Episodes
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Hello and thank you for listening to this latest episode of HIP Biz, the podcast where our roving business writer, Damien Pestell meets local business owners to find out how they find meaning in their work and what their journey has been to creating a business they love.
This week Damien met up with traditional signwriter and generally good bloke Charlie Nelson. Damien first met Charlie while he was up a ladder, since then he has learnt more about his life and been intrigued by the choices he has made.
Damien has a personal interest in Charlie’s line of work as both his dad and grandad were signwriters. For Damien stepping into his studio for the first time was like stepping back in time and he was looking forward to talking to him about the traditional craft which has seen a revival in recent years.
In this episode Damien finds out that Charlie has always been passionate about food and left university wanting to be a chef, inspired by the TV programme Masterchef. However, he quickly found he couldn’t cope with the unsociable hours and decided to head in a different direction.
Charlie talks about heading in the direction of design and landing a “great job” as a Graphic Designer for a food and drink magazine in London. How much he enjoyed it and why leaving to be a research analyst for more money was a mistake. But how it eventually turned out to be one of the most valuable lessons of his career.
Charlie tells Damien about the negative effects of working a job he didn’t enjoy and feeling an urgent need for change. Deciding to do something completely different and moving to live in Africa. Where he got a job at an eco lodge in Mozambique and how the experience gave him a completely different perspective on life. While there he experimented with wood-fired cooking which sparked a business idea.
He left Africa after a year and returned to the UK to start Fundi Pizza, a street food business with his brother in 2012. He describes how it was great fun and immediately successful. However as the business grew it became more complicated and less fun. He started to do some signwriting on the side.
Charlie tells Damien about the pandemic closing Fundi Pizza overnight and how they managed to sell the food business. Charlie then used furlough to establish himself as a signwriter, starting Fundi Signs.
Finally, Charlie talks about starting again and how it has meant learning again, something that he has missed as an adult. How he has always loved lettering and the enjoyment he gets from becoming more immersed in his craft.
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The latest episode of HIP Biz is now available, hosted by our roving Business Editor Damien Pestell. In this series we tell the story of the people behind our local businesses, finding out how and why they created their business.
This week Damien travels by bicycle (and up a very large hill) to meet the fabulous Brewing Brothers, Ned and Charlie Braxton at their sparkly new brewery up on the Ridge in Hastings.
They talk about their first job as publicans, managing their family owned pub in East Sussex and the fondness they have for those formative years, where they made many mistakes but had so much fun.
They discuss how those mistakes taught them invaluable lessons when it came to setting up their own business, and the West Coast road trip they embarked on in 2014 that inspired them, opening their eyes to the concept of micro-brewing, which celebrated the craft of beer making and the brewer.
They talk about how their friend Bill, an amateur brewer, joined the team right at the start and how they started brewing their own beer shortly afterwards, before opening the doors to their first pub, The Imperial on Queens road in 2016.
HIP finds out how the business was extremely well received in Hastings before Covid, and how they pivoted the business model overnight to a delivery service, quite literally getting on their bikes and personally meeting customers.
They discuss the fantastic bond they have developed with their customers and how a creative crowdfunding campaign enabled their latest move to the new brewery site and tap room.
By their own admission Ned and Charlie had no idea what they were doing when they first started their business and they’ve winged it on more than one occasion, but good fortune has followed them and they’ve had a fantastic time in the process.
A lot of fun was had recording this episode and catching up with one of the most fun businesses in Hastings, we hope that you enjoy the show which is now available on most platforms including Spotify and Apple Podcasts.
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Episodes manquant?
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HIPcast#203 sounds great on headphones. Just saying.
Sarah Milne takes a deep dive into the recent Refugee Buddy Week - the politics of representation, of inviting in to our homes, of the art and philosophy and psychology of the refugee experience - speaking to Ayah Bourghli, from the Refugee Buddy Project talking about the All Refugees Welcome panel discussion and Anna Derevianko from Ukraine, talking about her experience escaping from Odessa to Hastings and her first week here.
Ben Bruges went online to look out for Community Ledge and found People of Hastings instead. Kathryn Sutter explains, and introduces Ben to Millie Rowland, CEO of Boathouse Arts and founder of ‘Millie’s Nightclub’ and Kate Rosie, owner of Teddy Tinker’s: an antique, collectables, vintage and fancy dress shop on London Road.
Following on from the feature in Issue 203 ’Saving Lives at Sea. Hastings Lifeboat Women.’ Sarah Milne reflects on her own roles at Hastings Lifeboat Station and shares some safety tips.
