Welcome to another enlightening episode of Fabulous Speak, where we embark on a transformative journey of empowerment with an extraordinary guest, Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski. Join us as we explore their inspiring stories, delve into the power of resilience, and uncover the secrets to embracing authenticity and self-discovery.
Episode Highlights:
1. The Genesis of Empowerment:
- Kimi shares her personal journeys towards empowerment, highlighting pivotal moments that ignited their passion for self-discovery and personal growth.
2. Breaking Barriers:
- Explore the barriers and challenges that Melinda and Kimi encountered on their paths to empowerment. Learn how she overcame adversity with courage and determination, inspiring others to break free from limitations.
3. Embracing Vulnerability:
- Delve into the transformative power of vulnerability as a catalyst for personal growth and authenticity. Kimi shares her experiences and insights into embracing vulnerability as a pathway to empowerment.
4. Cultivating Resilience:
- Discover the resilience strategies employed by Kimi in navigating life's challenges. From setbacks to triumphs, she reveal how resilience became a guiding force in her pursuit of empowerment.
5. Empowering Others:
- Learn about Kimi's advocacy initiatives and her dedication to empowering others. Explore the ripple effects of her efforts in creating positive change and fostering community resilience.
6. Finding Inner Strength:
- Gain valuable insights into the importance of finding inner strength and tapping into one's innate potential. Melinda and Kimi offer practical advice and tools for cultivating resilience and embracing authenticity.
7. The Power of Community:
- Reflect on the role of community in nurturing empowerment and supporting personal growth. Melinda and Kimi discuss the transformative impact of building meaningful connections and fostering a supportive network.
8. Embracing Authenticity:
- Delve into the concept of authenticity as a cornerstone of empowerment. Kimi shares her journey towards embracing her true self, inspiring listeners to live authentically and unapologetically.
9. The Path Forward:
- Concluding the episode, Melinda and Kimi offer words of wisdom and encouragement for listeners embarking on their own journeys of empowerment. They share insights into the path forward, inspiring others to embrace their potential and pursue their dreams.
Join us in this captivating conversation as we unravel the transformative power of empowerment with Melinda Lee and Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski. Get ready to be inspired, empowered, and motivated to embark on your own journey of self-discovery and personal growth. Tune in to Fabulous Speak In Flow Podcast and unleash your inner potential today!
About Melinda:
Melinda Lee is a Presentation Skills Expert, Speaking Coach and nationally renowned Motivational Speaker. She holds an M.A. in Organizational Psychology, is an Insights Practitioner, and is a Certified Professional in Talent Development as well as Certified in Conflict Resolution. For over a decade, Melinda has researched and studied the state of “flow” and used it as a proven technique to help corporate leaders and business owners amplify their voices, access flow, and present their mission in a more powerful way to achieve results.
She has been the TEDx Berkeley Speaker Coach and worked with hundreds of executives and teams from Facebook, Google, Microsoft, Caltrans, Bay Area Rapid Transit System, and more. Currently, she lives in San Francisco, California, and is breaking the ancestral lineage of silence.
Website: https://speakinflow.com/
Facebook: https://m.facebook.com/speakinflow
Instagram: https://instagram.com/speakinflow
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mpowerall
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Welcome to the speak In flow podcast. Dear
listeners, I am so thrilled to have our esteemed guest today,
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski. She's a founder of culture by choice and
productivity by design. She's an expert and product project
management. And so we can learn so much from her. Welcome, Kimi.
Glad you're here. Thank
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: Thank you, Melinda. This is This is
wonderful. Among other things, I think it's terrific that you're
focusing on executive communication. Because that's
such a big key.
I can't wait to dive in, you focus on product
management project, actually tell me a little bit more about
what you do tell the audience so they get some background and
context?
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: Well, I'm a project manager. And like most
of us, I fell into it come from a technical background, grew up
with computers, in a different way than some of the generations
now have the computers now we're getting mature at the same time.
But as a result, when you become really good at what you do, and
you get promoted, that's when you find out, excuse me, but
they didn't mention anything in the programming class about how
to communicate with actual people instead of modules. So
that's what we focus on, we focus on giving our technical
colleagues a little bit of a boost in areas that they're,
they've got a great deal of potential for wonderful skill
levels in it, they just didn't have the the formal training or
the academic training in it, because they were focused on the
things that got them to the promotion into leadership to
begin with their technical skills.
