Oct 8, 2024
As voiceover entrepreneurs, we face unique challenges, especially when it comes to retirement savings. Join Anne Ganguzza and Danielle Famble, as they share invaluable insights into the power of high-yield business savings accounts. You'll learn how these accounts can act as a safety net during lean months, accrue interest, and instill the discipline required to save consistently. The BOSSES recount their personal experiences to illustrate how a robust savings account can bolster confidence and enable you to take calculated risks in your business ventures. Plus, discover how the evolution of online banks has transformed the ability to manage finances and receive money easily to benefit our businesses.
00:00 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
Hey Boss, listeners Anne Ganguza here. Think about the legacy you
want to leave with your voice. It's more than just getting gigs.
It's about creating moments that resonate, that shine, that linger
in memory. Let's craft those moments together with coaching that's
as dedicated to your artistry as you are. Your voice, your legacy,
our journey together. Visit anganguz for more
information.
00:31 - Intro (Announcement)
It's time to take your business to the next level, the boss level.
These are the premier business owner strategies and successes being
utilized by the industry's top talent today. Rock your business
like a boss a VO Boss. Now let's welcome your host, nne
Ganguzaa.
00:50 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
Hey everyone, Welcome to the VO Boss podcast and the Boss Money
Talk series. I'm your host, Anne Ganguzza, and I am tickled to
bring back Danielle Famble to the show.
01:03 - Danielle Famble (Co-host)
Hey Anne, thanks for having me back. I've been really inspired by
your red lipstick, so I'm wearing my own today. It's called Boss
Lady.
01:11 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
I love it and you are definitely a boss lady. Speaking of being a
boss and finances, I of course, check my bank statements all the
time.
01:21
And can I just say that I first of all, love my business savings
account to the point where I think it's like a must have for
anybody in the business to just have a savings account, Because
when times are lean and we know that this is a volatile industry
sometimes we have good months, sometimes, you know, maybe not so
good it's important to talk about having a business savings
account. And, by the way, I have a high yield business savings
account.
01:48 - Danielle Famble (Co-host)
Oh, my goodness. Oh, I love high yield savings accounts.
01:52 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
That is a thing, and one thing I do want you bosses to know I am
not a financial advisor nor is. Danielle, even though we love to
talk about money, we are not financial advisors, so that is our
disclaimer. We're just giving you our experiences with finances and
growing our company, so let that be our disclaimer.
02:11 - Danielle Famble (Co-host)
Yes, this is not financial advice. We're just talking about what we
know and what we love and how it's helped us.
02:17 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
There you go, so business savings account.
02:19 - Danielle Famble (Co-host)
What are?
02:20 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
your thoughts on business savings accounts.
02:22 - Danielle Famble (Co-host)
Like you, I love my high-yield savings account. I absolutely love
seeing how much interest that it brings into the account every
single month. It is amazing when you think about it. But you also
need to make sure that you are putting money into your savings
account.
02:39 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
In order to gain that interest, in order to gain that
interest.
02:42 - Danielle Famble (Co-host)
So really it's not spending or utilizing every dollar that comes
into your business, similar to personal finance making sure that
you have enough money for the volatility of this industry so that
you can pay yourself and pay your assistants or whomever that your
business needs to pay in the lean times. It's really
important.
03:00 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
Now let me ask you high-yield savings account Now. It used to be
back in the day when you had a checking account, banks were
offering all these incentives and you would get interest, you know,
if you kept in a certain amount of money. Same thing with savings
account. But it seems like all of a sudden there's high-yield
savings account. Or is it just that I didn't pay attention before?
Because all of a sudden I know that my money sat in the bank
because I have my Bank of America for like ages, because that just
was my bank, but yet it wasn't earning a lot of money, it wasn't
earning a lot of interest. And then all of a sudden I was like, oh,
look at this from American Express, there's a high yield savings
account here and wow, look at that interest rate. I should be maybe
throwing my money over there because it wasn't making a whole lot
of money. Sitting there Is high-yield savings account, just a thing
nowadays. Did it just happen where it just became a thing, or was I
missing out all those years?
