Parallel Entrepreneur with Mark Cleveland

Mark A. Cleveland

Mark explores the minds of visionary entrepreneurs who refuse to limit themselves to a single venture to learn how these trailblazers manage risks, innovate across industries, and turn ideas into impact. Whether you’re scaling your first business or juggling several, this podcast is your ultimate guide to thriving as a parallel entrepreneur.

  1. What It Really Takes to Build a Brand People Love | Andy Marshall

    VOR 8 STD.

    What It Really Takes to Build a Brand People Love | Andy Marshall

    Most people think they’re building a business. But every now and then, you meet someone who’s building something deeper, something rooted in people, place, and community. In this episode of The Parallel Entrepreneur, Mark sits down with Andy Marshall, Founder & CEO of A. Marshall Hospitality and the driving force behind Puckett’s. From his early days in the grocery business to transforming a small market with two gas pumps into a destination known for food, music, and connection, Andy’s journey doesn’t follow a typical path, it evolves with purpose. Puckett’s didn’t grow because of a playbook. It grew because it meant something to people. And over time, that approach hasn’t just worked, it’s scaled, without losing what made it matter in the first place. Now, Andy is stepping into a new chapter, running for Mayor of Williamson County. Not as a career politician, but as a builder shaped by decades of leading teams, serving communities, and creating places people care about. This conversation explores what that kind of leadership looks like:   • How Puckett’s became more than a restaurant, it became a community staple  • The discipline behind long-term growth  • Why community isn’t a byproduct, it’s the foundation  • What it means to lead beyond your business  • And why stepping into public service felt like the next right move This isn’t just about hospitality.It’s about building with intention, and carrying that into leadership at a different level. 𝗟𝗲𝗮𝗿𝗻 𝗺𝗼𝗿𝗲 𝗮𝗯𝗼𝘂𝘁 𝗔𝗻𝗱𝘆 𝗮𝗻𝗱 𝗵𝗶𝘀 𝘄𝗼𝗿𝗸:https://www.puckettsrestaurant.com/https://www.voteandymarshall.com/https://www.voteandymarshall.com/abouthttps://www.facebook.com/voteandymarshall/ About the HostMark Cleveland is an entrepreneur, investor, and advisor who works at the intersection of multiple ventures. As the voice behind The Parallel Entrepreneur, he explores how founders build aligned businesses, strong teams, and sustainable momentum—without forcing themselves into a single path.https://www.linkedin.com/in/macleveland/ About the GuestAndy Marshall is an entrepreneur who built his career the long way, starting in the grocery business before transforming a small-town market into what is now Puckett’s, one of the most recognized hospitality brands in the region. As Founder and CEO of A. Marshall Hospitality, he’s spent years scaling a business without losing its identity, focusing on experience, consistency, and community. His work reflects a belief that great businesses aren’t just built to grow—they’re built to matter.

    1 Std. 9 Min.
  2. Why Mentorship Is Broken (And How to Fix It) | Eve Peeterson

    8. APR.

    Why Mentorship Is Broken (And How to Fix It) | Eve Peeterson

    There’s a moment in every founder’s journey where the question shifts. Not “What am I building?”But “Who am I becoming?” In this conversation, Mark sits down with Eve Peeterson, an Estonian strategy and transformation leader who has led across private industry, government innovation, and national startup ecosystems. From working her way up in hospitality…To leading Estonia’s startup strategy…To now building a global mentorship platform… This is a conversation about reinvention, leadership, and what it actually takes to build ecosystems that work. They explore the real differences between US and European startup cultures, why mentorship is misunderstood, and how the best leaders keep learning, especially when they’re the ones teaching. And maybe most importantly…Why your next evolution doesn’t require starting over. Just saying yes. What You’ll Learn:- Why “perfect before launch” is holding founders back- The real difference between US and European startup thinking- How mentorship should actually work (and why it usually doesn’t)- Why leadership is the root of culture — whether you like it or not- How to keep reinventing yourself without losing who you are About the HostMark Cleveland is an entrepreneur, investor, and advisor who works at the intersection of multiple ventures. As the voice behind The Parallel Entrepreneur, he explores how founders build aligned businesses, strong teams, and sustainable momentum—without forcing themselves into a single path.https://www.linkedin.com/in/macleveland/ About the GuestEve Peeterson is an Estonian strategy and transformation leader with over 20 years of experience across hospitality, creative industries, and national innovation. From leading Startup Estonia to building cross-border initiatives like Nordic Tech Valley, she now focuses on leadership development as the founder of Leadrs.online, a mentorship platform designed to make better leadership more accessible.https://www.linkedin.com/in/eve-peeterson/ ⏱️ Key Moments00:00 – If you’re the smartest in the room…02:10 – Why she came to the U.S. (and what she got wrong)05:10 – Mentorship: Europe vs U.S. 07:03 – The mistake founders make: waiting too long to sell08:51 – Reinventing yourself (again and again) 14:24 – “Maybe I am an entrepreneur”18:56 – Why Estonia punches above its weight 26:40 – Starting over when nobody knows you28:22 – Why teaching is the best way to learn 31:14 – The biggest hiring mistake founders make32:43 – Leadership sets the culture 40:04 – The decision that changed Estonia’s future43:38 – What innovation actually means 49:47 – What she’s taking from this experience Links & Resources 👉 Join the Parallel Entrepreneur Network:https://www.parallelentrepreneur.com/#about-me 👉 Subscribe for more conversations with leaders building aligned systems across business, education, and community. 👍 If this episode resonated, leave a comment or share it with someone shaping the future of leadership.

