Fulton a popular place to live.

For more information on GNFCC and its North Fulton County service area, follow this link or call (770) 993-8806.

For the complete show archive of “The GNFCC 400 Insider,” go to GNFCC400Insider.com. “The GNFCC 400 Insider” is produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®.

Debunking Medical Myths – Episode 35, To Your Health With Dr. Jim Morrow

June 25, 2020 by John Ray

North Fulton Studio
North Fulton Studio
Debunking Medical Myths - Episode 35, To Your Health With Dr. Jim Morrow
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Dr. Jim Morrow, Morrow Family Medicine, and Host of “To Your Health With Dr. Jim Morrow”

To Your Health With Dr. Jim Morrow – Episode 35, Medical Myths

Vaccines cause the flu. We only use 10% of our brains. You’re more likely to get sick in cold weather. Dr. Morrow covers a number of medical beliefs we’ve picked up throughout life which we need to reconsider and discard. Listen in to find out what is true and what is a myth. (And we also celebrate Dr. Morrow’s birthday!) “To Your Health” is brought to you by Morrow Family Medicine, which brings the CARE back to healthcare.

About Morrow Family Medicine and Dr. Jim Morrow

Morrow Family Medicine is an award-winning, state-of-the-art family practice with offices in Cumming and Milton, Georgia. The practice combines healthcare information technology with old-fashioned care to provide the type of care that many are in search of today. Two physicians, three physician assistants and two nurse practitioners are supported by a knowledgeable and friendly staff to make your visit to Morrow Family Medicine one that will remind you of the way healthcare should be.  At Morrow Family Medicine, we like to say we are “bringing the care back to healthcare!”  Morrow Family Medicine has been named the “Best of Forsyth” in Family Medicine in all five years of the award, is a three-time consecutive winner of the “Best of North Atlanta” by readers of Appen Media, and the 2019 winner of “Best of Life” in North Fulton County.

Dr. Jim Morrow, Morrow Family Medicine, and Host of “To Your Health With Dr. Jim Morrow”

Covid-19 misconceptionsDr. Jim Morrow is the founder and CEO of Morrow Family Medicine. He has been a trailblazer and evangelist in the area of healthcare information technology, was named Physician IT Leader of the Year by HIMSS, a HIMSS Davies Award Winner, the Cumming-Forsyth Chamber of Commerce Steve Bloom Award Winner as Entrepreneur of the Year and he received a Phoenix Award as Community Leader of the Year from the Metro Atlanta Chamber of Commerce.  He is married to Peggie Morrow and together they founded the Forsyth BYOT Benefit, a charity in Forsyth County to support students in need of technology and devices. They have two Goldendoodles, a gaggle of grandchildren and enjoy life on and around Lake Lanier.

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MorrowFamMed/

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/7788088/admin/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/toyourhealthMD

The complete show archive of “To Your Health with Dr. Jim Morrow” addresses a wide range of health and wellness topics, and can be found at www.toyourhealthradio.com.

Dr. Morrow’s Show Notes

Debunking Medical Myths

 

  • Myth: Flagyl and Alcohol will make you sick
  • Just not the case. A study of college students showed that even when drunk, metronidazole did not make anyone sick. 
  • Myth: Medicine expires after a year
  • Just not the case. Just because a date has passed does not mean that the antibiotics you got a year ago turned to poison or suddenly stopped working. It just does not happen. 
  • The expiration actually refers to the fact that the prescription itself expires, not the medicine. 
  • any refills you have are no longer valid.

 

  • Myth: Vaccines can cause the flu (and autism).
  • Although the body can develop a low-grade fever in response to any vaccine, rumors that a flu shot can cause the flu are an outright lie 
  • The flu shot does contain dead flu viruses, but they are, well, dead. 
  • A dead virus cannot be resurrected to cause the flu  
  • As for vaccines causing autism, this myth was started in 1998 with an article in the journal The Lancet.  
  • In the study, the parents of eight (yes, only eight) children with autism said they believed their children acquired the condition after they received a vaccination against measles, mumps and rubella (the MMR vaccine).  
  • Since then, rumors have run rampant despite the results of many studies.  
  • For example, a 2002 study in The New England Journal of Medicine of 530,000 (yes, a whopping 530,000) children found no link between vaccinations and the risk of a child developing autism.

 

  • Myth: Supplements always make you healthier.

  • Vitamin supplements may be not only ineffectual but even dangerous, studies have shown.  
  • For example, a study published in 2016 showed that some older women who take calcium supplements may face an increased risk of dementia. 
  • And in a huge review of 20 years of supplement research published in 2015, researchers found that taking high doses of vitamins may be linked with an increased risk of cancer. 
  • Aside from these possible long-term risks, reports have suggested that supplements can cause damage in the short term too.  
  • A report published in 2016 found that a man in Pennsylvania who took Ayurvedic herbal supplement developed lead poisoning.  
  • Another report, also published in 2016, showed that a 4-year-old boy in England went to the ER after taking a slew of “natural” supplements, and developing vitamin D toxicity. 
  • The FDA does not require supplements to be regulated in the same way that drugs are, which can be a real problem.  
  • As a result, the safety of many supplements has not been rigorously studied.  
  • Furthermore, supplement bottles can sport unsubstantiated claims and even make errors in dosage recommendations, she said.

 

  • Myth: Cold weather makes you sick.

  • This myth is common around the world, but it is just not true.  
  • Studies have shown we may feel more cold symptoms — real or imaginary — when we are chilled (after all, a cold is called a “cold” for a reason),  
  • but the temperature itself does not make us more susceptible to viruses.  
  • This has been known since at least 1968, when a study in The New England Journal of Medicine showed what happened when researchers exposed chilly people to the rhinovirus (one cause of the common cold). 
  • It turned out that whether they were shivering in a frigid room or in an icy bath, people were no more likely to get sick after sniffing cold germs than they were at more comfortable temperatures. 
  • Cold air also does not make a difference in people’s recovery time from a cold. In fact, although the research is in its early stages, it is possible that being exposed to cold may even help your body in some way. 
  • However, it’s unclear how chilly conditions might affect the germs themselves.  
  • Research has shown that two common causes of colds — rhinoviruses and coronaviruses — may thrive at colder temperatures,  
  • and that the flu may spread most effectively under cold, dry conditions. 
  • Some scientists speculate that colds are more common in cooler months because people stay indoors more, interacting more closely with one another and giving germs more opportunities to spread.

 

  • Myth: We use only 10 percent of our brains.

  • Motivational speakers and other self-help gurus have been promoting this one since as early as 1907,  
  • as a way to encourage people to tap into some latent capacity, But these people were not basing the proclamation on sound science. 
  • Today, scientists can look at any brain scan, measuring activity at any given time, and have a big laugh at this myth. The idea lingers in popular culture because we want to think we haven’t reached our full potential.

 

  • Myth: Sugar turns kids into little monsters.