And that is why I'm so excited to because we're
mirroring leadership development, project management
with, you know, people out there are experts in their fields. And
yet, you know, having the right leadership having the right
communication skills are so essential, and so I can't wait
to dive in. So what I found really interesting about what
you do is you have seven key success parameters for project
management. And so can you tell us more about that?
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: Well, these are parameters that if
they're within the organization's culture, can
really raise your opportunity for project success. And what's
important about this, from the perspective of an executive
communications perspective is this. It has to be a daily
choice to reinforce these kinds of cultural parameters. That's
what we mean by culture by choice, a culture is going to
develop, whether you want it to develop in the direction you
want it to or not. Now, that's going to be dependent on every
single choice you make with every single person that you
deal with. So your leadership becomes amazingly critical. And
we start out with things like clear definition, ownership,
which is, you know, a concept everybody tends to buy into
without being very clear about what they mean, remembering who
we're doing this work for, we're not doing it for ourselves,
we're doing it for our clients or our end users. collaborative
spirit is probably one of the biggest areas where it feeds
into executive communications and interdependency, if you
don't understand where all of the pieces fit together. You
can't help your people navigate that, and be absolutely rigorous
about quality. Mm hmm. You can put something out in you and I
have both seen it, we of course, would never do that. But you
could put something out really, really quickly, but isn't
something you're going to be proud of finding your name on in
five years, or not. And last but not least, all of those things
help you manage risk, a lot better. But in particular, I
think collaborative spirit is the one that that is a lead by
example, form of executive communication. It's
so interesting, because I didn't I just was
talking to a company owner who hired a CFO. But about six or
seven years ago, the CFO was highly intelligent, like an
action oriented person and told this this group of people has he
had probably, I don't know How many direct reports 50. But he
beat them up, he was really tough. And nobody liked it. The
team members didn't like it. But he got stuff done. Fast forward,
he just left. And now they hired a new CFO, completely different
collaborate collaborator, wants to build the team wants to build
people together, and and then slower, so they don't get as
much done. So I asked this business owner, I said, Do you
see a bit of a difference in the results in terms of business
sense in terms of business, but he like monetarily? Bottom line?
He said, I'm not sure yet. But I know, he goes, I don't think
somebody's a me he, he knows that the people are so much
happier doing their work. And I think in the long run, so he did
say that in the long run, it's going to produce better results,
maybe in the short run, not so much. But then your way. You
know, tell me more about that. What do you think?
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: Well, I think part of the basis of this
is that when people say we want you to collaborate, they're not
actually always sure about what they're expressing. For some
people, a collaborative environment means everybody has
a vote for other people a collaborative environment is,
look, I carry the heavy load. And I want everybody's input.
Understand, however, I will be the one who will ultimately make
the last decision. Well, if you can't make clear to the people
that you're working with, right, which definition you're working
from, then each person, when you hear something, you think, Oh,
well, of course, they're talking about my definition of
collaborative. So that makes sense. Yeah,
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: you know, so the other thing is, is I
think your business owner, client is very intelligent about
this, because the previous executive was creating an
environment that was rife for turnover. Yeah. And the problem
is, that's 300% of a person's annual salary is the cost that
the business bears when they lose someone who's been around
for maybe two or three years. And that's a huge amount of
money.
That's a huge
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: loss long term, it's going to show us
productive, short term, what you're doing is you're
reinforcing that you as a business owner, you're walking
your talk, you're saying, You know what, this is so important,
I'm willing to put my skin in the game as well. And I am going
to be the defender of perhaps a little slower ramp up for
results, but long term, the business is going to be
healthier, because the people are going to be more willing to
commit to it. Talks about engagement. That's nothing new.
Yeah, right. No, and I loved how you clarified
what does collaboration mean? And, and we're gonna go into
what does executive communication mean to you. But
But just touching on collaboration can mean so many
different things to different people. And as part of executive
communication, I think is being clear. Even if you just have a
collaborative of that word, there can mean a lot of
different things, to take the time to define that for you for
your team, so that people are clear, yes, we're going to
collaborate in this project. However, I'm going to be the
final decision maker, or you go into the project and say, hey, I
want everybody to vote on this as a collaboration method. And
so which one is it for you? Right, and the team? What makes
sense for the project?
