76: Neha Naik: Mentoring Moms to Start Their Own Business from Conception to Delivery

Neha Naik: Multi-Business Owner, Entrepreneurship Coach, Expert in Career Planning and Recruitment

Today, my guest is Neha Naik. She is the founder and CEO of RG, The Sleepy Cub, Creative Arc, and Triad partners. Neha is a four times business owner and she runs those while raising two toddlers. Neha is an expert in career planning, recruitment, a certified sleep consultant, and a mom entrepreneurship coach. She mentors moms with young children on how to start a business to create a better work-life balance. She helps moms who dream of starting a business, but don't act on it. Takes them by the hand and walks them through all the steps of their new business from concept to delivery.

Episode Highlights:

  • How failure shaped her entrepreneurial journey, driving her to become a multi-business owner, running her companies while raising two toddlers

  • Working with start-ups in the technical arena, she helps them scale their businesses by providing operation processes, HR, and recruiting for high impact positions

  • Using her passion for empowering women to make changes in their life through entrepreneurship, she created her “Signature Coaching Business for Mompreneurs”

Her first business was born when she was job hunting, trying to avoid the unjust treatment she experienced from a previous employer, and was prompted to start her own company instead. She first felt insecure, thinking she did not have enough experience or expertise - but she succeeded! Things really snowballed from there, and every major new skill in her life turned into a business of sharing it with others.

Listen in as Neha explains how she instructs companies to project their future by providing data dashboards and analytics so they can make the right decisions.

Follow Neha’s advice “there is no such thing as perfection in entrepreneurship” so just start your launch. Don’t wait for your course to be perfect, start your own business and define your life.

Mentioned In This Episode

Transcript:

Speaker 1 (00:01):

Today, my guest is Neha Naik. She is the founder and CEO of RG, The Sleepy Cub, Creative Arc Triad partners. Neha is a four times business owner and she runs those while raising two toddlers. Neha is an expert in career planning, recruitment, a certified sleep consultant, and a mom entrepreneurship coach. She mentors moms with young children on how to start a business to create a better work-life balance. She helps moms who dream of starting a business, but don't act on it. Takes them by the hand and walks them through all the steps of their new business from concept to delivery. Neha, thank you so much for joining me today. I'm so excited to jump in with this with you and talk about all the four businesses that you have.

Speaker 2 (00:53):

Thank you so much for having me here Destini. It's an absolute pleasure and honor. Yeah, I can't wait to dive right in.

Speaker 1 (01:00):

Well, why don't you start and tell everybody about your journey into entrepreneurship and how you got to where you are today?

Speaker 2 (01:08):

Yeah, so that's a really good question. You know you guys, most of you, obviously who are maybe listening don't know me, I actually started my quote unquote career wanting to be a medical, going to medical school, wanting to pursue medicine as my career. So I have a bachelor's in psychology and biochemistry, and I decided to do a masters in medical sciences and realized that med school wasn't for me. So I already kind of felt like a failure because it was like, I am such a, I really hold myself to high standards. I think most of us do. And when that happened to me, I really took it personally because I felt like I let myself down, I let my family down, I let my fiance at the time down. And finally I was like, okay, well we'll just start over. So I took a six month break and then I was like, okay, I have to do something.

Speaker 2 (01:52):

I gotta figure this out. So I was like applying to random jobs on Indeed, Craigslist. And, you know, there was one job that was like HR recruiting assistant. I'm like, Oh, interesting. Like what's that? And I applied, I got the job and it was basically being a recruiter. That's really how my HR career started. And it's so funny. I always tell people a lot of times we end up where we are. We didn't think we would be right. Or it just like just opens up a new path because I feel like that's your calling it as your true calling and the universe telling you what your calling is. And basically I went from agency to agency and finally I was working with a company that was a European company. They had opened offices here in Houston, Texas, which is where I reside and we were doing oil and gas recruitment, but the mentality, the culture, it was just poisonous.

Speaker 2 (02:40):

I, you know, there's no other way to describe it. Literally Destini, I would dread going into work. Sunday nights were torture to me. Monday mornings were torture to me. It was horrible. Like it was absolutely horrible. And part of the reason why it was horrible is because there was no lot, there was so much lack of respect. There was no understanding. I felt like there was a lot of weird stuff going on. Like I would bring in the clients, but they would go to someone who was prettier than me. It was just very to me, it was a very nasty culture. Right. and the company did shut down actually because they were sued. So but while I was there, I just told my husband, right. And we didn't have kids at the time. We did put a down payment on a home that we were going to purchase.

