Cindy Seip, Director of Book Design
Born with a crayon in one hand and a camera in the other, Cindy Seip has never ventured far from her creative instincts. Through the years, her creative side took hairpin turns but always finished with a checkered flag.
As an “A+” student in art, it was her 12th-grade art teacher, Mr. Popovitch, that set her on a professional course in design, introducing her to the Ft. Lauderdale Art Institute. There, she would earn her degree in Advertising Design.
She began her career at the Miami Herald Tropic Magazine and later started her own design + underwater portrait photography business.
Over the years, Seip has amassed an impressive client list with some high-profile names like Sony, Nasdaq, Ericsson, Blue Cross Blue Shield, AvMed, Miami International Book Fair, Breakthrough Miami, and many more. Her accolades reflect her keen eye for design.
Seip resides in sunny Miami with her husband, Miami Herald Photojournalist, Al Diaz, two great kids, and a cute Wheaten Terrier named Amanda Bubbles.

Of Tom’s editing, Pulitzer prize-winning columnist and Author Dave Barry says: “Tom Shroder is the best in the business – the rare editor who has the analytical skills to see what needs to be done, and the writing ability to show you, when necessary, exactly how to do it. He is especially good at finding the flaws in long, complex pieces, and getting writers to perform at the highest level they’re capable of. I’d trust him with anything I’ve written.”
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The Silent Language of Leaders
In this speech you’ll learn:
- Two sets of nonverbal signals people look for in leaders – and the circumstances that make one more effective than the other.
- Body language strategies for collaboration, change management, negotiation, and working with cross-cultural teams.
- How to read the body language of your team members, to find out what they really think.
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Lee Hornick, Conference Coordinator, The Conference Board
The all-time greatest speaker I have ever worked with. I’ve worked with Carol numerous times over a 15-year period. She has an incredible rapport and ability to connect with the audience. I’ve seen her present to an audience of CEOs and totally blow them away. Her material is always original and fresh, and she knows it like a book.
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- Mothering with the Greatest Joy. Based on her newest book, “Don’t Sweat the Small Stuff for Moms,” which has sold more than 1 million copies, this speech helps the audience consider simple ways to stress less and enjoy their families more.
- Working Happy: Responding to demands with resiliency. Based on the book she wrote with her husband, Dr. Richard Carlson, “Don’t Sweat the Small Stuff at Work,” this speech teaches audiences a series of simple ways to minimize stress and conflict while bringing out the best in yourself and others.
- Living the Big Stuff: How to heal through loss and return to joy. Based on her book, “Heartbroken Open,” which is about learning to survive and thrive after the death of her husband, author Dr. Richard Carlson, in 2006, she outlines the four principles she used to cope.
- The Meaning of Womanhood. Based on her book, “Don’t Sweat the Small Stuff for Women” this speech discusses practical ways to do what matters most, and how to find time for you.
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DESIGN THINKING
Design in the Age of Smart Machines
After a decade of woeful economic conditions, a future golden age is on the horizon. Integrated technologies will make buildings interact with us, even adapt and grow. They’ll be disposable, portable, recyclable, assembled, and temporary with virtual, augmented, and physical layers. How will architect’s roles change and what can we do to be ready and take advantage now? Furthermore, Generation Flux will live in a hybrid reality of ubiquitous computing. How can buildings learn to talk, adapt, and shape future experiences?
Design Futures
Design futures marries futures methods and design thinking in order to materialize speculative future worlds. Futurists are moving beyond traditional tools to create more vivid, lived in, world building scenarios. Rather than just narratives, these stories are told with images, videos, and sounds and in the future tactile and spatial experiences. You will in effect see possible design futures, and participate in shaping the design. In creating multi-sensory, multi-dimensional futures, you can explore more deeply the intentions and implications of future alternatives. Participants will learn the theory, see examples, and practice creating or assembling thumbnail images of futures artifacts to imagine future worlds. Participants will learn what design futures are, how they differ from traditional scenarios and design fictions, how to create design futures, the basics of design futures workshop facilitation, the characteristics of excellent design futures, and examples from videos and illustrations. Plus they will do speedy thumbnail sketches freehand or using prefab elements.
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Since all of the members of our Inkandescent team are journalists, we have been wanting to launch a Journalists column for ages. We jumped on the opportunity after meeting Sonya Gavankar, a TV personality who has been seen hosting programs on PBS, BGTV, and MHz Networks.
Her broadcasting career has spanned diverse programming from international food shows to hard news. And her career began on the other side of the camera—when in 1997 she was crowned Miss DC. She was 20, and a student at American University. Although she didn’t go on to win the Miss America crown, she finished her education and used her wit, smarts, and talent to land a position at DC’s prestigious Newseum, a 250,000- square-foot space filled with exhibits and interactive programming.
So we thought it appropriate to interview her in the broadcasting studio of the Newseum, where she makes the movies that showcase the exhibits of the country’s top news events covered by the press.
Being the journalists that we are, let’s get down to the questions.
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June 2013, Be Inkandescent magazine — Teaching children how to research is a critical skill that can start early and will serve them for a lifetime. In today’s world, where so much information is readily available at our fingertips, it is never too early to begin to teach children how to search with a “critical eye.”
Opportunities to conduct in-depth research allow children to discover and explore a wide range of topics that connect to personal interests and encourage inquiring minds. As they search for knowledge and data about topics that are connected to real-world issues, personal interests, and relevant concerns, children learn the value of searching for information through a wide variety of resources.
They also discover and practice investigative and formal research techniques that train them to develop abstract ideas, use inductive thinking, see connections, and solve problems.
The research process itself teaches them to organize, apply, and evaluate information and data that they can collect from multiple sources and then use that information for a project, a purchase, a personal goal, or to help solve a real-world problem.
In order to strengthen and refine their thinking and communication skills, children need opportunities to explore topics they are interested in and share what they learn with others.
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December 23, 2013, News Channel 8 — Certified Financial Planner Howard Pressman had a college professor who made a big impact when he explained the four most dangerous words when it comes to planning for retirement: “This time it’s different.”
“As investors, it’s important to keep our eyes on our goals,” Pressman explains. “If your goals are one year away or two years away, you would be right to be concerned about what’s going on today. You also shouldn’t have money set aside for this goal invested in volatile investments. On the other hand, if your goals are 10 or more years away, don’t be intimidated by today’s “earth shattering” headlines, and don’t make long-term decisions based on short-term events. It’s really not that different at all—it’s just more recent.”
He shared more of this thoughts with Let’s Talk Live reporter Angela Stribling. Click here to watch the segment. For more information on Pressman’s insights, click here.
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Andy has also authored dozens of articles, speeches, and workshops, including the 2003 Emerald Literati Awards’ Outstanding Paper accolade for best article published in Foresight for “An Audit for Organizational Futurists” and the 2008 award for “Scenarios: The State of the Art.”
Most recently, he appeared on KRIV-26 News talking about the future of libraries and the CBS “Early Show,” to talk about an MTV-commissioned study: “The Future of the Youth Happiness.”
In this episode we talked to Andy about:
- What it means to be a futurist
- His popular book, ConsumerShift, and what the future of consumerism looks like
- The study he did for MTV about the future of youth happiness
- The future studies program at the University of Houston: Who attends, what he teaches, and what kind of jobs are out there for futurists
- His previous work at Kellogg, and type of work a futurist does for large corporations
- His own plans for the future
Download our podcast interview with Andy Hines here.
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Owning a string of hardware stores in downtown Washington, D.C., isn’t what you’d expect Gina Schaefer to say she does for a living when you meet the perky, petite 40something.
