In this, the latest chapter of my career, now nearly a year old, I vowed that I would stay true to myself and when I felt I had something to share, I would. Regardless of how it might appear to the outside world. I think it is important for others who might be having similar thoughts. I think it is important for my teenage kids to know being vulnerable and transparent leads to a more fulfilling life. And I think it is important for my own psyche. So...
Six months. I’ve been an entrepreneur and a business owner now for six whole months! After 30ish years in the ‘corporate’ world, it still feels odd to type that sentence out and see it on the screen.
We live ever more in a crowded and divided world. Never have there been so many people and never it seems have we been so disconnected from each other. It seems we listen less, talk more and really never understand people who are different than us. So what is one to do? I say start by thinking about yourself.
This week...9/11 actually (more on that in a minute)...marks the five month mark of losing my job. Much has transpired since then...much.
We’ve all heard it. Maybe we’ve all said it. Sadly many of us may have had it said directly to us. And of course ‘it’ is, ‘it’s not personal, it’s just business’. Well I say BS. It’s a lie.
The next chapter begins. I’m betting on me...and you.
This week marks seventy-five days since the biggest transition of my thirty plus year career.
It is week three of life's transition or at least career transition. It's cliche I know, the image I mean, you know something along the lines of the 'sky is the limit'. Ugh.
Well...it’s been a couple of days since this chapter of my career (also known as the Caterpillar chapter) closed. These couple of days have been an eye-opening…
This story isn’t about what you might expect. Even though it is about what I’ve learned the past year since launching my first entrepreneurial adventure – Lucas Partnering – it isn’t about leadership, marketing strategy, or tips on being on your own. No, this is about what I’ve learned about the community I’ve lived in for the past 30 some years...Peoria, Illinois.