03:51 - Danielle Famble (Co-host)
I have to be honest with you. I'm not exactly sure how old or new
high-yield savings accounts are. I can tell you that for me, when
it came to personal finance, I got clued in into the power of high
yield savings accounts and being able to make more money on my
money in terms of interest, really, when I started to get serious,
which was about six or seven years ago, so it could be relatively
new. Typically, these banks are online banks and because they don't
have the overhead that brick and mortar banks do, they're able to
offer these incentives and offer higher interest. A way to look up
a high yield account is really just to go online and Google and try
to find one that has a business account, if you can. That's what I
have been able to do, me too. Again, I don't know how old or new it
is, but I do know that being able to have access to these products
it's really important, and being able to have the discipline really
to save is actually what fuels the ability to get the money and the
interest.
04:47 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
And I will say that I was not confident in growing my business or
taking risks in growing my business until I had a substantial
amount of money in my savings account.
04:57 - Intro (Announcement)
And what?
04:58 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
is substantial. I mean for me to feel comfortable that maybe I
could pay my rent or pay my mortgage right if I didn't do any
business. You know, like they always say, like you want to have as
much money in your savings account like accrue three months worth
of what it costs you to live in your savings account, and I would
say that still holds true. I think that that made me feel
comfortable.
05:17
Once I was in voiceover, knowing that if I had a lean month I was
okay because I had that money in savings and so it is something
that once I was able to accrue that and whatever it took right, I
was putting $100 a month away or $50, whatever I could afford at
the time.
05:33
And then, as I made more money, I just made sure that I always put
into my savings account until I got to that point where I had a
good three months. And then I was like it was so freeing and it was
so confidence building that I had that good three months. And then
I was like it was so freeing and it was so confidence building that
I had that money that I could say, hmm, maybe I'll try a new genre,
maybe I'll get a new demo or maybe I'll invest in this type of
marketing or whatever it is. It allowed me that comfort to invest
money to grow my business, and that, I think, is what was so
instrumental in having a business savings account. Whether it's
high yield or not, right, just having that amount of money aside
was what gave me the confidence to grow my business. Other than
that, I was living paycheck to paycheck. Who wants to live paycheck
to paycheck?
06:19
I mean, that's just not the way to grow your business in voiceover
and it's tough and I know a lot of people that might be where
they're at and I encourage you to find a way to put a little bit
away each month or each week or whatever you can do to grow that
savings account.
06:37 - Danielle Famble (Co-host)
Yeah, that's huge. It's a psychological boost too, because you know
that if there are lean months which as we know there are there are
lean times that you can take care of yourself and the ability to
sort of dip your toe into maybe a different genre or do something
that makes you feel a little bit more uncomfortable, that your
security blanket is this account that can buoy you If it doesn't
work out or if it takes a little bit longer. It makes you feel much
more confident and secure because you are, because you are the one
who is securing yourself. It's a really big deal. It's a big deal
to be able to have that and the confidence that it gives you. It
was a game changer. Yeah, it's a game changer. A game changer for
me.
07:15 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
It really really was, and it catapulted my business into different
areas. I mean, everybody knows I've got multiple brands, and so I
would not have been able to grow those brands had I not had that
comfort or confidence level of having a little bit of cash so that,
okay, I could spend more time building up this brand instead of
auditioning, or I could invest in a demo, or I could invest in a
virtual assistant, right. Again, we just had an episode talking
about hiring assistants, right. And so that savings account gave me
such a big boost in order to grow, and I continue to make sure that
I have money in that. And what's nice is that, even though, let's
say, some months I may not be able to put as much into it, right,
the one that is a highield savings account is such a bonus, right
now because it's accruing a higher interest rate than any of my
other accounts, and so I am continuing to get more confidence in
putting money in there.
08:16
So the more you make an interest, the more you want to put in
it.
08:18 - Danielle Famble (Co-host)
Yeah, the account is helping you out.
08:20 - Intro (Announcement)
Exactly.
08:21 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
So the high-yield savings account is a boon and again, we're not
financial advisors, but look into it. I mean Google. I know that
for me. It's really given me even more confidence than I had
before. So always, always, really make it a point to have a
business savings account and business savings account. I mean it's
great to have a savings account your personal but, as we discussed
before, right when you're running your business, you really want to
separate your accounts, exactly.