But she and husband Marc Friedman proudly stand at the helm of a $19 million company they founded in 2002, which owns and manages 9 ACE Hardware locations in DC and Baltimore.
Why did a woman who graduated with a degree in political science, and worked for a few years at the Children’s Defense Fund, get into the hardware business? “We were young and dumb,” told me when we first met. But the real answer is more likely equal parts necessity, opportunity, humility — and true grit.
We’ll asked 10 questions to this Truly Amazing Woman about her career, her lessons learned, and advice she has for other women who are making strides and changing lives, including:
- How does she work so well with her husband Marc
- How she handles being a powerful woman in a traditionally-male dominated, masculine industry like hardware
- What part of her business is she most passionate about
- What aspect of her career tested her the most
- And what was a major crossroads—and how did she handle it?
Click here to download the podcast.
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The DCJCC’s Theater J announces the world premiere production of Our Suburb, a new play by Darrah Cloud. An homage to the classic American play Our Town by Thornton Wilder, Our Suburb opens with two families preparing for Christmas and Hanukkah, and two teenagers fall into an interfaith romance. Drawing a sometimes warm, sometimes stark, unyieldingly honest portrait of love and family, the play, which updates its setting from Grovers Corner New Hampshire to Skokie, Illinois circa 1977, is set against the threat of a familiar yet surprising enemy.
Our Suburb will be brought to life by director Judith Ivey, four-time Tony Award-nominee (most recently in 2013 for The Heiress) and two-time winner for her performances in Steaming and Hurlyburly. Ivey’s extensive directing resume includes credits at Second Stage in New York, Pasadena Playhouse, the Cherry Lane Theatre, the Falcon Theatre in Los Angeles and the Aspen Comedy Festival. She also previously appeared on the Theater J stage as Ann Landers in the one-woman show The Lady with All the Answers at a one-night-only benefit performance in 2012.
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Dec. 16, 2013, IdeaMensch.com — When Mario Schulzke asked Inkandescent PR founder Hope Katz Gibbs to answer 20 questions, the journalist and PR specialist couldn’t resist.
From “Where did the idea for The Inkandescent Group come from?” to “How do you make money?” she offered ideas and insights she hopes other entrepreneurs can use to Supersize their Small Business, including:
Tell the truth. The biggest PR mistake anyone can make is to be afraid to speak their piece and stand by their word.
Click here to read her the entire Q&A: ideamensch.com.
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By Derek Woodgate
Futurist, and President
The Futures Lab, Inc.
Advertising is experiencing a huge disruption to every aspect of the industry.
The revolution is certainly creating considerable concern among those comfortable with traditional industry structures and approaches. Yet this shift will open up new opportunities in terms of media and advertising formats, and consumer reach and engagement—not to mention cross-disciplinary collaborations, specializations, delivery technologies, financial structures, and reception performance approaches.
As Internet technology guru Clay Shirky recently stated: “It is the people who work out how to work simply in the present, rather than the people who mastered the complexities of the past, who get to say what happens in the future.”
As I see it, four very distinct but interacting layers will provide the strategic architecture for the coming revolution in the world of advertising.
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Tom Shroder is an award-winning journalist, writer, and editor for more than 30 years.
As editor of The Washington Post Magazine, he conceived and edited the story, Fatal Distraction. Written by award-winning journalist Gene Weingarten, the article probed the case where a toddler named Chase died in a hot car after his father accidentally left him there in the summer of 2008. The story asks: “Forgetting a Child in the Backseat of a Car Is a Horrifying Mistake. Is It a Crime?”
It was awarded the 2010 Pulitzer Prize for feature writing. Shroder also edited and contributed to Pearls Before Breakfast, which was awarded the 2008 Pulitzer Prize for feature writing.
In addition to being an author and editor of narrative journalism, Shroder is one of the foremost editors of humor in the country. He has edited humor columns by Weingarten, Dave Barry, and Tony Kornheiser. And, he conceived and launched the internationally syndicated comic strip, “Cul de Sac,” by Richard Thompson.
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December 2013, Be Inkandescent magazine — What kind of pie conveys the experience of starting a new job, getting married, becoming a mom?
That’s the question author Jo Packham asked when she began gathering 39 of her favorite foodies, who contributed 42 recipes to her delicious masterpiece, “Pie-ography: Where Pie Meets Biography.”
“Each one has devised a pie recipe that captures the essence of her life,” says Packham, the founder of the best-selling magazines, Where Women Cook, Where Women Create, and Where Women Create Business. “Stir in beautiful photography, short essays, and brief bios, and voilá, you’ve got more than a cookbook. From Espresso Dream Pie to Salmon and Spinach Pie, this collection nourishes body and soul.”
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Dec. 1, 2013, Evolution magazine — Hope Katz Gibbs was honored to be selected to be the December 2013 cover story of Evolution magazine.
The business and technology magazine published by Darnell Davis features stories about small business owners, who offer their expertise. In this issue, Gibbs asked: “Are You Ready to Be Inkandescent?”
Click here, then scroll to page 16 to read the article on: Evolution magzine.
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You don’t feel well, but you can’t quite figure out why. You’ve been to several health care practitioners — but no one has quite hit the nail on the head. And you still feel yucky.
Most likely, you don’t have any specific symptoms — or don’t think it’s affordable to keep searching for the answer. Fortunately there is an answer, insists Dr. Kim Muzinski, co-founder of the Integrative Chiropractic & Natural Medicine Clinic in Arlington, VA: www.MyHolisticDocs.com.
Staying healthy is key.
“With the payments for health care plans changing dramatically, it’s more important than ever to take control of your wellness,” she explains. “The value of spending your dollars toward wellness is so important.”
The bottom line: No busy adult has time to get sick. Here’s what you can do manage your good health.
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December 2013, Be Inkandescent magazine — Do you know what I’ve found to be the easiest way to make myself happy at work?
It’s so simple you probably won’t believe it.
But honestly, it’s to have gratitude for what I do have and not focus on what I don’t. And, to share that feeling with all those around me by simply saying, “thank you,” as often as possible.
And not just saying it … but really meaning it—authentically and spontaneously.
When is a “thank you” most appropriate?
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Back to School Night 2013 was another huge success for the financial services firm Egan, Berger & Weiner, LLC.
The partners wanted to capture the event on film! Click to watch this year’s 4-minute video.
And click to read more to view some spectacular moments of the evening.
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November 25, 2013 — What do you need to know about Global Demographic Trends?
In this video, produced by the financial services firm Egan, Berger & Weiner LLC, president of the ACC Family — *Jim Lindsay* — offers insights.
Click here to watch this engaging hour-long seminar.
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November 25, 2013, News Channel 8 — Are you worried about paying for college?* Financial Advisor Carmen Wu gives you food for thought with these four questions that she answers on today’s episode of Let’s Talk Live:
1. How does an American Family successfully address the challenges of saving for all of their financial needs — raising a family, educating their children and retire successfully?
2. How much do you recommend that a family save each year to afford college for one child? (Please show slide called “The growing cost of a college education.”)
3. How early should parents start savings?
4. What are the best options to save for college?
Don’t miss a moment!
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By Kathleen McCarthy
Managing Editor
Be Inkandescent magazine
Kids today don’t know history like they used to, but it’s not their fault, insists The John Marshall Foundation.
“The modern emphasis on standardized testing and teaching that favors skills over knowledge is to blame,” according to the organization, which sponsors educational and public interest programs or other activities in the fields of law, government, history and public affairs to promote a greater public understanding of Chief Justice John Marshall and his contributions. “As a result, history has fallen by the wayside in US classrooms.”