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: And, and the funny thing is, is that
people will say, well, oh, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, I
shouldn't do that. I'm gonna come across as a little bit of a
dictator, or I had one person say, I have a feeling I'm gonna
come come across as a very dictatorial person. I said,
well, one, you are a very forceful and decisive
individual. So that's just going to be you. Okay, own it, live
it. And I'm glad you understand. That's how you come off.
However, people are going to be a lot more willing to work with
you, at your level of collaboration, if they
understand that that's what you're probably going to do.
Now, as you see how incredibly productive your people are, when
you demonstrate your willingness to actually behave in the manner
you're asking them to behave and you're, it's going to be a whole
lot easier for you to give up some of that much blunted
control, because results are it, the results are going to be the
final proof. And you're going to get better results over the long
term. And I don't mean decades, I don't even mean years.
Sometimes it only takes one project over, say, eight weeks.
And you'll, you'll see a visible difference in the level of
productivity and efficiency, not just in Thank heavens, less
retesting, because we were all actually talking to each other,
you know, thank heavens, better requirements definition because
wow, we made it a point to collaborate with our client, not
tell them that's a stupid thing to ask for. Or say it in our
minds and not ask them questions and then ignore the possibility
that the question might not have been one they can answer because
we weren't clear in the way we phrased it. So you know, this is
not when people say communication, I think they
forget that the way you behave, what you reward, and what you
note, that communicates volumes. And it's much more powerful than
anything you're gonna say ever.
Reminds me of this analogy of just just in regards
to parenting, because we think we're gonna tell our child what
to do you have to do this, you have to do this. And actually,
the best way to teach your children is how you behave.
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: Like Oh, absolutely. Yeah, I'm a big
country western fan, which I've had to defend from. But there's
a song where a father hits you know, the stoplight seems to
come, it goes straight from green to red. And he says a four
letter, he, and he's muttering under his breath. And then he
hears his four year old in the back, see who's had his, you
know, his McNuggets thrown all over him say a four letter word.
And I think it was my four year old said a four letter word. And
I was concerned. And when he asked the kid, well, where do
you learn that? He says, oh, I want to be just like you, daddy.
I'm gonna eat all my vegetables. So I can be big and strong and
hold Mama's hand and I'm going to be just like you. And the
father kind of hits his knees and says, Oh, my God, can you
help me be a slight, you know, better than I am? Because I had
no idea.
I mean, it's so true. It's so true. And you I
mean, you've worked at different businesses, and you can see the
different cultures within these companies. And even if you're a
team leader, what you say how you behave, just trickles down
it, whether it's conscious or subconscious, good just is, like
you said, it's developing a culture by choice, or you're
not, it's not a choice, you're just developing a culture. And
so who's you'd be more understanding or awareness,
aware
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: of you think about it. The definition
of culture for most working organisations is a commonly
accepted set of behaviours, and expectations. Which means the
minute you start interacting with somebody, you're starting
to build a culture, it may only have two people in it. But
you're already starting to build a sense of what can I expect
from somebody. So when you and I first started interacting, I
knew from the very beginning, I could expect a thorough,
thoughtful person to be working with and so the thing is, that
also encourages, you know, I pay a little bit more attention to
being a little bit more thorough, a little bit more
thoughtful, when I'm with people that I know value those things.
And I don't think that's because I'm a unicorn. I think that's
because I'm just aware that that's a way that I accept
leadership from other people. Because of all the work and
study that I've done. I've learned that that's the way
people accept leadership. They they look for ways that you can
help them be better.
You obviously you've done the work, you exude
so much executive rises, communication, your website, I
loved your story. You're a storyteller. And so I'm curious
how have you always had this confidence is presence.
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: Let me tell you a quick story. I almost
got fired from my very first big corporate job And part of it was
cultural. Because I was hired in, I was the youngest person in
the room. by more than 15 years, I was the only only one of three
women on a 15 person team. And I was the only person that didn't
have a college
degree yet. Okay. And after
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: about six weeks, my new boss pulled me
aside, sat me down, and he said, Kenny, I would really like to
keep you. He's it. The thing is, is when you accept a job from
somebody, you make a deal. You basically make a contract, we
give you money. You give us intelligence, judgement, and
experience. I haven't heard a peep out of you in our staff
meetings for nearly five weeks. We're not getting our side of
the bargain. Wow. He said, Now, I can tell you got on these
topics. He said, and I did a little research, I understand
you were raised by your grandparents in a fairly
traditional manner. And I said, Yes, I was. He said, Alright.
