Coffey Talk

Kate Coffey-Bacon

Grab your coffee and join Kate Coffey-Bacon for Coffey Talk...a podcast brewed for connection, featuring honest conversations and stories that inspire, challenge, and build community.

  1. 6일 전

    People First: Resilience, Authenticity, and the Art of the Frenemy ~ with Danielle McNamee

    In this episode of Coffey Talk, Kate sits down with Danielle McNamee, who leads the ERP Partner Channel at Versapay. Danielle shares openly about navigating life's hardest seasons, including her experience with infertility and IVF, and how those experiences deepened her empathy, reshaped her leadership, and changed the way she shows up for the people around her. They dig into the frenemy dynamic in the Microsoft partner ecosystem, what it really means to lead with authenticity, and why vulnerability is not a weakness, it is the thing that makes trust possible. If you have ever felt like you were carrying more than you could let on, this one is for you. TAKEAWAYS The hard seasons you go through do not just shape you personally. They make you a more empathetic, more effective leader.Empathy is not a soft skill. It is a strategy that builds the kind of trust that drives real results in partnerships.The frenemy dynamic is real in the Microsoft ecosystem, and the people who navigate it best lead with an abundance mindset and genuine relationship.Vulnerability creates safety. When you share your story, you give other people permission to share theirs.You cannot do it all alone. Building the right support system is not optional, it is the whole game. 👉🏻Contact information for Danielle McNamee LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/danielle-mcnamee/ Thanks for tuning in to Coffey Talk with Kate Coffey-Bacon! Real people. Real stories. Conversations that stir something in your soul. ☕ Subscribe and join the Coffey Talk community. 💬 Follow @_CoffeyTalk on Instagram for daily inspiration and behind-the-scenes stories. 🎧 New episodes every Monday at 8 AM ET. 👉 Visit us at CoffeyTalkPodcast.com

    46분
  2. 6월 22일

    The Table You Set: Community, Identity, and Building a Life That Fits with Khaled Nassra

    Episode Summary Khaled Nassra has never done things the conventional way. He spent his career in go-to-market leadership, founded Enki Consulting, and then eight months into his marriage, he and his wife Emma packed up and hit the world. Thirty cities across Europe and North America. No plan. Just the decision to step outside. In this episode, Khaled and Kate dig into what that journey has actually taught him: about discipline, identity, community, and what it means to belong somewhere when home is still being figured out. Khaled shares his immigration story, the six-and-a-half-year wait that brought his family to Vancouver, and what it felt like to arrive in a new country and have to rebuild from scratch. He talks about the difference between setting a table for others and actually making sure everyone has a seat, the blind spots that even well-intentioned leaders carry, and what it looks like to run toward the things that scare you just a little. If you've ever felt like a newcomer, in a room, in a city, in your own life, this one is for you. Key Takeaways Your roots aren't a place. They're the internal anchors you carry with you wherever you go.Discipline isn't about being hard on yourself. It's about checking in every day and asking: Am I still on my mission?Welcoming others requires more than an open door. Sometimes you have to go out and pull people in.What you see as a weakness, whether an accent, a non-linear career, or a life full of context switches, might be your greatest asset.Building community means being honest about who isn't at the table and asking why. 👉🏻Contact information for Khaled Nassra: https://www.linkedin.com/in/khalednassra/ Thanks for tuning in to Coffey Talk with Kate Coffey-Bacon! Real people. Real stories. Conversations that stir something in your soul. ☕ Subscribe and join the Coffey Talk community. 💬 Follow @_CoffeyTalk on Instagram for daily inspiration and behind-the-scenes stories. 🎧 New episodes every Monday at 8 AM ET. 👉 Visit us at CoffeyTalkPodcast.com

    44분
  3. 6월 15일

    The Becoming: Leadership, Mentorship, and Who You're Growing Into with Gina McGlamry