    53 Min.
  3. Why Founders Don’t Succeed Alone | Dakota Simpson

    18. MÄRZ

    Why Founders Don’t Succeed Alone | Dakota Simpson

    In this episode of the Parallel Entrepreneur – Innovation Series, Mark Cleveland and Johnny Anderson sit down with Dakota Simpson, Chief Program Officer at the Nashville Entrepreneur Center. Dakota is focused on a simple idea: founders don’t succeed in isolation. They succeed when the right systems, support, and structure are in place around them. At the NEC, he leads the strategy and execution behind accelerator programs and founder development, helping entrepreneurs access the resources, networks, and guidance needed to grow. But this conversation goes deeper. It’s about what actually drives founder success beyond the idea. They cover:• Why ecosystems matter more than individual effort• The role of structure in startup success• What founders actually need at different stages• Aligning programs, people, and outcomes• Building more inclusive pathways to growth Short, practical, and grounded in real experience. Links - https://www.boringcompany.com/- https://technologycouncil.com/- https://nashvillechamber.com/- https://ec.co/- https://williamsonchamber.com/ About the GuestDakota Simpson is Chief Program Officer at the Nashville Entrepreneur Center, where he leads startup accelerators and founder programming. With a background in government and nonprofit leadership, he focuses on building systems that improve access, strengthen execution, and help entrepreneurs grow with clarity and support. https://www.linkedin.com/in/dakota-simpson-566358306/ About the Hosts Mark A. ClevelandManaging Director at Kensington Park Capital, entrepreneur, M&A advisor, and host of the Parallel Entrepreneur Networkhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/macleveland/ Johnny AndersonNashville tech leader, GNTC board member, Entrepreneur-in-Residence at the Entrepreneurship & Innovation Center, and host of The Impodsters™https://www.linkedin.com/in/johnnyonbrand/ Links & Resources 👉 Learn more about the Entrepreneurship & Innovation Center (EIC):https://www.wcs.edu/secondary/entrepreneurship-innovation-center-eic 👉 Join the Parallel Entrepreneur Network:https://www.parallelentrepreneur.com/#about-me 👉 Subscribe for more conversations with leaders building aligned systems across business, education, and community. 👍 If this episode resonated, leave a comment or share it with someone shaping the future of leadership. Chapters00:00:00 Speed to market and why it matters00:00:50 Meet Dakota Simpson + role overview00:01:54 What innovation actually means00:02:40 Building a founder support system00:03:42 The current surge in entrepreneurship00:05:02 Growth in founder demand and programs00:06:14 Shifts in founder demographics00:07:46 Younger founders entering earlier00:09:08 The rise of the parallel entrepreneur00:10:32 Lower barriers and earlier risk-taking00:11:05 Entrepreneurship by acquisition00:11:37 AI’s impact on founders00:12:30 What AI means for SaaS and business models00:13:55 Speed of change and access to knowledge00:15:00 What founders actually need to succeed00:17:30 Building systems that support growth00:19:30 Final thoughts on supporting entrepreneurs00:21:00 Episode close