Here's the thing. I want you to go home and ask your
grandfather. What he would think of it. If he were to learn that
you had made a contract? A deal? Oh, wow. But you weren't
delivering your end of it. He said, We went because we believe
you're equal to us. So I appreciate you're trying to be
polite. But to be blunt, I'm not paying you to be polite. I'm
paying you to be a professional.
Wow. Again, me now I can.
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: I can tell that story now. But I gotta tell
you at home and I had a really good cry and about a quart of
chocolate ice cream.
Wow, that that was a good. I mean, that's really
that's direct that hits full. Yeah, I would have had a quart
of chocolate ice cream as well.
Larry did his homework. And he had he knew why. Because
we come from multiple different cultures. I'm a fourth
generation Californian, not just a woman of Japanese ancestry.
You have to remember, all of us belong to multiple cultures, we
belong to the cultures of our schooling, our professions, the
kinds of companies we choose to work for. The kinds of bosses we
choose to emulate. All of those different relationships are many
cultures that make up our cultural persona. That's why I
tell people it's culture by choice. How you deal with a
person, establish it, every single choice.
And who you work with, right, how you deal with
them who you bring in. Yeah.
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: I think that's what we mean, when we
say, well, I'd like you to interview with the rest of the
team. So we make that the good fit. Set.
Right, right. Okay. Uh huh. Right, right. And so how
did you overcome that challenge of stop, you know, being more
professional? In his words,
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: and less quiet? Yeah, one of the things I
did was I asked him for help. I said, All right, would you do me
a favour I said, at any point in time, if you think I'm about to
say something that you see me hesitate? Would you just tap
your glasses?
I love it. And Larry said,
Well, they're going to be caddywhompus on my face by the
end of the first meeting, but we'll do it. I said, Okay. And
then I said, Would you also help me find someone, another woman
in this district that I can call on for advice every once in a
while I said, I really appreciate what you said. And I
would, I think I need to also expand my mentors and advisors
group. So
yeah, the journey, the journey right to have
someone hold you accountable, to have a mentor to have someone to
talk to work through the different challenges, resistance
obstacles. Mm hmm.
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: There is one other thing that I found, we
all have the ability to enhance our strength in our different
roles in our life. And you spoke to parenting, for example, when
you're in your parent role, you bring out different kinds of
strength. Well, when I was on stage, you can touch me, I own
that stage, I'll five foot two of me. And Hillary's it. So this
is your stage on a professional level. He says, I want you to
borrow so that. And I would say I was incredibly blessed to have
mentors and advisors, and some of my very first managers that
led me say, okay, use this, use what you know, from here, use
what you do from there. And you know, if you have to put it on
like a jacket, when you come into the office. And when you do
that, you start to develop habit of hey, havior, and carriage and
communications that conveyed other people. I'm, I'm saying
this because I believe it to be the best course of action. I'm
saying this because I believe it to be true. And I'm asking
questions, not because I don't know, but because I'm pretty
sure you have something to contribute. And as long as
you're consistent in that, you will learn to be the kind of
person that you wouldn't mind following. I'm still working on
that, by the way. Well, that
sounded great, because you're saying what you
believe you're saying what you you want to own, but then you're
also asking questions.
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: Or you've got to, yeah,
yeah. And you're and I also hear that you had
different mentors, different people telling you, asking you
or suggesting different things, trying on one or two different
skill sets, and owning them and stepping into them so that you
can own that stage or own wherever you're going as a
leader, the different types of skills that you build over time.
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: I think it's important because everybody
comes to their first quote, formal leadership role with a
whole life experience, right? It's not just who you are in the
office, it's who you are in your community. If you have an
athletic background, it's who you are on the field. Right?
bring that in. were absent. See that said, bring it
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: similar to what you did Melinda in terms of
okay, let me do a little bit of homework. Let me see if I can
learn a little bit about this person. You hear heard? Our
mutual wonderful admin, Vicki, I'm sure you kind of did a
little research and said, alright, what kind of work has
she done so I know where her stripe, sar gonna accomplish UI,
and we're harangues might make up for places there, okay, I
could do it. But I'm not going to be as good at it as you are,
you know, those kinds of things. If you're managing, you're
managing assets and resources, if you're leaving, you're
dealing with people. So get to know them. They're not just a
name badge or an employee number. Oh, my job description.