    Episode Summary In this episode of Coffey Talk, Kate sits down with Gina McGlamry, channel manager at TrueCommerce and a well-known relationship builder in the Microsoft Dynamics ecosystem. What starts as a conversation about conference culture and showing up authentically as a brand ambassador takes an exciting turn into one of the richest leadership conversations Coffey Talk has had. Gina talks about what it means to truly own your role -- the accountability, the internal advocacy, the responsibility of being the face of your company in a relationship-driven industry. Kate shares what she's been learning about knowing when to step back and let her growing team find their own footing. Together they get into mentorship in a real way: not the polished version, but the kind that happens in hallways and on quick calls when someone needs help navigating something they haven't seen before. The conversation moves through failure, recovery, and the leaders who make you better because of what they do in the hard moments -- not just the easy ones. Kate shares a story about bombing a pitch and the leader who responded not with disappointment, but with three words that changed her: 'but did you die?' Gina opens up about a call that went sideways, what she learned from it, and the kind of leadership culture that makes growth possible. They close with what Kate calls 'the becoming' -- the ongoing, imperfect process of turning into who you're meant to be, not who everyone expects you to be. This one goes somewhere unexpected and earns every minute. Key Takeaways Being a brand ambassador isn't just a conference role. It's an everyday accountability to the partners, customers, and teammates who are counting on you to show up.Mentorship isn't a program. It's a practice -- and knowing when to offer advice vs. when to just listen is a skill that takes years to develop.Good leaders create room for failure. Stepping in every time doesn't protect your team. It delays their development and eventually burns you out.Confidence in your own expertise isn't arrogance. At some point, you've earned the right to trust what you know without over-justifying it.The becoming is real: failure, pivots, and even the conversations that go off-script are part of how we grow into who we're meant to be. 👉🏻Contact information for Gina McGlamry https://www.linkedin.com/in/gina-mcglamry-95b890149/ Thanks for tuning in to Coffey Talk with Kate Coffey-Bacon! Real people. Real stories. Conversations that stir something in your soul. ☕ Subscribe and join the Coffey Talk community. 💬 Follow @_CoffeyTalk on Instagram for daily inspiration and behind-the-scenes stories. 🎧 New episodes every Monday at 8 AM ET. 👉 Visit us at CoffeyTalkPodcast.com

    39분
  4. 6월 8일

    Curiosity Did That: Mel Wilhelmi on Following What Interests You Through Every Career Pivot

    EPISODE SUMMARY Mel Wilhelmi has never had a master plan. And that's exactly the point. In this episode, Kate sits down with the Sr. Director of Marketing and Strategic Growth at Sunrise Technologies, a Microsoft Dynamics partner, for a conversation about what it actually looks like to keep saying yes to the most interesting thing in the room. Mel's career started at 16 at a job fair she wasn't even there for. She picked retail because it would give her the most real-world applicability. That one decision in 1991 wound through a microbiology degree, 17 years at Sally Beauty moving through programming, project management, and AX implementations, and eventually to Sunrise, where she's been a consultant, a trainer, and now the head of marketing. The thread through all of it? Curiosity. This conversation covers career pivots, the role of community in professional growth, what it means to push through fear, and why the skills that look unrelated on paper are usually the ones that set you apart. TAKEAWAYS Curiosity is a career strategy. Mel didn't map out her path. She followed what was most interesting, most challenging, and most worth her energy.The skills that look unrelated are usually the ones that set you apart. Biology to programming. Retail to consulting. Every detour connected.Fear is real and you push through it anyway. Mel draws a direct line between box jumps and career pivots.Community matters most to the people who didn't have it. Mel shows up for others because she remembers what it felt like when nobody showed up for her.Find your fulfillment and pursue it responsibly. You don't need the whole map. You just need the next right direction.👉🏻Contact information for Melissa Wilhelmi LinkedIn: :https://www.linkedin.com/in/melissawilhelmi/ Thanks for tuning in to Coffey Talk with Kate Coffey-Bacon! Real people. Real stories. Conversations that stir something in your soul. ☕ Subscribe and join the Coffey Talk community. 💬 Follow @_CoffeyTalk on Instagram for daily inspiration and behind-the-scenes stories. 🎧 New episodes every Monday at 8 AM ET. 👉 Visit us at CoffeyTalkPodcast.com