08:46
Into business checking and business savings and most banks right.
If you're going to open up a business account with them, they're
going to have options for you to open a business savings
account.
09:01 - Danielle Famble (Co-host)
Yeah, and you really just kind of have between the personal savings
and the business savings Because, as Danielle, I have my own
personal savings for me and then the business that I'm running has
its own savings account that I'm going to be able to utilize that
money if I need it for any sort of business expenses, and keeping
that separate. Going back to the basics of finance, keeping those
two things separate really helps me out when it comes to tax time.
It helps me out in the day-to-day running of my personal life and
my business. So, yes, keeping them separate, and the same way that
you keep your money separate from your business and your personal,
keeping your savings account separate as well. And knowing what are
you utilizing that savings for? Obviously, it's not meant to be
used for everyday purposes, but what are the criteria for when you
would need to dip into that savings account? Really just kind of
having a plan for your money.
09:53 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
Well, yeah, and it also helps in your financial well-being in terms
of how banks perceive you. Your FICO score. All of that
contributes. Right, these are your assets, right, this is money
that you have. And it's one of those things when I spoke to you
about making that $500 stock investment in the company that I
worked for, right, and I just forgot about it because it was, I
considered it my spare change and I'm just going to put it in and,
well, I'm going to look at it, but I'm not going to obsess over it
and just kind of forget about it. And the nice thing is, when you
have it in a bank, that when they want your business, they're going
to offer you perks of that, and so high yield savings is one of
them, and so that money just grows, right, I can just put it in
there and it just grows. And when I look at the monthly statement
and I say, whoa, look at how much interest I got this
month.
10:39
It makes me want to put more into it. It makes me want to find ways
to put more into it. And when you're talking about manifesting
abundance and you're talking about positive things that spur you on
and having faith and thinking in terms of having abundance, that is
really helps. I'll tell you, when you're looking at that account
and it keeps growing, that can really be a big mental help to you
feeling successful in terms of your business.
11:06 - Danielle Famble (Co-host)
Yeah, it's the evidence right. It's the evidence that what you are
doing and what you've been doing is working and that it's growing.
So, having that sort of tangible you know the statement to see I
put this much money in and this is how much my money made, without
really me doing anything other than putting that money into this
account, it's evidence that what you're doing is working and to
keep going.
11:27 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
And it's not like you're taking a risk like the stock market.
You're investing yourself in your business, exactly, so it's a
fairly stable. Unless the bank goes under right, it's a fairly
stable yeah well, that's a whole nother podcast but it's a fairly
stable way to grow your money.
11:41 - Danielle Famble (Co-host)
Right and also to grow your confidence. I really love that and I
think it's really important the distinction of, yes, you're growing
your business, but also you're growing your confidence and you're
growing your ability in your business to grow and invest and take
risks, which helps you potentially grow your business. You're
investing in your confidence, not just monetarily, but in that
emotional feeling of security that only you can give yourself. It's
a big deal.
12:08 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
Yeah, yeah, absolutely, and it doesn't take much.
12:10
I mean, bosses, you're already risk takers, right, because you've
decided to get into voiceover, you've decided to become an
entrepreneur, you've decided to start a business.
12:18
This is just another aspect of it, and it's an aspect of it that
can give you that cushion to weather all types of storms that can
happen within your business. There's just so many people I know
that are like they gave it all up to invest in voiceover but yet
they don't necessarily have savings. And I know as a coach, when
I'm talking to students that want to get into this industry, and
there's a lot of people during the pandemic right that lost their
jobs, that wanted quick money, and I was careful to say that
voiceover does require an investment. It's not that you're going to
be able to make quick money right away, and we all know that those
of us that have been in the industry, this is the same kind of
thing, really that you want to make sure that you've taken the
risks and now you've got another savings account that can help you
survive and weather those storms as you move forward in your
business.
13:06 - Danielle Famble (Co-host)
It's infrastructure. It's setting up the infrastructure for the
what-ifs or what could happen in your business and it's creating
sort of more cushion for yourself, just in case things happen.
