Meet Anne Zuckerman – a serial entrepreneur who took the challenge of steering her family’s retail business to new heights after her mother’s passing.
Her story is fascinating, inspiring, and a true testament to resilience and innovation. Listen as Anne shares with me the insights and lessons learned along the way, in her entrepreneurial journey.
In 2022, Anne launched her podcast, Just Wanted to Ask, to provide a platform to educate and inspire fellow entrepreneurs. She is truly an inspiration!
You can reach Anne at:
www.JustWantedtoAsk.com or www.AnneZuckerman.com
A little about me:
I began my career as a teacher, was a corporate trainer for many years, and then found my niche training & supporting business owners, entrepreneurs & sales professionals to network at a world-class level. My passion is working with motivated people, who are coachable and who want to build their businesses through relationship marketing and networking (online & offline). I help my clients create retention strategies, grow through referrals, and create loyal customers by staying connected.
In appreciation for being here, I have a couple of items for you.
A LinkedIn Checklist for setting up your fully optimized Profile:
An opportunity to test drive the Follow Up system I recommend by taking the
10 Card Challenge – you won’t regret it.
Connect with me:
https://www.linkedin.com/in/janiceporter/
https://www.facebook.com/janiceporter1
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Hello everyone and welcome to relationships
rule. I am so excited today to have as my guest, my new friend,
I hope I can call her my new friend. And Zuckerman and Anne
is coming to us all the way from Philadelphia area. And first of
all, welcome to the show. And
oh, thank you so much for having me. This is
absolutely wonderful. Well, it's
my pleasure. And and I actually met online of
course, on a podcast, Power Hour that common our mutual friend of
ours runs and, you know, you see all these faces on the screen,
and you kind of hear a few people talk and I kind of knew
right away I wanted to know more about and and so when we
reconnected after that, and we have become fast friends, which
I love. So and is really a multi entrepreneur, I mean, a multi
printer, as I think we call it, she has had several businesses.
She too is a podcaster, which I love. And we'll talk about all
of this, but I want to start with really her story, which
goes back to the firt, the main company that she started called
Aegis Inc. And the first question I had, of course is who
is EDA? And that's where the story starts. So And will you
share that story with us? Because it's there's so many
little gems in it that I want people to know.
Oh, thank you so much for asking. Yes, my company
is eat us. And or eat us Incorporated. I'm sorry, I'm
having can, cause. Thank you so much for asking. I love my
story, because it started with my mom. My mom was Edith. And
she was trained in design and corset making. She came to the
United States from Hungary and opened a lingerie shop. And as
much as I tried to get away from it, I ended up joining her in
the store. As she was working with my grandmother, my
grandmother passed away, and I hopped in. So I learned the
lingerie business, because she was trained in design and corset
making. She did alterations. So if someone came in and needed a
special bra for a dress, and needed, the straps changed, or
needed, the back changed, needed to be taken in, she would just
go in the back and fix it. And but she was hurt. She was old
school, European, I don't have to teach you how to do it, I
just have to show you and you have to learn. And so that was
my training. She sat down at the sewing machine. And I was
expected to know how to do all of this. And in fact, I did
learn I used to shorten robes and night gowns and taken bras
and adjust straps. And then I eventually became a mastectomy
fitter. So that's where everything started. And then of
course, everything in life changed. We moved into computer
software and automated systems. And a friend of mine. We had a
billing system that was done by my grandfather, he would hand
write bills every month. So we had house accounts. Yeah, men
would come in and purchase their night gowns and ropes and bras.