Speaker 2 (03:23):

And you know, my husband was like, you know, like if you need to leave, you need to leave. But at the back of my mind, I was like, Oh my gosh, we were just buying the house. How can I just leave my job? Like, I can't help you with bills, blah, blah, blah. It was a lot of self doubt. It was a lot of emotional trauma for me, not in a sense, like trauma is probably a really strong word, but you know what I mean? It was very, it was really hard for me to be like, okay, I failed once and now I'm going to possibly fail again. But what I realized was that it really wasn't failing. It was just me navigating through life, figuring out what I wanted to do. Right. So finally, my husband was like, you should just start your own recruiting agency.

Speaker 2 (03:58):

And overnight, as we were having dinner overnight, I was like, all right, let's form an LLC. You know, we named the LLC and I was like, now what? And then he was like, you need to put on your two weeks notice. And I'm like, Oh yeah, that's right. So I went to you put it in my two weeks notice and boom, I hustled, I cold called I cold emailed until about two and a half months later, I landed my first client. Right. So my entrepreneurship journey started with failure. And for anybody who's struggling out there, I want to tell you, you're not alone. Plenty of us feel really pigeonholed into what we're supposed to do, or we were what we thought we were going to do. And then a lot of us kind of ignore that inner voice of like, Oh my gosh, you're meant for more. And I say, you know what? You have to start listening to that voice. I don't care how old you are, but you have to start listening to your voice. And that's really how I started my entrepreneurship. So I now currently work for specifically for that business. I work with startups in the technical arena and I help them scale, which is providing operations processes everything within the HR and recruiting route. And then I also help with the recruiting of high impact positions for those startups.

Speaker 1 (05:06):

So you were at this agency and you, you know, you felt like there was a lack of respect there. You really dreaded going into work. You mentioned something about you would bring in a client, but it would go to someone that was prettier than what you are. Explain what was going on there.

Speaker 2 (05:23):

Yeah, of course. I'm happy to. So what happened was I remember a specific incident and you know, there was a potential client that we were going to meet in Fort worth, Texas, which, you know, as you guys may or may not know about four and a half hours away. So I drove, I woke up early in the morning, the meeting was at 11. I woke up early in the morning. I went there, I spoke to the client you know, he spoke to me, they were really nice about it. And then they signed the paperwork with me, right. So it's technically to my client because I went there and I got the client. Well, that was on a Friday. Well, I come into the office on Monday and I specifically remember, I'm not going to say his name just by the off chance was he may be listening.

Speaker 2 (06:01):

I don't know. But he don't, he, he walks in and he's like, Hey Neha, we're going to give this client to blah, blah, blah. And I'm like, why? Like I just, cause I, I got him. So he should be like working with me. Like I should be getting all the roles that I'm supposed to be working with them on, but it just went to somebody else. There was no explanation given to me the person that did get the client, she had obviously like she was a new college grad. You know, she dressed obviously like that and without getting into further details, I just knew, I just knew that it was just weird. It was awkward. And she was actually really nice to me. I have nothing bad to say about her because she couldn't control some of that either, but there was definitely politics involved. And I was like, all right, you know what? And that, I mean, I remember coming home and crying that day because I was just like, I cannot believe that just happened. Right. Like I literally did a nine hour round trip, trip in one day, one business day got the client to talk to me, got the client to sign. So I closed the deal, but it didn't come to me and it broke my heart. It crushed me.

Speaker 1 (07:04):

That is just devastating. I really hate to hear that. So what year was this where you, when you were at this agency, you're just putting a down payment on the house and you decided to leave. What year was this?

Speaker 2 (07:16):

This was in 2013.

Speaker 1 (07:20):

Okay. So is that the year that you started your recruiting agency?

Speaker 2 (07:25):

It was, yep. It was all this happened around November and I started my recruiting agency. I was supposed to start it in December, but my accountant was like, I would just wait until January because of the tax year is not messed up then. And I was like, okay. So I, I had the ideas ready. And then I actually technically launched it in January, but I started doing a lot of the pre-work things behind it, like who I was going to reach out to how I was going to network, how I was going to sell my services and all that.

Speaker 1 (07:54):

Okay. So you started this recruiting agency and then you landed your first client about two months, two and a half months after you started that. When did you, and you have all these other businesses? When did you launch them? What was the next business that you launched?

