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Everything you need to know about podcast advertising.
The ultimate guide to recording a podcast on your phone.
Steps to set up and use group recording in the Podbean app.
Are You An Entrepreneur? An Inside Peek At The Wise Women’s Council
One of the things I keep learning from gathering groups of working women together is how broad and diverse the realm of entrepreneurship is. Common culture would have you believe that entrepreneurship looks like a single white dude building a company out of his garage with a bunch of coding co-founders. Eating ramen. Dropping out of Harvard.
Sure, Silicon Valley has that.
But there is so much more to entrepreneurship than this.
I've met women who are building so many different businesses, in many different forms. What I’ve learned in interviewing and working with hundreds of you is that building businesses is a huge, broad landscape—and that women are building businesses faster than almost any other demographic group. (Black women are starting businesses at unprecedented rates.)
From private practices to PR firms to new companies serving women and families, to big tech companies to investment companies to research-based practices—women’s entrepreneurship is diverse, phenomenal, and important.
There is no one path to entrepreneurshipFor some people, they became entrepreneurial by accident—stumbling into entrepreneurship when a career path reached a dead-end, or wasn't fulfilling anymore. Others, like the story Tara McMullin shared on our podcast, found themselves jobless and pregnant and with a choice: start a new adventure or try to find another gig? Still some people start down the path because of a product idea they can't get out of their head, or a market segment and a population that needs to be served. Some people become entrepreneurs because it’s their calling. Some people don’t even know they’re building a business until long after they’ve been serving clients and realize that they’re in the thick of it as a full-fledged business owner.
People are creative. We like building things.Here's a secret: most of us scroll Facebook and Twitter and Instagram because we are bored out of our minds, lonely, or craving more stimulation. The "news" is a stand-in for the type of deep satisfaction that comes from making things with our bodies and minds, and truly connecting with other human beings. Humans naturally crave learning, growth, and being with other people.
Entrepreneurship—the art of making new things, of creating a new business in the world, and serving other people with your gifts and talents—can be deeply challenging and immensely satisfying. I've met and interviewed entrepreneurs of all types and what I've learned is that it's not about how you look, whether the media covers your type of business, or the “hustle” you’re supposed to have.
Entrepreneurship is about listening to your own inner wisdom, it’s about knowing yourself and deeply understanding people around you, and it’s about making things that change other people’s lives while also changing yours. It’s about the call to leadership, business, and growth.
Last year, in The Wise Women's Council, we had 18 women join us for a nine-month journey following the ups and downs of building businesses, careers, and lives. Some of the folks we had joining us on the journey included:
A tech employee who used the courage of the group to quit a lucrative leadership position and venture out onto her own to test two of her ideas for upcoming companies. A service-based entrepreneur who helps other business owners build maternity leave policies and stay sane while taking parental leave. A marketing consultant who was fired from her job while pregnant and vowed to build a better business, launching a marketing consultancy from a small studio shed in her backyard in Seattle. (You’ll hear her story on the latest podcast roundtable.)Today, I bring three of these women onto the podcast to talk about what it really means to be an entrepreneur and to live in the space of growth, experimentation, and challenging the status quo. You’ll hear from Sharon, a corporate executive who left one job to start a career as a coach to expand her learning and development practice, but realized how much she loved being within teams and companies and pivoted again to join a smaller startup team. You’ll hear from Michelle, a decision engineer with an MBA who started her own executive coaching practice when most of her peers were following a more traditional corporate consulting track. Then, you’ll hear from Erin, the founder of a PR consulting company who couldn’t get a new business idea out of her head, and decided to start a second company while pregnant even though the timing was crazy and she wasn’t sure if it would really work out.
Regardless of where you are in your career path today, it’s likely that at some point you’ll wake up and realize that something needs to change—and you’ll have to tap into your inner entrepreneur to create that change. I find that almost everyone I interact with and interview ends up having the question at some point or another. They wake up and they say, “What’s next? What happened?” That’s the call to take charge of your own life and career and try something new.
What’s your entrepreneurial story?Take a listen from a few of the women we worked with last year and then, in the comments, tell us about your own entrepreneurial journey. What has it been like for you? What have you learned about yourself and your career as you navigate the ebbs and flows of working and parenting?
FULL SHOW NOTES
Get the complete show notes with episode quotes, photos, and time stamps at http://www.startuppregnant.com/133.
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