Costa Mesa âmultipreneurâ Kara Duffy thriving during the pandemic by keeping busy
Costa Mesa resident Kara Duffy calls herself a âmultipreneur,â someone who is able to juggle several projects at once.
What that has meant during the coronavirus pandemic is that Duffy, an entrepreneur, business consultant and coach, has not had a lack of things to do.
âWhen people are talking about being bored during COVID, I tell them they can call me and I will happily outsource some of my work,â Duffy said with a laugh.
Duffy, 38, has continued to use the resources available to her to help her clients. During the quarantine, she offered free business Q&A sessions on Monday mornings.
She also still hosts her weekly podcast, interviewing female leaders through the Powerful Ladies community that she founded six years ago.
âThese are women who are not only chefs or artists or entrepreneurs, but they care about making an impact,â she said. âThey want to pay it forward. Theyâre doing work in areas that matter to them. Iâm not partial to where they are on the political spectrum, but are they doing more and are they taking an extra step? Thatâs been a really incredible experience.â
Duffy was used to Zoom before the pandemic, as she said more than half of her clients are outside of California. So after the death of George Floyd in May, she also quickly launched a free Zoom series â âA Powerful Conversation About America.â Her sister, Jordan, a Los Angeles-based audio engineer, has aided in that.
The first topic of the Powerful Conversation series is racism, and the third event is set for Friday. Registration is available online.
âI just said, âI canât be the owner of Powerful Ladies and I canât run a business called Powerful Ladies if weâre not going to be powerful about every situation thatâs happening,ââ Kara Duffy said. âSo I called up some of the [powerful] women I know who are women of color, and I said, âWe need to talk about this.â Obviously, Iâm [white and] privileged up the wazoo, so I canât be the authority, but I can make a space for other people to share their ideas and open dialogue.â
Duffy, who has a bachelorâs degree and MBA in marketing and entrepreneurship from Clark University in Massachusetts, is all about the discussions. She said she values the community she has created, especially during the pandemic. As she pointed out, being an entrepreneur can be lonely at times.
While the word âpivotâ has been perhaps overused during the pandemic, Duffy just smiles when itâs brought up. She doesnât mind the word, but she sees it as the last step in a four-step process.
âWe just need to first pause, reprioritize what weâre doing, prune and then pivot,â she said. âWe canât jump to pivoting until we know why. I had to do that, times 20 for every client, for my own businesses. It was constant working, trying to make sure that everything was staying afloat.
âI donât remember who said it, but whatâs really stuck with me for this whole experience is that everyoneâs freaking out about the life they used to have. But what if you didnât even want it? How do you get to reinvent whatever you want to be or be doing? Itâs a great excuse right now to throw everything out the window that didnât suit you before.â
Duffyâs approach seems to be working for her clients. One of them is Nancy Eaton, a Newport Beach resident who is a Marie Kondo organizational consultant. The coronavirus also changed that occupation in March, since Eaton wasnât comfortable going into peopleâs homes after that. But Duffy has been working with her on other aspects of her Inspired Living business, like marketing and photos.
âThe worldâs your oyster, as far as Kara is concerned,â Eaton said. âAnything you want to do, whatever youâre passionate about, we make it happen. Itâs great ⌠[the coronavirus] wasnât like a problem. It was more of an opportunity, to take advantage of the things that you need to get done or new markets or ways of doing your business. I know a lot of her clients from being online in Zoom calls with a lot of them, and everybodyâs just pumped and ready to go. Nobodyâs sitting around going, âOh my God, Iâm dying.ââ
Duffyâs message during COVID-19 is one of perseverance and community. She said she has another business sheâs planning to launch soon, though she declined to give details.
âWho can you be around thatâs going to help you get to that next step, keep you motivated, keep you inspired?â she said. âIf youâre left to your own devices, itâs so easy to give up way earlier than you need to. So often, the thing you need, the one thing thatâs missing, somebody has it. They say that one personâs trash is another personâs treasure. One personâs breakdown is somebody elseâs obvious answer and solution.â
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