Perth influencer credits business success to growing up in Fair City

A Perth influencer has hailed growing up in the Fair City as her motivation for developing her hit social media agency.
Kirsten Cameron,30, co-founded Scotland’s largest influencer agency, Aquarius Creative.
The former Perth High School student launched the Glasgow-based company in 2020 with business partner Amy Moore.

Kirsten, 30, grew up in Perth. Image: Kirsten Cameron/ Instagram

Kirsten Cameron, left, and co-founder of Aquarius Creative Amy Moore at a recent event. Image: Kirsten Cameron/ Instagram

Aquarius Creative is now the focus of BBC Scotland’s The Agency: Unfiltered – which is set to return for a third season.
Since being launched last February, the show has proved a hit, with the first two series’ reaching a combined total of over 1.2 million streams on BBC iPlayer.
The show is also in the running for a Bafta Scotland 2024 award.
Mum-of-one Kirsten has now credited her upbringing in Perth as a reason for being where she is today.
Growing up in Perth gave influencer the motivation to develop agency
She told The Courier:: “The Scottish influencer market is growing rapidly, and huge global brands are now hosting events in Scotland with our talent which is amazing to see.
“My education and growing up in Perth definitely gave me the motivation to grow and develop the agency – I had an amazing education at Perth High School and my guidance teacher Miss Reid really pushed me to get to where I am today.

“I also had amazing mentors in Perth – Lori from Eva Lucia which was one of my first jobs working in her boutique whilst I was studying fashion marketing at university.
“My family and school friends who are all still in Perth who support and encouraged me throughout my career.”

BBC’s The Agency: Unfiltered. Image: BBC Scotland

A reality series about Kirsten’s agency has been commissioned for a third series. Image: BBC Scotland

Kirsten also teased a new project in Tayside, stating: “Perth is stunning and I’m proud to be from there and would love to do more with my business in the city – we’re bringing something to Tayside hopefully in early 2025!”
In the new series of The Agency: Unfiltered, viewers will continue to follow Kirsten and Amy as they navigate the challenges of running Aquarius Creative and the reality of life as a social media influencer.
The Agency: Unfiltered to return for third season
They will also launch Aquarius Academy after relocating to a new office, which they will be renting out for photoshoots, podcasts and TikTok lives.
Fans can look forward to the series three launch on BBC Scotland and BBC iPlayer in 2025.
Louise Thornton, BBC Scotland’s head of multiplatform commissioning, commented: “After two hit series, we’re excited to bring The Agency: Unfiltered back for a third run.
“It’s been fantastic to see the show resonate with younger audiences, and we’re proud of its success.

“The third instalment will continue to offer that unique behind-the-scenes glimpse into the lives of Scotland’s top social media stars and we’re looking forward to seeing what Amy and Kirsten have in store this time around.”
Earlier this year, Kirsten spoke to The Courier about her struggles with post-natal anxiety.

Is disinformation the next critical frontier for business?

Shortly after declaring “the bird is freed”, Twitter’s new owner, Elon Musk, unleashed his own particular brand of chaos across the platform.In one of his first acts as CEO, the Tesla founder introduced a new paid verification system in early November 2022, ‘democratising’ access to the blue tick to anyone willing to stump up $8 a month. In no time, a slew of spoof accounts were running riot on the social network.“We steal your water and sell it back to you lol,” declared one blue-ticked – but nonetheless fake – Nestlé account, while Mario flipped the bird (literally and figuratively) at the franchise’s owner from a verified, but also fake, Nintendo of America page. But it was a seemingly more innocuous message that arguably wrought greater havoc for the company at the centre of it: “We are excited to announce insulin is free now.”

Aspiring writer? Here’s how to self-publish a book on Amazon”

Simplifying…
Inshort

Self-publishing a book on Amazon involves setting up a Kindle Direct Publishing (KDP) account, customizing your book page with details like title, author, and a compelling description, and selecting relevant keywords and categories.

