Press Release
Jessie Andrews Shares a Five-Phase Success Framework for People Who Feel Stuck
-
Jessie Andrews, based in New York, is a founder, actress, and creative director focused on building durable brands through structure, storytelling, and long-term thinking.
New York, USA, 10th March 2026, ZEX PR WIRE — Many high-performing people hit the same wall. On the outside, everything looks fine. Work is moving. Messages keep coming. Opportunities show up. On the inside, the week feels like a blur.
One creative founder recently described it in a familiar way. They were shipping projects, but always late. Their calendar was full, but nothing felt finished. They kept checking what other people were doing and felt behind, even on days that were objectively productive.
Then a small change flipped the pattern. They stopped trying to do more, and started building a system. One calendar they trusted. One set of notes they could actually find. A short list of weekly priorities tied to their own definition of progress.
Within a month, the missed deadlines eased, decisions got faster, and the work felt lighter.
That turnaround is common because the problem is common.
The Issue Is Widespread
Recent research shows how often people run into the same mix of pressure, distraction, and overload:
-
Procrastination affects around 20% of adults, and it can show up in career, health, and finances.
-
In the U.S., about 48.4% of businesses fail within five years, showing how hard it is to sustain momentum without strong operations.
Jessie Andrews on What Actually Holds Up Over Time
Jessie Andrews, a New York based founder and creative director who leads 1201 B Studios and multiple fashion brands, frames success as something built to last.
Success is about longevity. It is about the relationships that last and the impact that continues long after a project launches. Accomplishments matter, but self respect and happiness matter too.
Her work spans jewelry, swim, retail, and film. Across those worlds, her operating style stays consistent.
She learned early that systems are not optional. Taste is not enough. Creative vision has to be paired with operational discipline, or growth gets fragile.
She also points to a quieter risk that trips people up.
When you compare yourself to others, it creates anxiety. Focusing on progress and measuring success by your own standard is part of staying steady.
Copy This Framework: Five Phases to Reset Your Definition of Success
Phase 1: Set Your Success Standard
Write a simple definition you can track weekly. Keep it human and practical.
Examples: fewer rushed decisions, more finished work, better relationships, steadier sleep, cleaner workflows.
Phase 2: Install Structure
Pick one place to manage your life. One calendar. One notes system. One weekly planning block.
Structure protects creativity. It keeps you from rebuilding your plan every morning.
Phase 3: Build Systems That Scale
Choose two or three repeatable systems that remove friction.
Examples: a shipping checklist, a meeting template, a weekly inventory of priorities, a simple customer follow-up rhythm.
Phase 4: Treat Your Work Like Storytelling
Even if you are not in film or fashion, the principle holds. People respond to clarity.
Define what you do, who it is for, and what a good outcome looks like. Then align your actions with that story.
Phase 5: Protect Balance to Sustain Output
Balance is not a reward you earn later. It is part of the operating model.
If your week has no recovery, your decisions get worse, and your work becomes reactive.
Quick Wins You Can Do Today
-
Block a 30-minute weekly planning slot and keep it sacred
-
Create a three-item “must ship” list for the week
-
Move every loose task into one trusted notes app
-
Identify one relationship you want to strengthen and schedule the touchpoint
-
Write a one-sentence definition of success for the next seven days
Red Flags That Your System Is Breaking
-
Your calendar is full but outcomes are unclear
-
You keep changing tools instead of changing habits
-
You measure progress by other people’s pace
-
Small tasks pile up until they feel heavy
-
You are always “catching up” but never finishing
Apply It This Week
Pick one phase and run it for seven days. Do not overhaul your life. Just install the next piece of structure. The goal is to reduce noise, finish more, and feel better while you do it.
Start with Phase 1 and Phase 2. Define your standard. Put it on the calendar. Then build from there.
About Jessie Andrews
Jessie Andrews is a New York based founder, actress, and creative director. She leads 1201 B Studios and oversees multiple brands including Bagatiba and Basic Swim. She opened Tase Gallery in Los Angeles in February 2021 and has appeared in mainstream projects including Hot Summer Nights, HBO’s Euphoria (Season 2), and the Amazon Prime psychological thriller Love Bomb (November 2025).
About Author
Disclaimer: The views, suggestions, and opinions expressed here are the sole responsibility of the experts. No Digi Observer journalist was involved in the writing and production of this article.
Press Release
Anthony D Galluccio Shares “The Art of the Pivot” and a Grounded Approach to Managing Setbacks
-
The Cambridge-based attorney and former mayor focuses on managing adversity, perspective, and long-term service to children and families.
Massachusetts, USA, 10th March 2026, ZEX PR WIRE — Anthony D Galluccio is sharing a practical view of leadership built around a simple idea: the ability to pivot matters most when circumstances change and the stakes are real.
Rather than treating setbacks as failures, Galluccio frames them as integral to his growth and opportunity to discover new experiences. No one chooses adversity but it will find you. Some adversity involves your own doing and correction. Other adversity is out of your control. In either case you better embrace it and find opportunity in it fast. In his view, pivoting is adjusting quickly, finding opportunity and digging deep into the value set that defines your success. For me hard work and relationships are my life blood and sustenance during any adversity.