Consider this: A 2011 nationwide test, US history is now American students’ worst subject, many 4th graders are unable to say why Abraham Lincoln was important.
“If even Lincoln isn’t memorable to American students, what will happen to equally important but less regaled pioneers of our past?” asks David Bruce Smith, author of a new children’s book on Marshall entitled, American Hero: John Marshall, Chief Justice of the United States.
This concern is a driving force behind the Richmond, VA-based Foundation, and the inspiration behind the children’s picture book that it commissioned.
Illustrated by world-renowned artist Clarice Smith, David Smith’s mother, the book is dedicated to his father, Robert — the benefactor behind the University of Maryland’s Robert H. Smith School of Business “who was convinced that John Marshall, the ‘forgotten’ Founding Father, composed a life worthy of study and remembrance by every American,” David says.
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Sebastopol CA, September 23, 2013 — Join us for the Living Ayurveda Symposium & Marketplace in downtown Sebastopol on Nov. 9-10, where you’ll get a first hand taste of Ayurveda, yoga’s sister science.
Considered the ancient remedy for healthy, modern living, you’ll get a heaping helping of some of the best insights into this healing practice including:
- Having the opportunity to take two days of classes with world-renowned Ayurveda teachers,
- Learning how to care for yourselves, your loved ones, and your clients with this timeless tradition,
- Exploring the marketplace where you will find essential items for a healthy lifestyle, as well as meet local artists and healers.
That’s not all! You’ll also have the opportunity to:
- Rejuvenate in Sonoma County’s newest self-care studio,
- Unwind in the steam room, sauna, and baths,
- Enjoy a farm-to-table organic vegetarian lunch prepared by top local chefs.
- And, in the evening of Nov. 9, celebrate with Ananda Rasa , a reggae style Kirtan Band and an enchanting Odissi Dance performance by ShaktiBhakt.
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November 2013, Be Inkandescent magazine — Today we live in a totally connected, mobile world. Not that long ago, the United States was an agrarian society where it was pretty obvious where the lines were between home and work. Nature often dictated when work needed to be done.
For instance, my dad grew up on a farm and told us stories of not being able to open Christmas presents until late in the day after all the chores were completed. During the Industrial Revolution, work moved to factories where laws and rules existed to regulate work and work schedules.
Now, in the Information Age, all that has changed.
Savvy organizations have realized that what employees value most (after getting paid!) is having a flexible work schedule. As technology has made it easier to work remotely, workplace flexibility has become a competitive advantage and a great way to build loyalty.
Workplace flexibility takes many forms, including the following.
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Oct. 29, 2013, Working Writers & Bloggers — Reporter Cherie Burbach interviewed freelance writer and PR specialist Hope Katz Gibbs for WorkingWritersandBloggers.com, the website that helps writers succeed in business.
Questions included: Have you noticed the “feast or famine” world that people think about when they picture freelancing? Many freelancers today work for clients and also supplement that with their own blogs and books. What’s your approach to maintaining a successful freelance career? And, What’s the biggest misconception people have about freelance writers?
Check out the entire interview.
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International Quilt Market and Business Conference — Houston 2013
October 26-30, 2013
George R. Brown Convention Center
Houston, Texas
Sponsored by Jo Packham, founder Where Women Create:
THE SUCCESS OF PASSION: Presentation and Q&A with well known Entrepreneurs in the fields of Design, Publishing, Licensing, Retail owners, and more
- Friday – October 25th, 8-10 am
- Monday – October 28th, 9 – 12 pm
THE BUSINESS OF THE STUDIO: Advice and personal questions answered by a: Lawyer, Accountant, Banker, Management Guru, Computer Technician, Business Planner, and others.
- Saturday – October 26th, 8-10 am
- Monday – October 28th, 2-5 pm
LET PEOPLE KNOW WHO YOU ARE: Information and advice from a: Publicist, Agent, PR Firm, Marketing Expert, Branding Guru, Promotion Professional, Event Co-ordinator, Social Media Authority, Advertising Specialist, and more.
- Sunday – October 27th , 8-10 am
- Tuesday – October 29th, 2-5 pm
THE ART OF ORGANIZATION: Those women and men featured in Where Women Create’s Book of Organization will share their reasons, ideas, secrets, and products be- hind why and how they keep themselves and their notes or papers, materials, supplies, and tools organized. Receive mountains of useful information, see endless examples, enjoy hands-on activities to create jar lids, labels, boxes, and so much more using die-cut machines and embossing folders (designed by Where Women Create and created by Sizzix). Enjoy a special “treat” to help you “feed” your creativity!
- Wednesday – October 30th , 9 am – 12 pm
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October 18, 2013 — When it comes to taking money out of your retirement accounts, what are your options?
Is there a problem taking company stock, or is it better to take a lump sum distribution?
Is it a good idea to invest in a Roth IRA?
And, should a traditional IRA may be a better choice? If so, why?
Financial Advisor Sheldon Weiner answers to these questions on the Oct. 18 episode of News Channel 8’s Let’s Talk Live. Don’t miss it.
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Oct. 15, 2013, Vertical Response — “Social media’s most professional network is rolling out a new feature that could help your business grow,” writes reporter Lisa Fergison. “LinkedIn users can now follow channels, which are broken into broad-based topics such as marketing strategies, higher education and healthcare. Once you follow a channel, it shows up on your home feed.”
In this article, she asks PR expert Hope Katz Gibbs “How to Use LinkedIn’s New Channels to Grow Your Business.”
Click here to read the interview.
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Starting October 6 through the 16th, world-class authors including E.L. Doctorow, Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz, Columnist Dan Savage will showcase their work and share their insights and creative process for Washingtonians at the 10-day Washington DCJCC Hyman S. & Freda Bernstein Jewish Literary Festival.
Headliners include an American master’s exclusive look at a hotly anticipated novel, a lawmaker’s sweeping vision for a stronger nation, and a sex columnist’s frank talk about sex, love and marriage. The Festival will be a lively celebration of the depth and breadth of Jewish literature in America today.
- Literary master E.L. Doctorow opens the festival on October 6 with an exclusive preview of his newest book,
- Andrew’s Brain: A Novel, a story that questions what we know of truth and memory, brain and mind, due for release in January 2014.
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October 2, 2013, Vertical Response / LinkedIn — Social media’s most professional network is rolling out a new feature that could help your business grow. LinkedIn users can now follow channels, which are broken into broad-based topics such as marketing strategies, higher education and healthcare. Once you follow a channel, it shows up on your home feed.
What’s the benefit, you ask?
Multimedia journalist Lisa Furgison interviewed Inkandescent PR founder Hope Katz Gibbs about how small business owners can use the channels to their advantage.
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October 2013, Be Inkandescent magazine — When properly used, body language can be your key to greater success. It can help you develop positive business relationships, influence and motivate the people who report to you, improve productivity, bond with members of your team, and present your ideas with more impact. Here are a dozen tips for using body language to project confidence, credibility, and your personal brand of charisma.
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October 2013, Be Inkandescent magazine _ It happens far too often in today’s businesses. A superstar manager or individual contributor leaves the organization, and no one has planned for a replacement.
I’ve seen it happen at the highest levels of organizations when the CEO dies in an accident or another key player has a heart attack.
I’ve seen it happen when a top sales person is recruited away to join a competitor.
The organization is shocked and panic sets in and sometimes poor decisions are made.
There is a better way to handle this. Why not take time to identify and prepare whoever has the potential skills and abilities to move into key positions? Having a well-thought-out succession plan is critical to your organization’s success.