    22 Min.
  4. Operational Debt Is Slowing Your Company | Stephanie Johnson

    11. MÄRZ

    Operational Debt Is Slowing Your Company | Stephanie Johnson

    In this episode of the Parallel Entrepreneur – Innovation Series, Mark Cleveland and Johnny Anderson sit down with Stephanie Johnson, a fractional CEO and COO who specializes in helping companies eliminate what she calls operational debt. Most leaders recognize technical debt in software. Fewer realize the same concept exists inside organizations. Misaligned teams. Unclear processes. Decisions that made sense in the moment but quietly compound over time. Stephanie steps into companies during pivotal moments—growth, transition, or pressure—and helps leadership teams reconnect strategy with execution. This conversation explores:• What operational debt actually looks like inside organizations• Why strategy often fails at the execution layer• How leaders stabilize teams during change• The hidden friction slowing growth• What it takes to realign people, systems, and performance If you’ve ever felt like your business should be moving faster than it is, this conversation will resonate. About the Stephanie JohnsonStephanie Johnson is a fractional and interim CEO/COO who helps organizations navigate complexity, stabilize operations, and drive sustainable growth. Known for her ability to quickly assess challenges and reconnect strategy with execution, she works with leadership teams to improve performance, strengthen alignment, and eliminate operational friction. Stephanie has led across global teams and organizations, bringing a balance of operational rigor, executive leadership, and people-centered transformation. About the Hosts Mark A. ClevelandManaging Director at Kensington Park Capital, entrepreneur, M&A advisor, and host of the Parallel Entrepreneur Networkhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/macleveland/ Johnny AndersonNashville tech leader, GNTC board member, Entrepreneur-in-Residence at the Entrepreneurship & Innovation Center, and host of The Impodsters™https://www.linkedin.com/in/johnnyonbrand/ Links & Resources 👉 Learn more about the Entrepreneurship & Innovation Center (EIC):https://www.wcs.edu/secondary/entrepreneurship-innovation-center-eic 👉 Join the Parallel Entrepreneur Network:https://www.parallelentrepreneur.com/#about-me 👉 Subscribe for more conversations with leaders building aligned systems across business, education, and community. 👍 If this episode resonated, leave a comment or share it with someone shaping the future of leadership. Chapters00:00:00 The idea of operational debt00:00:44 Episode introduction + Stephanie’s leadership focus00:01:10 What operational debt looks like inside companies00:02:05 Why strategy often breaks at execution00:02:58 Stepping into organizations during pivotal moments00:03:47 Aligning leadership teams around clarity and accountability00:04:39 Finding the friction slowing growth00:05:26 Stabilizing teams during transformation00:06:19 Reconnecting strategy with operational discipline00:07:12 Leadership lessons from high-stakes environments00:08:05 Final thoughts on eliminating operational debt

    7 Min.
  5. Strategic Alignment of Talent, Tech & Data | Amy Henderson

    4. MÄRZ

    Strategic Alignment of Talent, Tech & Data | Amy Henderson

    In this episode of the Parallel Entrepreneur, Innovation Series, Mark Cleveland and Johnny Anderson sit down with Amy Henderson, Director of Infrastructure at HCA Healthcare Physician Services. Amy operates at the intersection of technical viability and business outcomes, aligning talent, technology, and data to drive enterprise growth inside one of the largest healthcare systems in the country. But this conversation isn’t just about infrastructure. It’s about what it really takes to connect strategy to execution. To build teams that understand both the financial model and the human one. And to develop workforce pipelines that strengthen an entire region. Amy also reflects on her decade of service with the Nashville Technology Council, including her time as Board Chair, where she helped advocate for technology-focused workforce development across Tennessee, from K-12 to career changers. This episode explores:• Why strategic alignment is a leadership discipline• Operating technical teams inside financial guardrails• Building culture while scaling enterprise systems• Workforce development as a long-term investment• The role Nashville plays in shaping tech leadership If you care about the future of enterprise leadership — especially where technology meets execution — this conversation is worth your time. About Amy Henderson Amy Henderson is Director of Infrastructure at HCA Healthcare Physician Services, where she aligns talent, technology, and data to drive enterprise performance in complex healthcare environments. With a focus on connecting technical strategy to business outcomes, she builds high-performing teams that operate with both financial discipline and cultural strength. Amy also served for a decade on the Nashville Technology Council Board, including as Chair, where she championed workforce development across Tennessee’s tech ecosystem.https://www.linkedin.com/in/henderson-amy/ About the Hosts Mark A. ClevelandManaging Director at Kensington Park Capital, entrepreneur, M&A advisor, and host of the Parallel Entrepreneur Networkhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/macleveland/ Johnny AndersonNashville tech leader, GNTC board member, Entrepreneur-in-Residence at the Entrepreneurship & Innovation Center, and host of The Impodsters™https://www.linkedin.com/in/johnnyonbrand/ Links & Resources 👉 Learn more about the Entrepreneurship & Innovation Center (EIC):https://www.wcs.edu/secondary/entrepreneurship-innovation-center-eic 👉 Join the Parallel Entrepreneur Network:https://www.parallelentrepreneur.com/#about-me 👉 Subscribe for more conversations with leaders building aligned systems across business, education, and community. 👍 If this episode resonated, leave a comment or share it with someone shaping the future of leadership. Chapters00:00:00 The intersection of tech viability and business goals00:00:41 Episode introduction + Amy’s leadership focus00:01:07 Amy’s role at HCA Healthcare Physician Services00:01:54 Aligning talent, tech, and data inside enterprise systems00:02:48 Operating to a financial model while scaling teams00:03:39 Building culture within infrastructure organizations00:04:28 Why workforce development matters in Tennessee00:05:27 Serving on the Nashville Technology Council00:06:18 Developing talent pipelines from K-12 to career changers00:07:32 Leadership lessons from board service and enterprise growth00:08:36 Episode close