Speaker 2 (08:10):

Yep. So actually the next, all the other businesses happened since 2019. So they were just kind of a, it was really cool the way it happened. So what happened was when I was working with these startups Destini for, you know, the, the recruiting side, you know, people started asking me questions about marketing. People started asking me questions about analytics because as you're starting a company and, you know, remember these are startups, these are technical worlds, so they have the funds. Right. They just want to make sure they're setting the foundation. Right. So I was like, okay. And I know quite a bit about marketing because of my own business. And I, you know, I was doing a lot of it because I honestly couldn't at the time afford to pay somebody to do my marketing. So I was having to watch Google videos.

Speaker 2 (08:50):

I was having to do like late nights, like, you know, how do I increase my audience? How do I increase my SEO score? I have to do all that. So I'm like, okay, like, I can help you. And one of my clients motivated me and he was like, look, I think you should start your marketing agency because you've got knack at this. And I'm like, you know, but like I don't have the team. He's like hire a team. And I was like, all right. So I started that. And then I started Triad Partners for the same reason, pretty much for data analytics. And then finally in December of 2019 around the time my daughter was born in December of 2019, I got a certification when I was on maternity leave with her for being a certified pediatric sleep consultant because I have both of my kids on a really good routine.

Speaker 2 (09:35):

And I'm not saying that of course, there's days when they sleep late. And the days when we have birthday parties and all that stuff. But for the most part, I'm a big believer in routine. I'm a big believer in kids sleeping well at night. And I wanted to empower women to do that because from my culture where I come from, it's almost as if, when you have a baby, it's all about the child and who cares about self care for moms or parents, you know? And I say, yes, I have kids, but I'm also a wife. I'm also a daughter. I'm also a owner of companies and I'm a human being. Like if I want to get my nails done, I can. And I wanted to empower other families to stand up and be able to voice that and make those decisions for themselves.

Speaker 1 (10:16):

So Creative Arc is your marketing agency, correct? Tell us who you serve in that company.

Speaker 2 (10:23):

Yep. So I serve specifically physicians and small private practices who are really great at what they do, but they're stuck in terms of their operations and their marketing specifically. So a lot, I work with clients right now in the Houston region who are either starting out or have started out. But now they're stuck, whether it's, you know, they're not getting as many customers or, you know, patients as they want, or whether it's like we are getting the patients, but we're not really getting the type of patients that we want. So really going in and saying, okay, let's look at our foundation, right. Because physicians are awesome, right. Physicians are great. And then obviously there's such a big contributing people of our society. However, I think the one thing that they lack is just organization, as it relates to operations and marketing. And so I'm like, I will do that. So you can do what you're good at, which is working with patients and treating them.

Speaker 1 (11:14):

Now is your Triad Partners firm, is that where you help people with data analytics? Tell us a little bit more about that.

Speaker 2 (11:21):

Yep. So basically what I do is and you know, that company is not limited to startups. So we, we work with some of the big name brands as well for that one. So what we do basically is we'll have a corporation come to us and they'll say, Hey, look like our data, we are not able to streamline our business processes because our data doesn't make sense right now. Like whoever built it, we have like three different softwares. Like we know this is here. The, you know, the finance is sitting in the software. We have the HR sitting in this software, everything is really muddled. And I want to know big picture, but also the details. Right? So what we do my team does is I have engineers that basically go in, they assess the situation, they put together an awesome, awesome data dashboard.

Speaker 2 (12:05):

And where, when we say, you know, when did we send it to the CEO or the VP of whatever department they're able to tell, okay, what was the cost resources? What was the ROI? Where can they streamline? So for us, it's about working smart and not hard, right? I'm a big believer in that. And so what I say is data tells stories, right? If you don't have data you're not able to tell a story. So a lot of times in our businesses, when we're like, well, what was my prof profit? What was my loss? You know, what can I do better? What investments, investments did I make? Without having data you're not able to assess that. Right. So what we do is we empower companies with pro by providing data dashboards and analytics so that they can make that decision. They can construct their storylines for the upcoming quarter or upcoming years even, and just say, okay, we're at 50 million this year. We want to get to 100. How do we get there? Well, here's where you're getting the least amount of ROI. Here's where you're getting the most. How do you shift that within the internal company culture?

Speaker 1 (13:02):

So I have to ask, I know you have two toddlers at home. How in the world are you managing 4 businesses?