We daisy-chain feature our favourite song 'came to the city' from Tim Hoyte's new album Clouds are Full of Stories. Tim Hoyte - Clouds are full of stories - (Bandcamp download).
He is hereby (ie when this is posted) daisy-challenged to make a bed, ident, audio clip, news clip, art piece, or whatever he chooses. Anything other than a full-blown song, or existing piece. That's what we mean by daisy-chain. Tim Hoyte is hereby challenged. And is welcome to drop a musician friend into the same body-trap. Daisy-chain time: time for the next flower!
The last podcast released was HIPcast#182. Bucking the 'pandemic project' trend, we made none. No excuses. It's just what happened. Or, rather, ... didn't.
Yes, HIPcast is back. But we need help. We need you to contribute your audio stories, soundscapes, story-telling or performing. We're also looking to feature an original song from the Hastings scene in each podcast, to take part in the Daisy-Chain Challenge.
We also need you to share. If you like the sound of this ep or think the basic idea is sound, then support us by sharing it. Simples. Thank you.
HIP is out each fortnight in your local cafe or corner shop (list here) and can be downloaded or read online. Follow Hastings Independent Press on Facebook and Instagram.
You can support independent community journalism by becoming a Friend of HIP.
You can volunteer. We're all volunteers. We don't bite. Come to the next open meeting if you want to help sub-edit, write, photograph, distribute, shoot, record, fund-raise...
Next Open Meeting: 7:30 @ The Nest, 5 July
Find the section emails on page two.
HIPcast is [email protected]
HIPbiz is [email protected]
news@ info@ art@ community@ listings@
Thank you to Jamwala for the title music.
Sarah Milne is a writer, artist and psychologist here in Hastings.
Ben Bruges is Features and Social Media editor for Hastings Independent.
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In this episode of HIP Biz, I meet Jennifer McNeil and Hayley Roe, founders of the wonderful Plant the Seed, an exciting new vegan food business based in Hastings.
In this episode we talk about the rise of veganism and how to do it in a balanced way. How Jen became a vegetarian at 16 before going vegan in her twenties and how Hayley converted after they met.
I find out how Plant the Seed was born from a passion to make vegan food more healthy and accessible and how starting their business in lockdown meant that furlough from their old jobs gave them a free hit at an idea they’d had.
Jen and Hayley speak about starting the business in London initially as a vegan sandwich delivery concept, where they hand delivered the sandwiches and later how they developed the concept into toasties and brunch as well as the original sandwiches.
I get to try one of their sandwiches live on the podcast and we discuss their move from Walthamstow to Hastings and how they have integrated into their new life by the sea. Finally we talk about working with your partner and how they’ve invented the vegan fried egg!
It was great to meet Jen and Hayley and hear their story, how they have followed their passion to create a business they love and enjoy.
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In this episode of HIP Biz I meet local baking legend Michael Wootton, owner of Judges Bakery in Hastings old town to explore how he fell in love with bread and being custodian of one of the country's oldest working bakeries, which first started making loaves in 1826.
We talk about growing up in Hastings and the special community the old town has, how it feels like a village and his passion for his hometown. How Hastings` special culture has come to exist and why he thinks new people coming to the town is a good thing.
How he didnt know what to do with his life when he finished his A levels, but saw an apprenticeship as a baker and decided to do that until he found a proper job, he has been baking now for over 30 years.
How he fell in love with bread and the sadness that he felt when the baking industry went through its darkest times and how he decided to buy judges so that he could make the bread he loved.
How Judges is a business he is incredibly proud of baking over 30 different types of bread in the summer, making everything from scratch dn how the acid test of a bakery should be their sausage rolls. We talk about the team of 28 people he has employs and how he has instilled his values about bread in them, and how they are big family.
We talk about the building that Judges Bakery is in and how the bakery has always been there, that the house is 500 years old and how the timber has been carbon dated to 1000 years ol and believed to be the timber from the norman conquest of Enhgland when they left their boats on the beach.
We talk sourdough and the tradition of bread making, why it is healthier and tastes better than yeasted bread and how the word barmy came from bread making. He also tells me where I went wrong with my lockdown sourdough, tips on making your own sourdough starter at home and how time is the secret ingredient in his bread.
It was fantastic to meet Michael and hear his story about following his passion and creating a business which really is truly loved and an integral part of the community.
