You're listening to gift biz unwrapped episode 99.
Speaker:You're way too talented to be sitting in this cubicle like
Speaker:you, I need to do more.
Speaker:Hi, this is John Lee,
Speaker:Dumas of entrepreneur on fire,
Speaker:and you're listening to the gift of biz unwrapped.
Speaker:And now it's time to light it up.
Speaker:Welcome to gift bears on wrapped your source for industry specific
Speaker:insights and advice to develop and grow your business.
Speaker:And now here's your host,
Speaker:Sue Mona height.
Speaker:Before we get into the show,
Speaker:I have a question for you.
Speaker:Do you know that you should be out networking,
Speaker:but you just can't get yourself to do it because it's
Speaker:scary. Are you afraid that you might walk into the room
Speaker:and not know anybody or that you're going to freeze?
Speaker:When you get up to do that infamous elevator speech,
Speaker:where you talk about yourself and your business?
Speaker:Well, I'm here to tell you that it doesn't need to
Speaker:be scary.
Speaker:If you know what to do to help you with this,
Speaker:I would like to offer you a coffee chat for the
Speaker:price of buying me a cup of coffee.
Speaker:We can sit down through an online video and I'll tell
Speaker:you everything that I know about networking and how I have
Speaker:personally built two multi-six figure businesses,
Speaker:primarily through networking to learn more about this opportunity.
Speaker:Just go over to Bitly forward slash network Ninja.
Speaker:That's B I T dot L Y forward slash network Ninja.
Speaker:And now let's move on to the show.
Speaker:Hi, it's Sue and welcome to the gift biz unwrapped podcast.
Speaker:Whether you own a brick and mortar shop sell online or
Speaker:are just getting started,
Speaker:you'll discover new insight to gain traction and to grow your
Speaker:business. And today I have joining us,
Speaker:Tina pedis of tenacious after spending some time in the big
Speaker:city with a big girl job,
Speaker:Tina quickly realized that the cubicle life just wasn't for her
Speaker:and with a little nudge from her husband,
Speaker:she founded tenacious as social media and graphic design firm.
Speaker:She effectively launched herself as a brand with a career that
Speaker:makes room for all her passions.
Speaker:Despite starting off as a company of one,
Speaker:Tina has since built a team of amazing women who have
Speaker:supplied the resources and woman power for her to be able
Speaker:to pursue a legacy outside of solely running a business.
Speaker:Tina is a social media expert,
Speaker:accomplished speaker and trainer on all things.
Speaker:Social Tina,
Speaker:welcome to the show.
Speaker:I'm sorry.
Speaker:Excited to be here.
Speaker:Thank you for having me on this whole world of social
Speaker:media keeps changing all the time.
Speaker:It's like a struggle to keep up with.
Speaker:I know I'm going to learn quite a bit from our
Speaker:conversation here too.
Speaker:To start off,
Speaker:I like to have our guests describe themselves through talking a
Speaker:little bit about a motivational candle.
Speaker:So if you were to describe what your ideal candle would
Speaker:look like,
Speaker:that represents you,
Speaker:what color would it be and what would be the quote?
Speaker:I love this question.
Speaker:When you sent this over to me,
Speaker:I was like,
Speaker:this is brilliant.
Speaker:It made me have to really think about this.
Speaker:And green is a color that is around me,
Speaker:everywhere from tenacious to other businesses that I have,
Speaker:and I'm always attracted to it.
Speaker:And I think just as human beings,
Speaker:you see new green grass,
Speaker:especially if you live in the Midwest and having plants around
Speaker:and all that kind of stuff,
Speaker:it's a color of light growth.
Speaker:So all I could picture was this huge,
Speaker:massive candle because the small green candle just wouldn't have the
Speaker:same impact.
Speaker:And then I couldn't get away from this quote.
Speaker:And this is one that I rest in it.
Speaker:I love it.
Speaker:I just,
Speaker:every time I read it,
Speaker:it, it motivates me.
Speaker:And it makes me think of so many different things,
Speaker:but I'll just read it to you.
Speaker:It's by Erma Bombeck.
Speaker:So, you know,
Speaker:it's not all that serious of a quote,
Speaker:but it kind of,
Speaker:it is.
Speaker:So it says when I stand before God,
Speaker:at the end of my life,
Speaker:I would hope that I would not have a single bit
Speaker:of talent left and could say I used everything you gave
Speaker:me. And that quote to me,
Speaker:just like,
Speaker:ah, like I hope my children take that quote to heart.
Speaker:I hope the people around me take that quote and just,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:truly using our talents and growing in them.
Speaker:I love also that you say that it's a big,
Speaker:huge candle because as entrepreneurs,
Speaker:I think we have this idea of bursting inside of us.
Speaker:And so many people don't let it out,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:in your quote is talking about just that.
Speaker:Do it,
Speaker:let yourself shine,
Speaker:let yourself be big to the world so that when you're
Speaker:reaching the end,
Speaker:you really have done.
Speaker:And given the world everything you can have yourself.
Speaker:Yes, exactly.
Speaker:Okay. Well Start with talking a little bit about tenacious,
Speaker:why social media,
Speaker:Tina, You know,
Speaker:such a good question.
Speaker:So it's funny when you read my little intro,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:big girl job.
Speaker:It's like,
Speaker:yeah, I did.
Speaker:I moved to the twin cities,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:Minneapolis St.
Speaker:Paul to find that marketing slash design job and our career,
Speaker:I should say.
Speaker:And I landed a job at a corporation doing some design
Speaker:work and customer service and really,
Speaker:truly it was my hobby that just said,
Speaker:babe, you're way too talented to be sitting in this cubicle.
Speaker:Like you need to do more.
Speaker:And we used to joke when we were in college that
Speaker:I would always be his,
Speaker:a sugar mama or like be the breadwinner.
Speaker:And at that point I just wasn't,
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:I had a steady job,
Speaker:but it was the whole nine to five feeling.
Speaker:I had a one-year-old at the time I actually had a
Speaker:clock. You know,
Speaker:you had to punch in and punch out at,
Speaker:you only got your 30 minute lunch.
Speaker:And if you wanted to take a longer lunch,
Speaker:you wouldn't be home soon,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:at the same time.
Speaker:And so it just started to weigh on me that I
Speaker:had all of those restrictions.
Speaker:I was just driving back in the same conversation I was
Speaker:having with my hubby about the whole bean to town to
Speaker:just sit in a cubicle.
Speaker:And he,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:we, we just started kind of really brainstorming.
Speaker:It was just,
Speaker:it was quicker than I'm even telling the story of how
Speaker:quick it happened,
Speaker:but I was like,
Speaker:well, I can do design work.
Speaker:I have a buddy that could do web work.
