The Entrepreneurial You

This is The Entrepreneurial You podcast with Heneka Watkis-Porter, the Jamaican podcast Queen, Author, international speaker, podcast producer, coach and entrepreneur. Some of my guests include Lisa Nichols, Les Brown, Richard Branson, John Lee Dumas, Paul Carrick Brunson, Seth Godin, etc. Listen weekly for conversations to help you level up you entrepreneurship and leadership games.

https://henekawatkisporter.com

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Blazing the Tech Trail in the Caribbean, with Ingrid Riley


Ingrid Riley is a trailblazer in the field of tech. An Award-winning Blogger, she is the founder of Silicon Caribe and Co-Founder and Chief Digital Strategist at getCONNECTID. She is also the leading lady behind many Meetups+ Pitch events, 3 Caribbean Tech Conferences, 3 Caribbean-wide Hackathons, a few Mobile App Competitions, Online Twitter Chats and  Startup Weekends.

#PeakPerformers, @IngridRiley shares her awesome journey on #TEY #Podcast today!Click To Tweet


Show Notes:

If you were really hungry and really, really sleepy and you had to choose only one, which would you choose? Would it be sleep or would it food?
I’ll definitely do the food. Because the food would probably help me to sleep better because you can’t really sleep well if you’re hungry if your belly is like rumbling.

Who is Ingrid Riley?
Just somebody who is curious, love to experiment, love to get to know people, love to read, love to observe individuals, love to travel. I definitely have a thing for travelling. If I don’t travel, my skin starts to itch.

So now, let’s get a little digital. How were you able to get started in this somewhat predominantly male-oriented field?
I never thought that would—I have no other intention just to simply follow what I was curious and passionate about. I was an investigative journalist. And when I kind of reached as far as I could and having been surrounded by technology. And I just kind of fell in love and fell really hard. Coming from that thought tradition and media background, I was looking at online media. Because of all of that exposure, I started my first company, which was called Maverik Media. 

What were some of the bumps in the road that you encountered?
I’ll choose one from the early days. Because I had this internet guide, it was my then business partner, I said, “Hey, I don’t know how to do this. Can you help me? Let’s put it together.” Because of that, she was also part of Maverick Media and we like doing things like email, newsletters or stuff that we are learning and sending out to people that we knew. We were recruited by this American dot-com called HomeView.com And so we put Maverick Media on ice to go and join this team in the hope of, you know, the whole thing of you joining a team. You get shares. We’re going to go IPO, you know, instant millionaire, right? The dot-com bubble popped. I led myself to be fired and went back to Maverick Media afterwards.
The thing that I learned from that is never put your own company on hold to go and work for somebody else unless you were at the centre of negotiating and really negotiate terms that are actually really good for you. I think we’re just kind of happy to be there, happy to learn, happy to be part of this thing without actually thinking about the business aspect of it carefully and recognise when a shark comes and knock on your door. Don’t put your company on the ice. Learn how to negotiate better. Don’t do things that are against your value system because it’s always going to come and bite you.

The second lesson I’ve learned recently is in this whole process of being involved in kick-starting the Jamaican tech entrepreneurship and startup ecosystem here and the Caribbean as well, I learnt to say no and always take care of myself.

How important is it for entrepreneurs and even persons who are considering entering entrepreneurship to follow their instinct?
It is the number one thing. It comes down to trusting yourself as an entrepreneur who tends to see things differently, tends to see things before others.

Well, let’s look at the flipside note, alright? When you create a product or a service or whatever it is, you become so intimately attached to it and you take it too personal to the extent that you refuse to listen to others. I know what is best for me. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/the-entrepreneurial-you/message


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 March 28, 2017  40m