Also, saving maybe totally different, but saving for things that
you need to do in your business. Maybe it's setting aside a certain
amount of money for taxes, maybe it's setting aside a certain
amount of money because you want to attend conferences and you need
to travel and take the time away. That can be part of the business
savings. But I think making sure that you have the mindset that the
money that is coming into your business, not all of it, needs to be
spent or used now you do need to put a certain amount of money
aside for certain things taxes, education, investing in your
business, investing in yourself in the lean times and in the slower
times. It's really looking at what is happening in your business
and creating the infrastructure for what could happen.
14:02 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
And you know, what else is interesting too is that with some banks,
they'll give you more benefits, right, the more you have. So if you
open up this type of business savings account, you need to maintain
a certain amount of money in there, and when you do that, you'll
get free checking, you'll get a lower interest, credit card from
them, all types of things, different perks, you'll get 3% back or
you'll get money back, and so it behooves you to do that, because
they're also offering you incentives to kind of keep money in that
savings account, right, and you're not going to just have it to
like blow in the first month on a new microphone or a new demo, but
to maintain funds in there, right, so that you can keep up the
benefits.
14:40 - Intro (Announcement)
And so.
14:40 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
I like that. There's like a double incentive. Really it's nice to
have that cushion and then you'd want to keep it in there, and it's
not like we haven't really discussed retirement funds or mutual
funds or anything like that, and again, we're not financial
advisors. However, they work differently, where, if you keep the
money in there for a certain amount of time, or you're required to
keep money in there for a certain amount of time or until you reach
a certain age as retirement.
15:04
A business savings account is simply just a business savings
account where you're not penalized if you have to take money out.
So I think it's got like everything in it. You know what I mean?
It's got that added cushion security. You get benefits if you keep
more in it, but yet you're not penalized if you have to take out of
it. Necessarily.
15:21 - Danielle Famble (Co-host)
Yeah, it's access, potentially very quick access to the money that
you have that you've put aside for whatever it is that you are
saving for. I think it's important to have access to the sort of
quick access to the account, so like a business savings account and
then other more long-term, like you were discussing you know we're
not financial advisors but having access to your money for
retirement or things like that. It's really important to have the
infrastructure for short-term, medium-term and long-term
savings.
15:52 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
Well, especially because, as entrepreneurs, you're not necessarily
contributing to a pension fund from your own business, right?
There's a lot of people that we haven't even really talked. We'll
probably have an entire podcast dedicated to retirement, but you
probably are not thinking about contributing to a retirement fund,
so this can be one step towards money that can go into that
Although I do think that's another separate podcast episode that we
need to talk about because I'm very lucky because I have a pension
coming from my experience in education and my husband has a pension
fund coming from a job that he worked for previously. So when we
retire, we're going to have that money, and so I'm not necessarily
contributing to a quote unquote retirement fund.
16:38
But I do have mutual funds through my financial advisor that I'm
investing money in, and I have an independent retirement fund that
I basically take $100 a month for that particular account, and I
would recommend that as well for anybody that is not necessarily
have a retirement fund, because all of a sudden, you're going to be
at retirement age and you're going to be like oh, wait, a minute, I
don't have. Where's that money? Do I have money in savings? Do I
have that money in a fund that can help support me when I'm no
longer working and most people say, well, I could work in voiceover
forever. But I mean, look, I love voiceover but I'm not going to
work in it forever. I mean, at some point my voice will crack and
sound old and I'm going to be tired. I'll be happily traveling the
world living off my savings slash retirement because I
invested.
17:27 - Danielle Famble (Co-host)
Now so it's something bossy. You're painting a wonderful picture of
your life, and I'm just like me too. That's it. That's what I want
to do.
17:34 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
I'm going to be traveling the world and it's because I'm thinking
now about those things, right, and of course, in reality we should
have been thinking about it and people tell you all the time,
right, Thinking about retirement when you're like 18.
17:47 - Danielle Famble (Co-host)
But think about savings.
17:48 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
Best time to save and invest is yesterday and next best time is now
and so, in terms of some people were like, well, I just don't have
it right To invest in savings. And again, if you are in voiceover
and you're living paycheck to paycheck, really consider thinking
about that. You know, I mean, and I did it when I first started
full-time in voiceover, I had a part-time job.
