Gift biz unwrapped episode 363,
Speaker:And made me feel really proud and way more empowered to
Speaker:be a woman learning about the lives of the women in
Speaker:the project.
Speaker:Attention gifters bakers,
Speaker:crafters, and makers pursuing your dream can be fun.
Speaker:Whether you have an established business or looking to start one.
Speaker:Now you are in the right place.
Speaker:This is gift to biz unwrapped,
Speaker:helping you turn your skill into a flourishing business.
Speaker:Join us for an episode packed full of invaluable guidance,
Speaker:resources, and the support you need to grow.
Speaker:Your gift biz.
Speaker:Here is your host gift biz gal Sue moon Heights.
Speaker:Hi there.
Speaker:It's Sue and thanks for joining me here today.
Speaker:I am so excited to finally announce that I've started something
Speaker:new just for you.
Speaker:It's called a gift biz bash,
Speaker:and it's an opportunity for you to get a short session
Speaker:of free live training,
Speaker:and then also a chance to shout out your company and
Speaker:any promotions you currently have going on.
Speaker:Or if you're interested in a collaboration,
Speaker:you can give us the details on that and perhaps find
Speaker:your next gift.
Speaker:Biz bestie.
Speaker:These 45 minute bashes are happening over zoom twice a month
Speaker:at all different times.
Speaker:So if you can't make one,
Speaker:you'll definitely find another that will fit your schedule.
Speaker:The very first batch is happening on April 4th,
Speaker:right around the corner to see the schedule and sign up,
Speaker:go to gift biz,
Speaker:unwrapped.com forward slash bash.
Speaker:It's a hundred percent free for you to pick up a
Speaker:growth tip and get eyeballs on your products to gift biz
Speaker:unwrapped.com forward slash bash.
Speaker:Come join me for the very first one today.
Speaker:We're rounding out international women's month with the perfect guest.
Speaker:We know how much strength and power women possess.
Speaker:We see it all around us yet often diminish that trait
Speaker:when it comes to ourselves,
Speaker:Rachel is on a mission to change that it's happening through
Speaker:creation of a product that reinforces for each of us,
Speaker:that we too have these traits and can do great things
Speaker:within our world.
Speaker:We've talked about the value that you already share through your
Speaker:products in our handmade heals the world month each,
Speaker:January, but here's a way to reinforce it for yourself all
Speaker:year round messages from her.
Speaker:You're going to hear what it is and the full product
Speaker:creation story from initial idea through development and promotion to the
Speaker:upcoming event of being able to see it in real life
Speaker:Today, I am so excited to introduce to Rachel McKee.
Speaker:Rachel is a Colorado based writer,
Speaker:designer, and entrepreneur.
Speaker:She holds degrees in communication design and ethical business,
Speaker:which she's used to help solo entrepreneurs and fortune 500 companies
Speaker:to develop ethical business strategies,
Speaker:improve design and presentation and increase clarity market placement and profits.
Speaker:She's currently launching her first book and an accompanying card deck
Speaker:titled messages from her.
Speaker:Rachel, welcome to the gift biz on repped podcast.
Speaker:Thanks so much for having me.
Speaker:This is such a fun project,
Speaker:I guess.
Speaker:I don't know what to call it.
Speaker:It's feels way more than a project.
Speaker:Yeah. I am excited to hear the whole story.
Speaker:I like to not know too much before I talk with
Speaker:you, because then it's very authentic and original and I'm not
Speaker:hearing something we've already talked about.
Speaker:So I am dying to get into the conversation,
Speaker:but before we do,
Speaker:I want to do something with you.
Speaker:That's become a tradition with my guests and that is to
Speaker:have our listeners get to know you in a different way
Speaker:through a motivational candle.
Speaker:So if you were to close your eyes and envision what
Speaker:a candle would look like,
Speaker:that would resonate,
Speaker:everything you Rachel,
Speaker:what would the candle look like?
Speaker:Hm. You know,
Speaker:that probably changes at different times in my life,
Speaker:but I think right now it would be like a really
Speaker:big giant candle.
Speaker:And it would be some sort of golden yellow like the
Speaker:sun. So you would feel warm just looking at it.
Speaker:And I think it would probably be a quote by Madonna
Speaker:actually that says I am my own experiment in my own
Speaker:work of art.
Speaker:I think at least in this era of my life,
Speaker:giving myself permission to let everything be kind of a fun,
Speaker:curious experiment is really a good guiding principle for me.
Speaker:And it's wintery and cold and I'm really done with winter
Speaker:and cold.
Speaker:So the candle itself,
Speaker:like when I think of it,
Speaker:I think of the feeling of like the sun being on
Speaker:your body.
Speaker:Beautiful. I love that.
Speaker:And yellow is my favorite color.
Speaker:I smiled when you said that.
Speaker:And as you know,
Speaker:because we've been talking for a couple of weeks before,
Speaker:we've actually done this interview,
Speaker:but I got back from Colorado recently and oh my gosh,
Speaker:you guys,
Speaker:one day it's sunshiny and bright.
Speaker:And the next day it's snowing,
Speaker:like crazy one or the other.
Speaker:Yeah. Especially this time of the year.
Speaker:That's what it is today.
Speaker:It's snowing today.
Speaker:And then yesterday it was nice.
Speaker:But the day before it was snowing,
Speaker:it's like spring comes and it's not gradual.
Speaker:It's like on and off.
Speaker:Yeah. Teases you a little bit.
Speaker:Well, I'm also a snow lover,
Speaker:so I can take both,
Speaker:just wake up,
Speaker:let me know what's happening and I'll deal with it.
Speaker:As you mentioned,
Speaker:your quote,
Speaker:I'm my own experiment and my own work of art.
Speaker:That leads me to a question,
Speaker:which is,
Speaker:was there ever a time when that didn't feel like that
Speaker:could work for you or the fear or hesitancy of doing
Speaker:something that maybe you've never done Before?
Speaker:Shit all the time.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:I think that's a part of the journey of being a
Speaker:maker and a creator.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:at least I know it is,
Speaker:for me,
Speaker:it seems like every few years I'll kind of try my
Speaker:hand at something new and every time I do something new,
Speaker:there's just a part of it that I've never done before.
Speaker:And I don't know about other people,
Speaker:but it's my human nature at least to be kind of
Speaker:nervous about doing things that I haven't done before and nervous
Speaker:about if I'm going to do them well.
Speaker:And if people are going to like it,
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:there's so many doubts that you can have in that creative
Speaker:process. And I think for me,
Speaker:like surrendering to the creativity that wants to move through me
Speaker:and just trusting that and really sticking with that and not
Speaker:getting caught in my mind and outer world suggestions and questions
Speaker:and, you know,
Speaker:just really staying true to that core creativity helps me get
Speaker:around some of those doubts,
Speaker:but I have them all the time.
Speaker:I'm glad you said that.
Speaker:And I thought you would because we all have those doubts.
Speaker:Right. I mean,
Speaker:and it's the extent to which we can decide.
Speaker:We're going to put that aside.
Speaker:We know it's there,
Speaker:but we're going to still do it any way.
Speaker:I think that can resonate with a lot of people who
Speaker:are listening here.
Speaker:Yeah. I'm intrigued with your history in terms of your degree
Speaker:with ethical business,
Speaker:how did you make that selection?
Speaker:Sometime around when I was graduating high school,
Speaker:I wanted to go into fashion design.