Speaker:And I'm like,
Speaker:but we need a piece to this because I don't want
Speaker:to be just your everyday freelance artist out there.
Speaker:I want to have a company,
Speaker:an agency or whatever that looked like in my mind.
Speaker:I didn't have all the words,
Speaker:but I just knew I needed another piece.
Speaker:And again,
Speaker:quicker than I'm even telling the story popped in my head
Speaker:was that Facebook had just came out with business pages.
Speaker:And I just thought about all the business owners in my
Speaker:life. And I pictured them tackling this piece,
Speaker:a business owner,
Speaker:being able to tackle the creative and the every day posting
Speaker:and just all of that.
Speaker:And I thought no way there is going to be a
Speaker:need for this.
Speaker:And so I started tenacious.
Speaker:Instantly guy was doing lean up logos.
Speaker:I was finding people to be on my team.
Speaker:I was still working in the corporate world,
Speaker:a few really awesome things happen,
Speaker:made my leap a lot easier to jump into the entrepreneurial
Speaker:world. Two months later,
Speaker:I was corporate free and I had Tanesha started.
Speaker:So that was in August of 2009.
Speaker:Since then I've found out a few kind of cool things.
Speaker:We were the first social media management company in all the
Speaker:twin cities and social media.
Speaker:Wasn't even actually a phrase yet at that time,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:people are like digital,
Speaker:social networking.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:no one just knew exactly what to say or how to
Speaker:say it.
Speaker:So it's been really fun journey.
Speaker:It's obviously been a path that we've had to pave.
Speaker:No one else has done it before us.
Speaker:So that part has been really interesting.
Speaker:What I love about your story.
Speaker:And I think it's a lot like how I was and
Speaker:maybe gift biz listeners.
Speaker:You're sitting here feeling the exact same way right now with
Speaker:your story.
Speaker:Tina, you talk about how your husbands just say,
Speaker:well, why don't you do something yourself?
Speaker:There's so much inside you,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:you're worth more than this.
Speaker:And it sounds like that clicked immediately.
Speaker:You just had to have somebody say it to you.
Speaker:And then you knew in your gut right then and there.
Speaker:Yes, that's exactly what I need to do.
Speaker:And then it's just a matter of putting the pieces together,
Speaker:figuring out the first steps and all of that.
Speaker:That's exactly what happened,
Speaker:honestly, with my husband too.
Speaker:He's like,
Speaker:well, why don't you start something yourself?
Speaker:And I'm like,
Speaker:Oh my gosh,
Speaker:why did it take someone to tell me that,
Speaker:to agree and to think that I showed for myself.
Speaker:Right? Isn't that interesting though,
Speaker:because you and I,
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:I know you well,
Speaker:Sue, and I feel like,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:me as well,
Speaker:it's like,
Speaker:we're both confident women.
Speaker:We didn't need someone to tell us that.
Speaker:But it was like,
Speaker:wow, that was the point that just kind of came that
Speaker:you're like,
Speaker:yeah, you're right.
Speaker:It just validated your meaning,
Speaker:your thoughts,
Speaker:your value in the world and pushed you.
Speaker:Yeah. Yeah.
Speaker:It's like this big crescendo.
Speaker:And then it's like,
Speaker:yes, I've known this all along it's time.
Speaker:Absolutely. Yes.
Speaker:I can see it in you so well,
Speaker:because I have to say this Tina's group has been helping
Speaker:me with my social media now for almost a couple of
Speaker:years. I think it is.
Speaker:And you run and I'm not even kidding you.
Speaker:I said this last week,
Speaker:the plasty used business.
Speaker:I think I've ever seen,
Speaker:I love that word on me.
Speaker:I will take that out.
Speaker:I'll accept it.
Speaker:You should,
Speaker:from a,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:interaction the way you worked,
Speaker:systems, how you appreciate your customers,
Speaker:the event that you put on,
Speaker:which I think we should talk about near the end here,
Speaker:everything. So if you were to have hidden this and just
Speaker:stayed with what you were doing before and not started everything
Speaker:you're doing now,
Speaker:we would have all missed out and again,
Speaker:give his listeners.
Speaker:I want you to think of this for yourself too.
Speaker:There are things that all of us do that we need
Speaker:to share with the world,
Speaker:not just for ourselves,
Speaker:but for everyone who can be the recipient of all these
Speaker:things. All right.
Speaker:Now let's talk about tenacious.
Speaker:Like how did you start in the beginning?
Speaker:And let's talk then about why someone should consider social media
Speaker:and outsourcing that task.
Speaker:I think I just asked you two questions.
Speaker:No, it's both.
Speaker:Yeah. I can go with good roll.
Speaker:So first one,
Speaker:like really,
Speaker:honestly, I quit my job and I had a Dell computer,
Speaker:which I now use Apple.
Speaker:Like I'm an Apple girl and soar all my girls.
Speaker:Now I make,
Speaker:I make them be that way.
Speaker:But I started out with like a $400 computer.
Speaker:And I look at this business now and we're,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:a team of 10,
Speaker:we have a location,
Speaker:of course we could have done things completely different.
Speaker:I could have had contract workers forever.
Speaker:I could have everyone working virtually and all over the place
Speaker:and things.
Speaker:And there's some part to me that has just wanted to
Speaker:hold that as tight as I could in having my teams
Speaker:on location every day.
Speaker:And for us all to be part of the same exact
Speaker:team, not working with other clients outside of tenacious,
Speaker:that this is their home.
Speaker:This is what they do.
Speaker:And now I'm so happy.
Speaker:Like I just,
Speaker:I'm so happy that I've stuck with that because yes,
Speaker:it could have been easier at times to just have contract
Speaker:workers and not had to deal with employees.
Speaker:Right. But the part to me,
Speaker:when you say our team is so classy,
Speaker:the things that we do,
Speaker:how we handle things is my team truly,
Speaker:truly cares about each one of our clients so deeply.
Speaker:And we get to sit in our conference room once a
Speaker:week and chat about each client and really go over their
Speaker:goals, go over.
Speaker:What's going on in their world.
Speaker:We brainstorm during that time and chat about each client.
Speaker:And if there's a struggle,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:not everything is always smiley faces and ice cream and parties
Speaker:and exciting sometimes there's issues,
Speaker:right. Or,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:maybe a client isn't happy or a mistake happened or they
Speaker:didn't quite get their goal or things just aren't going that
Speaker:great. You know,
Speaker:we've been through some economy slumps in our business,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:there's been a lot of different things.
Speaker:And so we have to go through those storms right along
Speaker:with the client,
Speaker:whether they're a little rainstorm or a big one.
Speaker:And I don't know that our team could have done that.
Speaker:Had we not been here connected on a regular daily basis
Speaker:seeing each other.
Speaker:So that was a big thing for me.
