If you aren’t growing, you are dying, but the hardest part about growing is maintaining quality. As you hire more folks, expand to new locations, industries, etc. it becomes increasingly challenging to maintain the high quality you provided to your clients when you first started. It’s an incredibly difficult problem and so we reached out to some phenomenal entrepreneurs and asked them to share their stories, experiences and insights on the topic with us below.
Lorrie Miller

I never knew I wanted to be a photographer, let alone own my own studio! The path to my growth was surprising and organic. I used to be in banking after graduating from college. It was something I was proud of. I quickly worked my way into management. Shortly after, I had a family circumstance that led me to quit working and stay home with my children. However, I still had a deep desire to contribute financially and have something of my own to help define me. I was always a hard worker and pushed hard to get my bachelor’s degree after having my first son. Read more>>
Sarah Doran

Military children are grossly under-represented in children’s literature. Having grown up the daughter of an Army Chaplain and then serving in the Army myself, as a Blackhawk helicopter mechanic and crew chief, military life basically runs in my veins. Several years ago when I was doing my under graduate work in Elementary Education, I recognized the huge lack of resources for military families and children. Read more>>
Kendra Morancy

The underserved are the people who know that they have a good product or service but don’t have any clue how to present themselves as an actual business and how to get in front of their ideal customers. No, it might not be your cousin or your friends but there are plenty of people who need and want what you have to offer. That’s where copywriting and marketing comes in. It’s a strategy that goes beyond posting once a week on IG. Read more>>