Speaker:And when I looked into the industry,
Speaker:I just couldn't find too many redeeming qualities.
Speaker:The production is pretty poor for the most part.
Speaker:A lot of production has moved out of the United States,
Speaker:environmentally. It's one of the most damaging segments of the market.
Speaker:And so I kind of turned away from that desire for
Speaker:many years and I transitioned more into art and I was
Speaker:thinking about being an art teacher and I couldn't really settle
Speaker:on something that felt right,
Speaker:but I was still taking classes and going through college and
Speaker:just trying to learn whatever I could.
Speaker:And at some point I stumbled upon some ethical clothing manufacturers.
Speaker:And this was probably about like 10 years after I had
Speaker:this desire in high school.
Speaker:So the market had changed a lot in 10 years and
Speaker:I wasn't sure about going into like continuing on the design
Speaker:path. So I kind of blended some of the art that
Speaker:I was studying and some communication design,
Speaker:which is kind of like graphic design.
Speaker:And then I blended ethical business into the program.
Speaker:So I went to college here in Denver at a city
Speaker:college and they actually let you make your own program.
Speaker:So I just wanted to bring more good to the fashion
Speaker:industry And that's right in line with care of today too.
Speaker:So it's perfect.
Speaker:It all blends together.
Speaker:So that's wonderful.
Speaker:And so let's just dive into the guts of this here.
Speaker:How did the idea of the book come together?
Speaker:Well, first share with us what the concept is and how
Speaker:it all came together.
Speaker:Sure. Yeah.
Speaker:So it's called messages from her and it's a 44 card
Speaker:deck and it's like an inspirational card deck that features 44
Speaker:modern world changing women.
Speaker:And then there's a correlating hardcover book that each of the
Speaker:women in the deck has two pages dedicated to her in
Speaker:the book.
Speaker:And then the cards inside of a little cloth bag and
Speaker:the whole set comes inside of a box,
Speaker:kind of like a magnetic closing box,
Speaker:like a collector set.
Speaker:So the idea is that you can just keep the cards
Speaker:wherever you want to keep them in your house or take
Speaker:them with you,
Speaker:whatever, that's not the important part,
Speaker:but you just pull a card whenever you're like,
Speaker:maybe you have a question or maybe you just want some
Speaker:inspiration for the day.
Speaker:So you pull a card and you see that woman and
Speaker:you see the quality that she represents.
Speaker:And then you can go and open the book and you
Speaker:can read a quote by that woman.
Speaker:You can read an inspirational passage.
Speaker:And then I have one full page of like a history
Speaker:passage about that woman,
Speaker:which is not a giant in-depth history,
Speaker:cause it's one page and these women have lived really amazing
Speaker:lives, but it certainly gives you a real sense of like
Speaker:where they came from,
Speaker:what they have done,
Speaker:the challenges they've overcome.
Speaker:And it's just been really inspirational for me and made me
Speaker:feel really proud and way more empowered to be a woman
Speaker:learning about the lives of women in the project.
Speaker:And how in the world did you come up with this
Speaker:idea of all things you could do,
Speaker:Rachel. Right.
Speaker:And I caught up with a lot of ideas.
Speaker:So this was one that I decided to follow through on
Speaker:It rose to the top.
Speaker:Somehow I don't know It did exactly,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:maybe five or six years ago.
Speaker:I had someone ask me how I felt about being a
Speaker:woman and what being a woman meant to me.
Speaker:And I realized,
Speaker:I hadn't really thought about it.
Speaker:And from there it just kind of opened me up to
Speaker:paying attention to the women in my life to paying attention
Speaker:to how I felt when I learned about like really impactful
Speaker:women. I think that that just kind of opened up my
Speaker:awareness. And then a few years ago I started seeing taro
Speaker:decks everywhere and Oracle decks.
Speaker:And like,
Speaker:they were just suddenly,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:like when maybe you're going to have an idea about something
Speaker:and suddenly that thing is just like everywhere kind of tapping
Speaker:on your shoulder.
Speaker:I would go to a friend's house.
Speaker:I would go to a coffee shop.
Speaker:I would go to a yoga class,
Speaker:whatever it was.
Speaker:I'd just be like,
Speaker:there was another deck,
Speaker:another one of these decks.
Speaker:And so I don't remember exactly which one I was kind
Speaker:of like handling one day,
Speaker:but I just was in the process of pulling a card
Speaker:from one.
Speaker:And I had this thought like,
Speaker:gosh, how much more impactful would this be for me?
Speaker:If this was full of like real relatable women that have
Speaker:just done some of the most amazing things in the history
Speaker:of humanity.
Speaker:And I love the way that people have brought to life,
Speaker:all different kinds of topics through Oracle decks and taro ducks,
Speaker:like elements of nature.
Speaker:But for me,
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:I think role models are really powerful and looking to people
Speaker:that we admire and learning from them is so healthy.
Speaker:So it just was like a kind of momentary flash Love
Speaker:it. Yeah.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:sometimes that's what happens.
Speaker:That's how you create products of all sorts.
Speaker:We talk about that here on the show,
Speaker:like, how do you identify what your business is going to
Speaker:be? Cause lots of times a maker can make a million
Speaker:different things.
Speaker:Definitely. So they're thinking of all the things we're already making.
Speaker:And then all of a sudden,
Speaker:one day they'll walk through the kitchen or there'll be in
Speaker:their closet.
Speaker:They encounter a problem and it's like,
Speaker:oh my gosh,
Speaker:we all need something like this.
Speaker:And then all of a sudden the product is born.
Speaker:Exactly. I think it's just kind of the universe coming down
Speaker:and blessing us touching on the side and the shoulder and
Speaker:say, you,
Speaker:you are going to do it.
Speaker:Yeah. I agree.
Speaker:I sometimes feel like,
Speaker:oh, I can give you the logical explanation for where this
Speaker:idea came from.
Speaker:But also like there's a whole invisible explanation that something dropped
Speaker:some idea,
Speaker:some muse dropped some idea down into my head.
Speaker:And then I try and sit with an idea when I
Speaker:get one for awhile and I do some research and I
Speaker:look around and just really start to pay attention to how
Speaker:that idea would work in the world.
Speaker:And that process kind of leads me to decide whether or
Speaker:not I want to really bring it to life.
Speaker:I like the idea of letting it sit for a minute
Speaker:too. You said you come up with ideas all the time.
Speaker:Yeah. Do you ever have the time thing where you come
Speaker:up with an idea and then a week later you're like,
Speaker:what was I thinking?
Speaker:You know,
Speaker:you need to give it a little bit of time to
Speaker:confirm that it's the right idea to move forward with.
Speaker:Let's go through and talk a little bit about the creation
Speaker:of all of this.
Speaker:So this turned into a business that you've registered at this
Speaker:point, or how does this connect in because you're going to
Speaker:be obviously making money from the sale of the books.
Speaker:Yeah. It's interesting.
Speaker:Right. Blending,
Speaker:the, like you spend so much time in the creation of
Speaker:something and then thinking about it and then you bring it
Speaker:into the world and it's like,
Speaker:oh yeah,
Speaker:right. And I still got to like make the website and
Speaker:calculate the margin and who's my target audience.
Speaker:And so it's like the creation part is a little more
Speaker:to me,
Speaker:glamorous and spacious.