Speaker:I did start out with everyone being contractors and me starting
Speaker:out my business at 28 years old.
Speaker:I did not truly know all the rules and restrictions around
Speaker:that. So hopefully the IRS isn't coming after me,
Speaker:but, you know,
Speaker:I had people,
Speaker:they just wanted to be a part of the team.
Speaker:And I only knew of really,
Speaker:truly starting out with contractors.
Speaker:Cause I was like,
Speaker:employees were expensive in my mind and I looked back and
Speaker:that was a very limiting belief that I had because once
Speaker:I changed over to employees,
Speaker:it was like,
Speaker:Oh, I could just rest,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:like we're together now we're truly a team.
Speaker:And that's one of the biggest things.
Speaker:But you know,
Speaker:it's funny you ask how we got started and then why
Speaker:social media and why is it important?
Speaker:And, you know,
Speaker:I started out and the very first client that I went
Speaker:to was one of actually my husband's clients,
Speaker:he's a personal trainer.
Speaker:And so he spends lots of time with his clients,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:a whole hour,
Speaker:a couple,
Speaker:three times a week or,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:one time a week or whatever it is,
Speaker:but you get a lot of talking time.
Speaker:And so he actually gave me my very first referral and
Speaker:this gentleman had three different businesses and I walked into their
Speaker:living room with a cardstock piece of paper that had three
Speaker:different levels of offerings on it.
Speaker:And it was called walk,
Speaker:jog, run.
Speaker:I still remember because his wife was like,
Speaker:I don't really understand the running analogy.
Speaker:I'm like,
Speaker:yeah, it has nothing to do with social media,
Speaker:But it totally related to your prospects.
Speaker:Yeah. But it hasn't been Bristol trainer,
Speaker:all those things anyways,
Speaker:they're still a client today.
Speaker:So obviously they weren't too upset about the card stock piece
Speaker:of paper or my packages.
Speaker:Yeah. But you know,
Speaker:what I like about that,
Speaker:Tina is you didn't wait to have everything put in place
Speaker:in this professional proposal or coming in with a binder or
Speaker:a brochure or something like that.
Speaker:You just got started.
Speaker:Exactly. And that's what I tell people all the time.
Speaker:I'm like,
Speaker:you know what?
Speaker:I have this cheap little computer.
Speaker:I had a card stock piece of paper that I designed
Speaker:myself and I printed it off on our,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:laser or whatever,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:our inkjet jet or whatever.
Speaker:And they said,
Speaker:yes. So I think,
Speaker:and I,
Speaker:well, I don't think I know that it is just truly
Speaker:the passion behind it.
Speaker:So when I dug deeper in my story,
Speaker:because you know,
Speaker:when you have coaches,
Speaker:so you and I were talking about this before,
Speaker:when you have these coaches,
Speaker:you don't know what really,
Speaker:what path they're going to bring you down entirely.
Speaker:But also it kind of turns into like a therapy session.
Speaker:Sometimes you become friends or whatever it is.
Speaker:But my coach,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:I, my story was,
Speaker:well, I knew that small business owners won't be able to
Speaker:handle this whole social media thing on top of everything else.
Speaker:And, you know,
Speaker:I already said that in her interview,
Speaker:but she kind of challenged me on it.
Speaker:She was like,
Speaker:well, Tina,
Speaker:how do you know that?
Speaker:And I was like,
Speaker:Oh, dang it.
Speaker:You're right.
Speaker:Like, how do I know that I've never owned a small
Speaker:business before?
Speaker:And when I dug back into my story,
Speaker:my story went all the way back to when I was
Speaker:about seven or eight years old.
Speaker:And my dad owned a small business.
Speaker:It was a pizza shop.
Speaker:It was open.
Speaker:And I should probably ask him this,
Speaker:but it was only open for a few years.
Speaker:And it ended up failing.
Speaker:He had a business partner,
Speaker:but he did everything.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:he was the cook and,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:the DJ and the janitor.
Speaker:And he was just,
Speaker:he did everything.
Speaker:And I just pictured my dad trying to around on a
Speaker:computer, especially back in like the eighties.
Speaker:But now you've been,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:fumbling around on a computer to try to post something,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:on social media,
Speaker:to entice people,
Speaker:to come into his location,
Speaker:which is necessary.
Speaker:It's necessary,
Speaker:especially for brick and mortar type location like that.
Speaker:And I just couldn't picture it.
Speaker:And so my dad's business actually failed.
Speaker:It didn't sell or anything.
Speaker:They just,
Speaker:they closed up and my dad isn't an entrepreneur anymore.
Speaker:And that story to me is just so incredibly sad that
Speaker:he's no longer pursuing dreams like that.
Speaker:And I truly believe it was because of not being able
Speaker:to delegate or understanding the power of delegation.
Speaker:And that brings us to social media.
Speaker:Why should we be delegating social?
Speaker:And I know obviously Sue,
Speaker:you see the value in,
Speaker:in delegating it,
Speaker:but really,
Speaker:truly with anything that we're going to be able to hand
Speaker:off to someone else,
Speaker:if it's not your favorite thing to do,
Speaker:and, or you're just not really equipped to do it,
Speaker:handing it off to someone else is going to be a
Speaker:complete weight off of your shoulders.
Speaker:One of the other things that I just want to bring
Speaker:up here,
Speaker:that was a really important point.
Speaker:I want all of our listeners to get is you also
Speaker:identified the trigger of the Facebook pages.
Speaker:They were coming out into the market.
Speaker:And that was a great opportunity because it was new,
Speaker:it was different.
Speaker:And it's something then that you could relate to and offer
Speaker:up like,
Speaker:look, there's something really new here that you should be using.
Speaker:Let me take care of it and help you with it,
Speaker:which led to your whole tenacious business in terms of that
Speaker:third leg you were talking about earlier.
Speaker:Yeah, exactly.
Speaker:So you talk about the fact that if you don't like
Speaker:what you're doing in terms of doing the social media posts,
Speaker:if it's not your favorite task of all things,
Speaker:because then of course,
Speaker:when you're the business owner,
Speaker:you get to decide which things you're doing.
Speaker:And also if it's not your best skill,
Speaker:but how do you manage that?
Speaker:Like at what point can you do that?
Speaker:Because let's face it when you're a business owner money's tight
Speaker:in the beginning.
Speaker:So how do you balance those two things?
Speaker:The ability to have the funds to actually delegate out,
Speaker:even if you knew you needed to do it,
Speaker:where's the trigger and what's the benefit of doing it maybe
Speaker:sooner than you're probably comfortable with doing yes.
Speaker:So the,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:it's interesting because I,
Speaker:I usually send a business somewhere else first.