“The art of the pivot is not about reinventing yourself every time something gets hard,” Galluccio said. “It is about responding with clarity, reaffirming your values, changing what you can and moving on quickly from what you can’t change. It means keeping perspective but also being able to block out the noise and stay focused on the battle in front of you.

Why this matters now
Pivoting in personal and professional life also has alignment with public policy and land use permitting. Permitting is fluid as it runs with democratic zoning changes and public opinion. You have to be fluid all the time. Similarly, public policy is also always evolving and has to be responsive to new challenges and data. Public education, technical education, workforce development, immigrant communities, serving low income children with cancer and housing constantly involve new challenges. For Galluccio, topics like this are not abstract. They connect directly to years of involvement with organizations serving vulnerable populations, where the consequences of disruption are immediate and personal.
He points to that reality as the reason he keeps returning to the same themes: staying fluid, adversity, perspective, and the opportunity to choose a better response even when outcomes are uncertain. To really embrace the fluidity of a pivot you must embrace and almost enjoy the challenge of adversity.
The core message: the pivot is disciplined, not dramatic
Galluccio describes a pivot as a focused response to a changed situation, not a sudden overhaul. He says the strongest pivots involve the biggest challenges.
-
-
Perspective over panic
Step back before reacting. Separate the moment from the full story. -
Opportunity in the chaos
Circumstances changed but look for new opportunity -
Action without ego
Let go of what is not working. Move toward what does, without protecting a storyline. -
Dig Deep
Values over emotion. Dig into your core values
-
In his view, the pivot becomes a leadership skill only when it is paired with follow-through. Anyone can talk about change. The harder task is to act on it steadily.
Managing setbacks in practice
Galluccio’s approach to setbacks is practical and repeatable. When circumstances shift, he recommends focusing on decisions that restore control and reduce noise:
-
Separate emotion from decision-making
-
Re-check the facts before acting
-
Identify what can still be controlled today
-
Write the next step in a single sentence and take it
-
Stay consistent with core commitments, even during disruption
-
Get the whole team moving forward with a new strategy
He describes this as a way to protect momentum. Not through intensity, but through clarity and consistency.
Service as a long-term teacher
Galluccio’s perspective has been shaped by decades of civic and community involvement, including long-term service with organizations supporting vulnerable communities. He served for 15 years on the board of Hildebrand Family Self Help Center, a large transitional family housing nonprofit, and for five years on the board of Centro Latino in Chelsea, a human service agency serving mostly new immigrants.
He says that kind of work changes how a person thinks about adversity. It is not a temporary phase. It is part of life for many families, and it calls for leaders who can adjust, respond, and keep showing up.
About Anthony D Galluccio
Anthony D Galluccio is a Cambridge-based attorney and law partner with a background in public service and a focus on municipal and land use permitting law. He served on the Cambridge City Council from 1994 to 2007, was Mayor of Cambridge from 2000 to 2001, and served as a Massachusetts state senator from 2007 to 2010, where he chaired the Massachusetts Senate Higher Education Committee. He manages Galluccio Assoc Inc a 501c3 charity, Ashleys Angels supporting childhood cancer in the Dominican Republic and Hope for the holidays. He has also served in long-term community leadership roles, including board service with Hildebrand Family Self Help Center and Centro Latino Of Chelsea. Anthony also coaches youth and high school sports and has for decades.
About Author
Disclaimer: The views, suggestions, and opinions expressed here are the sole responsibility of the experts. No Digi Observer journalist was involved in the writing and production of this article.
Press Release
Christopher O’Reilly of West Palm Beach Makes the Case for Follow-Through as a Career Strategy
-
Christopher O’Reilly, a marine technician and former yacht captain based in West Palm Beach, Florida, shares why consistent communication and patient follow-through build more durable careers than credentials alone.
A Simple Habit with Long-Term Returns
Florida, USA, 10th March 2026, ZEX PR WIRE — In the marine trades industry, as in most professional fields, the gap between adequate and trusted often comes down to one thing: follow-through. Christopher O’Reilly, a West Palm Beach-based Marine Technician with Coastal Air Systems and former yacht captain, has spent years refining a professional philosophy centered on what happens after the main event concludes.
O’Reilly describes a specific example from his own experience. After a business meeting where he sensed the conversation was winding down, he chose not to push the interaction further. Instead, he sent a brief message of thanks after the meeting ended. He maintained contact. That connection eventually became a working relationship. The lesson, he says, is about respecting the other person’s time and trusting that genuine engagement creates its own return.
What Consistent Communication Looks Like on the Water
O’Reilly’s background in yacht captaining gave him an unusual classroom for professional development. Managing crews and vessel operations across South Florida and the Caribbean, he learned quickly that technical knowledge was the baseline expectation. What separated capable captains from trusted ones was clarity: clear expectations before a job began, honest updates during it, and reliable follow-up after.
He applies the same standard at Coastal Air Systems, where he brings an aviation-grade documentation approach to marine systems maintenance. The result, he notes, is fewer callbacks on completed work and more calls for new projects.