Speaker:And then,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:you've got to use some other like qualities and discipline to
Speaker:really create the container to bring that creative project into the
Speaker:world. So is that what you did first is created the
Speaker:deck and wrote the book first?
Speaker:Definitely. Yeah.
Speaker:My very first question is how did you select which women
Speaker:would be so honored as to have a card?
Speaker:Yeah. So at the beginning,
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:I wasn't quite sure if I was going to follow through
Speaker:with it or not.
Speaker:I just kind of was doing brainstorming.
Speaker:I started this giant spreadsheet,
Speaker:so I'd hear a song or I'd hear a quote or
Speaker:a story of someone would just kind of pass by my
Speaker:day in some form.
Speaker:And so I'd write down their name.
Speaker:And then I started calling for like,
Speaker:what few,
Speaker:top qualities they were presented to me.
Speaker:And then I'd have another column for a quote by them
Speaker:and another column for a quote.
Speaker:And so I just started gathering information and then I think
Speaker:it was right around the beginning of the pandemic.
Speaker:I had a little more time on my hands.
Speaker:Like a lot of people did and I was like,
Speaker:I should really use this time to do something that I've
Speaker:been thinking about for a long time.
Speaker:So from there,
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:I just sat down with that spreadsheet so many times and
Speaker:started filtering out the women that I felt like had the
Speaker:biggest impact on me.
Speaker:And then I also wanted to choose some women that were
Speaker:really well known.
Speaker:So that way,
Speaker:if someone wasn't so into like women's history or women's empowerment,
Speaker:they might be like,
Speaker:oh, I love Dolly Parton.
Speaker:I don't know what this is about.
Speaker:I'm going to get it.
Speaker:And then it kind of is like that one person,
Speaker:that one really well known person is kind of like a
Speaker:gateway into learning about all of these other women.
Speaker:And everyone would have a different gateway based on their interests
Speaker:potentially. Hopefully.
Speaker:Yeah, exactly.
Speaker:And then I filtered the women down based on what qualities
Speaker:I felt like they represented to have a really solid foundation
Speaker:of a lot of primary qualities that we all might be
Speaker:in need of.
Speaker:So like one person's quality,
Speaker:like Beyonce has power and Helen Keller,
Speaker:his feelings and Georgia O'Keeffe is slow down.
Speaker:So like I have way more than 44 women that I'd
Speaker:love to keep reading about.
Speaker:And I'd love to do future volumes.
Speaker:But this first volume is really kind of like creating a
Speaker:solid foundation of just like aspirational all these that we might
Speaker:want to look to blended with some really well-known women and
Speaker:some lesser known women,
Speaker:some women that have done some really phenomenal things in the
Speaker:world. Love it.
Speaker:I'm going to ask you for certain categories in a couple
Speaker:of minutes,
Speaker:but I want to stick with this whole creation idea.
Speaker:You were gathering all the information,
Speaker:making your selection on the women and then doing the card
Speaker:and the book simultaneously.
Speaker:Great COVID project,
Speaker:mind you to get your mind off of everything else that
Speaker:was going on and be productive and all of that.
Speaker:I think that's fabulous.
Speaker:I can just see you behind the scenes doing all this.
Speaker:Yeah. It was really,
Speaker:really an amazing COVID project also because the stories of these
Speaker:women's lives are so inspiring and we're not getting consistently fed
Speaker:inspiring information unless you're really seeking it these days.
Speaker:So it was really helpful.
Speaker:That's a very good way to say that,
Speaker:Rachel. Yeah,
Speaker:for sure.
Speaker:Okay. So all the information now is done,
Speaker:then what happens?
Speaker:Well, I also,
Speaker:at the same time that I was writing the book was
Speaker:working with an illustrator in Australia.
Speaker:So probably from March,
Speaker:2020 for about a year,
Speaker:her and I went back and forth picking like I would
Speaker:pick the woman and I would send some photos over to
Speaker:her and she would do kind of a starter illustration.
Speaker:And we would go back and forth about that if you
Speaker:don't really took patients to just let it evolve in a
Speaker:natural way.
Speaker:So it really came through visually the way that I wanted
Speaker:it to.
Speaker:And I didn't want to like force this project for some
Speaker:reason, it felt like it was the kind of thing that
Speaker:I wanted to let of all of like with some sort
Speaker:of organic and enjoyable and peaceful feeling to it.
Speaker:So I was writing,
Speaker:we were going back and forth on illustrations and then it
Speaker:came time to finding a factory that can produce everything that
Speaker:I've designed,
Speaker:which includes the cards,
Speaker:the bag,
Speaker:the box and the book You led right into one of
Speaker:my questions.
Speaker:How did you source the people that you use?
Speaker:Like the factory,
Speaker:like you were just talking about,
Speaker:like who was going to actually produce it,
Speaker:but even your graphic artist.
Speaker:Yeah. Well,
Speaker:the artists let's see,
Speaker:it took me awhile to find her maybe a few months.
Speaker:And I tried out a few artists illustrators on Upwork.
Speaker:I don't know if you've ever used Upwork.
Speaker:I love Upwork,
Speaker:But you know what,
Speaker:explain it to people here who might not.
Speaker:Yes. Upwork is just like a giant online platform where you
Speaker:can find people with all kinds of skills all around the
Speaker:world. You can find marketers,
Speaker:you can find illustrators,
Speaker:you can find graphic designers,
Speaker:you can find copywriters like any kind of work that people
Speaker:can do remotely.
Speaker:You can find it on Upwork.
Speaker:And I've just had some really lovely connections over the years,
Speaker:hiring people through Upwork.
Speaker:Would you say it's a higher level than something like Fiverr?
Speaker:I think so.
Speaker:A more advanced skill tier,
Speaker:if you will,
Speaker:or projects that you would search for?
Speaker:I think so.
Speaker:And I really liked the way that you can look at
Speaker:their portfolio and see what they've done before.
Speaker:And like just feels like there's some good transparency around what
Speaker:their skills are.
Speaker:Okay. So that's where you got your graphic artist after testing
Speaker:out a couple?
Speaker:Well, actually,
Speaker:so I tested out a few on Upwork and didn't find
Speaker:the right match.
Speaker:And then I probably messaged maybe like 20 people that I
Speaker:found through Instagram.
Speaker:And when I found my illustrator,
Speaker:her illustration artist's name is Harley and J I saw a
Speaker:little bit of the artwork she was doing.
Speaker:And I was like,
Speaker:oh, this has to be my woman.
Speaker:I was so excited.
Speaker:So I sent her over a couple of tests projects,
Speaker:which I can't recommend test projects and not just by sending
Speaker:her a few photos of the women and just seeing what
Speaker:she came back with.
Speaker:And they were just so spot on,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:their illustrations,
Speaker:but they somehow evoke the feeling of each of the women.
Speaker:And I'm just so happy with how they turned out.
Speaker:So that's how I found my illustrator.
Speaker:Well, you know what,
Speaker:that's a Testament also to not satellite.
Speaker:Yeah. Continuing to go until you find the right one.
Speaker:And some of it is just intuitive,
Speaker:the way you work together.
Speaker:And then obviously what they bring back for you.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:it's always an interesting process,
Speaker:hiring people,
Speaker:period, but hiring people from afar,
Speaker:I think you can look at power.
Speaker:They communicating with you.
Speaker:How quickly are they responding to you?
Speaker:I'm always feeling people out in just the communication process while
Speaker:I'm getting work from them.
