“Really?”
“Are you sure?”
“This probably isn’t a great time.”
These were some of the reactions that Noel Kepler heard over and over when she told her friends and colleagues that she would go ahead and start her new firm, T&F Communications, in the middle of the pandemic.
Noel is a good friend. At times I am her client and other times she is mine. She has been working in communications for nearly 25 years, initially at big public relations firms and now at an international non-profit. As a single mother raising a daughter in New York City on one income, when people offered her side work, she took it.
“I was consistently on the side hustle for 10+ years, which included teaching, training and working as a national speaker,” she told me. “I have a full-time job that I love with an international non-profit, but just couldn’t make ends meet. So I took all those side clients and rolled them into an LLC in 2019 for tax purposes,” she added.
Noel is one of the most organized, methodical people I know. She never misses a deadline and knows how to stay true to a vision. We had discussed her formalizing her outside work over the years, so when she showed me her new website in September 2019, followed by her invitation in November to speak at her launch event in May 2020, it was clear that she was on her way.
Then Covid-19 changed the world. By April it was clear that her launch had to be canceled, and like most of New York and the country we were signing up for Zoom memberships.
Still trying to figure things out for myself, Noel sent me this email:
“As you know, I have been working to get my workshops and training materials online for a June launch. That is going well, and I believe I will be able to get the education platform up and running in June. One of the other methods I have come up with to move my work to a virtual setting, is to hold a “Communications Summit.” I would like to ask you to be the opening speaker (think: keynote) for the first summit which I am hoping to hold in mid-July. The first communication focus will be on Working Remotely (for obvious reasons).”
I readily accepted but couldn’t believe she was going ahead with the launch. “Are you sure?” was my first question. She went over the pros and cons, but she felt she had to move forward.
“When COVID hit, I was lucky enough to not lose my full-time job, but my income still took a dramatic hit as I lost all of my side work teaching, training and speaking,” Noel reflected.
She decided it was possible to move forward with her launch if she didn’t listen to everyone who said it wasn’t. However, it also required a new strategy and most of all establishing a different way to gauge success. “I still wanted to make T&F Communications work and decided to use the virtual summit as a good learning curve. I stuck with my wheelhouse and focused the summit on communications for remote workers.”









