Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Talia Deer's avatar

As someone who used to build executive communities for C-level professionals, I wholeheartedly agree that everyone - even those that are seemingly in positions of power - need community. Actually, I was always blown away by how many execs don't really know what they're doing. For example, a lot of them used to be an expert in A, B, or C. Now, they're in the top seat of a functional department (like the GC/CLO, CFO, etc.) and they need to be an expert in A, B, AND C. That's just hard. And lonely. You can't go to your colleagues and admit that - hey, I have no clue what I'm doing. You certainly can't go to your CEO or board members. So where do you go? Your group chat with others that may or may not be in the same position. Or, you join an executive community like the one I used to run where everyone has your title / position at a relevant company. Your peers. In many situations, we were a lifeline for these folks, especially when Earth-shattering things happened like Covid's outbreak, the effective repeal of Roe v. Wade, or the fall of SVB.

Expand full comment
Cassie Perez's avatar

Very interested in this Community Entrepreneur idea but would love more clarification! Would it help someone interested in breaking out into community consulting for various clients, becoming a CM on a freelance basis, something else entirely...?

Expand full comment
5 more comments...

No posts