Speaker:Because that's really important to me.
Speaker:Like is someone going to respond and communicate clearly?
Speaker:Do they seem excited about the work?
Speaker:Are they responding within a reasonable amount of time?
Speaker:I don't like holding people to this idea that like,
Speaker:you have to reply instantly.
Speaker:I'd like to kind of break some of those ideas in
Speaker:our society.
Speaker:But you know,
Speaker:I also don't want someone to take more than a couple
Speaker:of business days to get back to me.
Speaker:Well, or give you an expectation of when you can expect
Speaker:a response.
Speaker:Sure. I want to sit on this.
Speaker:Think about it.
Speaker:Let it settle in.
Speaker:I'll be back to you by Wednesday at the latest or
Speaker:something like that.
Speaker:Yeah. I love that.
Speaker:I love them to follow through when someone says they're going
Speaker:to get back to you when they actually do.
Speaker:And so you found her,
Speaker:you were working with her,
Speaker:but one other question here,
Speaker:was there any documentation that you had her sign before you
Speaker:shared any of the information with her?
Speaker:No, actually,
Speaker:no, there wasn't any,
Speaker:I think about that for a minute.
Speaker:You didn't do a nondisclosure or anything like that,
Speaker:or did she have an agreement that she gave to you?
Speaker:No. I mean,
Speaker:in my other aspects of business,
Speaker:I definitely tend to do things like that.
Speaker:Like, I actually have a business where I do consulting with
Speaker:ethically made clothing companies,
Speaker:but every now and then it's like,
Speaker:I feel someone out and it doesn't feel like something that
Speaker:we need to do.
Speaker:And I didn't have any concern that she was going to
Speaker:like take this project and try and do it herself.
Speaker:Like she's an illustrator,
Speaker:she's not a writer I'm bringing the right to it.
Speaker:It felt very like the synergistic kind of skills,
Speaker:not like any sort of close or competitive kind of thing.
Speaker:And all she was doing was the images.
Speaker:So she didn't have the total package anyway.
Speaker:Yeah. I mean,
Speaker:she could see what I was writing because I wanted her
Speaker:to feel like she was learning about the women as she
Speaker:was making the illustrations to like really get the feel for
Speaker:them. Okay.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:Wonderful. And so let's carry on with how you did the
Speaker:book. And I think this is just interesting for people to
Speaker:just hear the background of all of this.
Speaker:So you were looking for one place to do the book
Speaker:and the deck at the same time,
Speaker:right? Yeah.
Speaker:And the box And the box,
Speaker:Which proved to be a more difficult thing to find someone
Speaker:that could do a really good job with the box and
Speaker:I am a packaging nuts.
Speaker:So that was a really important aspect to me.
Speaker:This whole thing has emotion wrapped around the entire product.
Speaker:So the experience of opening it when they receive it is
Speaker:really important too.
Speaker:I would imagine.
Speaker:Oh, for sure.
Speaker:I think it's a really big deal and I'm packaging up
Speaker:these amazing women that have just done such great work for
Speaker:our world.
Speaker:Like I want the box and the bag and the book
Speaker:to feel special.
Speaker:Like they are.
Speaker:So how in the world did you start from zero to
Speaker:researching? What did you do?
Speaker:So there are always companies you can work with as an
Speaker:intermediary, if you want to do any sort of printing.
Speaker:So I started out thinking that that's what I was going
Speaker:to do,
Speaker:but then I just didn't feel that great about not having
Speaker:a direct line of communication with the people that were going
Speaker:to make the products.
Speaker:I tend to be pretty hands-on with what I do.
Speaker:And I mean,
Speaker:I guess I could also have a little bit of a
Speaker:control freak when it comes to something that I create.
Speaker:So I started out and was thinking about that.
Speaker:And when I shifted from that,
Speaker:I started researching factories,
Speaker:some factories in the U S and then some factories in
Speaker:Southeast Asia and some factories in China.
Speaker:And I felt pretty intimidated actually at first about going like
Speaker:communicating directly without overseas factory,
Speaker:which I decided to do an overseas factory because of the
Speaker:way that they can print gold foil on the cars and
Speaker:on the bag and on the box.
Speaker:So it's just that,
Speaker:like, I felt like gold foil initially.
Speaker:It was my number one design aspect when I visualize the
Speaker:whole project.
Speaker:So yeah,
Speaker:at first I was intimidated and then I realized,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:I had worked with all of these companies for the last
Speaker:decade that work produced products all over the world with all
Speaker:kinds of different factories.
Speaker:And so I felt like even though it might be a
Speaker:little more work for me to do it myself,
Speaker:and to go directly with someone abroad that ultimately I was
Speaker:capable of doing it and people have done it before and
Speaker:I could figure it out and that it was worth doing
Speaker:it that way,
Speaker:just so I could really be the person that's going to
Speaker:be saying yes or no to every little way to the
Speaker:product is made.
Speaker:And so was this then identifying factories,
Speaker:getting samples of their work,
Speaker:that whole type of thing back and forth.
Speaker:Yeah. So I went through a couple of factories,
Speaker:like one factory made the cards really well,
Speaker:but they just could not get it together with the book.
Speaker:Like I'd open the book and the pages would just start
Speaker:with like falling out.
Speaker:If you opened it too far,
Speaker:they weren't like properly glued and bound.
Speaker:And then I found another place,
Speaker:but they weren't really like communicating consistently and they didn't have
Speaker:the ability to do the box.
Speaker:And it's interesting how,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:I was in contact with them and they'd be like,
Speaker:oh, you don't want to do it that way.
Speaker:Do it this way.
Speaker:It's easier.
Speaker:Of course,
Speaker:because they're going to tell you what to do with what
Speaker:they can provide.
Speaker:Right. Yeah.
Speaker:And like what's quicker for them and they don't have the
Speaker:same vision.
Speaker:Right. But basically if anyone kind of gives me that message,
Speaker:I'm usually like,
Speaker:oh, this is not my place.
Speaker:I wanted to really feel like I had people that were
Speaker:getting the amazing service,
Speaker:like amazing customer service,
Speaker:excited to make the product with me.
Speaker:If I told them I wanted something done a different way,
Speaker:that they would try and pretty quickly figure out how to
Speaker:make that happen.
Speaker:So I think it was maybe my third or fourth factory.
Speaker:I have this like lovely team of three women and there's
Speaker:the designer and like the factory manager and the customer service
Speaker:person. And I just really,
Speaker:like, sometimes they're on me to be like,
Speaker:Hey, you owe this,
Speaker:this style.
Speaker:And I love that so much.
Speaker:And so how long did it take that whole process from
Speaker:when you were ready to start looking for a factory to
Speaker:when you actually found and was able to start really working
Speaker:it Maybe eight months.
Speaker:Okay. All right.
Speaker:Well, that's not terrible.
Speaker:It's not,
Speaker:it's not terrible.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:I think for people that are in the industry and in
Speaker:the practice of making things and finding factories,
Speaker:that will make the thing that they designed.
Speaker:It's not that long.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:I probably spent two and a half years from the point
Speaker:that I decided to like,
Speaker:go for it when I got the actual final prototype in
Speaker:my hands.
Speaker:So I think if you're not used to making things,
Speaker:it's like,
Speaker:oh my gosh,
Speaker:that seems like forever,
Speaker:but I felt okay about the timeline.