  • It can be hard to find a parent who does not believe this 
  • In one particularly clever study among a slew of studies finding sugar’s nil effect on unruliness,  
  • kids were given Kool-Aid sweetened with aspartame, a compound that contains no sugar.  
  • Researchers told half of the parents the Kool-Aid contained sugar, and told the other half the truth. 
  • The parents in the study who thought their kids were riding a sugar high reported their children were uncontrollable and overactive.  
  • But a sensor on the kids’ wrists that measured activity level said the opposite:  
  • The kids were actually acting subdued.  
  • The study was published in the Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology in 1994 
  • Sugar is often given at times when the rules are loosened and there are lots of other kids around, like birthday parties and holidays.

 

  • Myth: You need to stay awake if you’ve had a concussion.

  • Anyone who may have a concussion should seek medical attention,  
  • but the condition is rarely severe or life-threatening.  
  • Warnings that people need to stay awake after incurring a concussion most likely grew out of a misunderstanding about a particular type of head injury —  
  • one that involves brain bleeding and that causes people to have a “lucid period,” followed by a coma or even death.  
  • But this is very uncommon and doesn’t pertain to people with normal concussions 
  • If you’ve been evaluated by a doctor, and he has said that you have a mild regular concussion, you don’t need to worry that someone has to wake you up every hour.

 

  • Myth: Chewing gum stays in your stomach for 7 years.

  • Although it is true that many of the ingredients in gum —  
  • such as elastomers, resins and waxes —  
  • are indigestible, that does not mean they hang out in your guts for seven years.  
  • Plenty of what you eat — even things you are recommended to eat, such as fiber — is indigestible.  
  • But the digestive system is a robust piece of organic machinery, and anything it can’t absorb, it moves along.  
  • Despite the stickiness and strange consistency of gum, it passes right through your digestive tract.

 

  • Myth: Reading in the dark or sitting too close to the TV ruins your eyesight.

  • Dim light — or alternatively, staring into the multicolored tube at close range — can undoubtedly make your eyes work so hard they hurt.  
  • But there is no evidence that these practices cause long-term damage. 
  • The TV myth may have started in the 1960s, and at that time, it may have been true.  
  • Some early color TV sets emitted high amounts of radiation that could have caused eye damage,  
  • but this problem has long been remedied, and today’s TV and computer monitors are relatively safe 
  • If you or your child tend to sit so close to the computer or TV that it hurts the eyes, it may be a good idea to get checked for nearsightedness.  
  • However, sitting too close does not create a need for glasses even if getting glasses can remedy the habit. 
  • Myth: You should drink at least 8 glasses of water a day.

  • The eight-glasses-a-day myth likely started in 1945, when the Food and Nutrition Board of the National Research Council said adults should take in about 2.5 liters of water a day  
  • (equivalent to about eight glasses, or two-thirds of a gallon).  
  • Although most media outlets reported that as fact and stopped there,  
  • the council actually went on to explain that most of the 2.5 liters comes from food.  
  • the recommendation should be amended to the following: Drink or eat about eight glasses of fluid a day.

 

  • Myth: You should wait an hour after eating before you go swimming.

  • This myth has ruined many summer afternoons,  
  • forcing young and old to swelter in the heat while cool waters beckoned,  
  • all because they were careless enough to down a PB&J.  
  • Let the ban be lifted:  
  • There is no special reason not to swim after eating,
  • It’s true that any type of vigorous exercise can be uncomfortable (although not dangerous) after an overwhelming feast.  
  • But for most of us whose waterfront dining experience includes sand-dusted chips and soggy sandwiches, that is hardly a concern.  
  • And cramps can happen anytime, whether you’ve eaten or not.  
  • If you are swimming in waters so rough that a charley horse will mean the death of you, you should probably swim elsewhere. 

 

  • Myth: Fingernails and hair continue to grow after death.

  • This myth is actually just a misperception, and for many years, most physicians couldn’t disprove it, even though they couldn’t quite explain it. 
  • Here’s what really happens to your nails and hair after you die:  
  • As the body’s skin is drying out, soft tissue, especially skin, is retracting. 
  •  The nails appear much more prominent as the skin dries out.  
  • The same is true, but less obvious, with hair. As the skin is shrinking back, the hair looks more prominent or sticks up a bit.

 

  • Myth: Shaved hair grows back faster, coarser and darker.

  • Here’s a myth you can debunk yourself by paying attention to your own hair after shaving.  
  • You may notice that new hair grows in with a blunt edge on top.  
  • Over time, that blunt edge gets worn down, making it seem thicker than it really is.  
  • But why might recently shaved hairs seem darker than their nonshaved counterparts?  
  • It could be that those newly spouted hairs haven’t yet been bleached by the sun 
  • But if you don’t trust your own experimental skills, there’s other evidence that this myth isn’t reality.  
  • A clinical trial conducted in 1928 compared hair growth  in shaved patches to hair growth in unshaved patches. 

 

  • Myth: Eating turkey makes you drowsy.

  • Your excuse for taking a nap after dinner on Thanksgiving just went out the window.  
  • While turkey does contain a chemical called tryptophan that is known to cause drowsiness,  
  • your serving of Thanksgiving bird doesn’t contain any more of the chemical than a similar-size serving of chicken or beef 
  • So why do people feel so sleepy after a Thanksgiving feast?  
  • It could be the overall quantity of food you eat on this holiday that makes you drowsy.  
  • Those heaping mounds of carbohydrates on your plate (think dinner rolls and mashed potatoes),  
  • plus a few alcoholic beverages, will almost certainly make you feel tired.

 

  • Myth: Ulcers are caused by spicy food and stress.

  • If you think your ulcers are acting up because of the curry you ate last night for dinner, think again.  
  • Although doctors once believed that ulcers were caused by stress, lifestyle choices or spicy foods, they now know that most ulcers are actually caused by the bacterium Helicobacter pylori. 
  • Ulcers — sores that develop in the lining of the esophagus, stomach or the first part of the small intestine — can also be caused by certain medicines.  
  • Aspirin, NSAIDs and iron tablets are the most common culprits
  • Myth: Poinsettias are toxic.

  • Poinsettias aren’t toxic.  
  • The plants can make people sick,  
  • but there have been no definitive cases of a person dying from exposure to a poinsettia plant. 
  • In a paper published in the Southern Medical Journal in 1996, researchers reviewed 22,793 cases of poinsettia exposure that were reported to poison control centers over a seven-year period.  
  • They found that not one of those cases was fatal. The most severe reactions reported were stomachaches and cramping. 
  • The myth about poinsettias being toxic may have come from a case, reported in 1919, of a 2-year-old in Hawaii who allegedly died after ingesting parts of the plant, according to a 2012 article in the Western Journal of Emergency Medicine. But the child’s death was never confirmed, nor was the cause of death.
  • Myth: Chicken noodle soup cures … everything.

