Sherry-Lee Wisor, accepted into Accelerator in 2011, knew that feeling well.
“I was a punk-rock kid, I had a Mohawk and I used to think all businesses were bad. I was so wrong,” says Wisor, who is probably better known to music-loving locals as a singer and bass player in a number of groups, including Happy.
In 2007, she took over the family business, Schel Management Credit, when her father, Larry Heschel, passed away. She found it hard to talk about the realities of running a business with others in the music scene.
” [EO members] speak about the things I care about in life,” says Wisor, who is in the Accelerator’s inaugural class of 25. “I love to travel … to play music, and there’s a lot of talk about giving back to the community. In a lot of ways, EO has renewed my faith in humanity.”
As Accelerator members work toward the million-per-year mark, Radostits has undertaken a new challenge.
Since Edmonton now boasts the world’s largest EO Accelerator program, he’s been asked to help other chapters increase their membership numbers and help make millionaires in Toronto, Calgary,Vancouver and the rest of Canada.
Chicken Soup for the CEO Soul
In many ways, EO is as much group therapy as it is professional networking and development.
Just weeks into the three-year program, EO Accelerator members are asked to rate themselves in a number of areas, including family, fun and spirituality. One business owner complained to Accelerator president John Radostits that he gets antsy if he goes on vacation for more than five days. Another said he finds his work therapeutic. You can be as successful as you want but, Radostits asks them, what is it worth if you can’t take time to enjoy it?
To help them reach that million-per-year goal, Accelerator members are broken into smaller “accountability” groups, given mentors and asked to confess to a small peer group the things on which they want to improve. Then, they set personal and career goals. But if they miss the goals, they need to share their shame.