Speaker:But I'm thinking that you might have been overlapping the writing
Speaker:and graphic creation portion with the cards with also the investigating
Speaker:the factories.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:at some point that probably kicked in and overlapped at the
Speaker:end. Yeah.
Speaker:Wasn't just the writing stopped then the factory discovery and experimentation
Speaker:and all of that and then commitment,
Speaker:et cetera.
Speaker:Yeah. Once I felt like I have really confidently had my
Speaker:right designer and we had designed like half of the cards,
Speaker:then I started kind of tiptoeing into factories.
Speaker:So yeah.
Speaker:I wanted to make sure that I was like really committed
Speaker:before I started spending money for prototypes and just opening up
Speaker:a whole new component of the project.
Speaker:Sure. And how were you communicating with people overseas?
Speaker:Were you doing zoom calls or how did that all work?
Speaker:Yeah, so we started out with email and then we transitioned
Speaker:over to Skype actually.
Speaker:And so they'll message me through Skype.
Speaker:I do a lot of video feedback,
Speaker:so like,
Speaker:I'll get a sample and I'll record unboxing it and looking
Speaker:at everything and pointing things out and send that back to
Speaker:them. And then they send it back to me and that's
Speaker:been a really great way of communicating.
Speaker:Yeah. And then every now and then we'll go into email.
Speaker:I think we've done two Skype video calls,
Speaker:but for the most part,
Speaker:I've been really impressed how much we've been able to do
Speaker:and work well together through emails and messaging.
Speaker:Well, and I'd say good factories have a lot of experience
Speaker:with overseas coordination of projects too.
Speaker:So this isn't something new to them.
Speaker:They figured out how to do it and make you feel
Speaker:comfortable and then give you what you need.
Speaker:Yeah, you're right.
Speaker:Absolutely. I mean,
Speaker:I'm more new to it than they are.
Speaker:Right. But you've got to get the right factory that you're
Speaker:really going to feel comfortable with.
Speaker:And obviously,
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:I work with the factory over seas.
Speaker:I make a brand of ribbon my own brand over ribbon,
Speaker:but I went and visited the factory just because I wanted
Speaker:to make sure that I liked the conditions I met the
Speaker:owner, all of that type of thing.
Speaker:But I did that years ago.
Speaker:Certainly not in the recent years when no one was traveling,
Speaker:let's face it.
Speaker:So, and that's the way most people do it.
Speaker:Most people aren't going and actually seeing the factories.
Speaker:Yeah, totally.
Speaker:And I think that is something that I have had so
Speaker:much like the brands that I do consulting with in my
Speaker:kind of regular longer-term day job,
Speaker:I've worked so much with that about like the right certifications
Speaker:for their factories and the right questions to ask.
Speaker:So, I mean,
Speaker:I found this factory since COVID started,
Speaker:so I definitely have not been there,
Speaker:but they use a ton of sustainable materials.
Speaker:They pay living wages,
Speaker:their factories are really clean and well lit or they're in,
Speaker:Shenzen in China.
Speaker:So like Shenzen is one of the most creative and clean
Speaker:and like sustainably producing factories,
Speaker:cities in China.
Speaker:So I really love them.
Speaker:And they've been so pleasant to work with.
Speaker:And it's just been interesting,
Speaker:kind of like learning about how they communicate and learning a
Speaker:little bit more about their culture.
Speaker:And it's been a sweet process.
Speaker:I've had the same thing,
Speaker:cause my factory is in China as well.
Speaker:And I've became friends with my major contact there.
Speaker:He just had a baby girl,
Speaker:like, you know,
Speaker:the family and it's really nice,
Speaker:but I think that this would be an interesting conversation for
Speaker:people who are listening,
Speaker:if they were ever to consider doing a project overseas.
Speaker:Do you have any advice for them now that you've run
Speaker:through the experience for the first time and you have experience
Speaker:from your other job,
Speaker:any direction for people who are thinking that they can not
Speaker:continue, hand-making their product they need to do.
Speaker:And maybe it's even just a portion of it overseas.
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Speaker:Yeah. I mean,
Speaker:I think the one paying attention to how the communication is
Speaker:going. Like I was talking about like consistency,
Speaker:consistent communication,
Speaker:follow through.
Speaker:Like, I want my factory to be like asking me for
Speaker:the deliverables that I've told them that I'm getting them,
Speaker:not just a one-way street.
Speaker:So just finding a factory that feels like they're actually partnering
Speaker:with you on moving your project forward goes so far.
Speaker:Obviously like a lot of factories will send you a ton
Speaker:of samples of their work.
Speaker:And so get as many as you can just know that,
Speaker:like again,
Speaker:you can go through intermediaries any time they're going to take
Speaker:a chunk of your profits.
Speaker:They might not communicate about your project in the way that
Speaker:you really want them to,
Speaker:because they might not love it the way that you do.
Speaker:Right. It's just the nature of making something of your own.
Speaker:And it might take a little bit of time to like
Speaker:nail the communication and find the right factory.
Speaker:But I think it's totally doable.
Speaker:Like I would just tell people,
Speaker:don't let that part intimidate you.
Speaker:It's workable once you just kind of get steady through the
Speaker:process a little bit.
Speaker:So yeah.
Speaker:I mean just like samples,
Speaker:samples, samples,
Speaker:consistency of communication.
Speaker:And again,
Speaker:like I mentioned,
Speaker:finding a factory that really wants to work with you on
Speaker:making little tweaks and adjustments.
Speaker:I definitely had the experience where I'd be like,
Speaker:oh, this looks good,
Speaker:but we need to change this.
Speaker:And a factory would like kind of ghost me for a
Speaker:little while.
Speaker:So just finding groups that are really collaborative is super important
Speaker:to me.
Speaker:Yeah. And I'll tell you if they're doing that right in
Speaker:the beginning,
Speaker:when they're trying to get your business,
Speaker:it's only going to get worse from there.
Speaker:Yeah. You have to be careful and vetted out for sure.
Speaker:But it's doable,
Speaker:like you said,
Speaker:and I agree with you.
Speaker:I don't have an intermediary either and I love doing it
Speaker:that way.
Speaker:I just feel like their heart with my business and my
Speaker:heart is supporting them in their production to two-way street here.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:So as you're developing messages from her,
Speaker:what were you thinking?
Speaker:How were you going to handle the investment that had to
Speaker:go into the project?
Speaker:Yeah, so there's been two primary investments so far,
Speaker:which was investing in pain,
Speaker:the illustrator,
Speaker:and then investing in getting the prototypes.
Speaker:And so I kind of budgeted out for myself what I
Speaker:was willing to pay for.
Speaker:So I paid for all of that.
Speaker:And then I just launched a Kickstarter yesterday to fund the
Speaker:first print run of the project.
Speaker:Okay. So yesterday we are interviewing March 9th.
Speaker:So that was March 8th And this be air in a
Speaker:couple of weeks from now.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:And so how has Kickstarter go?
Speaker:Like that's a whole nother thing,
Speaker:right? Oh my gosh.
Speaker:We could talk,
Speaker:do an entire episode just about Kickstarter.
Speaker:Okay. Let's do an outline summary form or something.
Speaker:Yeah. Kickstarter is like launching a business kind of on steroids.
Speaker:I am finding out,
Speaker:I like to tell people that when you're going to go
Speaker:get a puppy and you're like,
Speaker:wow, this puppy is going to be a lot of work.