  • Everybody’s heard that chicken soup is supposedly the best cure for whatever ails you.  
  • But does this delicious food really help you get better when you’re sick? 
  • Unfortunately, no.  
  • The combination of hot broth and yummy veggies is more of a comfort than a cure 
  • However, some research suggests that chicken noodle soup may work well as a placebo.  
  • In other words, it may convince you that you’re getting better. 

[Source:  livescience.com]

 

Tagged With: flu, flu myths, health tips, medical myths, Morrow Family Medicine, To Your Health, To Your Health With Dr. Jim Morrow, vitamin supplements

Decision Vision Episode 71: What Decisions Do I Have to Make For My Business to Survive Covid-19? – An Interview with Zahir Ladhani, Velocity Strategic Consulting

June 25, 2020 by John Ray

Brady Ware
Decision Vision
Decision Vision Episode 71: What Decisions Do I Have to Make For My Business to Survive Covid-19? - An Interview with Zahir Ladhani, Velocity Strategic Consulting
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Decision Vision Episode 71: What Decisions Do I Have to Make For My Business to Survive Covid-19? – An Interview with Zahir Ladhani, Velocity Strategic Consulting

As the timing and shape of an economic recovery remains uncertain, many business owners are asking themselves what decisions they must make for their business to survive this Covid-19 environment. Host Mike Blake explores these issues with Zahir Ladhani, Velocity Strategic Consulting.  “Decision Vision” is presented by Brady Ware & Company.

Zahir Ladhani, Velocity Strategic Consulting

Zahir Ladhani

Zahir Ladhani is a seasoned executive with 30+ years of experience leading the growth of companies, products and teams. He played a crucial role on a senior executive team facilitating the $1.3 Billion sale of a company to a Fortune 50 Company. Additionally, he has overseen leadership teams in multiple publicly-traded organizations, in the capacity of President, Vice President of Sales, Vice President of Business Development, Marketing Director, and Director of Finance.

Zahir is a talented communicator and proven leader who understands corporate culture, the collaborative process, and how to assist organizations and their leadership teams optimize the balance between people, performance and profit.

Zahir Ladhani is currently the managing director of a business coaching firm, Velocity Strategic Consulting, and teaches Strategy at Kennesaw State University’s EMBA Program.

Michael Blake, Brady Ware & Company

Mike Blake, Host of the “Decision Vision” podcast series

Michael Blake is Host of the “Decision Vision” podcast series and a Director of Brady Ware & Company. Mike specializes in the valuation of intellectual property-driven firms, such as software firms, aerospace firms and professional services firms, most frequently in the capacity as a transaction advisor, helping clients obtain great outcomes from complex transaction opportunities. He is also a specialist in the appraisal of intellectual properties as stand-alone assets, such as software, trade secrets, and patents.

Mike has been a full-time business appraiser for 13 years with public accounting firms, boutique business appraisal firms, and an owner of his own firm. Prior to that, he spent 8 years in venture capital and investment banking, including transactions in the U.S., Israel, Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus.

Brady Ware & Company

Brady Ware & Company is a regional full-service accounting and advisory firm which helps businesses and entrepreneurs make visions a reality. Brady Ware services clients nationally from its offices in Alpharetta, GA; Columbus and Dayton, OH; and Richmond, IN. The firm is growth minded, committed to the regions in which they operate, and most importantly, they make significant investments in their people and service offerings to meet the changing financial needs of those they are privileged to serve. The firm is dedicated to providing results that make a difference for its clients.

Decision Vision Podcast Series

“Decision Vision” is a podcast covering topics and issues facing small business owners and connecting them with solutions from leading experts. This series is presented by Brady Ware & Company. If you are a decision maker for a small business, we’d love to hear from you. Contact us at decisionvision@bradyware.com and make sure to listen to every Thursday to the “Decision Vision” podcast.

Past episodes of “Decision Vision” can be found at decisionvisionpodcast.com. “Decision Vision” is produced and broadcast by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®.

Visit Brady Ware & Company on social media:

LinkedIn:  https://www.linkedin.com/company/brady-ware/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bradywareCPAs/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/BradyWare

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Show Transcript

Intro: [00:00:02] Welcome to Decision Vision, a podcast series focusing on critical business decisions. Brought to you by Brady Ware & Company. Brady Ware is a regional, full-service accounting and advisory firm that helps businesses and entrepreneurs make vision a reality.

Mike Blake: [00:00:21] And welcome to Decision Vision, a podcast giving you, the listener, clear vision to make great decisions. In each episode, we will discuss the process of decision making on a different topic from the business owner’s or executive’s perspective. We aren’t necessarily telling you what to do, but we can put you in a position to make an informed decision on your own and understand when you might need help along the way.

Mike Blake: [00:00:41] My name is Mike Blake, and I’m your host for today’s program. I’m a Director at Brady Ware & Company, a full-service accounting firm based in Dayton, Ohio, with offices in Dayton; Columbus, Ohio; Richmond, Indiana; and Alpharetta, Georgia. Brady Ware is sponsoring this podcast, which is being recorded in Atlanta per social distancing protocols. If you like this podcast, please subscribe on your favorite podcast aggregator, and please consider leaving a review of the podcast as well.

Mike Blake: [00:01:07] And so, today’s topic is another in our series of COVID survival topics. But this one is going to be a little bit different. And the question, really, is actually a number of questions all rolled up and mashed up into one. And so, the topic is, what are the decisions I have to make, so that my business survives COVID? And by now as we record this in early June and Happy Father’s Day in advance to everybody who is a father listening to this podcast, and as we record this, we are now, more or less, in something approximating recovery phase of this pandemic at a time, also, of tremendous social unrest and potentially change. We’re just in an environment now where there is no textbook, there is no wise man or woman to tell us exactly what to do based on experience. It’s all about kind of feeling our way through.

Mike Blake: [00:02:25] And so, whereas most of our topics do address a high-level strategic decision, the reality is that many businesses are not really in a strategic posture. As I was talking to our guest and our producer a little while ago as we were setting this thing up, and we talked about when you have a loaded gun pointed right to your head, your thought process at that point is not strategic. Your thought process at that point is not, “What is happening to my retirement plan and my 401(k)?” It’s, “How do I get out of this situation now? Get out of the building.” We’re going to figure everything else out at that point.

Mike Blake: [00:03:08] Now, I understand that’s a dramatic and it’s a graphic image, but I do think that there’s some truth and there is some relevance to that. But we are now, you know, after sort of huddling ourselves, at least certainly, I was, away from the pandemic to reaching a point where we are kind of have our hands wrapped around the bars and shaking them, being asked or asking to be let out of our mass house arrest, and now, all of a sudden, the doors open with differing speeds depending on what state you’re in. State, meaning geographic location.