Three Habits O’Reilly Recommends
The approach O’Reilly describes is not complicated. It begins with confirming expectations before any task starts. It continues with honest updates when complications arise, rather than waiting for someone to notice. And it closes with a short acknowledgment after the work is done. That cycle, repeated consistently, builds a professional reputation that no single credential can replicate.
A Career Built in Stages
O’Reilly grew up in Greenwich, Connecticut, sailing on Long Island Sound and working summers at Riverside Yacht Club. He earned his Merchant Mariner Certification and built a career on private motor yachts, eventually captaining vessels up to 126 feet in length. In 2019, Select Yachts named him captain of the motor yacht Lady Sharon Gale. He later relocated to West Palm Beach, where he transitioned into the technical side of the marine trades.
He is active in the South Florida marine community and publishes writing on topics including big game fishing, vessel maintenance, and the Jupiter Inlet at chrisoreillypalmbeach.com.
Start with One Follow-Up Today
Consider the last professional conversation you left without closure. A short message, a simple acknowledgment, a direct confirmation of the next step — start there. Track how those small actions compound over the next thirty days.
About Christopher O’Reilly
Christopher O’Reilly is a Marine Technician with Coastal Air Systems in West Palm Beach, Florida. He is a former yacht captain with experience on motor yachts up to 126 feet across South Florida and the Caribbean. He writes on maritime topics at chrisoreillypalmbeach.com.
About Author
Disclaimer: The views, suggestions, and opinions expressed here are the sole responsibility of the experts. No Digi Observer journalist was involved in the writing and production of this article.
Press Release
Akram Alhamidi Shares a Practical Plan for Building a Business Without a Traditional Roadmap
-
Akram Alhamidi, a self-employed entrepreneur from Petal, Mississippi, outlines the approach that took him from high school graduate to gas station chain owner in a matter of years.
Starting From a Real Need
Mississippi, USA, 10th March 2026, ZEX PR WIRE — When Akram Alhamidi graduated high school in 2020, he did not enroll in college or enter the workforce as an employee. He opened a gas station. The decision was straightforward in his telling: people need fuel, the business model is tangible, and the work of running it well is something you can learn by doing.
What followed was the expansion of that first location into a chain of operating gas stations in Mississippi, all managed by Alhamidi as a self-employed owner-operator.
What Made It Work
Alhamidi has spoken publicly about the role of consistency over inspiration in building his business. The gas station industry does not reward novelty. It rewards reliability: clean locations, functional equipment, attentive service, and steady management of daily operations.
For a founder without a formal business background, that meant learning every function of the business in real time. Pricing, staffing, logistics, customer experience. Each one became a lesson the business itself administered.
A Framework Others Can Apply
For those considering a similar path, Alhamidi’s experience points to a few practical principles. Start with a business that serves a clear, consistent need. Expect to learn by doing rather than by planning. Build the discipline to operate well on ordinary days, not just on days when momentum is high. Measure progress by what the business can do now that it could not do before.
These are not sophisticated frameworks. They are the operational realities of small business ownership, learned early and applied consistently.
The Ongoing Work
Alhamidi continues to develop his gas station business from Petal, Mississippi. His focus remains on expanding and stabilizing operations while maintaining the hands-on management approach that has defined his business since its founding.
Coverage of his entrepreneurial path has appeared in BM Magazine, Brainz Magazine, and IdeaMensch, each exploring how a young founder built a fuel retail chain without a formal business education or external funding announcements.
About Akram Alhamidi
Akram Alhamidi is a self-employed entrepreneur based in Petal, Mississippi. He is the founder and owner-operator of a chain of gas stations launched in 2020 following his high school graduation. Alhamidi manages his business operations independently and continues to expand his fuel retail presence in Mississippi. More about his background can be found through his featured profiles on BM Magazine and Brainz Magazine.
Start with one practical step this week: identify a business need in your community and research what it would take to serve it.
About Author
Disclaimer: The views, suggestions, and opinions expressed here are the sole responsibility of the experts. No Digi Observer journalist was involved in the writing and production of this article.
-
Press Release1 week ago
DeZero Launches the World’s First AI ‘Second Brain’ for Crypto Traders
-
Press Release1 week ago
Alluring Window Expands Professional Somfy Motorized Shade Installations Across New York City
-
Press Release1 week ago
A New Chapter Begins: WeTrade Continues Partnership with Phantom Global Racing
-
Press Release6 days ago
Daughter Exposes Family Theft Amid Father’s Alzheimer’s Battle
-
Press Release1 week ago
JET IT Services Launches IT Audit to Help Foreign Companies With Microsoft 365 Network and Connectivity Issues in China
-
Press Release6 days ago
Explores the Afterlife of Jesus Across Seven Nations
-
Press Release6 days ago
Finance Complaint List Launches Enhanced AI Technology to Help Address Risks Linked to Online Trading and Cryptocurrency Platforms
-
Press Release3 days ago
Tony Swantek Expands His Entrepreneurial Legacy Across Finance, Blockchain, and National Business Services