Speaker 2 (13:10):

I don't sleep. I'm just kidding. No, I do sleep. I would, I would literally like not, I would vanish if I didn't sleep. You know honestly, it, I sometimes don't know it either, but I will say this, I am big on priorities. I am big on working on things that provide the most impact within my companies. Right. So I do have an awesome team now. I wouldn't be able to do this without my team. I have an operations director that works with me. I have like a couple of engineers. I have a couple of recruiters. I have BA's. So I am at the point now where I am able to make those investments. But I remember when I first started out. Right. Which a lot of people, when they're starting out where you don't have that, and you know what guys, you do have to work hard until you get there.

Speaker 2 (13:55):

Right. And so because of the team that I have and the structure that I have in place now, I, I'm a very, also organized person to the point where like, it may drive people crazy, but I know exactly what I'm doing every day for the most part. And, you know, and there's days, you know, when the toddlers are sick or I'm sick or like, Oh, you know, someone fell down and scraped their knee. And now I have to be the mom right , I have to kind of change my, change my roles, you know, within the household. And I'm able to do that because again, I have an awesome team in place. I've gotten really good at setting boundaries, which I was horrible at when I first started, like, if a client asks me something, I was like, yep, let's do it.

Speaker 2 (14:34):

Let's do it right now. But now I'm like, okay, we will respond to you, you know, in 24 hours. And we, you know, I believe in like over what is it over, under promise over deliver. Right. So again, setting those expectations with clients. And quite honestly, I do it because I love all of it. I love it. I'm very passionate about it. I love the problems I'm solving and it gets me up. Like, it gets me so excited for my day and you know, it is a lot and, and a lot of people are like, how do you balance it? Right. And we have, as a family, very strict rules, like weekends, we don't work Fridays. We only work half days. You know, when the kids are home, no phones, no laptops. Like we have made it to a point where now it's like, I've kind of started getting in the rhythm of it. Now, do I have days when I'm working at night when the kids go to sleep? Of course, I think we all do though. Right? Like, we're like, let me catch up on these five emails because you know, I have to go to my son's recital or whatever. But for the most part, I'm really, I'm trying to be really, really good with boundry setting.

Speaker 1 (15:34):

So how old are your children at home?

Speaker 2 (15:36):

So I have a four year old and then a 16 month old. A boy and a girl.

Speaker 1 (15:39):

Oh, wow. So very, very young, well, the four year old be going to kindergarten next year?

Speaker 2 (15:47):

Not the, not next year, but the following year, because he's born and he's born in December. So he's in that weird cutoff.

Speaker 1 (15:54):

Okay. Do you have a nanny watching them or do they go to daycare or where are they in the daytime while you're working?

Speaker 2 (16:01):

So I have my nanny for the younger one. And then I have, my son actually goes to a Montessori just around the corner here. It's about two streets down from where we live and, you know, we pick them up, well, my nanny picks him up at three and then I try to wrap up by four. So we'll do like, you know, dinner, bath, all that with me. And, and then they usually go to bed by 7 or 7:30.

Speaker 1 (16:22):

I love Montessori schools. I sent my two younger ones to a Montessori school and I really think it helped set them up for success as they moved on to to kindergarten. So let me ask you this. I know that you have an online course where you mentor moms with young children on how to start a business so they can have a better work-life balance. And based on what you're telling me with all the four businesses that you've started, I think you're a perfect person to help them with this. What business does this, does this course fall under? And tell us a little bit more about the online course that you have.

Speaker 2 (16:59):

Yep. Yep. That's a great question. So this business, I don't think falls under any of my pre-existing businesses. But what I'm trying to do with it is honestly, I feel like there is a little bit of still a little bit of stigma to women being in the workforce. Right? And so the, the, the way I think of it is a lot of times women, you know, we're, we obviously are multitaskers. We do great when we put our minds to something. And you know, a lot of people have still have jobs, which is great. This is specifically for moms who are working nine to five, but they are sick of it. Whether it's a culture where they're unhappy or they're just like, I don't want to put my son to daycare from 6:00 AM to 6:00 PM. You know, my four months of age, whatever that looks like to you and your boundaries. So what I, a lot of times what happens is women will say, Oh, well, after the kid, I expect my employer to give me more leniency or expect work from home more, or, you know, blah, blah, blah. But I would say, you know what? You start your own business and you define your life. Not only define, not only do you define it

Speaker 1 (17:57):

In your professional life, you also define your personal life because

Speaker 2 (18:00):

You get to work with the clients, you get to select your work hours. You get to say, I'm not going to work every Thursday, because guess what, it's your business. However, it's not as easy said than done, right? There's a lot of, there's a lot of pressure. Societaly with all these things. When I read about 10 K months and 20 K months and all that. And, you know, I want to let women know that entrepreneurship is hard, right? No, I'm not going to downplay it for you. It is hard, but it is so worthwhile if you have the right guidance, right. If you know exactly what path to take. So that's kind of why that was my reasoning behind designing the course, ultimately what I wanted, what to happen, Destini. Cause I'm a big believer in like community service and giving back to the community.

