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Entrepreneurs receive technology and health guidance.

On Tuesday, three women delivered practical advice to a group of entrepreneurs.

Lovelee Brooks, Divine Bunch, and Sakinah Bunch talked at the Radcliff Small Business Alliance’s monthly meeting, offering advice on anything from SEO to mental health management.

Brooks runs a virtual solutions company called Lovelee Occasion & Etc. Small business owners, especially those who aren’t as tech aware, can benefit from virtual assistants, who are remote contract workers who can perform a number of activities. She claims that in an increasingly internet-dependent company climate, being offline means alienating a substantial number of potential clients.

“There are an estimated 9 billion individuals on the planet, and 4.6 billion of them use some type of social media,” she stated.

She claimed that making effective use of social media was not as simple as it appeared and that talking with a virtual assistant might help business owners achieve better outcomes.

Search engine optimization was discussed by Divine Bunch. She equated search engine optimization, or SEO, to having a coveted yellow-pages listing.

“People don’t want to sift through the yellow pages looking for a business,” she explained.

Divine, the owner of Divine Writing Agency, writes website content and employs SEO tactics to help businesses rank higher in search engine results. She claimed that regular content posting and connections back to your website from other sites resulted in greater placement, which meant that potential clients were more likely to find your business online.

Sakina, a wellness advocate, and holistic coach emphasized the need to balance work with mental and physical health. She claimed she had been depressed for years, working from dawn to dusk and eating whatever she could get her hands on. She forewarned that everything would eventually go wrong.

“We will be obliged to make time for our illness if we don’t make time for our wellbeing,” she remarked.

She emphasized that profit didn’t necessarily have to be monetary, and that strong friendships and relationships are worth cultivating.

“Is profit legal tender or a money that we reinvest in the lives of others, particularly those we love?” she posed rhetorically.

She claims that 72% of entrepreneurs have had mental health issues at some point in their lives, with 49% having a persistent mental condition.

She advised, “Work your business, but never let your business work you.”

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This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute endorsement of any specific technologies or methodologies and financial advice or endorsement of any specific products or services.

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