Thursday, May 14, 2020
Carpeting to Chronicling LifeStories - Career Story - Career Pivot
Carpeting to Chronicling LifeStories - Career Story - Career Pivot Mike OâKrent and LifeStories Alive I want to tell you the story of my dear friend, Mike OâKrent. Several months ago, I wrote the post, Share Your Story and Inspire Otherswith this hope that some of my readers would step forward and share their own Career Pivot stories. Here is the first of the series! Carpeting to LifeStories Alive Mike grew up in San Antonio when his family owned a carpeting business. It was in his grandfatherâs carpeting business that Mike started his work life as a teenager. After graduating from SMU with a Bachelors inBusiness Administration and Management, he rose through the ranks to eventually run this business. He would later leave it to run his own carpeting business. As we will later see, this was a valuable experience that would pay off years later. Survivors of theShoah Visual History Foundation Mike volunteered at the Jewish Federation of San Antonio teaching kids about the Holocaust. Hisinterest in the Holocaust was pivotal in what happened next. Mike was given the opportunity to interview Holocaust survivors as part of Stephen Spielbergâs Survivors of the Shoah Visual History Foundation. He was given special training to interview Holocaust survivors. He learned to listen in a very specialized way in order to capture the purpose of life. From 1996-2000, he interviewed 30+ Holocaust survivors. He listened in a way to be able to retell their stories. This was a âpivotâ moment in his life. He learned many valuable skills during this process. Mike had a passion for the project but, at that time, he had not even considered that he could interview people and tell their life stories for a living. Exiting the Carpeting Business In 1998, Mike moved to Austin and bought a new carpeting business. However, the carpeting industry was changing dramatically. He decided to sell and exit this business in 2004. Next came his second pivot moment. Mike spent the next couple of years as a corporate employee. He then sought the advice of a career coach who put him through a battery of exercises. Every time Mike talked about interviewing Holocaust survivors, he lit up. The decision to create his new business, Life Stories Alive, was born. Listen to the most recent episode In January 2006, he founded LifeStories Alive, a company that specializes in making personal history videosâ"digitally mastered records of life stories with personal accounts, photos, and mementos of family history. Mike was able to bootstrap the business very quickly. He had very little overhead and he quickly had a family friend as his first client. From this first client, he received much referral business. Mike was able to survive the first few years because he and his wife lived a modest lifestyle. They lived within their means. The skills Mike learned from working in the carpeting business proved invaluable while getting his business launched successfully. He understood sales, marketing, accounting, and many other business disciplines. He still needed to be able to adapt. Ever Adapting I remember talking with Mike in 2008. He had plans to franchise the business, but then the great recession came along. What Mike has since realized that he is not the âguyâ to develop a franchise model. He loves interviewing all kinds of people and is now focusing corporate leaders. What he creates is special. Besides interviewing fathers, mothers, grandparents, and other family members to capture their stories, he is now interviewing corporate and non-profit leaders to capture the organizational stories so that they are not lost. Did the business turn out exactly the way he expected? NO. He adapted as he went along. Common Themes I have found a common theme in the stories told by those of us who have made acareer pivot in the 2nd half of life. There was a pivot moment that gave us the idea but not the impetus to get started. There was a 2nd pivot moment that gave us the kick in the butt needed to get started. The ability to adapt was key, as what was created did not look exactly like what was expected. I hope Mikeâs story will inspire you. If you have a story you would like to share, please reach out to meand letâs connect. Marc Miller Like what you just read? Share it with your friends using the buttons above. Like What You Read? Get Career Pivot Insights! Check out the Repurpose Your Career Podcast Do You Need Help With ...
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