“Nicole Feliciano is all things #Boss. Most importantly, she is an inspiration to all moms looking to reinvent their careers.” —Sarah Michelle Gellar, actress, CCO and momLearn how to be a super mom and a great business woman in a step-by-step guide to developing, incubating, and marketing your business without taking the joy out of family life with kids—being an active parent while succeeding as a woman business entrepreneur.Where Sophia Amoruso’s #GirlBoss left off for young millennials breaking into the business world, Mom Boss picks up and continues the mission for all the entrepreneurial moms out there. Mom Boss proves that being successful isn’t about degrees or sacrifices, it’s about balance and power. It’s where instinct meets intelligence. Every mom has it in her to be a badass business woman. Nicole Feliciano—the founder and CEO of Momtrends Media, which provides busy women with a daily dose of style—charts the course for building a successful career without sacrificing being a great mom.Mom Boss on how to develop, incubate, and market your business without taking the joy out of family lifeValuable self-assessment exercisesStep-by-step advice, inspiration, and tried and true business and personal tipsInsights into how to be a successful and happy businesswoman and mom“If you have that feeling that maybe there is a Mom Boss in you but you’re just not sure where to start, then this is a must read . . . this is a great first step to turn your dreams into reality.” —Rosie Pope, CEO, designer, mom
This book didn’t offer many strategies or practices I hadn’t either known or read about previously. It may be received better by someone who is beginning or considering a start up business either in the MLM market or social media market. It was mostly for Moms looking to work from home. The author was most definitely privileged (and transparent about that) which made launching her business easier and most of us couldn’t relate. The book contained “personality” quizzes and while good at determining character type offered very little guidance. Think Cosmopolitan magazine quizzes. There were many spelling mistakes which drove me crazy including her book title. People need to edit better! Additionally, she referenced childcare workers as babysitters. Being in this industry, that was of course of putting because early childhood educators are NOT babysitters. Again, it might help some but it definitely didn’t help me.
I thought this was a fine book, with some good information. It felt encouraging. There were some editing errors that made it feel a little sloppy, though.