You’ll need to upload a well-formatted EPUB file and an attractive book cover, set a price within Amazon’s recommended range for maximum royalties, and then publish.

The book will be available for purchase worldwide within 72 hours, post Amazon’s content compliance check.

Was a long read? Making it simpler…

Next Article

Publishing on KDP is free

Oct 16, 2024

12:19 pm

What’s the story

Publishing a book on Amazon has become an increasingly popular choice for authors across the globe. The process, though simple, can be intimidating for those who are not familiar with it.

So, here’s a detailed guide on how you can publish your book on Amazon’s platform, Kindle Direct Publishing (KDP).

The first step is to set up a KDP account, which is free and easy to create.

Account creation

Setting up your KDP account

To set up a KDP account, authors can either use their existing Amazon account or create a new one.

After logging in, they will see a notification indicating that their account is incomplete.

To proceed with book upload, authors have to provide information on their business type (individual or corporation), date of birth, and country of residence.

They also need to enter payment details for receiving royalties from sales across all Amazon marketplaces.

Page customization

Customizing your book page on Amazon

Once your KDP account is ready, you can publish your work as a Kindle ebook, paperback, hardcover, or a Series page.

The next step is to customize the book page to attract potential buyers.

For this, you will have to provide information about the language of your book, its title and/or subtitle, series inclusion (if any), new edition status (if applicable), author name and other contributors like cover design artist or editor for anthologies.

Synopsis creation

Crafting a compelling description

A key element of the book page customization process is writing an interesting product description, just like the ones you see on the back of physical books.

The first line should be especially interesting as Amazon only shows an abbreviated preview of the blurb, encouraging readers to click “Read more” to view the complete text.

Authors can use Amazon’s formatting options like bold, italic, bullet lists for visual appeal but are advised against going overboard.

Keyword selection

Selecting keywords and categories

Next, you’ll have to choose the right keywords and categories for your book. This is important as it helps ensure that your book reaches the right audience.

KDP lets authors choose two categories and up to seven keywords that best describe their work.

You can even define an age and grade range for your target audience, particularly if you’re writing for younger readers.

File upload

Uploading your EPUB and book cover files

After choosing keywords and categories, authors have to upload their EPUB and book cover files.

The EPUB file should be properly formatted to ensure a smooth reading experience on Kindle devices.

The book cover should be professionally designed to attract potential readers.

Both these elements play a crucial role in the overall presentation of the book on Amazon’s platform.

Setting a price for your book

The penultimate step in the publishing process is setting a price for the book.

Amazon recommends pricing e-books between $2.99 and $9.99 (in the US), depending on factors like length, genre, author’s reputation among others.

This range is suggested as it falls within Amazon’s 70% royalty plan, allowing authors to earn more from each sale.

However, authors have the flexibility to choose a price outside this range if they prefer.

Publication

Publishing your book on Amazon

Finally, you can publish the book.

Once you’ve done all the above steps, you can click on “Publish Your Kindle eBook” to make your work available for purchase on Amazon.

It usually takes up to 72 hours for the book to show up in Kindle stores around the world. During this time, Amazon checks the content for compliance with its guidelines before it goes live.

A preview of the latest innovations in logistics – IntraLogisteX USA 2024 opens next week!