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September 27, 2013, Bank of America Small Business Community — In today’s Bank of America feature article, reporter Robert Lerose interviewed PR expert Hope Katz Gibbs on the secrets of getting the best exposure for your business.
“The elevator speech—a statement that sums up what your business does in 60 seconds or less—seems to be a staple of marketing today,” Lerose explains. “It’s also a reminder for business owners to use every opportunity to make a clear, memorable impression on their clients and prospects.”
Don’t miss his Q&A with Hope Katz Gibbs, author of the upcoming book, PR Rules: The Playbook.
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Contact: Hope Katz Gibbs
Inkandescent Public Relations
hope@inkandescentpr.com / 703 346-6975
Tell a great story in a concise and clever manner, add in pithy subheads and easy-to-remember bullet points, and call readers to action
Washington DC, Today’s Date — “Grabbing the reader’s attention, encouraging them to attend an event or learn more about a product or service, and intriguing reporters so they want to learn more is the goal for any good press release,” says Inkandesent Public Relations founder Hope Katz Gibbs, a veteran journalist who for more than a decade has been happily writing interesting press releases that get picked up by the media.
“Whenever I’m writing a release, my purpose is to tell a story—albeit briefly—that makes readers want to learn more about the topic I’m discussing,” she says. “Of course, it’s also rewarding to write a press release in a way so that it reads like a mini-article, since this gives it a greater chance of being picked up by newspapers, magazines, and blogs.”
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September 12, 2013, CBS MoneyWatch — “Do you feel like you’re spending 24/7 on the computer, applying to job after job and constantly tweaking your online profiles, but are no closer to securing a new position?” asks CBS MoneyWatch reporter Amy Levin-Epstein, who interviewed HR expert Sharon Armstrong on some things you can do offline that will be complementary to your online efforts.
Armstrong’s advice: “Work with headhunters. Utilizing these professionals can not only help you get an interview, but also a competitive salary once you’re the one that they want. It behooves them to get you the highest salary since their fee is based on it. The downside is that they will present several qualified candidates. That is a minor drawback.”
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September 10, 2013 — In this episode of Let’s Talk Live, Certified Financial Planner MIchael Egan talks with News Channel 8 reporter Sonya Gavankar about:
- What are the different types of IRAs?
- What are the contribution limits for 2013?
- Are beneficiary designations that important?
- What are the distribution rules?
Click here for his important insights.
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With no formal education in business, entrepreneur and author Jo Packham has risen to the top of the craft community as a publisher of several successful magazines for artisans.
The creator and editor-in-chief of “Where Women Create,” “Where Women Cook,” and her newest, “Where Women Create Business,” Jo been a leading innovator in the handmade publishing market for more than 30 years.
Her publishing company, Chapelle Ltd., has packaged more than 1,000 titles for most major publishers in the industry including: Time Warner, Oxmoor House, Meredith Corp. (Better Homes & Gardens), Rodale Press, Random House, Chronicle, and others.
Don’t miss our Q&A with this creative, innovative entrepreneur!
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September 2013, Be Inkandescent magazine — Most workplace lies (and liars) are discovered after the fact — after you’ve signed the faulty contract, hired the wrong person, or agreed to work on that career-limiting project. But wouldn’t it be a savvy professional strategy to be able to spot liars in action, before the harm was done? From my latest book, “The Truth About Lies in the Workplace,” here are seven tips for spotting liars at work.
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September 2013, Be Inkandescent magazine — It would certainly be easier if I could tell you there is one path to take to becoming a successful HR professional—but that just isn’t the case.
Yes, there are undergraduate and master’s degree programs in human resources management and human resources development.
You can obtain certifications from great organizations such as the HR Certification Institute (HRCI) that involve specific years of HR experience, a great deal of studying, and passing a very difficult exam. And then there is the job of retaining your certification by attending classes and reading books selected by HRCI for continuing education credits (and I am very proud to say that “The Big Book of HR” has been accepted as one of those books).
However, many successful HR professionals (and I count myself among them) have taken a different path into the field.
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August 23, 2013, Bank of America Small Business Community — In today’s feature article, reporter Robert Lerose interviewed HR expert Sharon Armstrong about the best places for employers to look for new hires.
“Over this past summer, the unemployment rate has slowly been ticking down and, increasingly, employers seem to be in a hiring mode,” Lerose explains. “But as small businesses restart the hiring process, the challenge to find qualified candidates will likely take up more of their time and energy.”
Don’t miss Armstrong’s insights into what’s different today than before the recession, tips on interviewing well, and how a small business can distinguish itself in the minds of job applicants.
Plus, be sure to download Armstrong’s free report: 100 Best Interview Questions.
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August 15, 2013 — Since Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke announced the Fed’s intention to taper the bond-buying program, know as quantitative easing (QE), the bond market has seen record flows out of all bond asset classes.No sector was spared.
What is happening?
In this episode of Let’s Talk Live, Certified Financial Planner Bryan Beatty talks with reporter Sonya Gavankar about:
1. Why would rising rates cause a more volatile market?
2. What is the real world impact of rising rates?
3. How can you protect yourself against increased volatility?
4. Is there a silver lining reason to embrace this kind of volatility?
Don’t miss their interesting conversation!
For more details on this important topic, click here to read Bryan’s column in the August 2013 issue of Be Inkandescent magazine.
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Aug. 5, CBS MoneyWatch — “You don’t have to be a career coach or a seasoned executive to know you don’t want to burn bridges when leaving your job,” says reporter Amy Levin-Epstein in today’s CBS MoneyWatch article. “But if you’re even considering jumping ship, you may be fretting the conversation. Will it be awkward — or worse, confrontational and damaging to your reputation?”
She interviewed HR expert Sharon Armstrong, who said:
Share what you’re doing to ease the transition. The best way to avoid burning bridges is to make your leaving as easy as possible on everyone left behind. That’s why Sharon Armstrong, author of “The Essential Performance Review Handbook,” advises saying, “I’m in the process of finishing up all my projects and will leave detailed notes on the status of each. Please feel free to call me if you have any questions.”
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Aug. 3, Investment News — “As the Federal Reserve winds down the massive bond-buying program that has kept interest rates low for years, its next chairman will have to excel in people skills, making Janet Yellen the best choice, according to investment advisers,” explains legislation and regulations reporter Mark Schoeff Jr., in today’s issue of Investment News.
For insights, he interviewed Bryan Beatty, a partner at Egan Berger & Weiner LLC.
Although he predicts that the Obama administration will want a “dovish” Fed chair, Beatty wants the next leader to raise interest rates.
“What we need more than anything is healthy savings — real money at the banks,” Beatty said. “It would be very beneficial for spending in our economy if [savers] got a little interest on their money and not have to risk it so much. [The Fed] is fixated on the asset side rather than the disposable-income side.”
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By Andy Hines
Futurist, and Founder
Hinesight
When it comes to thinking globally, I highly advise a wonderful book I just read by Fred Kofman (pictured right), Conscious Business: How to Build Value Through Values.
The author is involved with the Integral movement and the book reflects Integral principles, although it is does not impose many Integral ideas on the reader.
In fact, this is a book that is immensely practical while touching on what are often thought of as soft subject: values, in particular how adherence to values is at the heart of building a successful and sustainable organization.
It has its inspirational moments, but this is not one of those motivational tomes exhorting one to do the right thing. Rather, it provides very practical suggestions that pretty much sell themselves. That is really quite a feat! I came away with several takeaways that I can immediately integrate into my work.