Speaker 2 (18:44):

Right? And now that I'm in a place where I can give back, even for The Sleepy Cub I support the women's shelter with my , you know, profits, a percentage of them. And specifically for the course, my goal here is in the next six months, so six months or so when I started selling of it, selling it. And you know, when we get it to be like the way we want it to be in the feedback that we're getting for every person I sell it to, I want to donate it to a single mother. Who's trying to quit her job and start her own business. So that's really kind of my overlying vision behind it, because I think that, you know, we need to empower women in our society to make that change. Right. And I don't think we need cheerleading. Like I think we know we can do it, but we need to know how we can do it. And so my course breaks it down for you all the way from like, I have a play on words, conception to delivery, right. So if you think of like conceiving the business all the way to delivering it, and then how do you grow it? And then how do you use that to also create passive income streams? So that's kind of what my course dives into.

Speaker 1 (19:42):

So when did you launch your course? When was it available to the market?

Speaker 2 (19:46):

So it's actually being launched. We had a part, one launch in March, and then we decided to change some things up. Like I wanted to add more handouts cause we had a beta launch and we got some feedback, which I love feedback. And I also think that, you know, it takes time to perfect it, right? Like you can't expect. Cause I can remember this was my first time ever designing a course. And though I have an awesome team with me. There's still stuff I have to learn myself. So we did the part one launch in March and we got some really good feedback, like awesome feedback. Oh, like, you know, I would love to see more of this. I would love to see client attraction strategies. That was one of the feedbacks. So I added a module, we added some awesome worksheets that people can do as they're watching it. So this isn't just, you're watching there. You know, you are having you work as you're watching. So I'm having you write down what your three values are or the three pillars that come to your mind. So I'm a big believer in acting through it, right? Like I call it because it's great to watch it, but unless you're participating, you're not going to get much out of it. So I'm launching now these, I guess my second launch is going to be May 15th.

Speaker 1 (20:51):

So how many people did you have going through your beta?

Speaker 2 (20:55):

So we had about I think it was 48 people going through the beta and all of them were, all of them took it. We provided it to them at a discounted rate. And basically the caveat was, we want to know your brutally honest feedback, like be as brutal as you want to be. You can tell me you hate it, whatever, because you know what I do want to make sure that people that take it are actually benefiting from it because if they're not benefiting from it, then what's the point. You know? So I was very particular about that with my team. And I said, we are going to launch a beta and we are going to really have people tell us the feedback. And we, I mean, I will tell you some amazing feedback.

Speaker 1 (21:33):

Where did you find the 48 people?

Speaker 2 (21:35):

I found it on a lot of the entrepreneurship groups that I'm in on Facebook. Also my LinkedIn network my current existing network. I had a couple of clients that I know that are actually looking to start their own businesses, specifically for The Sleepy Cub and the moms that I work with. They're like, Oh, I'm a stay home mom. And I want to do this. And I was like, would you be just in the beta? So like really chopping into my email list and seeing if people would be interested and they were.

Speaker 1 (22:01):

Perfect. So let me ask you this Neha what do you see as next steps in 2021? You can talk about your online course. You can even talk about some of the other businesses that you have.

Speaker 2 (22:13):

Yep. So for 2021, really my plan is to you know, make a difference by helping women start their own businesses through this course. Number one, number two is I'm also going to be launching. Well, I, I just launched another course for The Sleepy Cub for parents who want to DIY sleep training. Right? Like how do you do it? What are the steps? So, you know, I'm going to be launching that, so I want to focus on that and I really want to focus on like taking some

Speaker 2 (22:42):

time off when things take off. Right. And being there, like being more available and, and getting to do the things I want to do, because I think I worked so hard. And again, I love what I do, but I would just love to go on, especially with COVID now, you know, trying to like starting to fade and hopefully go on vacation. So we have a vacation planned in June and then making a difference in society. So again, like I said, in the next six months, you know, ideally by fall I want to start supporting single mothers out there, who are looking to start their own businesses. But yeah, I would say those are my goals. I've recently also like been a lot of people have been reaching out about like business coaching and you know, I didn't really know as a coach, but I do a lot of Facebook lives in my group because I want to give people actual advice or I have a really like weird client call and then I'll go like right live. And I'll say, Oh my gosh, I just had the weirdest call. And this is what happened. And how do you guys tackle this? And people have been reaching out about that. So that's something I'm exploring though. I don't know if I'll have the capacity, so I'll have to, I'll have to work that out, but I've been getting a lot of those a lot of those requests as well.