Mike Blake: [00:03:58] And, you know, when that happens, I think to some extent, we’re sort of the dog that catches the car or what would happen if Wile E. Coyote actually captured the Road Runner? I’m not sure he’d know what to do with it. And so, now, this next phase is, okay, you know, what is this checklist? And you’ll read a lot of stuff that talk about, well, you know, let some of your employees continue to work from home and everybody’s going to walk around like they’ve got OCD and wash their hands all the time and creating distance between office and cubicles.

Mike Blake: [00:04:36] And that’s all well and good. It’s important. There’s plenty of information out there. There’s nothing that we’re going to do it. But then, you know, as a decision maker, you’re now going to be faced with many, many micro decisions if you are or even not so many micro decisions, but they’re all tactical decisions. And tactical decisions can take on equal or superior importance relative to a strategic decision.

Mike Blake: [00:05:07] And so, that’s a long preamble to saying that if this episode seems a little bit different, it is, and that’s by design. And the reason is because when you reopen your business and you expose yourself to the wide, weird world out there, it’s not about one decision anymore. It’s really about probably 92, at least. Well, we’re not going to go over 92 decisions, but we are going to go over probably about a dozen or so, and hopefully that this will be something that—or we hope is that, this will be something that you can you can take pieces from, and apply to your own situation as is, you know, what we try to do here are the Decision Vision podcast.

Mike Blake: [00:05:53] And helping us work through this is my friend, Zadhir Ladhani who is Managing Partner of Velocity Strategic Consulting. And Zadhir brings more than 30 years of, in the trenches, experience with software, the service companies, consumer companies, services and human capital companies, pharmaceutical companies, and management consulting. As you’ll hear, he’s a very talented communicator and he’s a proven leader whose drawn businesses and product lines and was a key member of an executive leadership team that led the sale of its company to a Fortune 100 acquirer.

Mike Blake: [00:06:34] Zadhir works with senior executives and leadership teams to scale up businesses by improving their discipline around people, strategy, execution, and accountability for sustainable growth. He has worked with numerous clients and using the complexity that growth often brings, allowing leaders to focus more time on building their businesses by leveraging transformative tools, processes, and principles. He holds a bachelor’s degree in mathematics and accounting from the University of Waterloo in Canada and a master of arts in international relations from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University in Boston, Massachusetts. Zadhir, welcome to the program.

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:07:10] Thank you. Thanks, Mike.

Mike Blake: [00:07:12] So, I’m going to ask you the question that I have to ask or everybody has to ask, every guest ever who comes on any program in the world, which is, are we in a recovery now? If not, when do you think it’s going to happen? And are you on the V side recovery camp, or are you on the slow slogging recovery camp, or somewhere in between?

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:07:33] So, Mike, I appreciate the introduction, and I am on the slow recovery side. I’m not on the V recovery side and I actually don’t think we’re in the recovery phase yet. If you look through what we’ve gone through, and I look at this from a lens of three phases, we went through the lockdown phase where we were trying to flatten the curve. And some parts of the country never flattened the curve. We would continue to grow it. But we decided to get into the second phase, which is the recovery phase, as you called it, but I think I call it the fight phase, that we’re going to go fight this.

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:08:10] And then, when the vaccine or a therapeutic is available is when, potentially, the full final phase of this comes in. So, I think we’re in this middle phase, which I called the fight, where the infections and the number of people who interact with this disease will increase, decrease, increase, decrease. And we’re going to see spotty places in the country, spotty places around different states and different parts of the state in different phases.

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:08:45] So, they’re going to be brush fires we’re going to have to put up around the country. If you look at why I say that and why I think it’s a long U, until a vaccine is available, there is no surety of how we will fight this. There are so many unknowns about this COVID-19 that every other day, we’re hearing something new and we’re learning something new. And so, anything somebody is forecasting, it’s coming out to be different. And so, I would say, we plan for the worst, and then hope for a better one. And businesses work on that well. Look, people are saying there’s a vaccine coming up, right?

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:09:23] Normally, vaccines take 20 years, and now, we’ve got a prognosis that we’re going to have a vaccine by the end of this year. I really hope we do. And I know there were over 150 candidates in the work, and we’re taking every piece of red tape out, and we’re trying to shorten the cycle as much as possible, and we got the best scientists we’ve ever had around the world working on it. And globally, humanity has gained. But sometimes, things take time. And we hope we can get through this. But my view is it’s a long U with ups and downs as we go through it.

Mike Blake: [00:09:59] You know, I think your observation is very smart, that the fact of the matter is, we don’t understand everything there is about the coronavirus. And the knowledge is evolving. And, you know, it reminds me, I think coronavirus is sort of the eggs of the disease realm. What I mean by that is for years, I think it’s still going on, is that doctors are telling us eggs are terrible for us, but now, they have the right kind of cholesterol, so they’re great for us. But then, maybe that kind of cholesterol, it has a limit, so they’re bad for us again. And frankly, I don’t know. So, I just see the eggs now and I roll the dice, right? But I mean, COVID is kind of like that.

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:10:50] Yeah.

Mike Blake: [00:10:50] You know, there’s even some there’s even some real discussion as to whether or not, not just ideological, but medical as to, again, how necessary masks are.

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:11:04] Yeah.

Mike Blake: [00:11:04] And, you know, we just don’t know. And I’m not going to make a statement as to whether or not somebody should wear a mask or not, but the fact of the matter is that whichever position is out there, there’s plenty of information, and frankly, some good information that supports one way or the other, right?

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:11:22] Yeah.

Mike Blake: [00:11:22] So, I guess maybe I want to go right off the script here, and that is that maybe the first decision you have to make is, do I think it’s a V recovery or slow recovery, right? Because if I think it’s a V recovery, then the other things we’re going to talk about today may have a different answer or a different spin to them as opposed to if I think there’s going to be a two-year recovery, say, that, you know, the Fed thinks is out there. Is that fair too or am I making too much of it?

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:11:54] No, you’re not making too much of it, but my pushback would be, if you make a decision that it’s a V recovery, what are the decisions you’ll make in your business? And what if it’s a U recovery, what would happen to you? Plan that out and forecast. And then, do that if you work towards a U recovery, forecast out that, what if then it’s a V? Which one gives you the higher probability of survivability? And my supposition to you would be plan for a U, hope for a V, you have a better chance of success versus you plan and act on a V, And it becomes a U. You see where I’m going? And so-

Mike Blake: [00:12:35] I do. And then, to that end too, we’ll talk about this a bit later, we may very well have a W kind of recovery.

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:12:44] Yes. And if you look at the stock market in the day we’re recording this, the stock market was way up, and then yesterday, dropped. And this morning, it just started to go back up again. Like I think we’ve got to be cautious and not get carried away with the fad of people jumping up and down and most people starting to get out there and what you see in a very quick manner. Think of it a little bit of a longer term because of the unknowns. One of the biggest things of this is the unknowns that we have is the thing we need to keep in mind.

Mike Blake: [00:13:15] So, how to lie? And I am a business owner, I’m a shareholder in my company, so how do I assess my own company as to one that’s likely to recover as opposed to one maybe that isn’t likely to recover?