The UK’s leading warehousing and materials handling exhibition, IntraLogisteX, is set to launch in the USA at the Miami Convention Center next week!
IntraLogisteX USA, which takes place on 22-23 October 2024, will build on the legacy of the IntraLogisteX brand while also establishing itself as a new, exciting and independent exhibition for the US logistics market.
Florida offers a strategic location for logistics companies due to its proximity to the intersection of trade lanes from across the USA, as well as a larger consumer population and its dominant share in the USA’s export trade.
The state likewise has a strong presence within both domestic and international manufacturing industries, which means IntraLogisteX USA will provide a focused environment for practitioners within these sectors to share ideas, discover solutions and improve operational efficiency, agility, scalability and accuracy.
Attendees to the exhibition will see a range of next-generation warehousing and materials handling solutions live and in-person, including the latest in robotics and automation for these industries, from world-class solution providers and suppliers such as Ocado Intelligent Technologies, Dematic, AutoStore, Dexory, Lucas Systems, Nokia AIM and many more.
In addition to the vast range of solutions on the show floor, the event will host an extensive two-day conference programme featuring more than 40 sessions delivered by seasoned practitioners and industry experts across two theatres. Featuring sessions from the likes of Nike, Johnson & Johnson, The Eastern Transportation Coalition, among others, attendees have an invaluable opportunity to learn from and contribute to discussions on the latest industry trends and best practices.
Supported by global B2B publisher and events organiser Akabo Media’s Logistics Manager magazine – the UK supply-chain industry’s foremost title and its sole monthly publication for more than 40 years – IntraLogisteX USA is poised to provide a unique platform for organisations looking to remain competitive in the ever-evolving North American logistics space.
For more information on the USA’s all-new dedicated exhibition for warehousing and logistics, please read the official IntraLogisteX preview in this month’s issue of Logistics Manager!

Visit www.intralogistexusa.com to register for a FREE visitor pass now! This all-new event takes place on October 22-23, 2024 at the Miami Beach Convention Center in Miami, Florida!

If L.A.’s a mystery, 25 Harry Bosch books are a brilliant, gripping way to solve it

