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Stacked Keys Podcast

Stacked Keys Podcast

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A proposito di questo titolo

The idea to talk to women who are out there living and making a difference is where the Stacked Keys Podcast was born. There are women who make a difference, but never make a wave while paddling through life. Immediately I can think of a dozen or more who impacted me, but I want more. I want to talk to those I don't know and I want to share with an audience that might need the inspiration to find their own beat. This podcast is to feature women who are impressive in the work world-- or in raising a family -- or who have hobbies that can make us all be encouraged. Want to hear what makes these women passionate and get up in the morning or what they wish they had known earlier in life? Grab your keys and STOMP to your own drum.

© 2026 Stacked Keys Podcast
Economia Gestione e leadership Leadership Scienze sociali
  • Episode 248 -- Jenn Zorotovich -- Embracing Hard Topics Turned A Professor Into A Better Caregiver And Leader
    Jan 15 2026

    What if the hardest topics in life became the ones that made you feel most alive? We sit with researcher, professor, and mom Jenn Sorotovich as she traces an uncommon arc—from teaching adult development and death and bereavement to coordinating an ALS clinic—and explains how grief, grit, and real-world practice reshaped her idea of success. The stories are intimate and vivid: a hospice patient savoring the warmth of a hand on her arm, another insisting on lipstick before the day begins. These moments don’t just tug at the heart; they rewire how we value time.

    Jenn pulls back the curtain on academia’s pressure cooker—tenure clocks, lack of maternity leave, and the myth of “work-life balance.” She advanced fast, then chose purpose over prestige, moving into clinical leadership where each three-month check-in with ALS patients underscores the urgency of now. Along the way, she unlearned perfectionism and people-pleasing, embraced average days as victories, and modeled repair and honesty for her students and kids. We get practical insight into building psychologically safe classrooms, navigating hot-button topics with care, and turning applied learning into meaningful growth.

    If you’re wrestling with outdated systems, craving a more humane pace, or wondering how to spend the one resource you can’t refill, Jenn’s outlook offers both clarity and courage. Expect candid talk about motherhood, policy gaps, end-of-life care, and the mindset shifts that make room for joy. Listen for the challenge she issues to women everywhere: reject narrow scripts, claim your choices, and stop waiting for permission.

    If this conversation moved you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review—then tell us: what will you stop waiting for today?

    Music "STOMP" used by permission of artist Donica Knight Holdman and Jim Huff

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    1 ora e 3 min
  • Episode 247 -- Rebecca Nichols -- Building A Wedding Business And A Marriage Rooted In Faith
    Jan 8 2026

    A love story rerouted a career—and built two purpose-driven businesses along the way. Meet Rebecca Nichols, the horticulture grad who fell for antiques, church pews, and the wedding world, then teamed up with her husband Jeffrey to grow both Tea Olive Designs and a community swim school that’s changing lives. From that first trailer of rented pews to crafting floral designs across Alabama, Rebecca shares how she scaled to 32 weddings a year, learned to say no, and now curates experiences where logistics, beauty, and empathy meet.

    We dig into the behind-the-scenes moments most people never see: the “wedding lull,” the text threads that spike in the final days, and why opening the door to the ceremony still brings tears after hundreds of events. Rebecca explains the hidden costs of outdoor weddings, why Southern summers can wreck flowers, and how tents demand power, flooring, and restrooms that rival venue fees. She also makes a heartfelt case for reviving floristry, teaching classes, and giving people the confidence to arrange with taste, not fear.

    At the center is a marriage built on faith, premarital work, and a daily practice they call “die to live.” That mindset shapes everything: how they set goals every January 1, tithe through tight seasons, and carry each other’s loads across two seasonal businesses. We also step into Swim Prep’s mission: saving lives and healing. From infant float skills to adult low-impact classes, the water becomes a place for courage, recovery, and community—often with a therapy dachshund softening first-day nerves.

    If you’re a bride, planner, creative, or entrepreneur, you’ll leave with practical takeaways on boundaries, pricing the real cost of “at-home” events, and turning wishes into work through the next right step. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves weddings or small-business stories, and leave a quick review so more people can find the show.

    Music "STOMP" used by permission of artist Donica Knight Holdman and Jim Huff

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    58 min
  • Episode 246 -- Elizabeth Anderson -- Regular People Understand the Value of Hard Work
    Jan 7 2026

    Start with a simple promise: make the software not suck. That’s Elizabeth Anderson’s north star as CEO and co-founder of Lunar Lab, where she pairs human-centered design with ethical strategy to build products that people actually use. We dig into how she and her co-founder left toxic tech during the pandemic, learned sales with a stack of library books, and created a B Corp that treats impact as a requirement, not a tagline.

    Elizabeth walks us through her product playbook: invite every wild feature idea, then slice to a focused MVP using value–effort prioritization. She explains why intuitive UX, honest feedback, and transparent leadership beat shiny UI and bravado, and how turning away misfit projects builds trust and long-term results. Her case studies—from aviation apps to startup forums—show the power of launching lean, testing in the real world, and earning the right to add more later.

    The conversation widens toward public service and parenting. Elizabeth ran for Congress in a deep-red Alabama district to force a neglected conversation on maternal health and rural hospital closures. She shares the data, the human costs, and what changed when she met voters across the spectrum with empathy. At home, she and her husband—both in tech—block YouTube at the network level, yet let their kids read widely and ask hard questions. Safety, context, and open dialogue beat algorithmic chaos.

    We also talk about libraries as civic infrastructure: job training, lending tools, community programs, and yes, the books that powered Elizabeth from poverty to entrepreneurship. If you care about product design, inclusive leadership, or healthier communities, this story is a practical guide to building with purpose.

    If this conversation sparks ideas, follow and share it with a friend. Subscribe for more candid, human-centered talks, and leave a review to help others find the show. What’s one feature you’d cut from your next big idea?

    Music "STOMP" used by permission of artist Donica Knight Holdman and Jim Huff

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    1 ora e 4 min
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