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:13:33] So, I think you’ve got to do the scenario planning around the U. And so, what I recommend to my clients is do a scenario planning that says you will have a 20%, a 50% or an 80% drop in revenue over the next year and a-year-and-a-half. And then, do your net income in a cash flow on those three scenarios. You put your expenses towards the 50 to 80 and run your business. And go forward with that planning phase, and that will give you as much opportunity to survive as possible.

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:14:15] The other thing you need to do is conserve cash as much as possible and reduce any frivolous expenses or even potentially some expenses that you just are nice to have versus need to have, and that will ensure. Now, the next key thing you need to do is what we’re seeing in COVID is a lot of trends that were happening pre-COVID have accelerated. And what you want to do is how do you evolve your business to get on those trends and make sure your business is essential in getting on those trends. And we can talk more, I’m sure, when you get to that level.

Mike Blake: [00:14:57] You know, that 80% drop in revenue, that’s a jarring number to me, right? I mean, I understand where you’re coming from, to me, that says an absolute catastrophic business scenario. I mean, realistically, how many businesses can survive an 80% drop in revenue for any period of time?

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:15:18] Depends on their cash reserves and depending on their things they have, right?

Mike Blake: [00:15:23] Okay.

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:15:23] So, I’m not suggesting that will happen, but would you rather do a premortem or a postmortem on your business? And so, we’re asking people to do a premortem which visualizes which it will be. So, therefore, before you get there, you can avoid that, right? If you know what will happen if you get to an 80%, then you start to think, what are some of the actions I do need to take today? And then, we start to talk about the customer. Who are our customers? How do we retain them? How do we become essential to them? How do we go after different other customers and go capture them? What is the evolution of our business we’re doing?

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:16:00] We have a client in Atlanta who has restaurants and they evolved from they were never a delivery, they were never a takeout service, and this is nothing new, but they figured out an interesting way of doing delivery and take out service because a lot of restaurants have done nothing shocking, but if they hadn’t been ahead of it, they could have been impacted by that thing. One—yeah.

Mike Blake: [00:16:25] So, we’ve talked about expense management and we talked about cash management. What are a couple of other specific things that businesses should be looking at to make sure that they’re in the survival group and not on the not survival group?

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:16:40] I think what you want to do is in your customers that you have today, you want to be close to your customers and understand what they are going through. And before they react to you, one, if you’re close to them, you will know where they’re going. So, because you’re starting to predict how your business is going to impact and you figure out how you become essential to them. As soon as you start to get hints and ideas that you may not be kept on, you need to start to see what businesses you need to evolve to. I’ve got a client who was in a particular business and they figured out there was an adjacent business that they could evolve to. They were never in that, but due to COVID, it was a revenue stream, and it was bringing in cash, and they added that onto it, and move that on. And it became a great revenue stream for them.

Mike Blake: [00:17:33] You know, that essential nature, I think, is a really important point. And a former guest on this program, Rod Burkert, has been preaching to people in my profession, business appraisal, to figure out how do they turn themselves from a vitamin into medicine, right? That nice to have, should have versus something that makes pain go away that is truly essential.

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:18:01] Right.

Mike Blake: [00:18:01] And, you know, candidly, that can be very painful thinking because what if what if you sort of look at your business in the cold-heart light of day, you’re just not medicine, right? Your business model has been built on selling vitamins, right? You’re GNC, for example, right? You cannot convert to a drugstore overnight. You are in the vitamin business, and that’s where you’re going to stay. And so, maybe one of the decision points then is not only, even before you get to, how do I make myself medicine, but is that even realistic, right? And maybe that gets to the premortem, the 80% drop in revenue.

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:18:46] Right.

Mike Blake: [00:18:47] I’ve yet to scale my business to a—you know, the world will still need vitamins. They still want some vitamins and vitamins don’t go away.

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:18:54] Right.

Mike Blake: [00:18:54] But clearly now, they’re taking a backseat to the medicine, I guess.

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:18:59] Exactly. And what you do also is look at the trends COVID is causing, do know that every time we’ve had a major event in the world, be it The Depression, be it the oil crisis in the ’70s, be it the 2008, we’ve never reverted back and there’s a new norm that happens. And what is the new norm that would happen post this? And we’re starting to see some trends of this. And can you evolve or pivot? I’m trying to resist using the word pivot, but can you pivot towards that addition to your business and move away from some of these businesses? Like I would say, look, if you’re a retailer, if you don’t have an e-commerce strategy or a digitization strategy, you’d better be thinking about this, right?

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:19:47] Because the demise of retail has been, and I’m not saying it’s going to go away, but I think it’s been precipitated. In every business, be it a doctor, or an accountant, or a lawyer should have and need strategy because whatever we’ve done in the last eight weeks or something, we’ve moved to telehealth in the fastest way possible when there was so much resistance from the hospitals and the doctors. And now, overnight, we’re speaking to our doctors and doing telehealth or teleappointments. Now, we’re going to be used to it as consumers. Now, my doctor better have that service available because I may not want to go and wait in the waiting room. I can get it done through my laptop.

Mike Blake: [00:20:25] And speaking of retail, you know, I got to tell you, I love the curbside service. You know, this microphone that I have now, that John, our producer, begged me to get because the other one made me sound so lousy, you know, I barely slowed my car down, and they just chucked the thing in the back, I lowered the window, and like in a football passing drill, they just sort of chucked it through, right?

Mike Blake: [00:20:53] I mean, that was great. I love that. I mean, even if we kill coronavirus tomorrow, I hope they don’t get rid of that because, you know, saving the time of even having to park, and get out of the car, walk in, yeah, I get it, I can walk in, I get it, I feel like I want to be treated like Cleopatra, and they sort of lift me up on one of those thrones that the servants carry around town and stuff, but I love that, right?

Mike Blake: [00:21:23] Frankly, I’d pay a premium for that. As somebody said, you know, if I bought us a 50-dollar item, we got to pay two more dollars to have the thing put in your car for you, yeah, I’m in. So, you’re right. I mean, I think there are some emerging business models and we’re not even close to being there yet. I cannot imagine what’s going to happen in education. You know, schools are not opening. And when they do, a lot of the students aren’t going back unless there’s no other choice, I think.

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:21:54] No, I hear you. I ask who is sending us information, saying, what will you do with your child? And my response back would be, you tell me what safety precautions you’re taking to make that decisions accordingly.

Mike Blake: [00:22:06] Yeah. So, you know, a fascinating thing has happened. A lot of this, I think, is now going away, but it could come back if we go into a W-shaped recovery, which I think there’s a good chance it will happen. I don’t think it’s drop dead, but I think there’s a good chance. How did businesses survive just not being able to operate for three months? And what lessons do you think businesses are taking from that so that if we do go into a second trough, that they can survive that second halt?