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In this week's episode of Be Your Business/HIP I meet Founder Corie and Distribution Manager Griffin from Hastings based male grooming company 1 Society. A business with a fun, unique style and an uplifting story to tell.
I speak to Corie about leaving home when he was 18 and going to live at the other end of the country, leaving everything he knew behind. Living for six years in a caravan in rural Sussex to be a farmer and his struggles with depression.
I talk to Griffen about emigrating to Hastings from Montreal, Canada via Europe with his free-spirited family and how a motorbike accident 3 years ago changed his life forever. How he has coped with life altering injuries and moved forward to create a life he enjoys, taking things one step at a time.
Corie introduces us to the 1 Society product range which were developed after seeing a gap in the male grooming market. How 50% of men worldwide have a beard, and the satisfaction he gets from making all the products himself and loving it when customers are happy.
We talk about creating a business which has helped to alleviate Corrie’s depression, a place filled with his mates which is fun, light hearted and doesn’t feel like work. How he keeps his feet on the ground and prioritises having fun with the business, so that it doesn’t become stressful.
It was great to meet the 1 Society team and hear their story, how Corie has created a business from his energy which suits him and other people connect with. It was incredible to meet these two young entrepreneurs who have created a life for themselves through a business they love.
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In this episode of HIP Biz I speak to Giles Perrin the charismatic owner of the St Leonards Grocery, a local fruit and veg shop which has become part of the fabric of the local community. Giles wears several hats and is also the Principal and founder of Claremont school, an Independent Day & Boarding school in East Sussex.
I find out about Giles` early life, and how he spent his formative childhood years in and around the school that his dad set up - Bedes in East Sussex. And that 19 weeks of the year he lived at their family holiday home on the north Devon coast, a place he now calls his 'spiritual home'.
When Giles finished school he embarked on a gap year to the India subcontinent and while there found a place like nothing he had ever expereinced before, meeting people who were far outside the demographic he had previously encountered, opening his eyes to a new way of life. He would return throughout his career.
The following years took him to University which he found difficult and then jobs on building sites and gardening work, where he was attracted to being outdoors.
After a second trip to India to set up a guesthouse, he returned to Bedes this time as a teacher which he enjoyed but decided to change it up and transferred to Frome school in Somerset, a tough comprehensive school.
He describes himself as a maverick teacher who was excellent with teenagers both academically and pastorally.
He travelled back to India for a third time when he was invited to set up an international boarding school, taking his young family to Pune where they stayed for over 4 years.
He came home when he was asked to set up a new school in Sussex from scratch. The school became a success and is thriving a decade later.
In 2021 he and Gillian, his partner decided to buy their local grocery store after a chance meeting with Teresa, one of the members of staff who whispered in his ear that it was for sale. They bought it from the previous proprietor who had run it for 33 years.
Giles has found a place where he can do the things he loves, being around people, getting to know them and providing an important service.
Nowadays he spends most of his time off working at the grocery store, with his nephew Jack running the day to day. He has quickly improved the business bringing new products and energy to the project.
Giles is very honest about his work style and describes himself as a master of winging it. He has never had a career plan, but just done the next thing that looks good. This has led to a varied career based on intuition rather than planning.
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Hello, I'm Damien Pestell from Be Your Business and welcome to this episode of HIP Biz where I speak to local business owners about how they have created a successful business they love, what matters most to them and what they have learnt on their journey so far.
This week I speak with Tim B’Vard who runs the fabulous Bavard Bar, a regular event on the south coast which combines Tim’s love of nonsense with stories from local residents about anything they choose.
In this episode I find out about Tim’s journey from the courtroom to the stage and his ongoing search for freedom throughout his career.
Tim shares how his early life was influenced by a love of comedy, which he was introduced to by his dad, who he would go to see in various shows. He talks about how on his 21st birthday he received Edward Lear’s Book of Nonsense with a personal note, “Always keep a bit of nonsense in your life!”, and how it would prove to be prophetic.
He discusses seeking freedom in his life and career, but pragmatically chose to make his legal career work for him and sought areas which could give him more autonomy.
He shares finding liberation in the form of standing up and speaking, first as a trainer to graduates embarking on a legal career and then spending more time in the courtroom instead of the office.
Finally we explore how he created The Bavard Bar. That he initally searched for space above pubs with his daughter but realised he didn’t even have a name or a pitch. His daughter suggested the name and he scribbled the idea down on a bit of paper - He confessed he had no business plan or idea of what the business was “I just did it!”
