Serial Entrepreneurship with Jessica Wenger McPhaul of Naked Rebellion is the topic of today’s show. Judi hosts the Emmy nominated Costume Designer, serial entrepreneur, and fellow Arizonan Jessica Wenger McPhaul. Just like her father, Jessica eats, sleeps, and dreams entrepreneurship. After being fired as a costume designer for “buying the wrong thing”—when the right thing wasn’t available in stores—Jessica recognized the market need for nude lingerie in all shapes, sizes, and colors. It took years before she and her husband finally built the courage to launch what we now know and love to be the Naked Rebellion. In this conversation, we hear about the tools Jessica uses to successfully manage four businesses and three kids and what it looks like to build an inclusive company in the modern world.
Today on Yes, And:
- Painting cacti between ‘vintage’ women: How Judi and Jessica met
- What Jessica learned from her dad’s entrepreneurial highs and lows
- Starting a company with your spouse
- Jessica’s deep commitment to preparation
- Why you should hire people in their zones of genius—even when you can do the work yourself
- Serial Entrepreneurship with Jessica Wenger McPhaul of Naked Rebellion
This show is supported by:
- AdvoCare® | Use Code “FeelBetter15”
Resources:
- Get on the Speaker School Waitlist
- Get the Fearboss Boss Project Workbook
- Get the print edition goal-focused Possibility Planner OR download it digitally here for FREE
Connect with Jessica:
- Instagram: @jessicawengermcp | @naked.rebellion
- Website: nakedrebellion.com | jessicawenger.com
Connect with Judi:
- Book: Fear Is My Homeboy
- Judi on Instagram: @judiholler
- Judi on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/JudiHollerFanPage
- Website: judiholler.com
- Email: hello@judiholler.com
- Check out HAUS of Holler on Amazon for Judi’s favorite products!
This show is produced by Soulfire Productions
Top Quotes:
- “I’ve never had a “real” job, where someone writes you a check, you have an agreement and there’s a certain number of years on a contract. Sitting in a box that someone else built, from 9-5 was just not something I could do.”
- “There was a time where I was letting the ‘have-to-do’s’ really take over. When I started changing my mind structure to the ‘get-to- do’s’, I was able to free myself.”
- “In the beginning, the only person in your way is yourself. All you really need is coffee, adrenaline and delusion. As you grow, things are going to get more expensive and you start to see all of the things that might become hurdles. But you get to do this.”
- “You don’t have to be worried about what everyone else is doing, yours is coming, so celebrate them.”
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