Speaker:And then to second,
Speaker:what we find is that our ideal client,
Speaker:and I say that because our ideal client is people that
Speaker:want to outsource their social media,
Speaker:of course,
Speaker:but it is a flow of any business is that you
Speaker:need to probably have first an assistant of some sort.
Speaker:It doesn't mean it's someone load totally on the totem pole.
Speaker:It could be someone on,
Speaker:honestly, that you're running right alongside this business with.
Speaker:And usually they're going to be someone that's going to take
Speaker:some things off of your plate first.
Speaker:And they're going to be some of the smaller things.
Speaker:They are going to be some of the $10,
Speaker:or maybe even like a hundred dollar items.
Speaker:So I talk about this on a regular basis is when
Speaker:you're thinking about your day,
Speaker:or if you could go back and look at your last
Speaker:week or your last day or whatever it was,
Speaker:and you were to list out every single thing that you
Speaker:do every single day,
Speaker:and you put it into categories on $10,
Speaker:a hundred dollars thousand dollars,
Speaker:and maybe even $10,000
Speaker:items, you would want to first outsource those $10 items.
Speaker:And those are going to be some of your assistant type
Speaker:items. And then you're going to go to more of the
Speaker:a hundred dollar items.
Speaker:And that's where like social media management and design is going
Speaker:to fall into.
Speaker:And to kind of just expand on that a little bit
Speaker:thousand dollar or $10,000
Speaker:items are going to be things like we're doing right now.
Speaker:So no one else can use our voice.
Speaker:You know,
Speaker:that's like one of the only things video and audio,
Speaker:the third piece is writing and,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:yes, people can edit your writing and people can go straight
Speaker:for you and things like that.
Speaker:But there still needs to be a really some platform of
Speaker:something that you're doing first.
Speaker:And those are going to fall into those kinds of thousand
Speaker:dollar, $10,000
Speaker:items. So to go back first,
Speaker:you got that kind of assistant,
Speaker:or you got a little bit of a helper of some
Speaker:sort. And I remember watching this Ted talk and I wish
Speaker:I could find it,
Speaker:but it's,
Speaker:it was a Ted talk on.
Speaker:Basically the person saying the best hire you ever make is
Speaker:your first $8 an hour hour.
Speaker:And if you can find someone to work for $8 an
Speaker:hour, send them on over $8 an hour doing assistant work.
Speaker:But you know,
Speaker:even that $10,
Speaker:$20, whatever it is to be able to do some of
Speaker:that assistant work,
Speaker:to keep you doing the things that you truly want to
Speaker:do, that's going to be the next step.
Speaker:And then I'm going to say,
Speaker:okay, now you've built up because you already understand this outsourcing
Speaker:of your assistant type work,
Speaker:your VA work,
Speaker:whatever that is.
Speaker:And then we're going to move into the design and the
Speaker:social media management piece.
Speaker:Sometimes people want to do this a little bit too early.
Speaker:For some reason you have some,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:funding or things like that.
Speaker:Yes, I will say it's a great decision to make,
Speaker:but usually it's going to be a little farther now in
Speaker:your business.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:I guess that doesn't say exactly the timeframe or how to
Speaker:do it,
Speaker:but first I would say your virtual assistant or your assistant,
Speaker:and then move into outsourcing some of those other tasks.
Speaker:You bring up a good point too,
Speaker:in that you're just not taking tasks off of your plate
Speaker:or your assistance plate just to free up time to make
Speaker:life easier.
Speaker:It's freeing up time to do other revenue producing type things
Speaker:like we're talking about here with the podcast,
Speaker:or if you're writing or you're going out on sales calls
Speaker:or you're going speaking or whatever it is.
Speaker:So it's to replace things that other people can do better
Speaker:because they're in the know,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:such as your team,
Speaker:Tina, you know,
Speaker:you're always up to date with all the platforms what's changing
Speaker:Facebook ads,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:all of that,
Speaker:but you're freeing.
Speaker:Then as a business owner,
Speaker:you're freeing up your own time to go after tasks that
Speaker:are going to help grow your business.
Speaker:That's really important for our listeners to understand too.
Speaker:You're not just,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:replacing time.
Speaker:So you can go out to lunch with your friends,
Speaker:right? We actually Had a client one time.
Speaker:She, a certain amount of spaces she wanted to sell in
Speaker:a in-person event.
Speaker:So she wanted to sell like 60 spots.
Speaker:And when she hired us,
Speaker:we just obviously didn't ask enough questions a few weeks in.
Speaker:We asked her,
Speaker:well, you know,
Speaker:how's the networking going?
Speaker:You know,
Speaker:how are sales going on your end?
Speaker:And she goes,
Speaker:what do you mean?
Speaker:That's why I hired you guys.
Speaker:And like,
Speaker:Oh, so she didn't really understand the clear difference between what
Speaker:your responsibilities were and that she still had stuff she needed
Speaker:to do.
Speaker:Yeah, We are going to be a supplement to that.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:Oh, of course there are tons of businesses that the majority
Speaker:of their businesses online.
Speaker:Great. But I say the real strong mix is the in-person
Speaker:and the online.
Speaker:And so figuring out what that mix is for you,
Speaker:maybe it is that a majority of it's going to be
Speaker:online, but you still gotta be shaking hands and meeting people
Speaker:thrown on those name tags,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:getting to events,
Speaker:conferences, networking on a weekly basis and really,
Speaker:truly getting to know people because those people are truly going
Speaker:to be the people that are your cheerleaders and are your
Speaker:fan base and the ones you create strong,
Speaker:strong relationships with.
Speaker:Absolutely. There's two points I want to bring up here.
Speaker:Number one,
Speaker:two, if you own a retail shop,
Speaker:you also need to spend time in your shop.
Speaker:Don't just let your hourly workers who are stocking and taking
Speaker:sales because you'll lose touch with your customers.
Speaker:So, you know,
Speaker:when Tina's talking about face-to-face,
Speaker:it's not just out,
Speaker:it's networking for sure.
Speaker:All you guys know,
Speaker:I talk networking a lot,
Speaker:but it's also making sure you're staying in touch with who
Speaker:your customer is because as their needs change or they're seeing
Speaker:something that they're really needing and they anticipated you,
Speaker:haven't, you don't,
Speaker:you need to know that information so that you stay relevant
Speaker:to each of your customers.
Speaker:The other thing is,
Speaker:and what I've learned,
Speaker:Tina, you're the first company that I've used to bring on
Speaker:social media is that you don't just hand it off and
Speaker:be done because there's learning and adjustment.
Speaker:Like you guys always ask me,
Speaker:well, what's coming up the next few months that we should
Speaker:know about what are you focusing on?
Speaker:What are your goals?
Speaker:And people have gotten to know me and what I like,
Speaker:because you need that connection or posts.