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August 2013, Be Inkandescent magazine — I love to go to book signings.
As an author myself, I find there to be something really special about meeting the writer of a favorite book, or one that I know I can’t wait to read. I thoroughly enjoy getting a personalized greeting and signature on that book. In fact, I have an entire bookshelf of signed books, and they are my treasures.
Several years ago I went to hear former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright when she was on a book tour for her 2005 book Madam Secretary: A Memoir.
In this outspoken and much-praised book, Albright, who was then the highest-ranking woman in American history, shared an insider’s view of world affairs in an era of political turbulence. A national bestseller, her memoir combined warm humor with profound insights, along with her personal testament of what she believed was happening at that time in history.
During her talk, one person stood and asked, “How do we stop globalization?”
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July 19, 2013 — What is long term care insurance and what does it cover?
Does everyone need long term care insurance and will the new healthcare law have any impact on long term care?
And, what is a partnership policy and should that be important to every aging American?
Those are some of the questions that insurance expert Dave Beck answered when he was interviewed by reporter Sonya Gavankar on the July 19 episode of Let’s Talk Live!
“Dave is a partner at Egan, Berger & Weiner LLC in Northern VA, has decades of experience working in the insurance and financial advising industry,” Gavankar told the audience. “He and the other partners at EBW always make understanding retirement-related issues easier to understand.”
Click here to watch the entire interview.
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July 2013 — In June 2013, Lyndsey DePalma’s House of Steep, was awarded Arlington’s Best Business Award.
“This is a big accomplishment in this county, which I believe is one of the best places to do business in Northern Virginia,” says DePalma, noting House of Steep won because it demonstrated significant growth, and that it has had an exemplary impact on the community. “I am blown away by this honor.”
“Being only 8 months old, it was unlikely that we’d win such a prestigious award. What sets House of Steep apart from other fast-growing businesses in the county is largely that our hearts are still in the right place. Much of our growth is a direct correlation of caring for the community that has cared so much to ensure our success. In the weeks since the announcement, that confirmation has grounded me and my team as we ride the start-up wave.”
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How Competitive Are You?
Washington DC, July 1, 2013 — “If you are like most business owners, competition drives you,” understands Hope Katz Gibbs, publisher of Be Inkandescent magazine. “That’s why we tackle the topic in the July issue.”
Featuring interviews with Po Bronson and Ashley Merryman’s new book, Top Dog: The Science of Winning and Losing, the entire issue features insight into their in-depth research.
“For a decade, it’s been a constant drumbeat, issued by leaders of our nation and corporations, to employees and even to our youngest students: we must all be more competitive,” explains Merryman, who with Bronson shares insights into:
- When Worriers beat Warriors—and when they don’t.
- Why Michelangelo needed an agent.
- The power of the home-field advantage.
Merryman and Bronson also provide 7 Tips for Entrepreneurs, including:
- Find a Contest
- Think About What Went Wrong the Right Way
- In General, Beware of Following “The General Rule”
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By Hope Katz Gibbs
Founder and President, InkandescentPR.com
Why do so many small businesses fail?
Because the very characteristics that make entrepreneurs want to start a business are the ones that cause them to stumble.
That isn’t news. Business experts have been shouting about this fact for decades—including many we have interviewed for Be Inkandescent magazine, such as life coach Martha Beck, “Don’t Sweat the Small Stuff” guru Richard Carlson, “E-Myth” author Michael Gerber, business tycoon Ted Leonsis, and Fast Company magazine founder Alan Webber.
How do the fireworks created by PR work their way into the mix?
From our publicist’s perch at Inkandescent Public Relations, we have been privileged to work inside dozens of companies—from start-ups to multimillion-dollar corporations. We’ve helped them make fireworks, and equally importantly, catch the embers so they continue to shine.
We have also witnessed their challenges. From these, we culled the “Trifecta”—three trends that that can trip up even the most energetic entrepreneur, with even the most carefully crafted business plan. Do any of these monikers describe you?
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If you have read anything about long–term-care insurance, you know that rates are increasing, and more insurance companies are withdrawing from the marketplace. Here are the questions you should be asking.
Washington DC, July 1, 2013 — “If you have read anything about long–term-care insurance, you know that rates are increasing, and more insurance companies are withdrawing from the marketplace,” writes insurance expert Dave Beck in the July 2013 issue of “Be Inkandescent magazine.
A partner at Egan, Berger & Weiner LLC, Beck says there are three questions worth asking:
- Why are rate increases occurring? Will they continue to go up?
- What will The Affordable Care Act mean to long-term-care plans?
- What is the future of the long-term-care insurance industry?
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July 2013, Be Inkandescent magazine — Several years ago, I heard a speech by Mariah Burton Nelson that has stuck with me to this day. A former Stanford University and professional basketball player, she was also a competitive swimmer and is now a published author and motivational speaker.
Nelson tells a lot of very powerful stories about her career in sports—but what I remember most was what she said about competition.
If the person in the next lane was swimming faster than she was, it made her swim faster and better. The concept of “competition,” Nelson said, has a negative connotation in many situations—but she explained that if competition makes you perform better, it can be a great thing.
I had never thought of competition as beneficial, and her speech caused me to think about people or situations that make me work harder or smarter because someone or something is better than I am.
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July 2013, Be Inkandescent magazine — In the world of investment, winning and losing has much to do with the concept of risk.
In fact, in my experience, the best investors are those who look at investing as an art, rather than a science. The tools they rely on most are common sense and experience.
What I was most intrigued by in the book, “Top Dog: The Science of Winning and Losing,” by Po Bronson and Ashley Merryman, is the discussion of whether individuals are wired to win or lose—and how this affects innovation and responses to setbacks.
From a financial planning point of view, here’s how I believe people’s perspective on winning and losing relates to saving for retirement.
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June 21, 2013 — The Bond Issue. We all know it’s an option to buy bonds vs. stocks—but what is the best investment?
“Since 2007, investors have poured almost $1.4 trillion dollars into bond funds; I presume this was done in an attempt to be safe,” says Howard Pressman, a Certified Financial Planner at Egan, Berger & Weiner, LLC. “But are these investors truly safe, or will they be sorry?”
In this interview on Let’s Talk Live, Pressman explains to reporter Sonya Gavankar:
1. What investors have done differently since the market fall in 2008.
2. If there are dangers in this type of behavior.
3. If you can lose money in bonds, what a better approach might be.
4. How investors can protect themselves.
Don’t miss a single minute of this informative interview! Click here to watch.
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June 14, 2013, Bankrate — Reporter Rachel Hartman writes, “Jumping out of planes, scuba diving, and deep sea fishing can lead to more than weekend thrills. They may also affect what you’ll pay when you take out a life insurance policy.”
In this article for Bankrate, she interviews Egan, Berger & Weiner partner and insurance expert Dave Beck about how to buy life insurance if you participate in a dangerous hobby.
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In his foresight work, Woodgate is known for developing what is considered a paradigm-shifting approach to future studies, demonstrated in his book “Future Frequencies” (Fringecore 2004) and his work on leveraging dystopian futures and rhizomatic thinking techniques, as well as in his merging of progressive culture with future studies.
His clients have included Philips Electronics, Intel, Shell, Fiat, Nokia, Pemex, AKZO-Nobel, GSK, Casio, Nestle, SWB, MTV Europe, Intel, Ford, Kellogg’s, Coca Cola, BBC, WorldSpace, Nissan, and many more.
So it was a pleasure to talk to Derek in this podcast interview about:
- The Futures Lab—what it is, why he started it, and what the organization is working on today.