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Hello, I'm Damien Pestell from Be Your Business and welcome to this episode of HIP Biz where I speak to business owners about how they have created a successful business they love, what matters most to them and what they have learnt on their journey so far.
This week I speak with Olga Mamonova who owns and runs Kino Teatr, an arts venue in the heart of St Leonards with her husband Russell. The Kino opened its doors in 2014 but the building first opened as a cinema in 1913.
Olga talks about rescuing this hidden gem when it was being used as storage space for a bathroom shop and how they got a lot of the kit for the cinema second hand an how the Kino has since developed into the cultural heartbeat of the town.
I discover what life was like in 1970’s Moscow in the Communist Soviet Union - Olga loved her life there and fondly remembers how the arts were easily accessible to her and her family. She attended music school with children from a wide variety of backgrounds and often went to shows at the Bolshoi Theatre for just £5!
Her father was a novelist, translator and poet, he specialised in the connection between different cultures and had a passion for Japanese culture. He came from a poor background but raised Olga and her sister to have his values about culture being the most important thing in life.
She grew up having a strong passion for her own and other cultures and pursued a career in the arts, working at a contemporary art gallery in Moscow where she met her husband Russell, an artist himself.
Finally we talk about the importance of culture to a community, The importance of St Leonards culturally and what it was like starting an arts business not long after the biggest recession ever.
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Hello, I'm Damien from Beyourbusiness.co.uk and welcome to this episode of HIP Biz where I speak to business owners about how they have created a successful business they love, what matters most to them and what they have learnt on their journey so far.
This week I speak to Hassan Gemei who owns Liban Coast a very successful Syrian restaurant with his wife Sennah. The restaurant was founded in 2013 from Sennah’s love of cooking her native food and has grown organically from a market stall initially to an established and thriving restaurant on the St Leonards food scene.
Hassan was born in Egypt to a multi-cultural family, his father was Egyptian and his mother Italian. By the time he was 5 he spoke 4 different languages and his early memories were shaped by very happy times in the kitchen with his Italian grandmother and regular community meals shared with family and friends.
In this episode we talk about the culture shock of coming to the UK in the Sixties where he followed in his fathers footsteps to become an engineer. We talk about his relationship with his father and how he inspired him to explore throughout his career.
I find out how Hassan turned a hobby into a business when he bought his local squash club, managing to persuade his local bank manager to lend him the money when his offer was unexpectedly accepted.
We talk about how each new business venture wasn’t about the money but the challenge and how he got a thrill from succeeding in new industries. So far Hassan has been an engineer, a software developer, a sports club owner, a commercial chef and run several import/export businesses. All of his businesses have been successful and he has sold most of them for a profit, he is a born entrepreneur.
Hassan is a highly intelligent and caring man with a natural affinity for business, throughout our conversation he recalls clearly the people who he has met along his journey and ponders often on how and where they are now. Throughout his life he has trusted his intuition and followed his energy to create. I thoroughly enjoyed learning about his journey and I hope you enjoy this wonderful podcast!
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Imogen White is one half of Hello Polly Copywriters, a dynamic copywriting duo setup during lockdown to help businesses communicate their messages clearly and concisely through their written content.
Imogen found her love of writing 15 years ago when she embarked on a personal project about a local historical object. The object captivated her imagination so much it became central to the first of her published children’s books.
In this episode we talk about how her work was born from a love of creating something new which engages people through stories and I discover how it evolved naturally from her previous career in sales & marketing.
I find out why Imogen enjoys being involved in lots of different businesses and how she captures the voice of local business owners` passion to tell unique and compelling stories. -
Mia Preston recently opened her latest business venture Pod Central, a Japanese style compact hotel in the heart of St Leonards. Pod central provides high quality overnight accommodation at a budget cost with energy saving technology making it a more sustainable hotel model.
We discuss the process of starting the business and I find out about creating a startup with no expectations or attachment to outcome.
Mia has had a fascinating career which has balanced her sharp intellect and keen thirst for understanding with a big heart and a desire to care for and help those who are less fortunate than her.
Her career began with an engineering degree, she followed her love of making and building things. She discovered that she was the only female on the course and when she finished she became a design and technology teacher.
She explains that she likes engineering because it combines science and art, and found that there is creativity in building a bridge or a road as well as rules. We also dig into the dogma of infrastructure and how things may appear that they change but in fact the bigger picture often remains the same.
When she started to have a family she changed career direction to find something that could fit around the demands of a busy family life and so became a clinical aromatherapist which she enjoyed for many years, working with hospitals and also as a private therapist.