Speaker:Aren't going to make sense.
Speaker:They're not going to sound like they're coming from you or
Speaker:that type of thing.
Speaker:So there's work in terms of integration,
Speaker:always. Yup.
Speaker:And taking over the voice of a client for us,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:if you came to us,
Speaker:Sue and you had not yet really done any work,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:you were just a brand new baby business and you didn't
Speaker:have a podcast or you didn't,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:you didn't network and you didn't,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:you hadn't already been writing and doing all these different things.
Speaker:We would have had to completely create your brand from scratch,
Speaker:which we have definitely done for businesses.
Speaker:But I can tell you that it's a longer journey to
Speaker:get to where you know,
Speaker:where you are or where someone else is in your place.
Speaker:So our clientele is usually doing a lot online to begin
Speaker:with, and they're probably a little bit overwhelmed by it.
Speaker:And usually what we do when they come on board is
Speaker:we say,
Speaker:let's get rid of a couple,
Speaker:even though we're managing it,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:now you feel like,
Speaker:Oh, I can hand this off.
Speaker:We'll say there's too much noise out here happening.
Speaker:And we really want to be focused in on the best
Speaker:platforms for you.
Speaker:And it's different for everyone.
Speaker:It really is.
Speaker:And we did that when I first came on and it
Speaker:was like,
Speaker:there were so many things and we consolidate and you know,
Speaker:it was nice to be able to run back and forth
Speaker:a strategy like I'm using this platform for this.
Speaker:Now, granted I have two businesses too,
Speaker:so it gets a little bit confused,
Speaker:but in terms of the overlap,
Speaker:but you know,
Speaker:just being able to bounce back and forth the strategy and
Speaker:what the true platforms are helpful in terms of knowing where
Speaker:to post,
Speaker:what to post all of that.
Speaker:So anyway,
Speaker:if someone is considering outsourcing their social media,
Speaker:what would be a first step that they should take and
Speaker:what should they be looking for in a company that would
Speaker:take on this task for them?
Speaker:One of the things that we always say for our clients,
Speaker:and I want it to be reciprocal is that like we
Speaker:would actually want to hang out.
Speaker:So if you're sitting in a meeting with someone and you're
Speaker:about to hire them to take over your voice online or
Speaker:brand or design or whatever that piece is,
Speaker:you got to love them.
Speaker:Like you really,
Speaker:really got to have a good vibe.
Speaker:And for us,
Speaker:we actually put it in kind of a different term.
Speaker:We say,
Speaker:you know what?
Speaker:We would do breakfast and lunch and appetizers and happy hour
Speaker:and dinner all in one day and really not get sick
Speaker:of these people where we could keep learning about their business.
Speaker:And then we go even a little bit deeper and we
Speaker:say, you know what?
Speaker:We want to be able to actually want to use their
Speaker:services. We either value what they do,
Speaker:or we truly understand what they're up to in this world.
Speaker:And we want to promote them to others because that's really
Speaker:what we're doing.
Speaker:And so that's a big piece.
Speaker:So if you do a flip flop on that,
Speaker:and if you're coming at it,
Speaker:if I'm going to hire someone to outsource to you really
Speaker:truly have to really,
Speaker:really enjoy these people and connect with them.
Speaker:I often say like,
Speaker:if you hear me talk,
Speaker:I'm speaking at an event or I'm here on a podcast
Speaker:and you're at all ever annoyed with me.
Speaker:Our team will not be a good fit.
Speaker:This is how we are all the time in our blog
Speaker:and my podcast and our whole staff.
Speaker:And so we're kind of high energy.
Speaker:And, you know,
Speaker:we talk a lot and you know,
Speaker:so we got all our silly words that we say all
Speaker:the time and all that seriousness,
Speaker:you really truly do want to really enjoy the people that
Speaker:you'll be working with,
Speaker:That you want to relate personality wise then too.
Speaker:But now we have some clients where like our,
Speaker:we're not the same,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:like as these people,
Speaker:like we have a lot of guy clients,
Speaker:we're obviously not the same as them because we're a bunch
Speaker:of females and we were able to take over their voice,
Speaker:but they really enjoy being around us.
Speaker:And we enjoy when they walk in the office or,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:we get on zoom or whatever that is.
Speaker:And they don't necessarily have to be exactly the same.
Speaker:They just have to be willing to put up with us.
Speaker:Okay. So we got the personality.
Speaker:Okay. It's a mix.
Speaker:Everyone loves each other.
Speaker:It's fun.
Speaker:What other qualifications should someone be looking for in a social
Speaker:media team?
Speaker:So here's kind of a divider,
Speaker:different agencies run different obviously,
Speaker:but here's the two different areas.
Speaker:I'm seeing a lot.
Speaker:We are very much relationship and goal setting.
Speaker:So for example,
Speaker:if a client comes to us and says,
Speaker:I am putting on this event and I want 150 people
Speaker:there and it's November 3rd and we're like,
Speaker:okay, well,
Speaker:we'll work up a 90 day strategy and a plan to
Speaker:get you there.
Speaker:And then everything that we track is based on getting a
Speaker:hundred and whatever people in the room,
Speaker:we are not a tracking numbers on analytics,
Speaker:on website,
Speaker:on Facebook likes our goal is the a hundred and P
Speaker:a hundred plus people in that room that is a very
Speaker:different strategy.
Speaker:Other people will track numbers and numbers and numbers and numbers.
Speaker:Great. That's a fine way of doing things,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:collecting data and all of that.
Speaker:But I so want to personally,
Speaker:even as myself as a business owner,
Speaker:my goal is either to get butts in seats,
Speaker:get downloads higher because I know what that's going to amount
Speaker:to. So I got these milestones that then hit a goal
Speaker:where, to me,
Speaker:I don't add,
Speaker:it's not as tangible for me to go look at all
Speaker:these analytical numbers all over the place.
Speaker:So there are,
Speaker:it's a very distinct,
Speaker:different way of doing business and we get some heat for
Speaker:it. Every once in a while,
Speaker:people are like,
Speaker:well, what are your SEO?
Speaker:Or what are these numbers?
Speaker:Or what are that?
Speaker:And I'm like,
Speaker:you know what?
Speaker:We put butts in seats,
Speaker:or we do this or whatever over here.
Speaker:And we focus on these goals.
Speaker:Now, all those numbers are milestones and they get us there.
Speaker:But the goal setting is huge for us.
Speaker:So really it's more of the relationship piece and more of
Speaker:like, kind of the data piece and some people that really
Speaker:truly want those reports.
Speaker:We started doing the reports a few years ago and we
Speaker:were sending them out to our clients and,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:we'll have anywhere from like 30 to 50 different clients that
Speaker:we're managing on a regular basis.