Speaker 1 (23:46):

So where are you going on vacation in June? We're going to Cancun. Oh, fun. Very fun.

Speaker 2 (23:52):

We're going to Cancun. We're going to an all-inclusive resort where all we're gonna do is have, well, we're going with kids, but as much as we can have some daiquiri's on the beach and have the kids play in the pool and there's like a water park and the resort. So it's going to be about sun, water and alcohol.

Speaker 1 (24:10):

I love that your kids are going to love that. So I have one, I have one last closing question for you. You've been doing this for awhile. You obviously have a lot of success with your four businesses that you've launched and the online course that you're currently working on. What advice do you have for other online course creators or entrepreneurs out there?

Speaker 2 (24:32):

So a couple of things, right? And first of all, if you are starting your course or whatever, is it that you're starting just to know that your first launch may not be the best launch and that's completely okay. In fact, it's actually good because you learn so much you guys, and I know there's so much, like I said, impending pressure of like, Oh my gosh, like my first launch, I, you know, did 70k in sales and you know, that's all great, but you've got to think about all the other resources that person has. So don't compare yourself to somebody else ever compare yourself to you always because you don't know what the other person's background looks like. You don't know the help that they have the financials that they have to support it. So I always say, because I struggled with this initially, right. I would always come here outward and then it took a mindset shift and it took me journaling every day.

Speaker 2 (25:22):

And it took me, you know, just talking to my spouse or whatever, but just making that shift to like, it's not, it's okay. That it doesn't work the first time. Right. it's, it's totally normal. And so don't set those expectations. And then for entrepreneurs who are starting, you know, I just, my advise is start. I know it sounds really cliche and it sounds really simple, but a lot of times we have all these great ideas and we get so muddled up in our heads. And we, we don't start because we're trying to launch that perfect website or that perfect program or whatever. But you know what, there is no such thing as perfection in entrepreneurship. You guys, I am still to this day, changing things on my website, changing things on my programs, changing my offerings, my pricing, because it is not a, it's never going to be a static thing.

Speaker 2 (26:08):

It's always going to be changing. There's going to be ebbs and flows, but learn from your clients, learn from, you know, learn from your even competitors. Right? entrepreneurship is a lot about learning. It's a lot about putting into action, what you learn. And so start it. Just take a piece of paper tonight. If you want to start your business and write down a couple of ideas and how can you start it and get things going? Don't wait. Oh, well, I'll wait until my child. No, just start. You don't have to start full time. You can just start really, really part-time and work your way up. Right. But until you start, you won't know what you're working with.

Speaker 1 (26:41):

I like what you said there about just, and that you're, you are even like myself. I was doing this last night on my website, just tweaking stuff, you know, doing a little bit of repositioning or changing up things. So that is some great advice, Neha where can people find you? Or where's the, I know there's a lot of places, but where's the best place they can find you.

Speaker 2 (27:03):

Yep. So two places, one, if you just want to take a look at what I do and who I am and my businesses in general, you can go to my website. So it's, nehanaik.com. So NEHANAIK.com and you can see all my websites there. The second, the second place that you can find me is my Facebook group, which is Successful CEO Moms. And to me, success just means that you've started to me that's it, you don't have to be a millionaire. You don't even have to have $1, but if you have the mindset and the attitude, that's what success is all about. So join the group. I'm very active in the group. I do a bunch of lives and I answer a lot of questions. So that's the two places that they can find me.

Speaker 1 (27:41):

And thank you so much for that. And thanks for joining me today. I loved our conversation and learning about all the businesses that you've started. And I love what you're doing with your online course and where you plan on taking that and helping the single moms. So thanks so much for the discussion today.

Speaker 2 (27:59):

Oh no, thank you for having me. And if anybody wants to reach out, please don't hesitate to.

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77: Amy Rose Herrick: Profit Building Specialist + Online Course Creator

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75: Franziska Iseli: Maverick Entrepreneur, Marketing and Brand Strategist