Tag Archives: Entrepreneurs

New Wedding Pics Up! Check them out!

Full albums on Facebook. This is one of the many things I love doing!

http://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.297080346977388.76991.145733358778755&type=1#!/pages/JL-Events/145733358778755

HEARpreneur Story Amanda Hollowell‏ YouTube

Amanda Hollowell the founder of JL Events, LLC tells her story.
I was asked to do a small piece about my wedding planning business in Savannah, GA. The who, what, when, where and why. Check it out!

My Entrepreneurial Reading List

Cover of "Girl, Make Your Money Grow!: A ...

Cover via Amazon

I have been in the entrepreneur spirit since January 2011. During that time I have read 7 books from management to emotional stability. All these books have been great in inspiring me and giving me direction. Here is a little recap of these books and what I took from them. Please note; the one major lesson that I am learning during this experience is that it is not about just growing your business, it is about growing you. Emotionally, as a small business owner you go thru just the same amount of ups and downs that your business goes through. What I am finding no ones tells you about this part of the business experience, it is organic to say the least but not for the faint of heart. So entrepreneurs beware! On your shoulders actually does sit the negative you and the positive you and it gets crazy fast. On to my reading list…

(Disclaimer: All books were purchased on sale at Books A Million and Big Lots, remember your budget people)

1. Russell Simmons – Do  You!: 12 Laws to Access the Power in You to Achieve Happiness and Success

This was a good book where I felt like he was more open and honest about the emotional journey you go through in the hustle game and staying to true to yourself. Not a lot of business resource advice, but definitely got my mojo going.

2. Glinda Bridgforth and Gail Perry-Mason – Girl, Make Your Money Grow!

This book is special to me, I had the pleasure of having dinner with the amazing Gail Perry Mason in Savannah, GA and she signed this book. There is a simple premise in this book, financial empowerment but with a minority voice for the tone of the book. I loved it, clear debt understanding the market and the next thing you know you are on Scott Trade. Not that simple but a great 101 Intro to securing your financial freedom.

3. Rhonda Byrne – The Secret

I read this book when it first came out. What works for me most in my journey is the practice of envisioning your dreams, staying focused and meditating.

4. Jeffery Gitomer – The Sales Bible

The Bible is The Bible; I will never replace that in my life. However, The Sales Bible is a great road map to selling yourself and your business. It is easy to read. It is written in more of a resource style that you can pick up and read a chapter to help you at that moment.

5. Kevin Phillips – Bad Money

Great read! Talks about the rise and fall of the American economic system 2006 – 2008. This gave me great perspective as a business owner in a global economy and shit does roll down hill.

6. Marcus BuckinghamGO Put Your Strengths To Work

Just like the title says it puts you to work on a series steps to achieve success. I am still a work in progress on this book because you have to keep working on it and remembering to do it.

7. Tyler CowenDiscover Your Inner Economist

There is nothing wrong with thinking like an economist, economy =money hello? This book helped me understanding my motivations and potential consumers or business partners motivations and how you can motivate people to your way.

This is just the beginning of my reading journey. I plan on journaling this process which I think will help with the moments of doubt or concern. I recommend everyone start their own reading adventure in life, you never know what you might learn or the knowledge you might gain. I do not think one person has the one right answer for you. But through research and having a good perspective, I believe we all can find the answers we are look for.

Facebook Birthdays

Image representing Facebook as depicted in Cru...

Image via CrunchBase

I recently had a birthday and this birthday I decided to look at my Facebook Birthday wishes in a different context. We can view this as a Facebook Birthday Case Study. According to Mr. Zuckerberg’s playground (Facebook) I have around 660 some odd friends on Facebook throughout the country. That is pretty impressive considering I only talk to 10 people daily, usually. That 10 almost stays in constant rotation due to my OCD personality to network and meet new people. That was a tangent, the focus of this “case study” is to track how many people would say Happy Birthday on my birthday, what this means to me as a person or a Facebook user and as a small business owner.

We will start with my feelings as a person. Not to be too personal but I am on my second year into my third decade of life. It has been pretty nerve wracking this past year. Change of job, meaning loss of job and entering into the world of entrepreneurship. “Danger Will Robinson, Danger!” is the best way to describe my feelings about this endeavor.

This birthday I was going to change, this year I was going to be present in every moment of my life. This year I was going to engage every Facebook friend, well only those who engage me first, kidding. This year on my birthday I was going to launch my blog and take my event planning business to the next level. This birthday I was going to be a present to myself. After reading this last paragraph, there is plenty on my plate. LOL

My birthday rolls around and I turn on my Facebook alerts to my phone and I am ready, 660 or so emails here we go. The first 30 I was pumped, I was like oh yeah, you like me, you like me, you like me, then I was like who are you, but who cares you like me. At the end of my birthday evening exactly at midnight, I think I ended with 160 or so Happy Birthday comments on my wall. Now we do the math. Out of my 660 friends 160 of them posted Happy Birthday on my wall. Give or take that is 24% of friends said Happy Birthday, yeah! I felt good about this. It was a great feeling, but my mind wonders what is the average? I mean do I send a Facebook message to the 500 others who did not post and say, what the h…, I thought we were friends? Or do I take it for what it is worth, and say Facebook is a medium to track people at a distance and feel like you are still kept abreast of their lives through picture updates and sending them gifts through games. I mean is there Facebook etiquette? Should there be a disclaimer that says if you add me as a friend you better say Happy Birthday darnit or I will not help you build a darn thing in Cityville. You know, I do not know. I am just observing.