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:22:48] I think in the first instance, a lot of businesses were caught by thinking it’s going to be a short-term close. And I think the government acted very, very quickly in all the incentives and money that came through, and the speed that it came through helped the companies. I think businesses are learning to conserve their cash now even more than they were before. And even consumers are learning that. What we’re hearing in some reports that consumers are really not spending as much money as we were. Our bank account seems a little bit inflated because we’ve been sitting at home.

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:23:23] And so, we seem to have some extra dollars in our bank balances. And businesses are that. I think businesses have learned to conserve cash. Some businesses moved a little slow in cutting expenses. Now, I think they’re being cautious in increasing them back. So, I think businesses are learning from this and will not revert back to the old days. I’ve heard companies and CEOs tell me, I’m not bringing my travel budget back to the norm it was. I’m not bringing my people back yet to the offices, right? And so, I’m going to keep my nonessential expenses down.

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:23:58] Now, you go to how long can they survive? I think that’s a predicament on the business and in the amount of money. We’ve got rent abatement going on. That leaves in July. We’ve got many things that are issues about to drop in July, August, September, and we’ll have to watch what happens to those businesses then, and how effectively they work. We’ve seen very large chains send letters to their landlords, and saying, we need rent abatements and we need you to work with us, right?

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:24:31] One of the largest chains out there in the world has sent that letter and they’re asking for those for a long period of time, not just until now. And I think businesses need to do that. The other aspect is I love using this, is the old military strategist, Colonel John Boyd used the OODA, meaning is O-O-D-A, right? You observe what’s the situation around you, orient yourself, and then decide, and then act quickly. And when you act, you start observing again. You orient, decide, and act.

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:25:07] And it’s similar to Jim Collins’ view around, and I hate to use this, but Jim Collins, he wrote, before you act, throw some bullets before you fire your cannons. Meaning, find your target with a few bullets. And I would ask businesses as they’re evolving and trying to survive this, you need to evolve. You can’t just stand still. And as you evolve, you want to test and fail fast, to learn fast, and keep testing, and be a testing organization because this is an evolution, and we’re going to have to evolve. You can’t stay the same and you can’t stay stagnant.

Mike Blake: [00:25:42] You know, I need to ask another question. This is not one that we’ve really talked about. But I know you can catch up with a fastball here. And again, our producer, John, is going to love this question, and that is, how do you navigate pricing in this environment? And what I mean by that, you know, a friend of mine who also happens to be my dentist was talking to me about what it’s going to take to reopen his practice and start filling cavities, drilling, and doing whatever it is a dentist do, right?

Mike Blake: [00:26:24] You cannot deliver those services for the same price today that you could 90 days ago, right? My wife just went to the dentist, and then face shields and two masks on at the same time. And I’m sure they were also sterilizing the thing, like they’re using some sort of disinfectant like those old sorts of pump-operated DDT and insecticide things they used to have in the old-time cartoons, right? But at the same time, there are other businesses that are desperate—actually, let me go back.

Mike Blake: [00:27:03] You know, restaurants. You know, I ventured into a restaurant last week for some takeout and, you know, half the tables are gone. You know, so now, they’ve got half of their serving capacity, but they’ve got the exact same overhead they had 90 days ago, right? The way the math works is that their prices must go up, you would think, right? Maybe not. So, on the same token, you know, if you’re an attorney right now and a lot of some legal services are considered medicine, others are considered vitamins, right?

Mike Blake: [00:27:39] Maybe you considered lowering your prices for a minute because you just want to get work in the door, right? And I can’t even imagine what airlines must be doing. Their pricing mechanisms have been so Byzantine anyway, what they’re doing now has got to be some form of calculus. And I’m talking too long, but I’m thinking about this question kind of real time, I mean, how do you think about pricing in this kind of environment? And do you agree, that’s a really critical micro decision or decision that a business has to make as they reopen here?

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:28:14] It’s a very, very, very important decision. And I would first want to take something off the table when you talk about pricing. Most companies have very good core values of their business. And some of them call for integrity. Some of them call for, we’ll take care of our customers. Some of them call for, we do what’s right, et cetera, et cetera. So, number one thing I want to take off the table is this is not the time to price cap, right? And then, if you’re a leader who’s thinking, I’m going to take advantage of this, look, this is a time for your values to be in action. We, as human beings, are naturally good people, live those values, and be good human beings. So, take that part out of the question.

Mike Blake: [00:29:00] So, you’re saying, I should cancel that hundred-dollar for Lysol can auction off of eBay?

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:29:05] Absolutely.

Mike Blake: [00:29:05] Okay. I’ll do that as soon as we’re done.

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:29:09] Yeah. And so, next one I would come is at any time, how do you develop your price? You develop your costs, you look at your competitor, and you look at your market dynamics, right? And what the market’s willing to bear. However, if you just do it like the old way, and yes, you bring your costs in trying to make it, you need to decide in this world, will the consumer come? And is a competitor going to figure out a different way? As you rightly said, will a competitor figure out a very cheap way?

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:29:41] And this is the time for businesses to be disrupted. And especially if you’re an accountant or a lawyer, there’s an e-business. I’m sure there’s an e-business out there that’s about to disrupt all the accountants and lawyers out there and other service providers. And so, you increase your prices. You’ve got to figure out your strategy, how you manage the costs. If we go down to the dentist line, you’ve got to look at how you cut your other overheads and stuff, because sometimes, people may just say, I want to not do my cleaning in six months, I’m going to delay for 12 months, right?

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:30:13] And then, go down that way unless it’s hurting and I need really my filling done and it’s killing me, it becomes essential. Then, if you gouge me, you know I’m not coming back, right? I’m going to find somebody else because that trust will be broken forever. So, it’s a very dicey situation. And this may not be the time to increase your margins. It may be the time for your survivability to continue the revenue while not losing money, yet, not increasing the margin business is where I would be today.

Mike Blake: [00:30:45] So, when we talk about pricing, and we’re touching upon this now, this is a good segue to the next question, which is, you know, we’ve talked about expense management, let’s talk a little bit about the sales side. And I want to talk about observing what your competitors are doing. And one of the things that really interests me about this period of times, is I’m trained as an economist, and economists have a favorite term called revealed preferences, which means that people say whatever they want, but if you want to find out what people actually care about, look at how they act and look at how they spend their money, right? And the fascinating thing about this time from an economist’s perspective is the revealed preferences and people’s tolerance for risk, right? At the end of the day, you know, I think the decision of whether you wear a mask or not, I think, boils down to a revealed preference of risk, right?

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:31:56] Yeah.

Mike Blake: [00:31:56] And so, why does this relate to competitors? Because, you know, talking about pricing and talking about how you become more efficient, I think there’s another lever to that, which is, what if my competitors are comfortable taking more risk than I am, right? Maybe the restaurant down the street is going to cram people maybe six inches closer and get a couple more tables or they’re going to—I don’t know the business wound up, but I think you get my point, is that out of out of desperation or they think they’re being clever, but they’re not or that, you know, they just simply have a higher risk tolerance.