And they would say charge it. And he would write them a bill
at the end of the month, and they would pay and he and my
grandmother passed away my grandfather became quite
elderly, and it was a burden for him. And I knew that we could
computerize the system, we could automate. And a friend of mine
knew how to do that came to the store. And he created a program
for me. And this is way back in the early 90s. And so it was all
code. And as soon as he left the store, I changed the coat was
awful. But anyway, so that's where I started because I just
had to put my finger in every single pot to see what would
work and what didn't work. And so That's where my journey
began. And then a my mother, we had incorporated the business my
mother passed away. And that's when I said, the world is my
oyster. And I can do whatever I want. And I'm going to go for
it. Okay, so
I'm going to stop you there for a second before we
get to the next phase. Because what I didn't realize until you
told this story just now, because I knew the story, but
the details that you just mentioned, I can't believe how
similar that is to my background, because my
grandmother, who actually came from Russia, but she lived in
England, my grandmother was a seamstress, and an alteration
is, and she was a she beaded, she sewed sequins and things
like that on dresses, and so on. And so she taught my mom how to
do all of that. And she made us little beautiful dresses, my
sister and I that were matching all the time. And, but she died
sadly at like 56 or something from breast cancer, of course,
back in those days. But my mother, when we moved to Canada,
started as a seamstress in the back of a high end women's
clothing store. And my father was a clothing manufacturer. So
I grew up all around this, this and I was a saint, I learned how
to sew and so on. And so it just took me aback when you when you
told that story because I get it. And it also reminded me of
the book. Outliers. Have you read that book? Yeah, yeah. And
how? What's his name? The guy. The guy that wrote it?
I can see it in front of me. Oh, same here.
Anyway,
we'll get back to that. But he talks about how you
know, the the Jews came over from the old country. And that's
what they knew. So that's how they moved forward in America,
right? Was the hours and hours and hours of things that like
they could only so or they could Yeah, anyway, it's just kind of
fantastic to me. So I'm still trying to remember his name.
It's not Daniel Pink. It's the other one and I get them.
Anyway, okay, so now you had inherited this store, basically,
in this business. And now you had, how did the idea come to
you to start your piece of that business, which was which is
bezzie broad discs, and a little bit about that entrepreneur?
funereal journey is how you made it happen, which I think is
really karma. And things happen for a reason, type of thing. So
tell me about that.
Well, I had seen a product. And in the back of my
mind, I remember the day so vividly, I was thinking I could
do better than that. And I, it just so happened, I was single
at the time. And I went on a singles hike on the Appalachian
Trail of all places. And there were quite a few of us. And we
stopped for lunch. And a whole bunch of people went swimming, I
sat on a rock was just observing. And after lunch, we
all got up and started walking again. And I happened to be
standing next to a young man. And I casually said, and what do
you do? And he said, he was an industrial design engineer. And
I said, What does that mean? Then he said that he designed
different parts of for things like vacuum cleaners or spray
bottles, or he designed at one point he designed the drip
section of for hospital IV connections, goodness, yeah. And
I thought, Oh, how interesting. And I casually said I've seen
something and I think I can do better. Can you help me? Yeah.
And he said, Well, I don't know. Let's Let's meet. So we did. And
I showed him what I had seen and I and we talked about it. And
the two of us came up with a plan and a design. He had
connections and I took everything that I had inherited
and met with patent attorney and then we discussed up pro rotate
mold, which was aluminum. From the prototype mold, I eventually
moved into a true production mold. Wow. And then years later
moved into the mold that I currently use, which is a double
cavity injection mold that's made of steel. It's a 500 pound
steel mold that's housed at a manufacturing facility in New
Jersey, which is the exciting part. The exciting part of all
of this is that I have a product that's manufactured here in the
United States,
which is amazing.
Yeah, and that's, that's the exciting
part. The exciting part is that anything is possible.
Well, you didn't know what you how to do what you
wanted to do. You had a vision, right? true entrepreneur, you
had a vision. How's it going to happen? You didn't think about
how you just wanted to make it happen. Right? And that's,
that's today there. You know, we use that term entrepreneurial,
so lightly, not I'm not as an entrepreneur compared to you
because you really truly had that vision. And I think that's
a true entrepreneur Gladwell, Malcolm Gladwell. Just came to,
oh, my God. And you knew it. I love that. Yes. Yeah, yes, I
couldn't get away from it. Okay, so now you've got a new product,
you have an you're in the digital age, and now you have to
figure out how to do online shopping and all of that good
stuff. Right? as well. So long. So how long into that business?
Did you start podcasting? Did you start, you know, networking,
all of that good stuff.