18:09
I worked my butt off contributing and saving and having a fund so
that I could ultimately, when it got to the point where I was
making more money doing voiceover, I could ultimately stop that
part-time job, but I do encourage all of you if you are living
paycheck to paycheck on voiceover, maybe it's time to consider a
job that will bring in some steady income that you can put into a
savings account.
18:31 - Danielle Famble (Co-host)
Exactly have something that will help invest, input capital into
your life and to your business. This is a long process.
Entrepreneurship is a marathon and you have to learn how to pivot
as time goes on, and maybe that means that you need to bring in
something that will help bring in capital to your life and your
business. Maybe that's a part-time job, maybe it's freelancing,
maybe it's figuring out how you can pivot to make money elsewhere.
Whatever it is being able to have again, the infrastructure of
savings around you is incredibly important because it's a long game
and there's nothing wrong nothing at all wrong with having outside
resources. That's bringing you in money outside of
voiceover.
19:17 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
Gosh, no, I mean I was just talking to somebody the other day. I
always talk about my Chanel lipstick or whatever it is, but I love
fashion, right, and so if I love something like that and I'm
spending a lot of money on clothes because I recently did lose a
little bit of weight, so congratulations.
19:32 - Danielle Famble (Co-host)
Oh, thank you.
19:33 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
But I mean, what's wrong with finding something that brings me joy?
So maybe I'll be an affiliate or I will do some form of my business
that will allow companies to maybe send me free clothes or make
some money off of the clothes that I buy so I can buy more clothes.
So it's that kind of a mentality. And I'm still doing voiceover.
I'm still a coach, I'm still, but I happen to love fashion. So I
just added that kind of to my alternate. This is what Anne's going
to do on her free time. Maybe I can make a couple extra dollars
that I can put into that high yield savings account and have fun
along the way, right? Yeah, so it really is. I think, up to us as
entrepreneurs, right? There's nothing saying you have to do 24-7 of
voiceover in order to have a successful business.
20:20 - Danielle Famble (Co-host)
Absolutely. What can you do and how can you do it that will bring
money into your ecosystem, your business, your life, so that you
can use that money to fund really everything else about your life.
And that means also saving, because saving is really just putting
money aside for future you so that future you can benefit. That's
right. It's also a discipline too. For me it's been a discipline of
looking at the amount of money that I have access to and dedicating
some of those funds to my longer term savings maybe retirement or
maybe, as you were talking about, mutual funds and investments but
also to my business high yield savings account, to my business
account, because I know that one day I will need access to that
money.
21:02 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
Absolutely, and a lot of times the banks will make it very easy.
You can have it $100 or $50 or $25 or $500, whatever it is on a
monthly basis, literally just streamed into those accounts, into
your savings account, into your retirement fund, whatever it is, it
can be done automatically, so you don't even see it. It's like when
you worked for my company and they would ultimately take out so
much money for retirement or whatever it is, automatically and then
match that back in the day when companies did that. Very few
companies do that anymore, but it's similar to that. So when it's
taken out automatically, you don't necessarily notice it. So try to
implement those things right so that you can contribute regularly
and consistently to a savings account, so that you can have that
money for when you want to go travel or retire from whatever it is
you're doing.
21:51 - Danielle Famble (Co-host)
I will tell you that automation is the way that I was able to
consistently put the money in savings in the first place.
21:57 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
It's hard when you manually have to do it, you know.
21:59 - Danielle Famble (Co-host)
Because it takes away the human element. The human has emotions
about money and may not want to put that money in these accounts.
Oh, so true. The automation doesn't have that, so it's going to
continue to do what you've set it up to do, and actually that's how
you get the result that you're wanting when you take away the human
element.
22:16 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
I love how you said that there's the emotional element to money,
and again, we could write a book on that right there's an emotional
element to money.
22:24
In so many ways. We have such a connection to it, whether we want
to or not, right? I mean, it's how there's a roof over my head,
it's how I afford this microphone, it's how I can afford to put
clothes on my body and food in my body, and so there is a lot of
emotion tied around money. So if you can make that emotion as
painless and as easy, and even as possible.