Speaker:And we'd have one,
Speaker:maybe two people even open the email.
Speaker:And I was like,
Speaker:ah, there's so much time put into these.
Speaker:I would way rather jump on the phone and discuss strategy
Speaker:and ideas on how to move us forward versus spending time
Speaker:on reading.
Speaker:And at the end of the day,
Speaker:the number of Facebook likes you have,
Speaker:or Instagram followers or Twitter followers who are,
Speaker:I don't even care what the platform is.
Speaker:Doesn't always equate to the people who are showing up to
Speaker:an event or the people who are purchasing product.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:it's kind of their vanity numbers in a way.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:absolutely some people would say their credibility makers,
Speaker:if you will,
Speaker:because you know,
Speaker:all the social credibility,
Speaker:but what you're doing in terms of actually targeting and going
Speaker:against performance of the goals,
Speaker:I think is so much more important than people get lost
Speaker:in that.
Speaker:People want to see their Facebook numbers rising and thinking that
Speaker:that is bringing them in incremental revenue and it's not necessarily
Speaker:a correlation.
Speaker:So that is a big difference with you guys versus many
Speaker:other people,
Speaker:I would say,
Speaker:well, okay,
Speaker:back onto this track of,
Speaker:if someone is looking for a social media company,
Speaker:should they be asking to see what other businesses are doing
Speaker:so that they can get a feel for it?
Speaker:Or what other tips can you give us so that someone
Speaker:can land on the right company for them?
Speaker:It's a good idea to see some of their previous work
Speaker:for sure,
Speaker:because you're going to be able to see how often are
Speaker:they posting for these clients,
Speaker:or you can see the numbers a little bit,
Speaker:or you can see if things have been replied to,
Speaker:or, you know,
Speaker:is there good design work?
Speaker:That's one thing I know we love is we have in-house
Speaker:designers. And so our clients,
Speaker:aren't outsourcing new,
Speaker:a couple of different companies.
Speaker:It's all one group.
Speaker:And so I think that is a valuable piece as well,
Speaker:but yeah,
Speaker:checking out their clients or their work.
Speaker:Now you have to take into consideration.
Speaker:Some of the things we were just talking about,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:we have some clients that are sitting at like 300 Facebook
Speaker:lights, but they make half a million dollars.
Speaker:They don't always correlate.
Speaker:So maybe even some case studies would be good.
Speaker:We draw up case studies and say,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:this was the goal of the client.
Speaker:Here's all the things that we did to get this person
Speaker:there. And you can see that work.
Speaker:And then I would also ask them,
Speaker:what is their process?
Speaker:So for us at tenacious,
Speaker:we've been through a lot.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:we've been in business for eight years and kind of started
Speaker:this journey and we had to figure out,
Speaker:okay, what process works the very best for our clients to
Speaker:be able to approve the work that we're doing.
Speaker:Now, we have some clients that we've been managing their social
Speaker:for so long that they don't even look through what we're
Speaker:going to be posting.
Speaker:We have their voice down and we don't need approval from
Speaker:them. Now,
Speaker:most of our,
Speaker:I'd say about 70% of our clients check our work each
Speaker:week. So what we do is we use a project management
Speaker:tool called base camp.
Speaker:We write out all the posts for one week.
Speaker:At a time we send to the client,
Speaker:they have usually about four days to approve the posts and
Speaker:then we post them.
Speaker:And so knowing what the flow is,
Speaker:is very important.
Speaker:Cause I know it's all over the board for every different
Speaker:social media management company.
Speaker:Say just having gone through that process,
Speaker:I think it's really important to know what's going out there
Speaker:because if you have a customer who calls back and references,
Speaker:something Should probably know what that was.
Speaker:I like having my hand in it,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:I have a few different businesses as well,
Speaker:like you Sue.
Speaker:And I like to see what's going to be happening on
Speaker:my social.
Speaker:I don't want any surprises.
Speaker:And so of course my team and I talk quite a
Speaker:bit, but my team talks with all the clients on a
Speaker:regular basis to know what's going on in their world.
Speaker:And the other great thing about you with that whole team
Speaker:is there are multiple people that you interact with,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:just like you're saying,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:I have my lead person,
Speaker:then I have graphics and I don't know all 10 of
Speaker:your people,
Speaker:but I know Sarah.
Speaker:Yeah. Something like that.
Speaker:Okay. Any final comment to wrap this part up in terms
Speaker:of looking for a social media company?
Speaker:Good. I mean,
Speaker:I think one of the things is like checking out a
Speaker:few different places.
Speaker:Like we talked about and not just going right away with
Speaker:your first one and they're all over the place.
Speaker:There's all over the board,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:that you can find different.
Speaker:I wa you know,
Speaker:maybe I was the first,
Speaker:but I'm not the only anymore.
Speaker:And so there's a lot of companies out there doing this
Speaker:and some are going to feel,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:they're going to have a solo,
Speaker:like they're just going to be them.
Speaker:And that might fit more for your flow,
Speaker:but you'll want to ask some of those questions on how
Speaker:they manage things.
Speaker:And I can hear people asking this in the back of
Speaker:their mind anyway,
Speaker:right now,
Speaker:what would you say is a range of pricing that you
Speaker:would look at?
Speaker:If it was just a single business,
Speaker:maybe managing a couple of platforms,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:starting off easy,
Speaker:what type of price range would you see?
Speaker:Someone investing You're me around the thousand dollar price range for
Speaker:a couple of different social media platforms.
Speaker:And that's going to be just one spot.
Speaker:So one Instagram account,
Speaker:one Facebook account.
Speaker:That's not a Facebook business page and a group.
Speaker:So you're looking at around that thousand $1,200
Speaker:Mark, and I'm finding that's pretty average in the Midwest.
Speaker:Now it gets a bit more expensive when you're talking East
Speaker:or West coast,
Speaker:but that's pretty average.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:Perfect. Just to give everybody a little bit of an idea
Speaker:here of the investment,
Speaker:well worth it,
Speaker:because again,
Speaker:remember this isn't just money going out.
Speaker:The anticipation is it's money going out because you're going to
Speaker:get eyeballs on your business for people to be attracted in,
Speaker:to buy what you sell your services,
Speaker:your product success.
Speaker:So it's not just a one-way street.
Speaker:That's not the point.
Speaker:Then you might as well not do it.
Speaker:Yeah. It's not bringing in.
Speaker:It's not doing well.
Speaker:You know,
Speaker:one other thing I wanted to make sure I said,
Speaker:too, is each company you want to make sure you're comparing
Speaker:apples to apples.
Speaker:So some companies will just write stuff and send it to
Speaker:you. Other people will actually post it,
Speaker:engage with it when people comment.
