And She Spoke: Women. Money. Power.

Many of us spend what felt like a lifetime on Zoom meetings, and perhaps you struggled to find your voice in this virtual space. This is completely normal because the rules of engagement are entirely different online than they are in the real world. 

To wrap up our 'best-of' series, we're replaying an episode with guests Casey Erin Clark and Julie Fogh, the Founders of Vital Voice Training, a voice, and communication company that recognizes that your voice is a powerful tool for connection and expression. As trained actors and voice and speech coaches, Casey and Julie understand that real communication happens when your voice is grounded in who you are. 

On this show, after hearing about their business aims, we dive into the disembodiment that many of us are experiencing, and Casey and Julie offer advice on how we might reconnect with our bodies once more. We touch on the importance of communicating and teaching rules of engagement, particularly in a virtual space where they aren’t so obvious. In-person meetings are not perfect either, so accepting these virtual spaces for what they are can help us feel okay in them. 

Our conversation also touches on broadening our understanding of power and confidence in the world that deifies extroversion, Casey and Julie’s functional authenticity definition, and the difficulty that many of us have with being authentic on social media. Our voices are a marker of who we are. It is not about talking the loudest or the most, it is about using your voice in a way that is truest to you.  

Here’s a peek at what else we discuss:
  • What Vital Voice Training does and the impetus to start the company.
  • How the pandemic affected Vital Voice’s business and the meaningful pivot they made
  • Four ways of perceiving the body and the importance of cultivating a connection to our bodies.
  • There is so much room for creativity on Zoom with all the tools available.
  • The difficulty of not being able to easily switch roles when we work from home.
  • Our bodies and spirits are not meant to deal with this level of uncertainty.
  • Balancing the humility of listening and the power of sharing your voice.
  • Why we need to expand our definitions of power and confidence.
  • The difference between feedback that men and women receive in the workplace.
  • Defining functional authenticity and why it is important to have this expanded definition.
  • Why it is so difficult to be authentic on social media where we can curate what we share.
  • You can be authentic and intentional; it doesn’t have to be one or the other.
Resources:
Casey Erin Clark
Casey Erin Clark on Instagram, LinkedIn, and Twitter
Julie Fogh
Julie Fogh on LinkedIn
Vital Voice Training
The Authenticity Code
Casey Erin Clark and Voice Positivity (And She Spoke Podcast Episode)
Brain.fm

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What is And She Spoke: Women. Money. Power.?

For so many modern, driven women, life is about being more than one thing. We’re multidimensional—and so are our conversations. We carry multiple identities; we can be both mother and artist; both attorney and entrepreneur. Both clinician and CEO. Both humble and proud. Life for women like us is about both. About…all of the above. It’s about the “and”...