Amanda was the former head of brand for The Knot – the global leader in weddings. Previously, Goetz served as a startup founder building availability software for the wedding industry after spending years analyzing companies for Ernst & Young’s Entrepreneur Of The Year program. She also worked for celebrity wedding planner David Tutera as Head of Marketing developing the go-to market strategy for his brands, licensing deals and client partners. She has built an audience of over 150,000 in the startup and business community, learning to live a life of ambition and success without subscribing to today’s hustle culture. She launched a newsletter called 🧩 Life’s a Game with Amanda Goetz to help high performers learn actionable tips for living a life of intention. ABOUT MIGHTY NETWORKS Mighty Networks is the ONLY community platform that introduces your members to each other—for extraordinary engagement, longer retention, and word-of-mouth growth. You can run memberships, courses, challenges, and events on a Mighty Network—all under your own brand on mobile and web.…
Hello & welcome to kurengworkx podcast, where we tell stories of Africa by Africans Immortalizing African Legends. I’m Kureng Dapel from Nigeria, passionate about digital arts as informed by my skills in photography, arts and theatre. As the Winner of The Who is Who awards and the Africans Rising international Award, I use my technical know-how to advance human rights through some of my pictures. Gender Based Violence, Cultural rights and children right are my major fields of interest.
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rom time immemorial, the pervading name tag as it relates to Africanism and the response to westernization or what many would prefer to refer to as ‘civilization’ has always been Culture Clash.However, for the Maasai people of East Africa, another tag has been given them. The external gaze has always been that they are a people who prefer to stay a…
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The world has always seen the Maasai people as backward, unflinchingly terrified of technological advancements. They have been called ‘Technophobic’
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