When we first meet Det. Hieronymous “Harry” Bosch, in the 1992 Michael Connelly novel “Black Echo,” he is in his early 40s, working homicide out of the Hollywood Division, and decidedly out of favor with his higher-ups at the LAPD. He is a loner, angry and impulsive.Recently booted from the elite Robbery-Homicide Division after shooting and killing an unarmed man (who also happened to be a serial killer), Bosch has been put on a short leash. But even a top-heavy, hierarchical bureaucracy like the Los Angeles Police Department can’t tamp down Bosch’s need to solve murders and make predators pay.Drawing on intelligence, intuition, methodical police work and an unquenchable drive to know the truth, Bosch solves two murders and the underlying crime that sparked them, consequences be damned.In “The Waiting,” Connelly’s latest book, Bosch is in his 70s, retired and in failing health. He has become an icon, respected in the circles he cares about; reviled in those he doesn’t. But he is at heart the same detective we met 30 years earlier. He has slowed down and learned from his mistakes, but he is still solitary, still infuriating to those trying to supervise him, still driven and brilliant. And more than ever, he is a cop you can’t help but root for. Michael Connelly counts his latest Harry Bosch mystery, “The Waiting,” as the 25th in the series. (Al Seib / Los Angeles Times) “The Waiting” is a milestone of sorts for Bosch. On his website, Connelly lists it as the 25th book in his “Harry Bosch Series.” Whether this is really a key anniversary for the detective is a little squishy, since he also appears in other of the author’s book series. But I decided to accept Connelly’s tally and celebrate Bosch’s silver jubilee by rereading all 25 books in order, something you might consider doing, too, if you love mystery novels and Los Angeles.Why? Because Bosch is a complicated, maddening, impulsive, brilliant, beautifully drawn character. Because the books are gripping, with a momentum that starts on the first page and builds steadily to the last. And because Connelly describes Los Angeles as well as any writer ever has.Connelly once told an interviewer that he would love to ask Raymond Chandler about Chapter 13 of Chandler’s novel “The Little Sister.” It describes a drive through L.A., and Connelly said he’d ask Chandler “how he pulled that off” and “tell him that that short chapter of his was what made me want to become a writer.”That slice of “The Little Sister” is stunning. Chandler’s detective, Philip Marlowe describes “the fast boys in stripped down Fords,” the “tired men in dusty coupes and sedans,” and “the great fat solid Pacific trudging into shore like a scrubwoman going home.”Does Connelly’s prose reach the literary heights of Chandler’s? Not exactly. But that’s not the point.In journalism, editors trot out this advice to writers: You have to take the reader to the dance. That’s what Connelly does. He sets us right down on the dance floor of Los Angeles.In “The Dark Hours,” he describes the midnight “gunshot symphony” on New Year’s Eve. “It was like a bag of popcorn cooking in a microwave. A few pops during the final countdown of the year and then the barrage. … It didn’t matter that what goes up must come down. Every new year in the City of Angels began with risk.”In “The Last Coyote,” we visit Mount Olympus, a “gaudy outcropping of modern Roman-style homes above Hollywood,” where oversized houses are “jammed side by side as close as teeth.”Bosch’s relationship with Los Angeles is complicated. He describes it in “A Darkness More Than Night” as “a city with more things wrong than right. A place where the earth could open up beneath you and suck you into the blackness.”But L.A. is also the home he loves, “a place to begin again … the city of the second chance.” He is never contemptuous of Los Angeles the way Chandler is.If Bosch’s worldview is dark, he comes by his perspective honestly. When Bosch was born, his mother, a prostitute, chose for her son the name Hieronymous Bosch, after the 15th century phantasmagorical painter. And the world he grew up in was every bit as disturbing as his namesake’s artwork.At 10, Bosch was taken from his mother and put into the foster care system. A year later, his mother was murdered. He enlisted in the Army at 17 and was sent to Vietnam, where he became a tunnel rat, assigned to destroy the labyrinthine underground passageways constructed by the Viet Cong. Most tunnel rats didn’t make it home. Bosch did, but not without damage. As someone says about him in “A Darkness More than Night,” “You don’t go into the darkness without it going into you and taking its piece.”By book four of the series, “The Last Coyote,” Bosch’s demons have taken firm control. He’s living illegally in his house in the Hollywood Hills, which was red-tagged after the 1994 earthquake, drinking heavily and sleeping poorly. And, after physically assaulting his lieutenant in the Hollywood Division, he has been suspended and ordered to see an LAPD psychologist. The therapist asks Bosch if he has heard of post-traumatic stress syndrome. “I have to say,” she concludes, “that you are a walking, talking example of this disorder’s symptoms.”The therapy is helpful, as is solving the murder of his mother, and Bosch resumes his job. But he never travels easily in the world.As a policeman, Bosch starts from a position that “everybody counts or nobody counts,” a maxim repeated throughout the series. He works as hard to solve the murder of a teenage hustler in Hollywood as that of a city councilman’s son. But that’s not to say Bosch is always an admirable cop.He breaks laws repeatedly in the service of what he considers justice, roughing up unwilling witnesses, searching residences without warrants and breaking into homes and businesses without a qualm.If Bosch doesn’t mellow, he does grow over time, especially in how he learns to love and be loved. (Be warned, the next few paragraphs contain spoilers though not about the mysteries themselves.)Romantic love never quite works out for the detective, perhaps because of his oddly sentimental view of the subject. “I’m a believer in the single bullet theory,” Bosch tells us in “Lost Light,” book nine in the series. “You can fall in love and make love many times. But there is only one bullet with your name etched on the side. And if you are lucky enough to be shot with that bullet, then the wound never heals.”Bosch’s bullet carried the name of Eleanor Wish, whom he meets in the first Bosch book, “The Black Echo.” Although there are other women both before and after Wish, she is the only one he marries. It does not end well.But Wish is also the source of Bosch’s greatest joy in life — perhaps his only true joy — his daughter Maddie. He first learns of her existence in “Lost Light,” when she is already nearly 4.As Connelly tells us, Bosch believed that his mission required him “to build himself and his life so that he was invulnerable, so that nothing and no one could ever get to him.” Meeting Maddie rocks his worldview. “In that moment, he knew he was both saved and lost. He would be forever connected to the world in the way only a father knew.”As Bosch ages, so does Los Angeles. The L.A. riots add to a building distrust of the police. The LAPD hierarchy changes with each new police chief. Mayors and council members come and go. The pandemic hits, as do the Black Lives Matter protests. Favorite restaurants — Gorky’s, Chinese Friends, Kate Mantilini — close their doors. And then there’s technology.In 1992, when Bosch made his first appearance, DNA profiling was in its infancy. There were no cellphones. Cops carried pagers and had to find pay phones to call in when their beepers sounded. Back at the station, they compiled their murder books on typewriters.And it’s not just Bosch’s circumstances and his city that change. Over the course of the series, Connelly’s writing becomes more assured, and his plotting more complex. In a couple of the books, he experiments with writing in the first person, narrating the action through Bosch’s eyes.A friend recently asked which two or three Bosch books I’d recommend “for those of us who aren’t completionists.” There are certainly some standouts among the 25, as well as a couple that aren’t up to snuff. But the series as a whole is so much more than the sum of its parts.Reading the books in order is like a walk through the city’s recent history with a guide who knows it intimately. So I’m afraid my advice has to be, start with “The Black Echo” and read straight through to “The Waiting.”Sue Horton is a writer and former Op-Ed editor of The Times. Although Connelly also worked at the paper, their tenures didn’t overlap, and she doesn’t know the author. More to Read