We talk about what it was like to literally step into somebody else’s shoes when Mia spent a day in a wheelchair, deprived of her senses in order to really understand the experiences of the people that she was caring for and how it helped to cultivate an increased sense of empathy.
More recently she completed a Masters degree in Attachment Studies before embarking on her latest project, Pod central.
I was fascinated to find out that we all have behavioural adaptations in our life which were developed in childhood and that these play out in our adult life whether we are aware of it or not and Mia shares how she explored this while completing her Masters in Attachment Studies.
In this episode we talk about how she has an innate love of learning and enjoying new experiences but gets bored of sameness quickly and so has had a varied career.
Finally exploring spirituality and how Mia coped with a 10-day vipassana (silent retreat) and confronting hidden parts of herself. It helped her to understand how she fitted in the world.
Plus a lot more!!
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Damien Pestell met and interviewed Mary Barrett who is the owner of Little Fusion Kitchen, a fusion pop-up in The Jenny Lind pub, Old Town - Hastings.
Mary bravely decided to start her own business in the middle of lockdown. As circumstances had it, she was working part-time in the pub and they realised they needed a kitchen to keep operating under the new government guidelines in Dec 2020.
Seemingly 5 mins later the kitchen, which was a disused staff room had been gutted and fitted out with a kitchen and Mary was operating a take-away and eat in service for customers.
I went along to try the food not long after I had interviewed Mary and to say it was exceptional would be an understatement. Mary is a talented chef and a brave business owner at a young age, definitely one to watch for the future.
Listen to this podcast if you are interested in how to start up your own food business and want to hear a genuinely lovely human story.
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This week on the HIPCast, we have some great stories for you!
Sustainable energy co-op company Energise Sussex Coast, which partners Hastings Borough Council (HBC) in pursuing the latter’s net zero carbon target, has filed a formal letter of objection to the plans lodged by Seachange Sussex for development of a commercial site at North Queensway. Health and Environment editor Susan McFie on the benefits of rewilding A new cheese stall wants to bring the best of British cheese to Hastings.If you’d like to support all the brilliant work the HIP team is doing, you can join the Friend Scheme. For a price of a cup of coffee each month you can help keep us going. You can find out more about that on the website, which is hastingsindepdendentpress.co.uk
Also a reminder to sign up to our wonderful newsletter that comes directly to your inbox every Sunday. If you haven’t had a chance to pick up a physical copy of the paper it’s a great way to catch up with the latest stories. That sign up link is on the website.
You can find us on social media at Instagram on @hastingsindependent and on Facebook at Hastings Independent Press
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Nicki Oloyede is the founder of Missy Mop Fabrics, a sustainable fabric company based in Hastings. The business is named after the nickname Nicki’s mum gave her when she was a girl after her wild & crazy hair.
Launched in 2019 the company sources and sells leftover fabric from the fashion industry, which would have otherwise been sent to landfill.
Nicki has Nigerian and German roots and had a colourful childhood surrounded by adults wearing clothes from these cultures with interesting colours and different styles.
In this episode I talk to Nicki about her varied career and finding her passion in the thrill of seeking unusual ‘dead-stock’ fabrics as well as the great satisfaction she gets when her customers select a fabric they might not usually wear.
We talk about how living in an entrepreneurial town has helped nurture her business and how Hastings is a place where people can and do re-invent themselves.
We find out that our paths actually crossed in 2009 when we both worked for a large telecoms company, although we never actually met.
We also talk about how she used a pop-up format to establish her business and why it was such a great way of testing the business concept. How pop-ups could be used to rejuvenate towns across the country to nurture startups and give towns a stronger identity & sense of community.
Finally we talk about how the fashion industry is changing and why doing work that we really, really love is so important, that when we do this it gives us the energy and drive to succeed.
The latest Hastings Independent Press is out! Go to Hastings Independent Press to find out where to pick up your free copy; how to sign up to the Newsletter and how to support our work as a volunteer-run community newspaper by becoming a Friend for no more than the cost of a cup of coffee! Get in touch with your news and ideas and suggestions!
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Alice Hull is the co-founder of 55 prints - Screen Printing based in St Leonards. We met in her studio amongst the printing equipment and smell of inks to speak about starting your own business & her journey so far.
In this episode we talk about how she stumbled into screen printing and that initially she didn’t really know what it was or why she was doing it. She has since found that she loves working with artists to bring their work to life and now has a creative outlet which she can really express herself through.