Well, what happened was Okay, so now I had
a product, right. And in the meantime, my mother was great at
business, but she hadn't bought the building. So I ended up
having to close her business. So now I was fully invested in my
bezzie broughtest business, right, but I needed to learn
marketing, but I needed to learn marketing in this new age of
digital. And so I looked around, and I said, Okay, fine, what can
I do? And that led me on this crazy road that I've been on, of
learning about funnels and software, and how to market and
where people can find me and all of that. Most, so much of
business these days is done through social media. I know.
And social media has been a challenge of mine to say the
least for
me, too. Yeah, I don't love it. So.
But I always have my options open. And I'm
always looking to see what I can absorb, where information is
going to come from. And I truly believe that we all get gifts on
a daily basis. The question is if we're open to receiving them,
so I knew nothing about podcasts, nothing. And there was
one podcast host that I had been introduced to. I listened to all
of his podcasts. And I thought that was great, but never gave
it another thought. I certainly didn't want to be a podcast
host. Oh, you didn't
know No at all? No.
But I saw the opportunity to be a guest. Yes.
So I said, Okay, fine. So I will be a guest on podcasts. And that
will be my way of marketing without having to tackle the
whole issue of social media, Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn,
all of that. I'll just be a podcast guest. Yeah. And I
happened to go to a networking meeting. And the presenter at
this particular meeting was a lady who I had met a few years
before. And at that time, she was managing director of a
networking organization. She had not started in podcasting yet.
But when she spoke at the networking event, she had she
had opened a podcast School, a school to train podcast hosts,
right. So I called her up because I knew her and I said,
Listen, I I don't want to be a host I want to be guest. Can you
help me? And she said, not really what I do, but my school
is opening on Monday. I said, Okay, I have nothing to lose,
I'll just sign up for the school. That way, I will learn
what podcasting is all about a learn how to be a better guest.
Right? And that'll be that. And I started the school and she
said, and in 28 days, it's now 30 days, but in 28 days, you
will have a podcast. And I said, But but But you said No buts. In
28 days, you will have a podcast and I said, but But what if and
she said there are no what ifs? In 28 days, you'll have a
podcast. And 20 days later, I had a podcast, and then
discovered that I absolutely love podcasts and podcasting and
being a host. Yeah. It is truly a passion of mine. I love
meeting people. I have loved every single guest I've had on
my podcast. I've learned something from everyone. And
being a serial entrepreneur. For me. It's like kidney candy box.
Yeah. Yeah. And I love it. And your podcast is
called just wanted to ask. So how did that come to be?
Well, I, as I said, I was a big fan of
someone's podcast, and what some how in passing. He said, just
wanted to ask and I said, That's it. That's the name of my
podcast, just wanted to ask. And I interview entrepreneurs like
myself, coaches, consultants, and authors. And what I do on my
podcast is promote other people's businesses, because
that's what I have a passion for. I love helping people do
the same thing I did get out there on a bigger stage and a
bigger platform. So
have you ever thought, and I'm just listening
to our episode, actually, that I, you kindly had me on your
podcast, a month, last month. And, and you are a great host?
It's you can tell that you love it. So that's kind of the fun
thing I do, too. I love interviewing people, because I
love finding out more about people. We're both really
curious people, I just know it. And have you have you ever
thought of having another like sideline, which is helping
entrepreneurs, coaching entrepreneurs, or however you're
training them, whatever you would make that be? Because
you've been you've been that person that takes the leap that
that something I don't have that that would is it's like, it's
trust, it's trusting in them in the process or trusting in the
that it's going to work, right? You're a positive person, and
you just think, well, I'm going to invest. I know something's
good is gonna happen. Have you thought about that? I have.
And I've certainly had people ask me a
lot of questions. I love answering people's questions,
and helping in whatever way I can. And connecting people with
other people as you do. We both like connecting people with
whatever information we can share. And it's and you've
introduced me to this whole other aspects of relationship
building. So, yeah, I love doing that. Have I put together a
program yet? No. But it's not beyond my imagination. Or,
because I don't know where life will take me tomorrow.
Right? I was just that your new the new piece has
to be a play on just wanted to ask. And really, like did you
ever want to ask or something? You know, something like that?
Yeah. And kind of fun.