22:48
Yeah, make it invisible, I mean. And they also say that one of the
most frequent causes for divorce is financial right Issues and
troubles. So if you can make it easy and seamless, why not? And a
business savings account for me, having it taken out automatically,
having my money grow on a monthly basis and being encouraged and
inspired to contribute on a regular basis to it, it's a no brainer.
It should be a no brainer, I think, for everybody that wants to run
a successful business.
23:16 - Danielle Famble (Co-host)
Yeah, and it's a tool to be able to utilize and run your business
successfully. It's just another thing, it's another tool in the
tool belt. It's a way to help you feel more confident when times
are a little bit tougher, and it's a way to know that you can fund
the business that you are running. It's invaluable. I love
it.
23:34 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
Absolutely. And again, we both decided early on bosses that we
could just spend 27 minutes saying I love my high yield savings
account.
23:43 - Intro (Announcement)
I love my high yield savings account.
23:44 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
I love my high yield savings account Again, not that we're trying
to push anything on you, but we are not financial advisors. How
many times do I have to say that to this time? But no, really, I
mean it's the most amazing thing, because I'd been sitting there
for years, like literally for years, watching getting pennies, like
every month, in my bank account. I'm like what happened? It used to
be the banks were like here, we're going to give you so much
percent each month for keeping this money in our bank, and it just
became a little bit different until, like you said, the online
banks who don't have the overhead costs of brick and mortar, can
offer those things right and again.
24:16
And my bank has really upped its game too, by the way, because when
I told them about my high yield savings account, I said, well, why
are you not matching that? And so they actually came up with
because I wanted to have a business savings account as well as a
high yield business savings account. Right, with them, they upped
their game. So it's something you can actually talk to your bank
about and say look, why can't you offer me this amount of interest?
A lot of times? Banks, if they want your business, they're going to
work with you.
24:48 - Danielle Famble (Co-host)
So yeah, and also just educating yourself of what is out there. To
be completely honest with you, for the longest time and for me,
coming from a musical theater background I never, ever, ever
considered what I would need to do to have savings for my business.
The education for me happened from my personal life, for personal
finance and then bringing that into how I'm running my business.
But, to be honest with you, for me I wasn't even really thinking
about savings because I was just looking at what was coming in. I
need this money now, okay.
25:16
It kind of just kept cycling through the moment, but really
stopping and taking a look and saying, okay, I can be the person to
fund my level of confidence and security when I'm in an industry
that is volatile sometimes. That is a complete game changer and it
requires thinking about things differently, but it also requires
educating yourself of what options are out there for you to be able
to do that.
25:39 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
And bosses repeat after us like I love money, right, danielle? I
think the two of us could just say I love money, I love
money.
25:48 - Danielle Famble (Co-host)
I love money.
25:48 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
That is our emotional attachment, right? We just said that there's
a lot of emotion attached to it. I love money, and so if I didn't
love money, if I hated money, it would not want to come into my
life, right? I mean, I can't be hating things that I want to
manifest, hating things that I want to manifest, and so I love my
relationship with money. And at times, yes, it's tough that it runs
the world, it's tough that I have to spend so much on a monthly
basis to put the roof over my head or that oh my gosh, you know how
much is food these days. It can be frustrating at times, but in
reality, my relationship with money is to have a love affair with
it so that I can manifest it in abundance.
26:23 - Danielle Famble (Co-host)
Yes, and a love affair that is not fear. Yeah, because when you're
running away from something, even if it's trying to catch you, then
it really seems like it's just chasing after you. So a love affair
and being open to it and wanting it, and wanting to learn about it,
and wanting to invest the time into it. I love money too, anne. I
think we I love money too.
26:43 - Anne Ganguzza (Host)
That's it. That's it. We can go home High-yield savings account and
we love money. There you go, bosses. What a great conversation.
Again, we could say this 500 more times, but I think you guys get
the point. I'm going to give a great big shout out to our sponsor,
ipdtl. You too can connect, network, make money like bosses and
find out more at IPDTLcom. There you go, you guys have an amazing
week and we will see you next week. Bye.
27:10 - Intro (Announcement)
Join us next week for another edition of VO Boss with your host,
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industry revolutionizing tips and strategies and new ways to rock
your business like a bosscom and receive exclusive content industry
revolutionizing tips and strategies and new ways to rock your
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