Speaker:And then they're also,
Speaker:like I said,
Speaker:as the design aspect of it,
Speaker:now we do all of those pieces.
Speaker:So when we say that thousand dollar Mark,
Speaker:you may just be like,
Speaker:Oh my gosh,
Speaker:well, there's a lot of pieces to that.
Speaker:So we're doing behind the scenes sayings as we're doing the
Speaker:writing and the posting of things too.
Speaker:So you just want to make sure what levels of this
Speaker:is everyone going to be doing for you?
Speaker:That was a great add.
Speaker:Thank you for sharing that.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:We're going to move now into the reflection section.
Speaker:So this is a look at you.
Speaker:And also I think your business in tandem of what has
Speaker:made you successful.
Speaker:If there's one natural trait that you feel you call upon
Speaker:over and over again,
Speaker:what would that be?
Speaker:I'm really coachable.
Speaker:And as I tell people,
Speaker:every time I hire them,
Speaker:if it's my CPA,
Speaker:if it's my lawyer,
Speaker:if it's my business coach or even my employees,
Speaker:I tell them,
Speaker:I don't know everything,
Speaker:even though I act like it.
Speaker:I still need you to be the expert in my life.
Speaker:When it comes to X,
Speaker:Y, and Z,
Speaker:I take everything in that I'm told.
Speaker:Some of it gets tasked right back out.
Speaker:If it doesn't align with me.
Speaker:But most of the time,
Speaker:if someone's really truly speaking into me,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:I hire very intentionally.
Speaker:If someone's speaking right into me and they tell me,
Speaker:Tina, I believe this is your next step.
Speaker:Or I believe this is what you're lacking or what you
Speaker:need to push yourself in a little bit or whatever that
Speaker:is. I'm going to listen.
Speaker:So that trait,
Speaker:I know a lot of entrepreneurs struggle with because we got
Speaker:this right.
Speaker:We can do this on our own.
Speaker:We don't need the help.
Speaker:We know our stuff.
Speaker:And just admitting that you need help,
Speaker:you need help and that you can take direction from other
Speaker:people. I think that's a big piece.
Speaker:Yeah. And I think a lot of people can identify things
Speaker:in us that we won't necessarily see in ourself.
Speaker:Good and improvement wise.
Speaker:That's all exactly.
Speaker:And you're right,
Speaker:because I mean,
Speaker:I know that I'm that type of person,
Speaker:like, I know what I want to do.
Speaker:I know my goals,
Speaker:I know everything.
Speaker:And sometimes I have to stop and say,
Speaker:wait, listen to what people are saying,
Speaker:because you might miss something really valuable.
Speaker:Now we've already talked about base camp,
Speaker:but is there another tool that you're using personally or you're
Speaker:using within tenacious that helps you to be productive or to
Speaker:create balance in your life?
Speaker:Yeah. We use Slack,
Speaker:which is a messaging system for our staff.
Speaker:And I would say 96% of the time,
Speaker:it actually helps us immensely.
Speaker:We don't exchange any emails back and forth within our staff.
Speaker:So that helps our email be cut down to our clients
Speaker:and then any email newsletters that we belong to.
Speaker:And so it is very,
Speaker:very helpful.
Speaker:So Slack,
Speaker:we can just chat like Facebook messenger,
Speaker:back and forth.
Speaker:We can have group chats going on individual chats.
Speaker:And it has been a huge shift in how we do
Speaker:life. Now I say 96% because there's a lot of little
Speaker:fun things that you can do inside of Slack.
Speaker:And so we goofed around a little bit with GIPHYs and
Speaker:just funny things every once in a while,
Speaker:but it's kind of like the virtual water cooler.
Speaker:So even though we're all here,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:right here and staff,
Speaker:if everyone just talked,
Speaker:when they needed something to answer and it would be a
Speaker:hot mess up in here,
Speaker:like it would be crazy.
Speaker:And so it's very,
Speaker:very helpful to be able to have that spot,
Speaker:to just put the information and then wait for that response.
Speaker:And it's not,
Speaker:it's not bogging down our email.
Speaker:And so that's been a really,
Speaker:really helpful spot for us.
Speaker:Yeah. It sounds like you can stay on task,
Speaker:then you just ask the question work,
Speaker:and then when you get your answer,
Speaker:fit it into wherever it needed to go.
Speaker:And then exactly.
Speaker:Plus if you guys like each other,
Speaker:as much as you do,
Speaker:then you're not going to be working when you're here.
Speaker:That brings me to what else I was going to say.
Speaker:We actually started because of a consultant that came in,
Speaker:we started a new process where we do a no talk
Speaker:Tuesday or no talk Thursday,
Speaker:or we pick a day where we come in and by
Speaker:nine o'clock Slack is shut down base campus,
Speaker:shut down,
Speaker:email, shut down,
Speaker:texting and down.
Speaker:Facebook is shut down.
Speaker:Everything is shut down.
Speaker:And we work on something.
Speaker:That's been sitting out at the top of our to-do list,
Speaker:our frog or whatever that is,
Speaker:that needs to move quickly.
Speaker:And we need really,
Speaker:really focused time.
Speaker:And so we do that from nine to noon.
Speaker:Then we sit together and have lunch because we are a
Speaker:bunch of girls and we need to get our talking out.
Speaker:And then we sit and have lunch.
Speaker:And then we do a couple more hours in the afternoon
Speaker:to really wrap up.
Speaker:And then we share at the end of the day,
Speaker:what was accomplished and the girls,
Speaker:I thought the girls were going to be like Nat,
Speaker:about this day.
Speaker:They're going to be like,
Speaker:what the heck?
Speaker:We can't do that.
Speaker:And now they're asking for more because they get so much
Speaker:work done.
Speaker:And the statistics around the interruptions that we get on a
Speaker:regular basis,
Speaker:it should make us all want to do this on like
Speaker:even a daily basis to block out our time,
Speaker:turn off the notifications and things.
Speaker:But one of the stats is that every three point something
Speaker:minutes, we get an interruption.
Speaker:And if we had a 20 minutes to get back,
Speaker:that's what it takes you once you've had an interruption is
Speaker:20 whole minutes to get back to peak performance.
Speaker:But the thing is,
Speaker:we don't have that because after that first three and a
Speaker:half minutes,
Speaker:another three and a half minutes,
Speaker:we'll have another interruption.
Speaker:So we never get to our peak performance if we just
Speaker:constantly have those notifications and things happening to us.
Speaker:So our writing is suffering our focus with our time being
Speaker:able to do a podcast.
Speaker:You know,
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:I literally have to shut my computer so that I can
Speaker:truly just focus on podcasting or else there's been 700 Facebook
Speaker:messages and texts and whatever you know happening.
Speaker:Oh, it's so true.
Speaker:Yeah. It's so true.