It's crazy. Recently, I've talked I've
spoken with friends of mine. And you know, there's this concept
of chasing squirrels. Oh, yeah. I know when running after shiny
objects. And some of my friends have thought that that's what I
did. I was just chasing, chasing shiny objects without thought
But, and it's taken me a number of years. But now, in hindsight,
if I look back, and it's always 2020. Looking back, I realized
that in many ways, it was strategic. Everything that I've
done, since my mother's passing has led me along a path, a path
of learning, and a path of growing and expanding. And I
think that's what I truly, truly appreciate most about what life
has to offer, especially now.
So I did read that your dad had said something
about you not going to university, you're not going to
college. And, and I think your mom said, he just didn't want to
pay for it. Right. And it's funny because my mom didn't get
to have a, an advanced education. And she was a
lifelong learner. And she was passionate about learning
different things. And as she became well, I don't think it
happened, really, until she became a widow. But then she
started going and taking courses and learning about things. And,
and so for you, you didn't go to college? I don't think right,
but you started to do other things that taught you along the
way. Is that correct? Yeah,
I did go to I did go to a junior college.
Okay. Okay. Um, I felt that I wasn't able to come play for
years. Okay. Um, it frightened me and in in saying that my
parents were divorced. So you get 111 piece of advice from one
side? And then you have other input from the other side? Yeah.
And because my parents were all immigrants, yeah. They didn't
really understand what that part of the US was all about, because
they had gone to school in Europe. And so it was a totally
different system. Of course, of course. And so for me,
everything was pretty new. If I had to do all over again, would
I have gone farther? Possibly.
Well, what was it that frightened you? You said
you were scared to go further?
Well, part of it was I really didn't think that I
was going to do well. Okay. Okay. And then I also didn't
know what I wanted to be when I grew up. Yeah, there's that too,
right. So yeah, it's all. Now when I was a junior college, I
did major in retailing. That's what it was called, then not
marketing, but retailing. And I did learn about business and
brick and mortar. Yes.
Okay. You know, it's interesting, if you had it
to do again today, in today's world, would you go to
university?
It's an interesting question. I'm not
sure I know,
because I've changing my tune on it as well.
I mean, I grew up with a father who had come from England, who
had been in the war and didn't get to go to university, and he
was really smart and should have, but there was no money to
do that. And the war was on. So all I ever heard my sister and I
was you're going to university, you're going to university
because he didn't get to write. So we went to university. And
that was the thing to do back then. And then it's changed. Now
I believe so much. And I have one daughter that would go to
school for her whole life if she could, she loves learning, and
she loved being at university. But she went away and traveled
and she came back and she finished. And when she came
back, I said, we're done. If you go back, you're on your own,
right. So she did. And she finished university. The other
one hated school, the only reason she was in college was to
play basketball, and she never graduated. And it was like, at
first devastating to me that she didn't finish. I felt I hadn't
done my job. But I don't feel that way. Now. I think that that
wasn't meant for her and she had to learn in different ways. So,
you know, it's not the stigma anymore for me that I thought it
was back then. And I don't know if I today. I don't know if I
push it as much. Get out there and learn about
life. Yeah, you're right. It was a stigma
for me too, for many, many years. And then all of a sudden,
I looked around and said, but look at all these really, really
successful people who don't have a degree. Exactly. And I
thought, okay, fine, there's possibility for me, and then I I
heard a gentleman named Alex scharffen. Speak. And he's
written a very small, thin book entitled e p t, the
entrepreneurial personality type. Oh. And when I heard him
speak, I just I cried, I absolutely cried. Because he was
speaking about me, let that growing up. He always felt like
he was on the outside. And I realized that as much as I love
learning, I'm not great at sitting in a classroom, I will
listen to lectures. For hours, I will listen to podcasts for
hours. But to be in a, an, to be in a classroom, and confined
with one subject of that seems daunting for my brain. Okay. So
I can't say that I haven't had an amazing education. Exactly,
exactly. So what's your goal for your
podcast? Because I know that you've just returned from a
podcast conference, and you're pretty pumped up. Do you have
new goals for your podcast now? Well,
I've my podcast has passed the 100 episodes.