Alice later found out that she also had a family link to the trade. Her grandad was Tristram Hull, who set up a famous screen printing studio in 1960’s London which became a real hub for local and international artists.
Screen printing is part art, part science and the skill of the printer is in getting the right balance between ink and mesh to achieve a product which meets the expectations of the client, they collaborate with artists on their work and are very much a part of the creative process.
For more details see @55printson Facebook.
Go to www.hastingsindependentpress.co.uk to find out where to pick up the latest copy of the community newspaper; to support our work as a Friend for the price of a coffee; to sign up to the newsletter; or to read any of the articles on the website.
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HIPcast 180 serves up delightful voices: Pasha Milburn, Food Editor; Kent Barker, Arts Editor; Lisa Golden, podcast volunteer; Hugh Sullivan, News and Sports Editor; Fiona McGarry, Arts Editor; and Pete Donohue, poet and Literature Editor.
Go to www.HastingsIndependentPress.co.uk to volunteer, to sign up as a Friend of HIP or to sign up for the newsletter. All articles referred to relate to the print/website version of HIP 180.
Enjoy!
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In HIPbiz #2 podcast Damien speaks with local entrepreneur Lisa Driver from @booyah_vitality about starting her business in the middle of lockdown, the importance of food as medicine and creating a community business with the whole family involved!
Lisa Driver is the founder and Managing Director of Booyah Vitality, a wellness drinks company based in Hastings. Booyah was born out of the pandemic which gave Lisa the impetus she needed to take the plunge.
Lisa is a keen ambassador for “food as medicine” and has worked in the health industry since 1995 as a naturopathic nutritionalist and nutritional fitness consultant. She also runs a popular pilates class on Hastings pier and when Lisa started selling turmeric shots to her members, an idea was born.
Booyah is a family affair and they each have roles within the business. Lisa is the guiding force while Phillip and their son are in charge of production and their daughter Phoebe looks after social media & logistics.
In this episode Lisa talks about the story of her business being born from home initially and filling her sons room with boxes, finding the right branding for her packaging which has helped establish the brand and how Booyah is above all a community business.
HIPbiz podcast opens the lid on the stories behind our local businesses, finding out how they have created work that gives them meaning and energy, run by one of our business writers Damien Pestell from @beyourbusinessuk and edited by @colden_drystone.
Consider becoming a Friend of Hastings Independent Press to support our community of volunteers. www.hastingsindependentpress.co.uk/become-a-friend/
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In this episode of the HIPcast, host Lisa Golden brings you five stories from the most recent edition of the Hastings Independent Press.
You will hear from:
Felicity Laurence from Hastings Community of Sanctuary on the government’s new plans for refugees (HCOS website)
HIP News Editor Hugh Sullivan on low vaccination rates in Hastings
Gail Borrow from Explore The Arch on their new show Spirited (Book tickets)
Kate Moran from Hastings Older Women's Co-Housing on the importance of community (HOWCH website)
... and HIP Digital Editor Ben Bruges on filming 108 sun salutations in celebration of the summer solstice
More links:
Find out where you can pick up a copy of the paper - now in print www.hastingsindependentpress.co.uk/where-can-i-get-a-copy/
Consider becoming a Friend and support your community newspaper www.hastingsindependentpress.co.uk/become-a-friend/
Get in touch if you want to advertise with us www.hastingsindependentpress.co.uk/advertise-with-us/
Or sign up for the regular Newsletter www.hastingsindependentpress.co.uk/newsletter/
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Damien Pestell speaks to local entrepreneur Penny Williams who is the founder of Blush Beauty, she found meaning in her work using beauty to give people confidence! It was always a dream of Penny's to work with makeup since she was 6. She is passionate about beauty not being frivolous or superficial but an amazing source of goodness and happiness. She works with brides to be at their weddings and other events.
Penny is also an accomplished artist who re-discovered her love of painting during lockdown. She created a new business selling her work when the events industry ground to a halt. She went deeper into her creative process by exploring movement through abstract art. She talks about how she sees the brushstrokes before she paints which gives her a sense of channelling something magical.
In this podcast Penny talks about her early life as an academic and applying to Cambridge, working in PR for beauty & fashion and as a journalist and then being a primary school teacher where she changed some of her students` lives.
Throughout Penny's life there have been moments when she has trusted herself to make instant decisions using her intuition. Through listening to herself she has been able to see her path and know what to do when faced with adversity. Penny is an inspiring and courageous woman.Damien Pestell is owner and founder of Beyourbusiness.co.uk
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