It's Strictly Business. Or Is It?

Published: Nov. 17, 2020, 10:47 a.m.

What\u2019s In This Episode:

Business isn\u2019t supposed to get personal. Business is business, they say, and we\u2019re supposed to keep our personal lives out of it. But can we? More importantly, should we?\xa0

This week, Jill calls up three colleagues to find out just how personal business can get, if at all. She speaks to business guru and game changer Melissa Ford, KazSource founder, CEO, and podcast host Eric Kasimov, and award-winning social media speaker and course author, Marki Lemons-Ryhal. They have very different backgrounds and business experiences but what they reveal may surprise you.

Jill Salzman is currently growing her third entrepreneurial venture, The Founding Moms, the #1 platform for mom entrepreneurs to build better businesses. She\u2019s the author of\xa0 The Best Business Book In The World\xa0and the best-seller,\xa0Found It: A Field Guide for Mom Entrepreneurs. Jill gave her own TED talk on 11/11/11,\xa0was dubbed a\xa0\u201cmommy mogul\u201d by\xa0CNNMoney, a\xa0\u201cCool Mom Entrepreneur We Love\u201d by MSN Live, and was recently named one of the Top 50 Women to Watch In Tech as well as a Top 100 Champion Small Business Influencer after Forbes\u2019 named The Founding Moms one of the Top 10 Websites For Entrepreneurs.\xa0She\u2019s shared the speaker stage with Richard Branson, Sheryl Sandberg, Daymond John, Marilu Henner, and Desmond Tutu and she regularly appears on ABC7\u2019s Windy City Live TV show. In her spare time, Jill enjoys kloofing, baking, and erasing her daughters\u2019 crayon artwork from the kitchen walls.



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