    10 Min.
  6. Women in Tech, Real Relationships & Nashville’s Growth Story | Meg Chamblee

    25. FEB.

    Women in Tech, Real Relationships & Nashville’s Growth Story | Meg Chamblee

    In this episode of The Parallel Entrepreneur – Innovation Series, Mark Cleveland and Johnny Anderson sit down with Meg Chamblee, Executive Vice President for Tennessee at UDig. Meg launched UDig’s Nashville office in 2020 and has grown it more than 10x, building not just a market presence, but a reputation rooted in trust, partnership, and long-term relationships. But this conversation goes far beyond growth metrics. Meg shares how Nashville’s tech community has evolved, why organizations like Women in Technology of Tennessee (WiTT) matter more than ever, and what it really looks like to lead with both excellence and inclusion. As a past president of WiTT and a board leader at the Greater Nashville Technology Council (GNTC), Meg has helped shape the ecosystem that supports emerging leaders, especially women navigating technology careers in Middle Tennessee. This episode explores:• Why community is a strategic advantage in Nashville• How WiTT is creating access, confidence, and opportunity for women in tech• The power of real relationships in building sustainable growth• What enterprise clients actually need from digital transformation partners• How leadership evolves as companies scale• Why investing in people outlasts investing in hype If you care about technology, leadership, and building something that lasts in this city, this conversation is for you. Learn more about WiTT: https://www.wittn.org/ Connect with Meg: https://www.linkedin.com/in/megchamblee/ About Meg ChambleeMeg Chamblee is Executive Vice President for Tennessee at UDig, a technology consulting firm that designs and builds custom digital workflows and experience solutions for enterprise clients. She founded and leads UDig’s Nashville office, which has grown more than 10x since 2020. Meg is a past president of Women in Technology of Tennessee (WiTT), serves on the board of the Greater Nashville Technology Council (GNTC), and co-founded the ELITE (Emerging Leaders in Technology) program. She has been recognized as an NBJ 40 Under 40 honoree and is a longtime advocate for building inclusive leadership pipelines across Middle Tennessee. About the Hosts Mark A. ClevelandManaging Director at Kensington Park Capital, entrepreneur, M&A advisor, and host of the Parallel Entrepreneur Networkhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/macleveland/ Johnny AndersonNashville tech leader, GNTC board member, Entrepreneur-in-Residence at the Entrepreneurship & Innovation Center, and host of The Impodsters™https://www.linkedin.com/in/johnnyonbrand/ Links & Resources👉 Learn more about the Entrepreneurship & Innovation Center (EIC):https://www.wcs.edu/secondary/entrepreneurship-innovation-center-eic 👉 Join the Parallel Entrepreneur Network:https://www.parallelentrepreneur.com/#about-me 👉 Subscribe for more conversations with leaders building aligned systems across business, education, and community. 👍 If this episode resonated, leave a comment or share it with someone shaping the future of leadership. Chapters 00:00:00 The reality of being the only woman in the room 00:00:52 Episode introduction + framing Meg’s leadership 00:01:01 Meg Chamblee, UDig, and launching Nashville 00:01:47 Why relationships drive real growth 00:02:03 Nashville’s tech ecosystem and connection culture 00:03:00 The impact of WiTT in Nashville 00:04:02 Community as the foundation for scaling 00:05:00 Leadership lessons from growing a market 00:06:01 Investing in people and showing up to serve 00:07:00 Board service, volunteer leadership, and long-term impact 00:07:42 Episode close