Speaker:And we know it's going to be a lot of work
Speaker:and you get that puppy home.
Speaker:And you're like,
Speaker:wow, this is five times more work than I even thought.
Speaker:That's how Kickstarter has felt for me.
Speaker:It's just been like such a fast paced world.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:it's a month long campaign.
Speaker:So normally you might launch and then you just kind of
Speaker:like, you can launch organically or you can keep refining your
Speaker:marketing and you have no kind of start and finish line.
Speaker:It creates a totally different feeling and dynamic,
Speaker:But you had a finish line.
Speaker:It sounds like I have a finish line.
Speaker:That's going to be on April 7th,
Speaker:but you also set a goals.
Speaker:So let me back up and just,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:Kickstarter for those that aren't familiar is a crowdfunding platform.
Speaker:So the idea is that you've made something that you love
Speaker:and you show a bunch of other people,
Speaker:and if they want to see it in the world,
Speaker:they contribute to your campaign and exchange.
Speaker:They usually get your product for that contribution.
Speaker:And their money goes towards bringing the first production run of
Speaker:your product to life.
Speaker:So it can be really sweet,
Speaker:can get a lot of good feedback.
Speaker:You can get friends and family involved and you can kind
Speaker:of empower people in the process of bringing your project to
Speaker:life. It's also just like a massive platform where you can
Speaker:reach a ton of people that you might not have access
Speaker:to, but there's so much that goes into it,
Speaker:that you got to really nail your design and your execution
Speaker:of the campaign.
Speaker:So people really take you seriously and think that,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:if they back you,
Speaker:you're going to really follow through with making the product.
Speaker:Like I have spent the last gosh,
Speaker:maybe month and a half every day working to do outreach
Speaker:and emails and marketing.
Speaker:And to just try and like front load,
Speaker:a lot of support into the campaign on day one.
Speaker:And there's a lot of different ways you can do a
Speaker:Kickstarter, which every time I do a little more,
Speaker:I learn a little more about it.
Speaker:So like some people spend a few months before they launch
Speaker:getting people signed up in advance.
Speaker:So then they like knock it out of the park on
Speaker:day one.
Speaker:And some people do pay marketing through the whole thing.
Speaker:And some people do a really community oriented project,
Speaker:like a community garden,
Speaker:where then they get everyone in the community to donate through
Speaker:Kickstarter. So it's really vast,
Speaker:there's a huge range of products on there.
Speaker:It's an interesting platform.
Speaker:I would recommend that if anyone is thinking of doing a
Speaker:Kickstarter, just give yourself like a good few months to get
Speaker:your whole campaign and your like pre-launch outreach done.
Speaker:Like make it spacious.
Speaker:I think because there's a start date and finished date,
Speaker:it can feel just a bit intense.
Speaker:And does Kickstarter give you direction and tutorials or anything to
Speaker:help you along the way themselves specifically?
Speaker:I'm sure you can go on YouTube and learn all about
Speaker:Kickstarters. Yes and no.
Speaker:They definitely have articles and some like checklists.
Speaker:And if you follow those,
Speaker:you're going to be in good shape.
Speaker:But I think what I did is I looked at a
Speaker:number of campaigns that I thought really did a good job,
Speaker:both in their execution and in meeting and exceeding their financial
Speaker:goals. So I,
Speaker:as I was building out,
Speaker:my campaign always had like three tabs open for my top
Speaker:three, like inspirational Kickstarters.
Speaker:So I could look at,
Speaker:oh, how did they communicate this?
Speaker:And how did they build this?
Speaker:And how does this work?
Speaker:And then I started talking to a few friends that had
Speaker:done Kickstarters a little late in the process,
Speaker:but definitely like do your research about well crowdfunded campaigns and
Speaker:see what they did see how long their videos are,
Speaker:see the way they design their page,
Speaker:the way they design their rewards.
Speaker:So you can search for the kind of media coverage they
Speaker:got in advance,
Speaker:how their social media looks like it's worth doing the research
Speaker:and giving yourself the time to do it well,
Speaker:because if you do it well,
Speaker:then you've just got a really invested community.
Speaker:That's there for your success for the launch of the Kickstarter,
Speaker:but also through anything else that you make.
Speaker:I think people just feel so included in the process through
Speaker:doing crowdfunding,
Speaker:I with you.
Speaker:And if you've never been on Kickstarter,
Speaker:it's so fun and interesting just to go and look at
Speaker:all of the different projects that are in development.
Speaker:It's crazy.
Speaker:What's out there.
Speaker:It's very fun.
Speaker:Give us some more detail about your Kickstarter,
Speaker:what the offer is,
Speaker:what it's looking like.
Speaker:Okay. Yeah.
Speaker:So there are a few different reward tiers that you can
Speaker:do, but all of them,
Speaker:you get something back for,
Speaker:of course you can also just go on and crowdfund and
Speaker:just donate money to people's campaigns because you love them and
Speaker:you just want to see them bring their product to the
Speaker:world. So just a flat out donation is what you're saying.
Speaker:Yeah, exactly.
Speaker:So for mine,
Speaker:I have one small reward,
Speaker:which is a sticker.
Speaker:That's three of the cards.
Speaker:I just wanted to give people like a $5 option to
Speaker:get something inexpensive and feel included.
Speaker:But then all of the other tiers are different versions,
Speaker:different like deliveries or like a two-pack of the deck.
Speaker:So there's one that's early bird discounted copy for the first
Speaker:100 backers.
Speaker:So that's $37.
Speaker:And then there's a regularly priced set,
Speaker:which is $40.
Speaker:And then I have a hundred copies that are going to
Speaker:get aired in early.
Speaker:Those will be arriving in may.
Speaker:So that's a hundred dollars to get one of the Airdyne
Speaker:copies. And then my favorite tier is the most expensive tier,
Speaker:but it's $350 for 10 copies that get donated to a
Speaker:girls charity outside of LA called step up and step up
Speaker:works with teen and adolescent girls that are kind of like
Speaker:at risk youth.
Speaker:And they partner them with adult women mentors,
Speaker:and they give them social training and emotional training and financial
Speaker:training. And they'd give them job placement training and they help
Speaker:cultivate their interests and hobbies.
Speaker:And so the ideas,
Speaker:this project is all about role models and looking to other
Speaker:women and other people that have done amazing things.
Speaker:So anyone that donates at that higher tier is sending 10
Speaker:copies so they can actually distribute a copy to girls in
Speaker:the program.
Speaker:I absolutely love that.
Speaker:Add on It's my favorite.
Speaker:Yes. For sure.
Speaker:Obviously you can buy multiples,
Speaker:like you could do the three 50 and then you could
Speaker:also get a couple for yourself and whatever you want to
Speaker:do, right?
Speaker:Yeah. You can mix and match.
Speaker:However, it goes.
Speaker:So Kickstarter,
Speaker:it's not always the most intuitive platform,
Speaker:but you pick your main reward tier and then once you
Speaker:pick your main thing,
Speaker:you can add on other reward tiers to that.
Speaker:And then I also have one thing that I really love,
Speaker:which most people probably will just glaze over because there's this
Speaker:very cute,
Speaker:like gift box.
Speaker:If you want to give it as a gift,
Speaker:you can also buy a box that has a poem by
Speaker:Maya Angelou on the cover of the box and the logo.
Speaker:And so it'll come like packaged as a gift for,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:maybe like a gift for the favorite woman in your life
Speaker:that inspires you.