    42분
  5. 5월 11일

    Your Past Is the Fire: Shirley Grimes on Resilience, Motherhood, and the Ripple Effect with Shirley Grimes

    Episode Description: Shirley Grimes describes herself simply as a mom just trying to make it - but that description doesn't begin to cover the ground she's covered. In this Mother's Day episode of Coffey Talk, Shirley shares a story that starts in a car, winds through a psychology degree, a grief-fueled cross-country drive, and an accidental entry into the Business Central world through an order-entry job at a golf company in Panama City Beach. What Shirley didn't expect was to find a career she loves, a community that embraces her, and a platform to do what she was always wired to do: give others the same small but life-changing investment that her aunt once gave her. Kate and Shirley talk about the invisible weight of conference mom guilt, raising daughters to lead with faith over fear, letting go of a plan when something better is waiting, and why the tech community might be exactly the right place to change the trajectory of kids aging out of foster care. This one will stay with you. Takeaways: Your background doesn't set the ceiling — it can be the very thing that propels you forward.The people who shaped us most often had no idea the magnitude of what they were doing.Mom guilt around professional growth is real, valid, and worth naming out loud.Faith over fear isn't a platitude — it's a daily decision, especially when life forces a pivot.The tech community has a unique and largely untapped opportunity to mentor and reach foster youth.👉🏻Contact information for Shirley Grimes LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/shirley-grimes-90818214b/ Thanks for tuning in to Coffey Talk with Kate Coffey-Bacon! Real people. Real stories. Conversations that stir something in your soul. ☕ Subscribe and join the Coffey Talk community. 💬 Follow @_CoffeyTalk on Instagram for daily inspiration and behind-the-scenes stories. 🎧 New episodes every Monday at 8 AM ET. 👉 Visit us at CoffeyTalkPodcast.com

    40분
  6. 4월 20일

    Lead with Empathy, Adapt with Purpose with Jenn Rinfret

    Jenn Rinfret has lived a lot of lives. She was a runway model in Milan at 17, a single mom rebuilding from scratch, a survivor of a serious car accident, and the founder of a business that helped seniors navigate technology with dignity. Today she is the Commercial Lead for Americas at Seer 365 in the Microsoft channel — and through every chapter, empathy has been her north star. In this episode, Jenn and Kate dig into what it really means to lead with empathy in leadership and in life, the difference between a gamble and a calculated risk, and why the seniors Jenn worked with taught her more about showing up for people than any leadership course ever could. This is a conversation about resilience, reinvention, and what keeps you going when life just keeps coming. Key Takeaways: Stepping outside your comfort zone is where the best things begin — the discomfort is the point, not the problem.Empathy is not a soft skill. It is a leadership strategy, and it shows up in how you take the time to understand the why behind someone's behavior before reacting.There is a difference between a gamble and a calculated risk. Knowing the difference changes how you make decisions and how you move forward.The seniors Jenn worked with — spies, war survivors, people carrying extraordinary stories — are a reminder that wisdom is everywhere if you slow down enough to notice it.Reinvention is not a one-time event. It is something you choose over and over again, and it gets a little easier every time you do it. 👉🏻Contact information for Jenn Renfret https://www.linkedin.com/in/jennrinfret/ Thanks for tuning in to Coffey Talk with Kate Coffey-Bacon! Real people. Real stories. Conversations that stir something in your soul. ☕ Subscribe and join the Coffey Talk community. 💬 Follow @_CoffeyTalk on Instagram for daily inspiration and behind-the-scenes stories. 🎧 New episodes every Monday at 8 AM ET. 👉 Visit us at CoffeyTalkPodcast.com