    22 Min.
  7. Designing for Trust: Customer Experience, Bias & the Human–Automation Balance

    18. FEB.

    Designing for Trust: Customer Experience, Bias & the Human–Automation Balance

    Great experiences don’t happen by accident. They’re designed. In this episode of The Parallel Entrepreneur – Innovation Series, Mark Cleveland and Johnny Anderson sit down with Suzi Earhart, CCXP, a Customer Experience and Organizational Change executive who believes better experiences begin with intentional design, empathy, and mutual understanding — and end in measurable business results. Suzi started her career in computer science before realizing something foundational: technology alone doesn’t create great outcomes. People, process, and technology must work together. And if they aren’t aligned around the customer, trust quietly erodes. This conversation goes beyond surface-level CX talk. We explore how leaders unintentionally design from the inside out, how unconscious bias limits true “outside-in” thinking, and why deciding between human, assisted, or self-service interactions is one of the most strategic trust decisions a company makes. In this episode, we discuss:- Why incentives today are tied to identity and belonging- The challenge of truly thinking “outside-in”- How culture and bias distort customer-centered design- The difference between human, assisted, and automated experiences- Why innovation requires structured change management- Assessing whether employees are truly set up to deliver quality- How aligned CX creates both financial and relational wealth At just over 12 minutes, this episode delivers practical insight for founders, operators, and leaders responsible for shaping experience at scale. About the Guest Suzi Earhart, CCXP is a Customer Experience and Organizational Change executive based in Denver, Colorado. She is passionate about improving experiences through intentional design, empathy, and mutual understanding — outcomes she believes must ultimately be proven in business results. Beginning her career in Computer Science, Suzi quickly recognized that sustainable innovation requires alignment across people, process, and technology. Her work focuses on helping organizations think like their customers, challenge unconscious bias, and intentionally decide when to use human, assisted, or self-service models. She holds certifications in change management and has led initiatives including:- Strategic and technology roadmaps- Journey mapping and Voice of the Customer systems- Service delivery redesign- Organizational change management programs- Governance system creation- Employee capability and “do-ability” assessments Throughout her career, she has remained committed to servant leadership and mentoring — helping others reach their full potential while building systems that deepen trust and results. Connect with Suzi here: https://www.linkedin.com/in/suzi-earhart-ccxp-220663/ About the Hosts Mark A. ClevelandManaging Director at Kensington Park Capital, entrepreneur, M&A advisor, and host of the Parallel Entrepreneur Networkhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/macleveland/ Johnny AndersonNashville tech leader, GNTC board member, Entrepreneur-in-Residence at the Entrepreneurship & Innovation Center, and host of The Impodsters™https://www.linkedin.com/in/johnnyonbrand/ Links & Resources 👉 Learn more about the Entrepreneurship & Innovation Center (EIC):https://www.wcs.edu/secondary/entrepreneurship-innovation-center-eic 👉 Join the Parallel Entrepreneur Network:https://www.parallelentrepreneur.com/#about-me 👉 Subscribe for more conversations with leaders building aligned systems across business, education, and community. 👍 If this episode resonated, leave a comment or share it with someone shaping the future of leadership. Chapters:00:00:00 Incentives, Identity & Brand Association00:00:49 Episode Introduction00:01:41 Suzi’s Background: Tech, People & CX00:02:00 Why Innovation Demands Change00:04:01 Brand as Identity & Belonging00:05:01 The Full Customer Ecosystem00:06:00 Designing Platforms Customers Struggle With00:07:00 Fitting Into the Fabric of Customers’ Lives00:09:00 “Our Customers Don’t Understand”00:10:01 Perspective, Bias & Trust Decisions00:12:01 Innovation as Intentional Design