So
true. If you just get to know them, understand how
you affect them, get to know them, that will just help them
speed up any initiative project fast. Or at least with more
success, at least was more of a holistic perspective.
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: Well, and you can't help people grow to be
their best. Yeah, if you know absolutely nothing about who
they are to begin with. Yeah. You know, I will say though, in
the process of doing that, you might find some interesting
experiences. I had no idea you could cure him with Coca Cola.
But in getting to know one of my new technology specialists,
working with a government agency, I said so what do you do
in your free time and he proceeded to explain to me how
you can cure a ham with Coca Cola
that's only that's that's so funny.
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: And I Okay, then he goes now you you
look like One of the, you know, steak people. I said, I'll tell
you, I said, Well, no, no, no, no, no, I'll take you up on that
challenge, you bring some of that in the office, I'll bring
my favourite dish, hell, we'll make it a potluck. And let's see
what we've got. And just just by having that conversation and
being willing, although scared to try Coca Cola gear, damn. He
and his colleagues, none of whom knew me beyond the fact that I
just walked in the door. Suddenly, you looked at me as a
person when I was trying to learn about them as people. And
so that's the bonus that you get, by the way. And it's a
great compliment when they're willing to look at you and see
something other than that pesky title or, Oh, my God, she's
gonna hurt me, you know, kind of things. So, right, there is a
huge problem.
Right? Right. And I think it speaks volumes of your
own leadership authenticity, ability to connect, I think that
speaks volumes, because they want to get to know you, they
want to get to know all the parts of you, right? So. So
there's, I think leaders that want to walk around, and I know
it all, or I'm the expert. And then they just talk about that
part, which is important. So your expertise, your knowledge
or experience, I think it just makes you more human, when you
can open up different aspects of you. And then that way, you can
connect with other people, and just a deeper connection. And
who doesn't want that, like, if you want to be known as a
memorable leader. It's about that deeper connection.
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: And it's not about what you know, it's
about the relationship you built with them. Right? And it's about
what they're gonna remember. And the humility, right, we
talked about the humility, being vulnerable being
humility, you know, having a little bit yeah, of humility,
that I am a human.
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: Gentleman name, Casey, and I'm hoping, not
mangling his name. I do it five times out of 10, where the book
called how ambitious where he points out in eautifully,
straight forward fashion, that being humble doesn't mean that
you have to give up your ambition or your drive. being
humbled just means that you are ready to accept what you don't
know.
I love it. I love it. Not just acceptance. Yeah,
acceptance of what we don't and then
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: yeah, go out and get that.
One, exactly. Yeah, I can't I don't want to do it
all. That's okay.
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: I'm kind of curious, because this is a
very powerful niche area, how did you come to realise how
important it is to help people understand executive
communications better? Well,
it's my own, write my own trauma, my own chat, and
I do say trauma. And I believe that we have we, and we all
experience it, there's no way around it as being human,
whether you call it trauma, whether you call it
uncomfortable experiences, passive, right, whatever you
want to call it, it can be different levels and learn to
learn. And it's that that blocks us when we have enough of it, it
blocks us from showing our full self. And like just what we
talked about just now I think leaders are able to show more
sides of them than just their expertise. And they're not
afraid of it, their acceptance of it. So but then if we have
that block of too much trauma, we don't want to show those
other parts other people sense I can't get I don't know who this
person really is. And so I really, it's a wall, there's a
wall. Yeah, they like and then so then when I was able to
overcome that and see the difference that it helps other
people make in terms of a presenters, perhaps a speaker
and she was the leader, then that's why I do what I do is
actually just feeling the vote their selves so they can be
whole and allow people to accept them as a whole person.
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: Do you know you've created an amazing
mission? Oh, because you're also human. You're not just helping
people grow their own capacity for executive communications.
You're helping their people around them to humanise them and
real and connect them at a far deeper level. And that is so
important. I mean, I'm so delighted that and I'm in awe
because that's a huge job you do Oh,
I love it. Nobody's ever asked me that in this
podcast, I really appreciate you as like guests asking me those
questions. So it's really yeah, thank you so very much.