- The big companies he’s worked with, and how the research he’s done for them played out in their business and society at large.
- His work on the Future of Play—and how it impacts small businesses.
- His books, including your newest, Future Flow to be published this year.
- And, the emerging issues that small business owners need to be aware of.
Download our interview here.
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June 2013, Be Inkandescent magazine — Much like Malcolm Gladwell’s “Tipping Point,” my forecast is that Sheryl Sandberg’s title “Leaning In” will become a business and social concept that we’ll be referring to for years.
Consider Melissa Lawrence’s discussion of this in her “I’m Just Sayin’” column on CloudMom.com.
“Success doesn’t mean staying in a game that’s not for you because leaving connotes failure,” she writes. “Rather, it’s having the courage and self-confidence to go for what you want, and the forbearance and maturity to accept the consequences.”
I’ll go with that—as I can easily relate to it from all the work I do with social entrepreneurs around the world.
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June 2013, Empowered Women International — In this article, Marga Fripp shares the story of Sushmita Mazumdar, a natural connector who wonders about everything and everyone. Her childlike appreciation for the world around her and her desire to inspire everyone to see in it what she does is what makes Mazumdar such a special artist.
“There are people sitting right next to us, and we don’t know their stories!” insists book artist, writer, and educator Sushmita Mazumdar, whose chosen form of artistic expression is hand-making books, most of them true stories.
These are brought to life using vivid colors, captivating design, and a variety of unusual materials. Though a talented graphic artist, Mazumdar is not an illustrator, which has forced her to devise imaginative ways to make her stories visually stimulating without relying on the drawings used in most children’s books.
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June 2013, Be Inkandescent magazine — Oh, how I wish Sheryl Sandberg had written “Lean In” when I was starting my business career!
I absolutely love this book and the concepts it covers, and I think it should be required reading for anyone interested in a career in business—men as well as women.
Actually, the concept of leaning in doesn’t just apply to a business situation, but can be used wherever you are in life.
I am just happy that this new generation of women has the encouragement they need to pursue their career aspirations—without hesitation.
I admit it. I have been guilty of leaning back when I should have been leaning in.
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June 2013, Be Inkandescent magazine — Sometimes, the solution to a problem is right at our fingertips.* So why do we resist? That’s a question worth pondering over a fabulous cup of steeped tea.
In fact, tea and herbs feed the soul and nourish the body. So let nature be your friend.
Here are 10 reasons to drink tea and herbal tisanes.
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June 2013, Be Inkandescent magazine — As the daughter of a Chinese father and American-born mother, I have been exposed to many different stereotypes in the US, Europe, and Asia.
I also grew up taking in mixed messages about what it means to be a successful, professional woman.
While both my parents expressed their belief that I could achieve anything with hard work, focus, and dedication—I saw that professional women’s struggles in Asia are exacerbated.
As I grew older, I saw that women are not taken seriously professionally if they are too passive, but that they can also be derailed professionally by being seen as “too ambitious,” “too expressive,” “too opinionated,” or “too individualistic.”
The trick for me was Finding a way to lean in that felt right.
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Ten female leaders offer insight into how they lean in—and how you can, too
Washington DC, June 1, 2013 — “Thirty years after women became 50 percent of the college graduates in the United States, men still hold the vast majority of leadership positions in government and industry—which means that women’s voices are still not heard equally in the decisions that most affect our lives,” explains Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg in her bestseller, Lean In.
An extension of her wildly popular December 2010 TedTalk, Sandberg has turned her initial 15-minute-and-28-second snapshot of the issue into a 187-page showstopper that not only examines why women’s progress in achieving leadership roles has stalled—it has galvanized us in ways perhaps more profound than the Atlantic Monthly article “Why Women Still Can’t Have It All,” by Anne-Marie Slaughter.
Why has Sandberg’s movement struck such a chord with so many women?
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Hope Katz Gibbs
Inkandescent Public Relations, www.inkandescentpr.com
hope@inkandescentpr.com / 703 346-6975
May 13, 2013, Washington, DC — Edinger Associates PLLC served as counsel for Franchise Services of North America Inc. (“FSNA”) in its acquisition of Advantage Rent A Car (“Advantage”) from Hertz Global Holdings, Inc. (“Hertz”) and the sublease of Advantage’s nationwide rental car fleet from Hertz. The acquisition of Advantage was consummated on December 12, 2012, and FSNA has been managing Advantage since that date.
Edinger Associates also served as counsel for FSNA in its transaction with Macquarie Capital (“Macquarie”) to provide equity financing for the Advantage acquisition. The final phase of the equity financing was consummated on May 3, 2013 in connection with the re-domestication of FSNA from Canada to Delaware and the issuance of a newly created class of FSNA preferred shares to Macquarie.
The Edinger Associates team advising FSNA was led by Principal Brook Edinger with the assistance of Partners Ladd Johnson and Scott Woodworth, and Senior Counsel Dag Wilkinson, as well as the Firm’s Associate and Legal Assistant staff.
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To celebrate our NEW Lessburg location, and our 15th Anniversary, Curry’s has some great deals to share!
Guaranteed lowest prices on tires—always.
Curry’s is your hybrid expert: Let Curry’s recondition your battery and bring your hybrid’s gas mileage and horsepower back to life!
Use Curry’s Cash to get $20 off your next service.
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Tara Sheahan is rocking the world—one soul at a time.
As the founder of Conscious Global Leadership, she has created an organization whose mission is to support leadership development through mindfulness training and emotional intelligence.
“CGL’s curriculum is results-oriented, and designed for personal and business growth,” says Sheahan, whom we met at the 2013 Conscious Capitalism Conference.
“It won’t take long before everyone is a little more conscious,” insists this dynamo, who is doing everything she can to ignite global social harmony by strengthening the character and consciousness of leaders across all fields. “We aim to share best ‘inner’ practices and how to mentor others for heart-centered living and leadership.”
“Leaders have an extraordinary ripple affect,” insists Sheahan. “We have the power to inspire greatness at home and in our workplace, by first inspiring it within ourselves. This can only occur through inner awareness of thoughts and beliefs that drive us every day. They can be fear-based or love-based.”
“Right now, for example—what thoughts are driving you?” she asks.
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May 2013, Be Inkandescent magazine In this article, Oxford University’s David Pendleton is at Webster University to share his insights into All You Need to Know About Leadership.
We asked him: What are your strengths and weaknesses as a leader?
He said: “I’m no good at planning and organizing. And I’m here today for our interview with my colleague Sean Coleman from Webster University. The good news is that he’s very, very good at planning and organizing. So together, we can be dangerous. But on my own, I’m a bit of a damp squib when it comes to organizing things.”
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May 2013, Be Inkandescent magazine —
HR people, on the whole, don’t tend to be risk-takers. I observe this all the time as I interact with HR professionals in different situations.
Yet, while many HR people would prefer their work worlds to be defined, no matter how hard we try, the people we support constantly push us out of our comfort zone.
I, for one, think that is a good thing. Why? Because when HR professionals—or any business person for that matter—get too settled, they risk becoming complacent.
HR supports the organization and its people, and we work to maximize the success of employees so that the organization can grow to new and exciting levels. And to do that, you have to take risks.
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May 2013, Be Inkandescent magazine — What impressed me when I read “Wild Company,” by Mel and Patricia Ziegler, was that their story of innovation, risk taking, determination, persistence, and bold action is certainly fascinating, especially in view of their wild success.
That story aligns with the stuff of entrepreneurial endeavors. Have a dream, take a courageous leap, encounter trials and tribulations, learn lessons, hopefully succeed and grow.