    13 Min.
  8. Why Today’s Leadership Playbook Breaks in the Age of AI

    11. FEB.

    Why Today’s Leadership Playbook Breaks in the Age of AI

    The leadership playbooks that built today’s successful organizations were designed for a different world. In this episode of The Parallel Entrepreneur – Innovation Series, hosts Mark Cleveland and Johnny Anderson sit down with Amalia Goodwin, Global Managing Director of Adaptive Organizations at Slalom, to confront a reality most executives quietly avoid: Incremental change is no longer safe. It’s organizational suicide. Amalia works with C-suite leaders and boards who understand that AI transformation isn’t about tools, it’s about redesigning how organizations sense, decide, and evolve at scale. This conversation goes far beyond technology and into the deeper work of leadership courage, organizational design, and the role companies play as architects of society’s future. We explore what it actually means to build an adaptive organization, one capable of continuous reinvention rather than reactive survival. In this episode, we discuss:- Why AI transformation fails without leadership courage- The danger of applying yesterday’s playbooks to tomorrow’s problems- What “innovation metabolism” really means inside organizations- How leaders can balance quarterly performance with long-term survival- Why organizations must see themselves as civic architects, not just profit engines- Designing decision-making systems that can keep pace with exponential change- The overlooked societal impact of AI governance and organizational choices Amalia brings insights shaped by 25+ years and 100+ global transformations, blending strategic clarity with moral responsibility. This is a conversation for leaders who know the future isn’t something you react to, it’s something you design. Chapters: 00:00:00 “Courage feels a lot like fear when you’re in it.” (Cold open) 00:00:47 Episode introduction + why this conversation matters 00:01:07 The systems that made you successful won’t survive the AI age 00:01:16 Why incremental change is actually dangerous right now 00:01:37 Amalia on helping organizations succeed in a technology shift 00:03:54 “The definition of value is changing.” 00:04:22 How companies are evaluating AI strategy (M&A lens) 00:05:23 Adaptive leadership + reinvesting in continuous change 00:06:00 Learning velocity as a new measure of value 00:06:25 Decision velocity: when do leaders know enough to move? 00:07:27 “Innovation metabolism” — how leaders fuel themselves differently 00:07:56 Addressing fear in strategic decision-making 00:08:13 It’s okay to be afraid — making AI adoption fun (Bingo + games) 00:09:59 The moment AI “blew me away” (and rewrote an SOW) 00:10:29 The real leader work: humility, new mindsets, new skill sets 00:10:41 “Courage feels a lot like fear when you’re in it.” (Expanded) 00:11:28 Relearn vs. Unlearn — why unlearning is harder 00:12:23 Six-month roadmaps vs. 3-year plans 00:13:19 Massive 30-year transformative vision 00:14:01 AI as a playground — bringing back play 00:15:03 Hackathons, bake-offs, and low-code teams winning 00:16:00 Agentic workflows + giving unexpected leaders a stage 00:16:55 Closing: “A bake-off sounds like the right answer.” About the GuestAmalia Goodwin is the Global Managing Director of Adaptive Organizations at Slalom, where she partners with C-suite leaders and boards to reimagine how organizations lead through exponential disruption. Her work focuses on the intersection of AI transformation, leadership courage, and organizational responsibility, helping companies design systems capable of continuous reinvention. Amalia is a recognized thought leader on adaptive strategy and organizational courage, with insights featured in Fortune, Forbes, HR.com, Unite.AI, and Slalom’s global research on AI-enabled organizations. She is known for introducing leaders to what she calls “innovation metabolism”, the capacity to transform fast enough to survive, without being consumed by change itself. 🔗 Connect with Amalia on LinkedIn:https://www.linkedin.com/in/amaliagoodwin/ About the HostsMark A. ClevelandManaging Director at Kensington Park Capital, entrepreneur, M&A advisor, and host of the Parallel Entrepreneur Networkhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/macleveland/ Johnny AndersonNashville tech leader, GNTC board member, Entrepreneur-in-Residence at the Entrepreneurship & Innovation Center, and host of The Impodsters™https://www.linkedin.com/in/johnnyonbrand/ Links & Resources 👉 Learn more about the Entrepreneurship & Innovation Center (EIC):https://www.wcs.edu/secondary/entrepreneurship-innovation-center-eic 👉 Join the Parallel Entrepreneur Network:https://www.parallelentrepreneur.com/#about-me 👉 Subscribe for more conversations with leaders building aligned systems across business, education, and community. 👍 If this episode resonated, leave a comment or share it with someone shaping the future of leadership.

    18 Min.

Info

Mark explores the minds of visionary entrepreneurs who refuse to limit themselves to a single venture to learn how these trailblazers manage risks, innovate across industries, and turn ideas into impact. Whether you’re scaling your first business or juggling several, this podcast is your ultimate guide to thriving as a parallel entrepreneur.