We were lucky to catch up with Maria Jandres recently and have shared our conversation below.
Maria, appreciate you joining us today. When you were first starting out, did you join a firm or start your own?
I immigrated to the United States when I was 20 years old after graduated as a lawyer in Nicaragua. My mother is a lawyer for more than 40 yrs and she inspired me to go back to school in the US. One of the biggest challenges I faced was the immigration process that’s when i decided to learn more about the law in the US and study as a immigration paralegal.
Since that I wanted to learn how to help other immigrants with their journey to obtain their legal status in this country.
Now I have my own small business women owned that support with paralegal service, notary public and real estate.
I also do immigration,housing and childcare advocacy in the community to help monolingual clients to be educated in this country
Awesome – so before we get into the rest of our questions, can you briefly introduce yourself to our readers.
We are a minority/women owned business that offers confidentially and mobile services to my clients. We are proud to be part of the community and for our constant growth
How’d you build such a strong reputation within your market?
I think a small minority business delivering high-quality products or services, providing excellent customer service, maintaining transparency and integrity in business practices, establishing strong relationships with customers specially base on the community support actively seeking and valuing feedback, and consistently meeting or exceeding customer expectations.
Any advice for growing your clientele? What’s been most effective for you?
Some of my best effective strategy are word-of-mouth referrals: Satisfied customers had been a powerful source of new business for our business, Networking and community engagement has also generate referrals and new business opportunities.
Contact Info:
- Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/maria_jandres/