Never Apologize for Being a Mom
Being a working mom is a superpower—but it shouldn’t require superhuman strength. This Mother’s Day, we need more than flowers and brunch. We need leaders who say, “Your full humanity is welcome here.”
Being a working mom is a superpower—but it shouldn’t require superhuman strength. This Mother’s Day, we need more than flowers and brunch. We need leaders who say, “Your full humanity is welcome here.”
Forty‑eight years stand between today and equal power for women in America’s boardrooms—a delay longer than an entire working lifetime. Parity Now challenges the old boys’ network head‑on, exposing the hidden systems that keep the world’s best minds on the sidelines.
In a world reshaped by AI and relentless pace, The More Effect introduces a human-first code of living and leading—one that honors presence, possibility, connection, and momentum. It’s a practical framework for thriving in modern life with clarity, care, and emotional intelligence.
Too often, customer service today is stuck in the Stone Age—manual, reactive, and constrained by outdated processes. Experience Manufacturing™ is the natural evolution, combining human intelligence and AI to create proactive, emotionally resonant, and profoundly human customer experiences.
Jeremy Victor is a pioneering futurist and the creator of Experience Manufacturing™, a modern framework for building emotional equity and lasting brand affinity. He is the author and podcast host of Business at the Speed of AI, where he explores how intentional design, emotional intelligence, and technology shape the future of customer experience and leadership.
Jenny Cavnar is set to make history as the first female play-by-play MLB analyst for the Oakland Athletics. But this isn’t just a personal milestone—it’s a sign of a shifting landscape in sports and beyond. What if giving women bigger microphones isn’t just about equality, but about unlocking untapped excellence?
This Thanksgiving, I’m reflecting on the power of presence—and how self-awareness helps us savor the moments that matter most. After a season of separation, my family is finally together again, and it’s reminding me that connection begins when we choose to look up. Eyes up. Phone down. Be here, be now.
Achievement knows no gender. — Jeremy Victor — First in 1963, and again in 1974, women were promised equality in the workplace. Yet decades later, women are still waiting. In this article, I dive into the staggering realities of gender parity and explore why corporate America continues to fail women.