Personnelity

Designing a Career that Actually Fits You

February 15, 2024 Lauri Rollings and Nicolle Farup
Personnelity
Designing a Career that Actually Fits You
Show Notes

Do you feel burned out or that you are in the wrong career? Find out why so many of us (especially women in leadership roles) feel that way and what you can do about it by listening to my discussion with Julie Bonasso.
Julie is a graduate of Temple Law School who is a consultant and coach specializing in professional well-being and executive health coaching. An experienced corporate lawyer and Master Certified Coach, she helps clients integrate self with career to accelerate growth. The cornerstone of her coaching is leveraging well-being as the pathway to success. She is the founder and CEO of Julie Bonasso Coaching.
How to Reach Julie:
 juliebonasso.com
hello@juliebonasso.com
Other Resources We Discuss in this Episode:
Machiavelli for Women, by Stacey Vanek Smith
https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Machiavelli-for-Women/Stacey-Vanek-Smith/9781982121754
Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins, 490 U.S. 228 (1989)
https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/490/228/
Whistling Vivaldi by Claude M. Steelehttps://wwnorton.com/books/Whistling-Vivaldi/
Theme Music: Coffee and Conversation from https://www.podcast.co/music.
About the Host: 
Lauri Rollings is the CEO of Lauri Rollings and Associates, LLC. She is a lawyer by trade who has more than 20 years of experience providing strategic advice and solutions as an attorney, an executive director of construction trade associations, and as a consultant. Her services help businesses run more efficiently and promote recruitment and retention of a diverse, productive workforce. Rollings previously served as Executive Director of the Plumbing and Mechanical Contractors Association of Oregon and Executive Director of the Plumbing Mechanical & Sheet Metal Contractors’ Alliance of Milwaukee. Before joining the construction industry, she practiced law for more than a decade representing clients in a broad range of industries. Before that, she was a newspaper reporter. Rollings graduated with honors from both Stanford Law School and the University of Wisconsin.