But how does entrepreneurship work when success and growth isn’t measured in monetary terms—but in lives saved and the extent to which centuries of social inequities are exposed and restructured?
That is the world that a particular type of entrepreneur—social entrepreneurs—inhabit. Their world shares some of the same challenges, problems and pains of the Ziegler’s world, but it sometimes doesn’t tally well on a spreadsheet of accounts.
Case in Point: Lily Thapa.
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May 2013, Be Inkandescent magazine — In this article, Empowered Women International Founder Marga Fripp shares the inspirational story of Paulette Mpouma, who came to EWI in 2011 with an idea that stemmed from spending time playing games with her children as a way to teach them about their home country, Cameroon, and Africa in general.
“I was concerned by how little many people know about Africa, so I sought to create a product that would teach geography, history, religion, and cultural studies in a fun, creative way that would appeal to a wide audience,” she explains.
Based on a lesson that she has taught her children—“If you don’t go to school enough, you have to pay for what you don’t know”—players are encouraged to roll the dice to advance around the continent, earning money for knowledge that they have and paying out for what they don’t know.
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May 2013, Be Inkandescent magazine — “The significant problems we have cannot be solved at the same level of thinking with which we created them,” said Albert Einstein.
This quote highlights the importance of teaching children to think creatively so that they will be prepared to cope with the complexities of our modern world and face situations that do not have one clear answer.
What is creativity, and why is it important? How can it be nurtured? How have creative thinkers changed our lives and shaped our ever-changing world?
These are just a few of the questions that may be used to start the conversation and raise awareness of creativity and its connection to innovative solutions. There are also children’s books that share the stories of children who have solved everyday problems with innovative ideas.
One of my favorites is The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind, by William Kamkwamba and Bryan Mealer and illustrated by Elizabeth Zunon. It’s an inspiring story of a young boy in Malawi who used scrap metal, tractor parts, and pieces of old bicycles to create a crude yet operable windmill to bring electricity to his village.
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May 2013, Be Inkandescent magazine — Does this sound familiar? You are sitting at your desk, and that colleague who has bugged you for ages does something that irks you again. You know that it’s illogical—there’s just something about this person that rubs you the wrong way.
So what do you do? Odds are good that your first response is to tense up. Your shoulders creep toward your ears, your heart races just a little, and maybe your stomach cramps a tad. You silently plot ways to avoid the person—or pretend that venting to your friends makes you feel better. You’d rather not react like this, but it seems uncontrollable.
Click inside for tips on how to stop jumping to conclusions with our colleagues.
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May 2013, Be Inkandescent magazine — Is being wild and adventurous—and strategically planning ahead for retirement—a non sequitur?
That question was answered for me when I read Mel and Patricia Ziegler’s book, “Wild Company: The Untold Story of Banana Republic.” Not only did they start their retail fashion company with $1,500 and no business experience, they re-imagined military surplus as safari and expedition wear.
Innovation was the key to their success. And the same is true when it comes to being creative about planning ahead for your financial future. Consider this research.
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April 19, 2013 — When Financial Planner MIchael Egan appeared on today’s episode of Let’s Talk Live! today on News Channel 8, reporter Sonya Gavankar asked him to explain:
1. What is Medicare? Explain the different parts.
2. Is there a deadline for an individual to enroll in Medicare coverage?
3. Is Medicare the only coverage an individual needs?
4. If you have Medicare and supplemental coverage, then you are fully covered, right?
5. How do you enroll for Medicare?
Egan impressed the audience and producers with his expertise and ability to explain the complicated concepts. Click here to watch this interesting episode!
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WEBSITE — IT Shows
Click image for larger view Writing / Concept by Hope Katz Gibbs
Website design by Michael Gibbs
Website coding / database by Max Kukoy
About IT Shows, Inc.
IT Shows provides USAID with management, administrative, evaluation, and strategic program design services that create, build, and strengthen the capacity of programs in developing countries.
With nearly two decades of experience, our team of international development experts is well-versed in managing, procuring, and recruiting for all project tasks.
Here’s how:
- For each project we are engaged in, we assign capable project supervisors and administrative support. IT Shows leverages the latest communication technologies and facilitates support for global prevention programs.
- Our core capabilities include the use of web-based applications, virtual conferencing, and cutting-edge communications tools.
- Our staff has extensive experience in performance-based contract management, with particular expertise implementing international health programs involving HIV/AIDS/STDs, family planning, and other reproductive health programs.
- Our approach: We pride ourselves in developing creative solutions that result in rapid change. The key to our success is building highly collaborative relationships with the dozens of international health institutions and non-governmental organizations that have long been our clients.
How can we help you? To learn more about our services, projects, contract vehicles, and career opportunities, we invite you to peruse our website. Give us a call so we can discuss how IT Shows can be a valuable team player for your next project. Contact us at 703-284-7068.
“Leaders have an extraordinary ripple affect,” insists Sheahan, whose husband is the equally conscious Casey Sheahan, CEO of Patagonia. “We have the power to inspire greatness at home and in our workplace, by first inspiring it within ourselves. This can only occur through inner awareness of thoughts and beliefs that drive us every day. They can be fear-based or love-based.”
“Right now, for example—what thoughts are driving you?” she asks. Great question!
In this podcast interview with Tara Sheahan, you’ll learn how you can:
- Tap into your innate emotional intelligence, and understand the nature of the mind and its patterns and conditioning, to release old beliefs that no longer serve you.
- Become conscious by better understanding yourself through self-acceptance and compassion.
- Discover that work is play, with success and prosperity as a natural byproduct.
- Be more inspired every day as you start to choose the activities, people, and situations that lift you up.
- Plus, Casey Sheahan chimes in on how Tara Sheahan made an impact on the employees and bottom line of Patagonia by sharing one simple with idea with him.
- And, the couple discusses how their belief in being conscious—and living in a place of love versus a place of fear—has made their relationship stronger.
Don’t miss a moment of our interview.
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April 2013: Is your hybrid vehicle letting you down like a bad date? Has your get up and go got up and went? If you want to increase your gas mileage by 30 percent or more, let Curry’s master hybrid craftsmen restore your car’s performance—like magic!
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All across the globe, small children spontaneously speak of previous lives, beg to be taken “home,” pine for mothers and husbands and mistresses from another life, and know things that there seems to be no normal way for them to know.
From the moment these children can talk, they speak of people and events from the past—not vague stories of centuries ago, but details of specific, identifiable individuals who may have died just months, weeks, or even hours before the birth of the child in question.
For 37 years, Dr. Ian Stevenson (pictured below) has traveled the world from Lebanon to suburban Virginia, investigating and documenting more than two thousand of these cases of past-life memory.
Tom Shroder is the only journalist who has had the privilege of accompanying Stevenson in his fieldwork. He followed Stevenson as he talked to dozens of children and families touched by this phenomenon.
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April 2013, Be Inkandescent magazine — Now, more than ever before, people want to work for an organization they can be proud of. This is especially true of employees in the Millennial generation, who openly talk about wanting to be proud of where they work.
Any employer can create a culture where employees feel pride. Mission-driven organizations have a built-in way to make people proud—stress the mission and the impact that mission has on the community, the nation, and/or the world.
Companies in the for-profit arena can stress the good their product or service brings to the greater community.
Living up to the mission can bring a real sense of pride to employees.
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April 2013, Be Inkandescent magazine — “I want to push the window of sustainability to change the direction of American society,” says Eric Henry, president of TS Designs.