Local author pens second children’s book

Watch more of our videos on ShotsTV.com and on Freeview 262 or Freely 565Visit Shots! nowThis article contains affiliate links. We may earn a small commission on items purchased through this article, but that does not affect our editorial judgement.A Yorkshire author with Dewsbury connections has published his second children’s book after his first effort hit the top ten in the Amazon children’s charts.Richard Clarke is a trained PE teacher who has spent nearly 30 years in the education sector. His family are from Dewsbury, and he spent many days in his childhood with his grandparents in Thornhill Lees. His first book, ‘Calm Pond’ was a great success, leading to several BBC and radio interviews. He found himself in the Amazon children’s book charts, rubbing shoulders with literary greats such as JK Rowling and Roald Dahl. His success has led to a second book, The front cover of the new book‘Further Adventures at Calm Pond.’His books are aimed at 5 to 11 year olds and contain nine short stories about a group of creatures who live near his current home in Blackstone Edge, on the border between Yorkshire and Lancashire. He hopes, amongst other things, the tales inspire a love for the environment!The stories cover many topics to help children understand life issues. Calm Pond looked at equality, resilience, honesty, change, strengths and weaknesses, anxiety, differences, empathy and bereavement. Further Adventures at Calm Pond looks at patience, tests/exams, kindness, mindfulness, critical thinking, creativity , inclusion, courage and compassion. Richard in front of Calm PondRichard hopes the short stories will become invaluable resources for parents, carers and anyone who works with children. Each story ends with thoughts that will hopefully develop life skills and strong mental health. ‘Further Adventures at Calm Pond’ is currently available to pre order on Amazon. https://www.amazon.co.uk/Further-Adventures-Calm-Richard-Clarke/dp/1068521805Continue Reading

Entrepreneurs in Valley Partners Program Pitch Business Plans

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio – Ingrid Pinkett operates a property management company in Mahoning County.

Marcie Consiglio founded an organization in Austintown that provides transitional housing to former foster youths, and Rev. Shane Floyd plans to open a grocery co-op on the southwest side of Warren.

They were among 25 participants in Valley Partners’ Business Accounting and Legal Assistance program who pitched their business plans to a group of business and finance professionals Tuesday at the Public Library of Youngstown & Mahoning County. Tuesday also marked the graduation from the six-week program.

Participants who complete the program receive an $8,000 grant for accounting and legal assistance. The group meets each week for six weeks, and at the end must submit a business plan. Businesses must be located within a Community Development Financial Institutions-designated area and not be older than two years.

Matthew Longmire, business resource manager at Valley Partners, called Tuesday’s event a 60-second fast pitch.

The pitch was to include an overview of the business, the problem being solved, the business’s target audience and unique way of solving the problem and long-term goals. 

