Baby Shea–So Soft So Sweet

Rudolph Hair Clips

Rudolph Hair Clips

My 1st Entrepreneurial Diva who I would like to feature is Valerie Kaenel.  She has started a new business for herself, called Baby Shea.  You can find it at www.babyshea.etsy.com.  She makes the most adorable baby blankets, clothes, and hair clips, I have ever seen.  My sister just had twins, a boy and a girl, so I bought 2 of the baby blankets and a set of hair clips.  I even bought a hair clip for myself to wear to my son’s football games.  His colors were purple and white, so I bought a purple butterfly hair clip.  Take a look at some of her items.

I met Valerie about 10 years ago.  She is the sister of my neighbor at the time.  We met and clicked right away.  She is a dentist by trade and a fellow soccer star.  We battled many teams together and she makes my smile pretty.  She is a mom to 2 beautiful little girls.  She and her husband, Preston, own a Dental Practice, Padre Dental in San Diego.  Where she finds the time, I have no idea.

Lady Bug Hair Clip

Lady Bug Hair Clip

You can currently find her on ESTY, which is the EBAY equivalent for homemade items.  It is a fantastic resource.  On Sunday November 23, she will have a booth at the Encinitas Street Faire.  I will be there as well to help support her in her endeavor.  Stop on by if you are in the area.

If you would like to contact Baby Shea, leave a comment, I will take care of the rest.

Pink Giraffe Blanket

Pink Giraffe Blanket

An Article about Mompreneurs

Here is an article that I found on  the msnbc Website.

It talks about Mompreneurs, what they are, and how they are viewed.  I think this article is right up our alley.

Let me now what you think!!

Primary author Eve Tahmincioglu has been covering small business and entrepreneurship for more than a decade. She regularly writes about small business issues for the New York Times and BusinessWeek’s SmallBiz magazine. She also writes the Your Career column for MSNBC.com. She is the author of “From the Sandbox to the Corner Office.”

MOM ENTREPRENEURS NEED TO GET OVER THEMSELVES

What the heck is wrong with the word entrepreneur? It’s a perfectly good word that has been around for a long time.

But nooooo, we can’t seem to leave well enough alone. It turns out moms who come up with a great business idea are no longer entrepreneurs. They are “mompreneurs”.

The cyber lore out there says “mompreneurs” are women who come up with a product or service while home with their children, and somehow stumble upon the idea because of a need they discover while taking care of the little buggers.

With that kind of reasoning, people who come up with a great idea at the local watering hole (which is where many great ideas are hatched), would be called “drunkpreneurs”, or “boozepreneurs.” You see where I’m going with this?

There are mompreneur magazines like The Mompreneur; books, including “Mompreneurs: A Mother’s Practical Step by Step Guide to Work at Home Success”; and websites such as Mompreneurs online.

Lately, PR people have been constantly pitching women-owned businesses for me to write about and using this label, which isn’t new but seems to be getting more popular these days. For some reason they think the business product or service isn’t quite enough to get my attention.

Well, it’s annoying. First off, it’s hard to say. It doesn’t have four syllables like entrepreneur so I find myself constantly saying “momtrepreneur,” but that’s not right.

Secondly, women are constantly complaining that they’re not treated equally when it comes to the business world, but they feel compelled to alienate a whole gender by making it seem like their accomplishments are that much more important because they experienced motherhood while crafting a business concept.

So do we want to be part of a club and label ourselves? I’m asking this about men and women.

I figured I’d ask a linguist. “There are lots of ways we use language to distinguish ourselves. It’s part of identifying ourselves as members of a group. It’s not surprising,” says John McCarthy, professor of linguistics at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.

If a man came up with the word and started calling entrepreneur moms momprenuers, that would have been a major no-no, McCarthy says. But since it appears that women concocted the label themselves, it’s OK.

He calls the label and others like it “cute.”

OK, it’s cute, but will it last? McCarthy isn’t betting on it because rhythmically it doesn’t quite work. He suggests the word “mommypreneur” rolls much easier off the tongue.

Sorry, I don’t like that either.

Thank goodness, not all mommies are using the moniker.

Deborah Stephens Stauffer and Kathleen Whitehurst invented DaysAgo, a digital day counter that you attach to food containers so you know when something has been in the fridge too long. The idea was sparked by half-used baby food jars. You know, the ones that fill up the fridge when your kids are tots, and you take your chances using, hoping the mashed peas weren’t opened last month.

It’s a great idea and doesn’t need the “mompreneur” gimmick to sell, even though these gals are the perfect definition of the word. “Just because I struggle daily with juggling conference calls and nap schedules does not mean I am any different than other traditional entrepreneurs,” Deborah says.

Amen sista!

Discovering my Entrepreneurial Spirit

I discovered my entrepreneurial spirit when I was a stay at home mom about 7 years ago.  It all started when a girlfriend of mine and I went on a trip to San Francisco.  We both were happily married with 2 beautiful kids.  We would try to go away for a weekend twice a year.  This trip, like I said was to San Francisco.  We took a a day trip to go wine tasting in Sonoma, Ca.  As we went from winery to winery, we were noticing the wine charms in all of the gift stores.  We thought that was such a great idea.  (For those of you who do not know what wine charms are, they are decorated rings that you put around the stems of your wine glass so you know which one is yours.).  We came home from that trip and started researching. 

We went from creating wine charms to jewelry.  We started having home parites for our family and friends.  I had a booth at my local town fair, Carlsbad Village Fair.  I also started to go around to local boutique shops for clothing, kids, and wine, selling my jewelry and charms.  It was such a rush when a store woner or manager would place an order.  It was such an accomplishment.

It gave me such a sense of purpose.  Don’t get me wrong, not that being a stay at home mom did not have it’s own extremely imortant purpose.  It gave me an outlet to be creative and to be business minded.  It gave me courage to go out on my own and start something.

This blog is going to be dedicated to women doing the same thing.  I want to help promote women who have the courage to start something new and put themselves out there.  I also want to help women entrepreneurs find information to help them on their journey.  Hopefully we can all help those who follow their dreams, grow them even bigger than they ever imagined.

“The difference between the impossible and the possible lies in a person’s determination.”
- Tommy Lasorda

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