Twenty Something Yak


A Yaktivate.com Podcast Network Channel

Archive for March, 2008

Twenty Something Yak – Interviews Ben Casnocha

Thursday, March 27th, 2008
Welcome to Twenty Something Yak with Christine Hassler.

Todays guest is Ben Casnocha http://bigben.blogs.com/website/index.html http://www.mystartuplife.com/

Ben Casnocha

Listen in to my conversation with the very insightful Ben Casnocha who started his first company at age 14! Now he is 20 and a freshmen in college, but has already accomplished more than most of us do ten years after college. He is author of the bestselling business book My Start-Up Life: What a (Very) Young CEO Learned on His Journey Through Silicon Valley. www.mystartuplife.com. Ben’s work has been featured in (more…)

Twenty Something Yak – Interviews Bailey Stoler

Monday, March 17th, 2008

Welcome to Twenty Something Yak with Christine Hassler.

Todays guest is Bailey Stoler, Author of “A Mistake Leads to Business School”article.

Baily

In this episode of twenty-something yak, we’re talking about how our career path is not always a straight shot, it’s often a long windy road or it’s a road with many forks in it. I discovered today’s guest and seasoned windy-road career path traveler, Bailey Stoler, by reading a business week article she wrote entitled “A Mistake Leads to Business School”. (more…)

Twenty Something Yak – Interviews Patricia Hudak

Monday, March 10th, 2008
Welcome to Twenty Something Yak with Christine Hassler.

Todays guest is Patricia Hudak, founder of Real World 101

Patricia Hudak

Has the real world been a bit of a shock?? You are not alone! Tune in to Christine’s conversation with Patricia Hudak, 22 who founded Real World 101 - your online resource to everything you need to know, but were never taught, about life after college. The idea came to Patricia at the beginning of her senior year of college when she realized that not only did she not know how to pay off her student loans (which total over $160,000), but she didn’t know much about how to do anything in the “real world.” After a fruitless search for (more…)