Once the Birthday posts all came in and it was time for the Thank You. I had said Thank You several times throughout that day. There was one Thank You I posted that got a fairly decent response. I posted something to the effect, “now only if I could get everyone one to send a dollar with that comment, I would be rich.” Well not rich, but I would have some money in my pocket. A few agreed with the comment, liked it and someone offered to mail a dollar, when in reality it would totally cost them more to mail that dollar instead of sending it through Paypal. I digress. What if we could do that? Let’s be honest, my 660 friends and I are a component of what makes Facebook worth billions. We all know now that plenty of our information is being sold, track, and used for marketing purposes. I mean come on Facebook is the Matrix, except we are not babies feeding on liquid humans with holes throughout our bodies connecting us to a main frame. Instead we are connected to Smart Phones, Panera Wifi (Loves me some Panera Wifi), Xfinity by Comcast, and however you are getting connected. Back to the point, the point is this would it be wrong to say for my birthday, can you Paypal me a dollar, will you like my business, could follow me on twitter, will you subscribe to my blog? Is that wrong?

The end result of my Case Study, is that not to maximize your Facebook friends for no reason, but maximize to change your world or others. I am always humbled when I read someone’s post on my wall, especially when I know we have not talked. It is always touching to know that you like something I am doing. Now, more than ever we should all take our Facebook Birthdays to the next level, ask for that help you need, spread some good news, or just follow through and try to wish all your friends Happy Birthday. It truly does make a difference.

Ways to get publicity HARO

The Eugene Talmadge Memorial Bridge over the S...

Image via Wikipedia

Repost form a discussion on Black Business Women Online

Helpful Tips

Hi,

Does anyone else subscribe to HARO? What has been your experience? Have you ever gotten in touch with a reporter to help her out? Did that PR help your business out? I was on it for a while but didn’t really use it. I wasn’t taking the time to read the queries and respond to them. I’m trying to make it a point to do so now and wanted to hear from others if it was worthwhile.

For those who don’t know HARO, it’s essentially a listing that you can subscribe to that highlights requests for sources in specific areas (e.g., business, travel, etc…). If you’re an expert at a particular topic, you simply respond directly to the reporter making the query.

This blog provides tips for maximizing HARO.

Thanks

My Response

Hello Michelle, 

I subscribe to HARO and I love the service. It enhances all public relations efforts and streamlines the process. I have been featured, however the website who featured my company went under. I wrote about it on my blog www.theamandaseries.com, topic got featured and the article is gone. One challenge with HARO is there is no tracking system on their end. They do not know if you have been published or if your story has been picked up. They are truly a news interest/tips service that is powered by Vocus. They have a great get your product in a gift/goody bag section and this is awesome, I have seen some pretty prominent awards shows and events needing stuffers.

My name is Amanda Hollowell, I own an Event Planning and Public Relations Company out of Savannah, GA. You can follow me on twitter @mandarellla, I have a blog called The Amanda Series – www.theamandseries.com, my company’s website is www.jleventsllc.com. I love networking and connecting, so please search me out. Have a good one.

Amanda Hollowell

Got featured in article and the website is gone!

Savannah, Georgia - Doorbells

Image by ~libby via Flickr

Yes, I got featured in an an article and now the whole damn site is gone. Talk about bull… I usually never talk like this, but I was actually looking forward to telling you all about this. Below is proof of the article, it happened yall! It just did not live long enough for me to brag about it.

Entrepreneurs! What’s Your Story?May 29, 2011 … Two years later, my husband retired and we moved to Florida. …… My name is Amanda Hollowell and I own my own Wedding and Event Planning Company (Savannah, GA) for the past two years. The last year, I finally left my full time job and became my own boss. It is scary every day, but I love it. …
hearpreneur.com/ask/2011/05/29/entrepreneurs-story/ – Cached

If you anyone knows what happen to this blog, please please notify the police and then me. Kidding, just hit me up on twitter @mandarellla

I was robbed!

You might not always be invited, but you are always welcomed!

I do not know who coined that phrase, but it is an idea I live by. I am welcoming you to me. The things I like, dislike, my clients that I represent and trends that I am spotting. We are not always going to agree, but with civil discourse and me deleting your comments I am sure we will find a way to compromise. Kidding about deleting your comments. I am always open for suggestions, willing to test your products, or just hear you out. So welcome to The Amanda Series, a simple blog but with dynamic content. I hope you enjoy.
Thank you in advance, Amanda Hollowell. www.jleventsllc.com (Shamless plug)