    38분
  7. 4월 13일

    Winning in Today's Marketplace: How to Stay in the Room with Kevin Armstrong

    Kevin Armstrong has spent decades at the intersection of technology and growth, and in this episode of Coffey Talk, he pulls back the curtain on what it actually takes to win in today's marketplace. From his early days at Xerox to scaling companies, leading transformations, and now driving AI strategy at FinListics, Kevin shares the principles that have kept him in the room through every market shift the last 30 years has thrown at him. This is a conversation about curiosity, preparation, perspective, and what it means to show up as both a competitor and a good human. If you're navigating change, building your career, or just trying to figure out your next move, this one's for you. Key Takeaways Curiosity is a strategy, not a personality trait. The people who keep asking questions are the ones who stay relevant.Preparation is the differentiator nobody talks about enough. The practice-to-performance ratio in sales is broken, and it's costing people deals.Know thyself. Your value equation is unique to you, and the sooner you understand what you bring to the table, the sooner you can own it.Tell them something they don't already know. That's how you build a perspective worth having in the room.Time kills all deals, and that goes well beyond sales. Responsiveness is a discipline that compounds over a career. 👉🏻Contact information for Kevin Armstrong LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/armstrongkevin/ Episode Referenced: The Currency of Life: Understanding Time ~ with Brad Prendergast and Kate Coffey-Bacon https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-currency-of-life-understanding-time-with/id1835167771?i=1000738109865 Thanks for tuning in to Coffey Talk with Kate Coffey-Bacon! Real people. Real stories. Conversations that stir something in your soul. ☕ Subscribe and join the Coffey Talk community. 💬 Follow @_CoffeyTalk on Instagram for daily inspiration and behind-the-scenes stories. 🎧 New episodes every Monday at 8 AM ET. 👉 Visit us at CoffeyTalkPodcast.com

    55분
  8. 4월 6일

    Shut Her Down, Clancy: Kim Dallefeld on Grit, Community, and a Career That Never Stopped Moving

    Kim Dallefeld has spent nearly three decades in the Microsoft Dynamics NAV and Business Central ecosystem, and her story is anything but a straight line. From accidentally triggering a debugging message at Ford Motor Company to leading a ten-country ERP implementation, building Dallefeld Consulting from the ground up, and eventually selling it to Centre Technologies, Kim has lived through just about every chapter this industry has to offer. In this conversation, Kim and Kate dig into what it really takes to build a career worth remembering: listening before solving, showing up honestly, leaning into community, and never being afraid to ask for help. Kim is an MVP, MCT, NAVUG All-Star, and NAVUG Legend, and she still believes the best credential you can carry is your reputation. Key Takeaways: Listening is the most underrated consulting skill. Kim learned early that the best thing you can do before offering a solution is to actually hear what someone needs.Community gives you what certification never can. The relationships formed in the NAVUG community shaped Kim's career in ways no credential ever could.You get back as much as you put in, and sometimes way more. Showing up to serve, not to grab, is what builds lasting trust and opens unexpected doors.Knowing when to let go is its own kind of leadership. Kim's decision to sell Dallefeld Consulting came from self-awareness, not defeat, and that distinction matters.Be yourself and do what you say you're going to do. Simple advice that still holds up after 30 years in the field.👉🏻Contact information for Kim Dallefeld LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kim-dallefeld/ Thanks for tuning in to Coffey Talk with Kate Coffey-Bacon! Real people. Real stories. Conversations that stir something in your soul. ☕ Subscribe and join the Coffey Talk community. 💬 Follow @_CoffeyTalk on Instagram for daily inspiration and behind-the-scenes stories. 🎧 New episodes every Monday at 8 AM ET. 👉 Visit us at CoffeyTalkPodcast.com

    52분

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Grab your coffee and join Kate Coffey-Bacon for Coffey Talk...a podcast brewed for connection, featuring honest conversations and stories that inspire, challenge, and build community.