With his business partner and TSD CEO, Tom Sineath, Henry (pictured here) has been in the screenprinting business for more than 30 years, and he is the winner of the Sustainability Champion award from Sustainable North Carolina in 2009.
Outside of his business, Henry devotes much of his time to furthering the sustainable agenda in various community organizations. He founded North Carolina’s Burlington Biodiesel Co-op and has run his car on biodiesel (or straight vegetable oil) since 2004.
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April 2013, Be Inkandescent magazine — “Here at EWI, we know these women can and will succeed,” says Marga Fripp. “Each year, we work with dozens of budding entrepreneurs who have a great idea, and the ambition to turn it into a successful business.”
Case in point: An inspirational story written by Jeremy Brandt-Vorel, an EWI volunteer, about Elda Larue and Lyzbeth Monard. These graduates of Empowered Women International’s Entrepreneur Training for Success program are the creators of delicious cake pops that have become a birthday party staple.
“We’re so excited to have them be part of EWI community, and we look forward to watching them grow and prosper,” Fripp shares.
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April 2013, Be Inkandescent magazine — Brainstorming encourages children to think of new ideas, combine existing ideas in new ways, and generate original and often unusual ideas.
Once they have opportunities to practice this type of thinking, children can improve their ability to make inventive or creative connections between ideas and also come up with new ideas.
An important rule of brainstorming is that all ideas are accepted and none are judged. The process of suspending judgment is important as it emphasizes the importance of accepting all possibilities and helps to ensure and maintain an open mind.
Many great inventions would have met an early end if the inventors had not been open to possibilities and continually thought of new ideas. Thomas Edison’s lightbulb is one such invention.
While other inventors had already invented an electric lightbulb, the filaments that they used were not practical and either burned out quickly or used too much electric current. Edison brainstormed with his team and conducted more than 1,200 experiments before finding a filament that would burn for a long time without burning out.
A fun way to introduce the power of brainstorming to children is a strategy called SCAMPER.
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April 2013, Be Inkandescent magazine — Why wait for your body to provide biofeedback about the bad food you eat? Our bodies need exactly the vitamins and nutrients found in food that comes from the earth, so do your beautiful self a favor and fuel your bodacious bod with good foods that are readily available, are convenient, and are a direct way to give your cells precisely what they need to avoid disease or disharmony.
Say no to belly pain, bloating, and digestive imbalance, and start feeding yourself the nourishment your body needs.
Click inside for some easy ways to get what your body is begging for.
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April 2013, Be Inkandescent magazine — When it comes to the concept of doing well by doing good, I immediately think of my favorite quote from Winston Churchill, who said: “We make a living by what we get, we make a life by what we give.”
Of course, how this is carried out will differ from person to person. For me, it requires a life balance between family, professional aspirations, and altruism—by helping those less fortunate than I.
In their book, “Conscious Capitalism,” authors John Mackey and Raj Sisodia identify four tenets that all good businesses must possess to succeed in the 21st century. Click inside to find my four tenets for success.
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By Ashley Freund
Editorial Assistant
Inkandescent Public Relations
An essential element to successful career advancement in today’s corporate environment is the use of professional and personal connections.
Finding a job is a daunting process, but support from someone who can vouch for your talent can make the process less stressful and ultimately leads to more self-confidence. I found myself in a constant cycle of recommendations and interviews at many companies, but was unable to find an organization that I felt passionate about until Inkandescent Public Relations.
When I met Mrs. Gibbs, founder and president of Inkandescent Public Relations, I felt instantly at ease. She told me in detail what would be expected from me and how, with time, my responsibilities would grow. I have tackled and successfully completed tasks from database control to press releases, and I have had the opportunity to meet people from across the world. I started as an intern, and I am now honored to be the paid editorial assistant for Inkandescent PR.
Making the transition from intern to editorial assistant was intimidating at first. I found myself concerned about how I was going to balance my life at Virginia Tech, where I am a senior, continue to be a contributing member of Kappa Delta Sorority, while maintaining the high quality of work that was expected of me at Inkandescent PR.
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All across the globe, small children spontaneously speak of previous lives, beg to be taken “home,” pine for mothers and husbands and mistresses from another life, and know things that there seems to be no normal way for them to know.
For 37 years, Dr. Ian Stevenson traveled the world from Lebanon to suburban Virginia, investigating and documenting more than two thousand of these cases of past-life memory.
Tom Shroder is the only journalist who has had the privilege of accompanying Stevenson in his fieldwork. He followed Stevenson as he talked to dozens of children and families touched by this phenomenon. What did he learn? And did the evidence convince this skeptical journalist of the existence of old souls?
You’ll learn about that, and more, in this podcast interview with journalist, author and one of the foremost editors of humor in the country.
Click here to download the podcast.
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Embrace Your Power: Red
Financial independence, courage to live your dreams, and confidence in yourself—these are the qualities that make your root Chakra strong.
It is balanced when you feel secure about your career, home, family, and future. From the base of your spine, imagine roots growing from your feet into the earth. Ground yourself by knowing that you are safe and protected.
Root Chakra: Muladhara
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Balance: Orange
Abundance, wellbeing, pleasure, and sexual health are the attributes of this Chakra.
Situated midway between your navel and the base of your spine, you are happiest when your body is healthy.
Stand firmly, radiate love from your core, and belly dance to balance this Chakra.
Sacral Chakra: Swadhisthana
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Glow Like the Sun: Yellow
The ability to feel in control of your life starts in the gut. Located behind your navel, envision this Chakra full of sunshine, for it is in balance when you feel calm about your present and in control of your future.
Radiate confidence, and your solar plexus will glow.
Solar Plexus Chakra: Manipura
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Love With All of Your Heart: Pink and Green
Joy and inner peace are central to your heart being happy.
This central spot is the beginning of your spiritual life, and is balanced when you feel good about your relationships with your lovers and friends, kids and parents.
Honor them, forgive them, and embrace the bliss that is around you as you tap into the strength of your heart.
Heart Chakra: Anahata
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Speak Well: Blue
Your true self is communicated through the honesty of your words.
Envision your Throat Chakra radiating out into to the universe, spreading messages of love and peace, and sharing ideas about how to make the world a better place.
Speak well—with clarity, honesty, and passion. You will be heard.
Throat Chakra: Vishuddha
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See Clearly: Purple
The ability to focus on, and clearly see the big picture of your life, stems from a special spot in your brow—your third eye.
Focus on your future, appreciate all that you have learned in the past, and meditate on your inner knowing.
Third Eye Chakra: Ajna
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Dream + Believe: Brown and Black
From light to dark, embrace all that is coming your way, and know that your dreams can become your reality.
Listen closely to your inner knowing using the two Chakras situated above your ears. Breathe deeply, and be open to hearing all that is possible.
Temple Chakras: Astaroth
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Sparkle: White and Crystal
In that space between sleep and awake, you know who you are and what you truly want.
Perhaps more importantly, you know what your purpose is here on earth.
Your temple Chakras (there are two of them, of course) relate to divine communication and your relationship with God. Believe, and act to make your dreams come true.
Crown Chakra: Sahasrara
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March 29, 2013 — Egan, Berger & Weiner partner Sheldon Weiner, Let’s Talk Live reporter Sonya Gavankar picks the brain of the financial adviser to find out if we really need guaranteed income in retirement.
Weiner offers insight into:
- How important is guaranteed income in retirement?
- What exactly are your sources of income in retirement?
- What do you mean by withdrawal rates?
- At Egan, Berger & Weiner, how do you structure your retirement income?
Click here to watch this 5-minute interview.
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