I was episode 100. I know I'm excited. Yes,
we should have celebrated. Yeah, well, we still
can. Yes. Okay. So I passed the 100. Mark. So that is certainly
an achievement. Absolutely. And I am interviewing some
absolutely amazing people. So in terms of a goal, I'm just happy
to, to have interview after interview after interview. And
as I said, it's like Christmas day, every day that I interview
someone, because I never know what I'll learn and who I get to
meet. Yeah, that's
so true. So many fun things that happen from I
actually got a very strange, or I'll tell you about it offline.
But somebody new that I met in the podcasting world, and it
sort of opened another, another door. And that happens all the
time, which is really kind of fun. So I know that you are I
already know that you're a curious person. And I always
like to ask a couple of quick questions of my guests. And one
of them is my curiosity question, which is, you know, do
you believe that curiosity is innate? Or learned? And part
two, what are you most curious about right now?
Is it innate or learned?
Just so you know, yeah.
I think people can learn. I think people can
learn that. For me, it was innate, but dormant. Ah, I did
not realize as a child, that it that I had a gift of being
curious. As children, sometimes we just don't see what's around
us. We think that the gifts that we have, everyone has, but they
don't. Correct. Yeah. And so people are amazed to that. I, I
love learning about software. I love learning about technology.
I love learning about all sorts of topics like marketing. And as
I get older, that hasn't deterred me, I'm still
interested, I still want to learn. And so and people are
surprised by that. And I'm surprised when people don't have
that.
I know me too. I agree. And are you do well, I
know you love podcasts. And do you read as well? Are you a
reader like real books or ebooks or what do you like? Or do you
watch things? Well,
I have discovered that I learned best
by listening. Okay, and it was really interesting. I had some
visual issues growing up, which I didn't realize I had. When I
got my first Kindle, I realized that when I enlarge the print,
it was so much easier for me to read. Which I also didn't I
didn't know as a child. So that opened one door and then when I
discovered audible, that opened another huge door. So I love
listening to books on audible and when And I drive I mostly
listen to business books. Yeah. So that's why I've listened to
Gladwell, and I've listened to other people, because those are
the kinds of books that I love listening to in the car. Now,
because I'm in the podcast space, I do listen to podcasts
when I'm not driving. Yeah, I listened
to, I'm not driving as much as I used to. So
I have to find I have to go for a walk and listen to a podcast
as well. So yeah, so that's great. Well, this has been so
much fun. And I want to ask, one last question in sent in the
sense of my audience is probably very similar to yours. It's
entrepreneurs. It's small business owners, it's
commissioned salespeople, it speakers authors, what piece of
advice would you share with them that you think keeps you going?
What keeps me going, or that you've
learned that stays with you, you know, that
you've learned a long time ago.
There's always more to learn. And everything,
there's so much that comes around again, I met you and we
talked about relationships. And that was a part of my life that
I wasn't paying enough attention to. And through meeting you, I
have upped my game. I know, I love it. That's great. And so
again, I have no idea what doors open. But plus, I think, and
I'll share this as well. And that is that for many years,
people saw network marketing as not something wonderful. But in
today's world, network marketing companies can teach you so much
about marketing and how to do business the right way. And I
think that's one of the main lessons, I've learned that
there's just so much information out there, also within the
network marketing community, because companies are large, and
they keep up with everything current. It's not like going to
a class where you don't know what kind of business the
professor has worked in, or where they are in their
business. So the possibilities are endless. Oh,
for sure. And we haven't even talked about that,
because I'm a network marketer. And I love that industry. And I
think not only does it teach you about business, it teaches you
about yourself. There's a lot of personal development involved in
being a network marketer, for sure. So yes, maybe that'll be
next time. We'll just talk about that. So thank you again, for
being on the show. And it was a delight. And people can find you
where, and I will put it in the show notes.
But my podcast is just wanted to ask.com it can
be found on iTunes, Amazon, and Spotify. My product is that
bezzie be easy. I woman.com. Right. And again, and things
like that. Right. Right. And on both websites, there's lots of
information about me as well. Awesome.
Thank you again, thank you so much. And thank you
to my audience for listening as usual. If you liked what you
heard, please leave a review. We always love that it helps the
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