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: Thank you so very much. It's quite
important.
Yes. So
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: I was just gonna say if I had to do it over
again, and I had a few less decades for my belt, I would be
right there with you. Because I think that is a a perspective on
leadership that could to easily get lost. So added
to it audit, you can add that to what you're
doing. I mean, it's already there. The the whole everything,
the structure, everything you're doing is already there. And I'm
sure you can you touch on. You talked about it in the
collaboration part.
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: A little bit. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, yeah. No,
I your wisdom in choosing the word trauma and refusing to back
down from it. Because an uncomfortable situation begins,
we live through it, it ends. It becomes trauma, if it habits,
our future decision making. So I think that one of the powers
that you have harnessed is part of what we talk about all the
time, when we talk about clear definition. We're saying don't
just give somebody a dictionary, meaning help them understand the
context in which you chose that. That specific work. And I think
you you've harnessed the power of clear definition beautifully
in that particular choice. That makes
a lot of sense. Because you we have experiences
or stories, these events that create these stories that create
experiences, which then lead you to choose that specific word. So
what is the background of all of that, and that is why it's
important. Rather than just giving the word. I love that.
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: If there is a very short book, we call
them commute flight reads, back in the day, when so many of us
commuted by blade, and it was called The Four Agreements by
Don Miguel Ruiz. And the first one was be impeccable with your
word. Right. And that always struck me. So I'm a little slow
to give promises, because I will break my back trying to keep it.
So there are promises that people have asked, and I'll find
a way not to ever make it because I don't believe I'd be
able to fulfil. You know, and that is, that is something else
that your people are going to see. If you break promises to
them. Even small things like, Hey, isn't that my turn to bring
the doughnuts. Right? Say, Well, if you're getting a break,
you're worried about them, you know, minor? What's going to
happen when there's a lot at stake? And it's a perfectly
human question to ask. I think. I think though, you want to one
of the things you want to communicate as a leader as an
executive or leader, or an executive who actually is a
leader. Yes, that you want to communicate that there's no
reason to ask that question. Right?
Ever. Right? Right. I love that. I'm learning so
much from you. They're learning so much from you. We do not ever
want to be fall back on her own integrity and be seen as such
because can't get back.
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: You can't get her back. And I think for
most people know that. Don't you think most people know that?
They do.
But I don't think they consciously they know that
consciously. But they don't know subconsciously like what are
they doing without even realising that has a powerful
effect like like it may say, Oh, it's just a donor. I just it's
just donuts.
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: So yeah, it's no big deal.
I guess I try other things. I get sidetracked. And
so you know, so subconsciously, yeah. So I we talk so we might
need to continue this conversation I am looking
forward to I just want to thank you and know thank you so much.
How would people get in touch with you? and learn more about
you and the work that you do or even want to start to have a
conversation how they work with you. Well, we have
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: leadership leadership group on Facebook.
And if you were to Google K SP partnership done.com, you will
find that we truly believe that you should be as straightforward
as possible. So somebody said, Well, why don't you put like,
why don't you take one of the peas out of KSP partnership? And
they said, Well, the reason it's there is because although my
godson says that he thought it meant came these superpowers, it
does not KSP partnerships stands for key success parameters. And
it's a partnership. So we've got about three full time partners
and Vicky, whenever I can get her some social media staffing
and help. But primarily, we work together as partners. There's no
it's my team. It's not, you know, that kind of thing. So
when I say clear definition, I say, we even, we even bet our
website name on it. You know, every single part of that the
company name is in there, because every single part
matters. So KSP partnership.com. And if you go on to LinkedIn, I
guarantee you, you will only find one, Kimi Hiratsuka Zemsky.
Love it. And I'd be delighted to connect but you have to say
Melinda sent me. Oh, cute. Okay. That way. Oh, no.
I love that. Reach out to Kimi. She's a wealth of
knowledge. She just brings so much wealth of experience. And
so don't hesitate. Don't have to reach out and thank you. So as
mentioned, Melinda sent you. All right. Thank you so much, Kimi,
it was so fun. Thank you
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: was this was a pleasure and an honour.
Thank you.
You Me too. Until I see you next time. Take care.
Kimi Hirotsu Ziemski: Take care.
Awesome