Mike Blake: [00:32:40] You know, competitors are going to do things. Some competitors will do things that other businesses wouldn’t necessarily feel comfortable with. But then, they’re going to have to make the decision, do I mimic the risk profile of my competitor because I don’t know or do I use that as an opportunity to differentiate myself somehow? And how do I do that in a way that is, you know, civil and appropriate?

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:33:12] So, I would answer it with a nuanced way, is one, it depends on the market you’re in and the risk tolerance of your consumer. And you let your consumer’s risk tolerance also help you make that decision because if you’re in a risk-tolerance level where the consumer is looking for the safety at the highest level, then you want to be careful, because then, you won’t get those. But if you’re in a market where the consumer is willing, now, do you go there and take that risk tolerance because of your competitor?

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:33:43] I would say also depends on what you’re looking for. Is it a short-term gain or a long-term gain? And I go back to your values. And as an organization’s values that, would you be willing—when big companies develop their core values, one of the questions I ask them is, are you willing to take a financial hit to live your core values? Then, only are you sure about your core values. Otherwise, they’re just words, right?

Mike Blake: [00:34:10] That’s revealed preferences right there.

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:34:12] There you go, right? And this is the time that that core value is being tested. If it is your core values to go with that risk tolerance, yes, go, but if you stated to your employees that this is how we’ll behave and this is who we are, and all of a sudden, at a time of crisis, you evolve, you think your employees are going to believe you as life goes on, right? And trust is broken. So, I would think be living true to who you are and don’t change is a very key thing. Now, do you evolve with the market? Absolutely. But you’ve got to decide on that mechanism in that.

Mike Blake: [00:34:51] So, we touched on this a little bit, but I want to come back and hit it explicitly, is that, let’s assume that this is, in fact, going to be some sort of W-shaped recovery. In fact, there is a possibility that COVID is just with us for a long time. There’s no guarantee that we’ll find a silver-bullet vaccine. It could be partially effective, like the flu. It could be completely effective against the or it could be something entirely different, right? How do you think a typical business or how are you advising your clients to prepare for a world that may very well be sort of on again, off again, on again, off again?

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:35:38] So, we’re continuing—you know, I initially said the postmortem, that idea, we’re continuing to do that. So, in the past, before COVID, we would develop a three-year strategy, and then develop a quarterly annual plan and the quarterly plan, and reassess it every quarter. Now, we’re actually going in and assessing our strategy every month because things are changing so fast. And sometimes, we do it more often or because there’s a necessity to do that and there’s a crisis coming.

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:36:08] So, we recommend to our clients have a monthly review of your strategy, monthly review of your forecasts, not just your profit and loss, but then, take it to a cash flow level. And actually, weekly or biweekly, let’s look at our cash levels. And we continue to evolve that. We don’t get exuberant when sales go up or revenues come up as this V, or W, or a squiggly line continues, we stay cautious. And you can see people start to say, okay, we’re back. Let’s bring these things back. And we always become the naysayers to the organization, said, let’s put the, what if we’re going to go down?

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:36:49] Until you see a major long-term trend, let’s keep to this level and continue to evolve because do know, we’re not going back. It will be a different world that we’re living in and it will continue. And especially, Mike, as you said, if this is going to be a long-term fight level, we’re going to be a whole different type of people in how we live. You know, it’s acceptable for me and you to meet and talk with masks on now, which, you know, eight weeks ago, we would have never done that, you know. We would have sat-

Mike Blake: [00:37:20] They wouldn’t let you into most places of business with a mask.

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:37:24] True.

Mike Blake: [00:37:24] I mean, can you imagine going into a bank right now? Right? I mean, really, 90 days ago, right? Now, it’s expected to go in with a mask, right? But if you do that 90 days ago, you would have been stopped at the door.

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:37:39] Exactly.

Mike Blake: [00:37:40] So, it would be interesting to see if there’s some sort of facial recognition technology that somehow accounts for masking.

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:37:49] Yeah.

Mike Blake: [00:37:49] So, we’ve talked mostly tactical, but I do want to draw back a little bit and get into a little bit of a strategic discussion.

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:37:58] Yeah.

Mike Blake: [00:37:58] And that is, you know, it could be tempting, I think, should be tempting to use the current environment as an opportunity to expand, right? Money is as close to free as it’s ever going to get. The government, by hook or by crook, and I’m not going to comment on what I think the soundness of the policy is, but the fact of the matter is that they’re knocking us over the head and stuffing our pockets full of cash, right?

Mike Blake: [00:38:33] They want us to have cash. And it would be tempting then to sort of take that cash or go after free or very close to free money and borrow maybe with the goal of expanding or maybe renewing your technology or production capabilities. What do you think about that? Is that a temptation that a lot of companies should give into or do you think most companies are going to resist that?

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:39:02] My gut says no. It’s counter-intuitive.

Mike Blake: [00:39:05] No, they’re going to resist it?

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:39:07] I’m telling my companies, don’t do CapEx right now. This is not the time to invest money in your business. Meaning, don’t take on more debt. Conserve cash, conserve your expenses. I may be an anomaly, but this is like no other time we’ve seen in recent history of businesses. The thing it is, we just don’t know what’s going to happen. You know, normal certain crisis, the short-term is known, the long-term is not known.

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:39:37] In this crisis, the short-term is not known, right? And so, it’s such anomaly time that, what will you do with that CapEx? So now, let me then nuance it for you. If your CapEx is for normal expansion, and you do your normal IRR, and all that, I would say no. If your CapEx is going to reduce your short-term expenses, which I know there’s a couple of business out there that are reinstalling their telephone systems from the copper wire telephone systems and their monthly system costs are much lower, now, that’s a different discussion, right?

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:40:13] So, it’s a nuanced answer. I had a very good friend last night called me, and said, I want to upgrade my software in my retail business. And we went through this analysis with him, actually. And the end decision was, yes, because now, this new software was enabling him to go do delivery, which his old system was not. And his staff was having to do manual work to do delivery. That cost benefit made sense. So, it really depends. It’s not the cheap money, it’s what the efficiency, and the new business opportunity you’re able to do, and the revenue increase you’re expecting from it, then it’s a big difference. Yeah?

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:40:50] So, it’s not, money is cheap, let’s invest because we have it. I would be very, very resistant. I’ll give you an answer, when COVID started, I had a luxury car. I actually took it back on the beginning of March just before the lock down happened. And as a personal business, I said, do I need to conserve cash? I had my cash reserves, but I felt that I need to even conserve more in case this is longer than I’m anticipating, right? And so, even a small business like myself, I kind of drank my own Kool-Aid.