Speaker:It's kind of a thank you.
Speaker:I added a few extra little design elements that people can
Speaker:add on and I added an e-gift card.
Speaker:So if anyone gives it as a gift,
Speaker:they can notify the person that they're giving it to.
Speaker:And so it's pretty thorough this point.
Speaker:Well, we're going to say this again at the end,
Speaker:but since we're talking about it right now,
Speaker:where can people go and find all this information?
Speaker:Yes. So the Kickstarter link is very,
Speaker:I can't just give that to you in like a word,
Speaker:but the website is messages from her.com
Speaker:and there's a banner at the top.
Speaker:You can click on it,
Speaker:it'll take you to the Kickstarter.
Speaker:There's buttons all over.
Speaker:That will take you to the Kickstarter.
Speaker:I'm also on Instagram at her underscore messages.
Speaker:And the link,
Speaker:if you're on Instagram,
Speaker:in the bio of that handle will take you right to
Speaker:the Kickstarter as well.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:That is perfect.
Speaker:Couple of other questions.
Speaker:And then my quiz,
Speaker:then I have a quiz for you,
Speaker:Rachel. Great.
Speaker:No pressure.
Speaker:Where along the process,
Speaker:did you start working on your Kickstarter Later than I should
Speaker:have to be totally honest with you.
Speaker:I really started actively doing it just this January.
Speaker:I kind of thought that like I was a little naive
Speaker:about it.
Speaker:I thought that a lot of the assets and work that
Speaker:I had done were going to just transfer over a lot
Speaker:more like,
Speaker:like for like,
Speaker:and I underestimated just how much I would have to customize
Speaker:and change for Kickstarter.
Speaker:So I just really upped the volume that I had been
Speaker:working in the last month and a half to finish it
Speaker:in time.
Speaker:I also two weeks behind because like many,
Speaker:many people between Christmas and when we,
Speaker:if it was right after new years,
Speaker:my partner and I,
Speaker:and everyone we know got COVID.
Speaker:So just kind of like surrender.
Speaker:So yeah,
Speaker:like I said,
Speaker:I was about two weeks later than where I wanted to
Speaker:be, but I just tried to keep putting in the work
Speaker:and trusting that the time was going to work out too.
Speaker:So I wasn't super stressed the whole time.
Speaker:So would you say a comfortable pace would be like four
Speaker:to six months out?
Speaker:Something like that?
Speaker:Oh yeah.
Speaker:I think I would have given myself three.
Speaker:Okay. And I know people again that have done Kickstarter and
Speaker:like I have a design,
Speaker:like a graphic design background.
Speaker:So I think a lot of the things that I did
Speaker:were a little bit easier for me than someone that doesn't
Speaker:have all those skills.
Speaker:Like if I didn't know the design tools that I know
Speaker:I would have had to hire a couple other people.
Speaker:My partner is also an entrepreneur.
Speaker:So like he has a friend that's a videographer that did
Speaker:came and did the video with us.
Speaker:So if I didn't have connections and some of the skills
Speaker:that I had,
Speaker:I would definitely give myself like five,
Speaker:six months.
Speaker:Okay. All right.
Speaker:Perfect. And how did you feel when you finally saw the
Speaker:finished product done the prototype of the finished product?
Speaker:Walk us through that.
Speaker:I think I cried a little bit,
Speaker:honestly. That's good because I was just really touched seeing it
Speaker:finally come to life.
Speaker:And again,
Speaker:I'm such a packaging person.
Speaker:Like packaging is so important to me to convey really what's
Speaker:inside of the box or whatever your packaging is.
Speaker:And so just like it actually got delivered while I was
Speaker:out of town and I had a friend and I was
Speaker:like, you have to go pick this up for me.
Speaker:This can not vanish or get misplaced.
Speaker:And so I had a friend go pick it up and
Speaker:I got back in town and I got the box,
Speaker:like a brunch we were at and I didn't want to
Speaker:open it at brunch.
Speaker:I like took it home and it just felt so real
Speaker:when I actually pulled it out of the box.
Speaker:And seeing something that you make,
Speaker:come to fruition,
Speaker:I think is really touching.
Speaker:And then again,
Speaker:the second layer for me is that through learning about the
Speaker:lives of these women,
Speaker:I just feel so much happier to be a woman.
Speaker:So it feels like it's emotionally like resonant on a few
Speaker:different levels.
Speaker:I'm proud of myself for seeing it through.
Speaker:I'm touched seeing this thing that I've been envisioning for a
Speaker:long time.
Speaker:And then I'm feeling like I've honored the women that I'm
Speaker:writing about.
Speaker:I'm making something that I feel really good about the final.
Speaker:And you should be so proud,
Speaker:like from idea and conception to what I am envisioning to
Speaker:be such a beautiful quality project.
Speaker:Do you have a video of that unboxing anywhere?
Speaker:My partner did,
Speaker:he totally did.
Speaker:I was trying to do it privately and he was like,
Speaker:oh, I like came in the room and recorded it.
Speaker:That has to be saved somewhere In some form.
Speaker:Yeah. Oh gosh.
Speaker:Alrighty. You ready for my quiz?
Speaker:Yeah. I mean,
Speaker:maybe we'll see.
Speaker:Are you nervous?
Speaker:Well, I don't even have any idea what it is,
Speaker:so I'm just winging it and just trust that I can
Speaker:wait. Yeah,
Speaker:you can.
Speaker:I am going to ask you three categories and you're going
Speaker:to pick a card from my categories who is the most
Speaker:surprising card.
Speaker:Gosh, I'm not sure about that.
Speaker:The first woman that popped into my head is Irene assembler,
Speaker:which I mean,
Speaker:what she has done is really heroic,
Speaker:but she's maybe more of a surprise.
Speaker:Cause I think a lot of people don't know about her.
Speaker:And so share just a piece of information.
Speaker:Yeah. So arena Sandler was a nurse in Poland during world
Speaker:war II.
Speaker:During the Holocaust,
Speaker:the Warsaw ghetto was the largest ghetto in all of Europe
Speaker:in world war two.
Speaker:And she went into the ghetto under the pretense of providing
Speaker:nursing care for people with contagious illnesses that the soldiers didn't
Speaker:want to go in and get.
Speaker:So she would go in,
Speaker:she would find children and she snuck them out of the
Speaker:ghetto. She recorded their name with a secret language that she
Speaker:made up and she hid their names and where she placed
Speaker:them all across Europe with different families.
Speaker:So they would be saved.
Speaker:So she made up this language,
Speaker:she hid their names and all of these jars hid those
Speaker:jars all over the place around Poland.
Speaker:And at one point she was even caught for some of
Speaker:this and sent to be executed.
Speaker:And then someone broke her out of jail from the Nazis
Speaker:and she went into hiding.
Speaker:And at the end of world war II,
Speaker:she went back to all of the hiding places where she
Speaker:had kept these records and found all of the children that
Speaker:she had hit,
Speaker:which was something like 3,500
Speaker:children. Whoa.
Speaker:Yeah. I thought you were going to say 35.
Speaker:Wow. That is incredible.
Speaker:Incredible. Yeah.
Speaker:And just incredible.
Speaker:I'm going to change my category from surprising to incredible.
Speaker:Okay. Second one.
Speaker:There's three here.
Speaker:Second one who is one of the most unknown women.