Speaker:And taking that time and just focusing.
Speaker:You're absolutely right.
Speaker:So I've struggled with that too.
Speaker:I haven't found my day that I can take yet,
Speaker:but you're presenting an interesting opportunity.
Speaker:I'm going to have to consider that.
Speaker:Is there a book that you've read lately that you think
Speaker:our listeners would find value in?
Speaker:Hello? One of my faves as one great goal by Ursula
Speaker:Manchez, and that's talked about setting goals a lot here already
Speaker:on this podcast,
Speaker:but that was a game changer for me in my business.
Speaker:I reread it every year.
Speaker:I'm trying to force her to do a audible so I
Speaker:can just listen to her and my ear on it.
Speaker:But as well has been a client.
Speaker:She's been my coach now where you collaborate on things,
Speaker:but she wrote the book one great goal.
Speaker:And it is truly all about focusing on one thing at
Speaker:a time.
Speaker:And it has been a game changer for everyone around me
Speaker:that I've been able to coach in on that.
Speaker:And then myself,
Speaker:That's fabulous.
Speaker:And I need you to make sure that she does that
Speaker:she follows and does some type of an audible book.
Speaker:You know,
Speaker:she doesn't have to be the one reading it either.
Speaker:If she didn't want to tell gift biz listeners,
Speaker:just as you're listening to the podcast today,
Speaker:you can also listen to audio books with ease.
Speaker:Unfortunately, not one great goal quite yet,
Speaker:but we'll be working on that.
Speaker:I've teamed up with audible for you to be able to
Speaker:get an audio book for free on me.
Speaker:All you need to do is jump over to gift biz,
Speaker:book dot and make your selection.
Speaker:Okay. Tina,
Speaker:I'm so excited for the answer to this question.
Speaker:I would like to invite you to dare to dream.
Speaker:I'd like to present you with a virtual gift.
Speaker:It's a magical box containing unlimited possibilities for your future.
Speaker:So this is your dream or your goal of almost unreachable
Speaker:Heights that you would wish to obtain.
Speaker:Please accept this gift and open it in our presence.
Speaker:What's inside your box.
Speaker:Oh my goodness.
Speaker:How long do you have,
Speaker:Is it a really,
Speaker:really big bond?
Speaker:Actually, The very first thing that came into my mind was,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:of course,
Speaker:I'm in this tenacious box right now and thinking about this
Speaker:and you alluded to this earlier,
Speaker:but last year we put on our very first conference,
Speaker:the before conference,
Speaker:and it felt like my second wedding day,
Speaker:it was the most magical couple days of my life.
Speaker:I loved every minute of it.
Speaker:It was the perfect time to put on a conference all
Speaker:of the above.
Speaker:But when I look at that box,
Speaker:that magical box that you're talking about,
Speaker:I pictured it being filled with people at the very big
Speaker:box, but it was our conference growing and being known as
Speaker:a national,
Speaker:a truly a national conference,
Speaker:small business conference for small business owners.
Speaker:And that is,
Speaker:I just love the idea of small businesses,
Speaker:us changing the facts and the stats around how much we
Speaker:struggle and us showing up stronger and bigger and better and
Speaker:brighter every single day.
Speaker:Because the flexibility I have as a mom,
Speaker:a wife,
Speaker:a daughter,
Speaker:granddaughter, a friend in this space of owning my own business
Speaker:is something that I want everyone to be able to experience
Speaker:Agreed. So if listeners wanted to learn more about the conference
Speaker:or about tenacious overall,
Speaker:where would you send them?
Speaker:Of course.
Speaker:Yeah. The before conference.com
Speaker:is our conference site and our conference will more than likely
Speaker:be every April.
Speaker:And so that is right now,
Speaker:we're going in sales on that and we're surpassing our numbers.
Speaker:So it's really fun.
Speaker:That magical box is happening soon.
Speaker:So thank you.
Speaker:Congratulations on that.
Speaker:No surprise,
Speaker:no surprise because I was there last year and it was
Speaker:spectacular. Well,
Speaker:thank you.
Speaker:It's been a blast,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:and the coolest part is when you have a speaker that
Speaker:you thought would maybe be a little bit of a stretch
Speaker:and they're like,
Speaker:of course I know everything about your conference.
Speaker:I can't wait to speak.
Speaker:Wonderful. I love It.
Speaker:So anyways,
Speaker:that's been really fun.
Speaker:And then our website is tenacious edge.com
Speaker:and you can find everything there,
Speaker:but my name is a little bit quirky.
Speaker:Tina Pettis,
Speaker:it's spelled T E N a and you can find me
Speaker:everywhere at Tina Pettis like everywhere.
Speaker:If you just Google Tina Pettis,
Speaker:it's me,
Speaker:it's me.
Speaker:And you can also find her on our show notes page
Speaker:because we'll have all the links there available for you just
Speaker:in case you're out walking the dog at the gym,
Speaker:straightening your shop right now.
Speaker:I encourage you all to look into this before conference.
Speaker:It really is spectacular.
Speaker:And you can hear the passion with which Tina about it
Speaker:in terms of just uplifting and energizing.
Speaker:All of us who are doing our thing,
Speaker:we're letting our light shine for our businesses,
Speaker:but we can always learn more.
Speaker:We can always get better and things change.
Speaker:So we have to stay relevant and current with the times
Speaker:as well.
Speaker:Tina, thank you so so much,
Speaker:we've been talking about getting you on the show for several
Speaker:months and I'm so thrilled.
Speaker:We've finally gotten it together.
Speaker:You've given us some great information.
Speaker:I encourage all of us in terms of listeners who are
Speaker:considering outsourcing social media,
Speaker:took me a long time to decide that that was what
Speaker:I was going to do.
Speaker:And I'm so glad I did now that I actually made
Speaker:the leap.
Speaker:Tina's given us some great advice,
Speaker:great suggestions.
Speaker:And I wish for you,
Speaker:Tina, you know,
Speaker:the business is going to keep growing.
Speaker:I know it is that before conference,
Speaker:pretty soon,
Speaker:you're going to need to go into a whole nother building
Speaker:because it's just going to grow.
Speaker:So, so big continued success to you and your team and
Speaker:may your candle.
Speaker:Where are you in your business building journey,
Speaker:whether you're just starting out or already running a business.
Speaker:And you want to know your setup for success.
Speaker:Find out by taking the gift biz quiz,
Speaker:access the quiz from your computer at bit dot L Y
Speaker:slash gift biz quiz or from your phone by texting gift
Speaker:biz quiz to four four,
Speaker:two, two,
Speaker:two. Thanks for listening and be sure to join us for
Speaker:the next episode.
Speaker:Today's show is sponsored by the ribbon print company.
Speaker:Looking for a new income source for your business.
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