Mike Blake: [00:41:23] Now, let me come back to you. One of the things that I think is going to increase that temptation is the capital equipment sellers, for the most part, computers are different. But I think just out in that machine or because they just need to get inventory out the door are going to make me coming back and saying, hey, look, we’re going to offer you a once-in-a-lifetime 40% discount or I’ll let you finance the thing over 19-and-a-half years. You know, you’re going to see some pricing, and I’ll bet you, when you return that car, they probably tried to entice you to keep it with some special financing one-time deal, right?

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:42:07] Right.

Mike Blake: [00:42:07] So, is there any point at which you might be talked into the CapEx of that commitment because that price is so attractive, and you think two years from now, you are going to have to make that expenditure anyway, so why not take advantage of it now?

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:42:27] If it’s for the same business I’m doing, I would resist it again. If you’re adding more services and opportunity of business that I don’t do now and it helps me add to the trends that I’m seeing and it gives me a new revenue opportunity, then I’m looking at it. But I would be very resistant on, if it’s the same business, it’s just a good deal right now. I’m very, very cautious and maybe I’m too conservative in that way, but I’m still very cautious on the short-term.

Mike Blake: [00:42:58] So, we don’t have much more time, unfortunately, but there’s a lot more we could talk about. But a question I want to work in here is about talent. And given what you said, I think I can anticipate your answer, but I don’t want to assume, you know, I’m guessing that probably goes the same for hiring talent, too. I’ll give you an example. A resumé was sent to me by a friend of mine for an individual in my industry that’s looking for a job, has fantastic qualifications.

Mike Blake: [00:43:33] You know, that person probably would not be available, but for this recession that’s going on. And it would be very tempting to try to hire somebody opportunistically, but the business case would be very thin, would be a very speculative hire. So, I don’t think that we’re going to proceed with that. But, you know, what do you think about that? Because I think a lot of companies are going to see opportunistic hiring opportunities where they may feel like they’re getting access to talent they would not ordinarily have. Do you think about that the same way as you think Cap Ex as well or is there a different thought process that goes on there?

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:44:16] This one is slightly different.

Mike Blake: [00:44:18] Okay.

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:44:18] When you’re doing your 80% and 50% scenario planning, one of the aspects I missed saying was your own talent. Identify your own key A players. And once you identify them, let them know you know they’re your A players. Even though they don’t have a place to go today, but the better the player, the more love they need. Give him the love, show them the love because they’re the ones who are going to come up with good ideas for you. So, that’s point one. Now, in your rest of your organization, if you have B, C players, and there’s A player talent available, I would swap it.

Mike Blake: [00:45:02] Okay. So, instead of adding, you’d upgrade.

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:45:05] I would upgrade. And I would say this is the time companies can upgrade because there’s going to be amazing A players available unfortunately for them. But as more and more companies have difficulty, as I think our fourth quarter is going to see many, many companies. And so, A players will be available, I would say upgrade. And when I say upgrade, I say your B, C players, when you swap them, do it with the most dignity and let them move on with dignity, living your core values. That’s also very important. But this is the time to upgrade. Absolutely.

Mike Blake: [00:45:42] Zadhir, this has been a great conversation. We’ve covered some really good nuggets and really specific nuggets too. It’s something I’m trying to do a better job of as I do the interviews of this podcast. I’ll bet you, listeners are writing down a lot of questions. How can people contact you for more information or if there’s a question we did not cover they’d like your insight on?

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:46:06] Sure. So, they can call me on my cellphone. And my contact number is 610-453-8461. Identify that they’ve heard, you’re in my podcast, and go from there, or look me up on LinkedIn, or email me, and we’ll put that on the podcast. Catch up and they can email me. And if they reference that they heard this and from our podcast, we’ll go from there. Happy to do that.

Mike Blake: [00:46:31] Well, why don’t you give us your email because somebody may not go to the show notes necessarily if they’re driving in their car, jogging, then they want to just hear it.

Zadhir Ladhani: [00:46:38] Sure. It’s zladhani, so Z-L-A-D-H-A-N-I, @velocitystrategicconsulting.com.

Mike Blake: [00:46:46] Very good. Well, that’s going to wrap it up for today’s program. I’d like to thank Zadhir Ladhani of the Velocity Strategic Consulting so much for joining us and sharing his expertise with us today. We’ll be exploring a new topic each week, so please tune in so that when you’re facing the next executive decision, you have clear vision when making it. If you enjoy this podcast, please consider leaving a review with your favorite podcast aggregator. That helps people find us so that we can help them. Once again, this is Mike Blake, our sponsor is Brady Ware & Company, and this has been the Decision Vision podcast.

 

 

Tagged With: Brady Ware, Brady Ware & Company, Business Development, business strategy, consulting, COVID-19, Decision Vision, Mike Blake, Velocity Strategic Consulting

Brad Taylor, Taylor Built Brands

June 23, 2020 by John Ray

Taylor Built Brands
North Fulton Business Radio
Brad Taylor, Taylor Built Brands
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Taylor Built Brands

Brad Taylor, Taylor Built Brands (North Fulton Business Radio, Episode 247)

Brad Taylor joined the show to discuss brand positioning and other key branding principles for both B2C and B2B companies. Speaking with host John Ray, Brad also discussed his sales management and consulting services. “North Fulton Business Radio” is produced virtually by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® in Alpharetta.

Brad Taylor, Founder and CEO, Taylor Built Brands

Taylor Built Brands is a branding, marketing, and sales strategy consultancy based in Roswell. The founder, Brad Taylor, is a 30-yr sales/marketing veteran and spent the last 24 years in Marketing and Sales leadership roles at The Coca-Cola Co. Prior to that, he gained valuable marketing experience at Pizza Hut, Inc. and in the advertising agency industry.

Brad has been thoroughly trained, and has vast experience in consulting on all aspects of Brand Development/Management, Digital Marketing, and Sales Management/Business Development. He is widely known as an “out-of-the-box” thinker and extremely easy to do business with. In addition to consulting small businesses, Brad also teaches Branding and Marketing classes at Emory University and KSU.

Points of Contact for Brad Taylor:

Company website

LinkedIn URL:  https://www.linkedin.com/in/bradalantaylor/

Facebook URL: https://www.facebook.com/BmktgTaylor

Twitter URL: https://twitter.com/bcoketaylor

Instagram URL: https://www.instagram.com/bcoketaylor/

Questions/Topics Discussed in this Show

1. Why did you start Taylor Built Brands and what services do you provide?

2. Who is the target customer for Taylor Built Brands?

3. How can Taylor Built Brands help local firms grow their business?

4. What is Brand Positioning and why is it so important for businesses to focus on that?

5. What other ways can Taylor Built Brands help firms grow their business?

6. What do you do when you’re not consulting local businesses?

 

North Fulton Business Radio” is produced virtually from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® 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, iHeart Radio, Stitcher, TuneIn, and others.

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: Brad Taylor, brand development, brand positioning, digital marketing, John Ray, marketing, North Fulton Business Radio, Sales Leadership, sales strategy, taylor built brands

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