Speaker:So I think a woman named Jane Adams is really not
Speaker:well known,
Speaker:but she was one of the most famous women in her
Speaker:lifetime. She won Nobel prizes when she died.
Speaker:She was the most famous woman in the world and she
Speaker:died gosh,
Speaker:in the early 19 hundreds.
Speaker:So it's not even that long ago,
Speaker:she was born into a really wealthy family and she didn't
Speaker:want to go down the path of like socialite and having
Speaker:kids and raising a family and having a big house.
Speaker:And so she took all the money that she inherited and
Speaker:bought this incredible complex called whole house,
Speaker:which is actually in Chicago.
Speaker:She studied this kind of like,
Speaker:I think it was called the reformation is something,
Speaker:she went over to Europe and learned like this concept of
Speaker:bringing different groups of people together for the wellbeing of society.
Speaker:So like bringing different economic groups and different races and like
Speaker:immigrants and having them in this giant complex together in varying
Speaker:styles of housing,
Speaker:but altogether in the same area and the complex had like
Speaker:a community gym and after work classes for people to be
Speaker:able to kind of like get out of a lower paying
Speaker:job, they had like a movie Paul and like a girls
Speaker:club and a boys club.
Speaker:I mean kind of anything you can think of,
Speaker:oh, there was a clinic and birthing center.
Speaker:Like it was just this like almost this own little mini
Speaker:city of services where people lived and based on all of
Speaker:the studies that she did in that project that created what
Speaker:we now know is like social services,
Speaker:which were not a part of our government or society before
Speaker:she did the work that she did.
Speaker:Wow. That is incredible.
Speaker:You're not kidding.
Speaker:Inspiring. I know like these women crazy.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:You ready?
Speaker:This is going to be the hardest one.
Speaker:Maybe, maybe,
Speaker:maybe not.
Speaker:Maybe those will be the easiest for you.
Speaker:I'm not sure,
Speaker:but which one is your favorite?
Speaker:Oh yeah.
Speaker:That is the hardest,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:cause I can't pick one.
Speaker:'cause they're all your favorites.
Speaker:I already get that They are and on different days.
Speaker:Right. And I think that's the nice thing about each of
Speaker:them representing different qualities.
Speaker:Like if I'm feeling X way,
Speaker:one day that I'm really drawn to that person that represents
Speaker:that for me,
Speaker:one woman that I continuously come back to over and over
Speaker:again is share though.
Speaker:I think shares definitely one of my favorites Is it because
Speaker:of her hair,
Speaker:It's about everything.
Speaker:She's just amazing.
Speaker:And her card represents imagination and her quote is the,
Speaker:I don't want to like put to her quote,
Speaker:but it's essentially like everyone makes up their own life through
Speaker:their imagination.
Speaker:Some people just use more imagination than others.
Speaker:And I think she's just been so creative in her life.
Speaker:I think a lot of people may be kind of forget
Speaker:all of the different things that she's done.
Speaker:Like she's so funny and she's had her own shows and
Speaker:she has excelled and like all the ways that she's brought
Speaker:art and creativity to the world for so long.
Speaker:And it just feels like she's like an inventor of her
Speaker:own everything,
Speaker:you know?
Speaker:So it's just a good,
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:I guess it's similar to the quote that I told you
Speaker:from Madonna at the beginning,
Speaker:but just kind of like making your life,
Speaker:whatever you want it to be and imagining and going after
Speaker:that thing that you imagine,
Speaker:and like you're in charge of that.
Speaker:You can do that.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:So Rachel,
Speaker:are you reaching out to all the people who are still
Speaker:living who have a card I've started reaching out to some
Speaker:of them,
Speaker:but I haven't reached out to all of them.
Speaker:Hi, good.
Speaker:That's exciting.
Speaker:I want to know how that evolves.
Speaker:I'll keep you in the loop.
Speaker:I'll let you know.
Speaker:I can not wait to go and check this all out.
Speaker:I was waiting to talk with you about it first,
Speaker:because like I said,
Speaker:I didn't want to know too much before I went and
Speaker:dove into everything.
Speaker:Any final word for all of our wonderful women who are
Speaker:listening here and the power that we have and our ability
Speaker:to make achievements,
Speaker:what else would you say to them?
Speaker:You know,
Speaker:I would just say like one of the big things that
Speaker:I learned from this project is looking to other women as
Speaker:like an example of what's possible.
Speaker:And instead of competition or feeling like they've already taken up
Speaker:a certain amount of space,
Speaker:like celebrate the women in your life for what they've done,
Speaker:because they're also showing you what's really possible.
Speaker:They don't have something that you don't inherently have those skills
Speaker:and qualities.
Speaker:And all of those things that you see outside of you
Speaker:are inside of YouTube.
Speaker:Beautiful. Couldn't have said it better myself,
Speaker:Rachel. So I'm not going to go find out everything about
Speaker:this right over on the website messages from her or the
Speaker:Instagram account of the same name,
Speaker:the link in the bio.
Speaker:Rachel, this has been absolutely amazing.
Speaker:Thank you so much for coming on the show,
Speaker:Man. Thank you,
Speaker:sir. It's been fun.
Speaker:Here's to honoring you and all women past current and future.
Speaker:I can't wait to get my hands on this book and
Speaker:the cards because I want that value reminder each day,
Speaker:we are all powerful,
Speaker:vibrant women and the world needs us to show up that
Speaker:way. Before you move on to your next activity today,
Speaker:make sure to get your name on the list for at
Speaker:least one gift biz bash.
Speaker:You can see the dates for April and may and get
Speaker:signed up over@giftbizonraps.com
Speaker:forward slash bash.
Speaker:Up next Saturday,
Speaker:you're going to hear from a woman who completely pivoted in
Speaker:terms of her ideal customer.
Speaker:She started thinking she'd be selling to one type of person,
Speaker:but discovered switching gears to reach out to another made a
Speaker:whole lot more sense.
Speaker:And boy has it paid off.
Speaker:If you're enjoying this podcast,
Speaker:here's a way to show your support.
Speaker:You can visit my merch shop for a wide variety of
Speaker:inspirational items like mugs,
Speaker:t-shirts water bottles and more featuring logos images and quotes to
Speaker:inspire you throughout your day makes a great gift to,
Speaker:and we've just added some new products to the shop.
Speaker:I found turnaround to be quick,
Speaker:and the product quality is top-notch take a look@alltheoptionsoveratgiftbizonwrapped.com
Speaker:forward slash shop.
Speaker:All the proceeds from purchases of these products goes to help
Speaker:me offset the costs of producing the podcast and now be
Speaker:safe and well.
Speaker:And I'll see you again next time for the gift biz
Speaker:unwrapped podcast.
Speaker:I want to make sure you're familiar with my free Facebook
Speaker:group called gift is brains.
Speaker:It's a place where we all gather and our community to
Speaker:support each other.
Speaker:Got a really fun post in there.
Speaker:That's my favorite of the week.
Speaker:I have to say where I invite all of you to
Speaker:share what you're doing to show pictures of your product,
Speaker:to show what you're working on for the week to get
Speaker:reaction from other people and just for fun,
Speaker:because we all get to see the wonderful products that everybody
Speaker:in the community is making my favorite post every single week,
Speaker:without doubt.
Speaker:Wait, what aren't you part of the group already,
Speaker:if not make sure to jump over to Facebook and search
Speaker:for the group gift biz breeze don't delay.