From left are Matthew Longmire, Valley Partners business resource manager, and Ayana Beulah and Tanay Hill, Valley Partners business resource advisers.

Business and financing professionals attorney Brittany Brantley, shareholder at Ogletree Deakins in Cleveland; Mario Nero, director of economic development lending at Valley Partners; John Montgomery, business banking loan officer at Premier Bank; Mindy Wiesensee, assistant vice president and branch manager at Premier Bank; and James Gibbs, loan committee member at Valley Partners, listened to the pitches, asked questions and offered suggestions.

“At Kerrid Properties, we provide full-service property management for residential properties in Mahoning County,” Pinkett said. “We focus on tenant satisfaction and building a community.”

She has 20 years of executive experience and relocated to Youngstown from California. She said new property owners often struggle with high tenant turnover, poor communication and slow maintenance.

“And that leads, of course, to tenant dissatisfaction and income loss,” Pinkett said. “We solve this by offering a proactive, community first approach.”

The company uses technology for communication and faster maintenance, thereby keeping tenants happier.

Consiglio is the founder and executive director of Moab House, located at the Mahoning Valley Campus of Care.

“When foster kids leave the system and turn 18, they lack stable housing and support, which can lead to homelessness, trafficking and abuse,” she said.

Moab House offers former foster youths, ages 18 to 21, safe, loving and productive housing with full-time, live-in house parents.

“This is what makes us unique,” Consiglio said. “We focus on life skills, financial literacy and relationships, ensuring that our young adults are equipped to thrive in independence.

Often, former foster youths don’t qualify to live in apartments or they aren’t welcome there, she said. 

“Our long-term goals include two additional houses over the next three years,” Consiglio said. “And together we can make a difference. They didn’t ask for this life. It’s not their fault.”

Business and financing professionals listened to the pitches, asked questions and offered suggestions. They are, from left, Brittany Brantley, Mario Nero, John Montgomery, Mindy Wiesensee and James Gibbs.

In his 60-second pitch, Floyd, who is also the pastor of Grace African Methodist Episcopal Church in Warren, explained that those who live beyond 1 mile of a grocery store are considered in a food insecure area.

His envisioned Pure Plate Community Food Co-Op would help address food insecurity.

“We are gearing up to be a community co-op grocery store,” Floyd said. “A food co-op grocery store primarily is a community-owned grocery store. That’s what separates us from everyone else.”

The business has hired a consultant and plans a feasibility study of southwest Warren, which is its target area.

Other participants’ business plans included a facility for homeless veterans, transportation services, an arts and entertainment space, restaurants, meal services, clothing stores, fitness training, health and wellness companies, behavioral health counseling, automobile detailing, auto sales and repair and a wine depository.

Montgomery, of Premier Bank, referred to information submitted by the new businesses that list access to capital and employee retention as challenges.

“Just because you’re a new business doesn’t mean there’s not an opportunity to access capital,” he said. “Just keep that in mind.”

A business doesn’t have to be 10 years old to be considered seasoned, Montgomery added. Regarding employee retention, small businesses may have a difficult time competing with larger companies in terms of pay and benefits.

“What I’ve seen and what I think can be helpful … it’s almost creating a unique culture right now where there’s some flexibility in their job,” he said. “Maybe they’re part of the decision-making with your business just to make them feel that they’ve got more value.”

For some people, that’s more important than the hourly wage, Montgomery added.

Pictured at top: From left, Marcie Consiglio of Moab House in Mineral Ridge, Rev. Shane Floyd of Pure Plate Community Food Co-op in Warren and Ingrid Pinkett of Kerrid Properties LLC in Youngstown were among the participants at Tuesday’s pitch event.

The Importance Of Financial Systems In A Successful Business

Managing your business finances can feel overwhelming, especially when you’re just starting or if your business is growing fast. However, if you want your business to thrive long-term, establishing solid financial systems is essential. They aren’t just for tracking revenue and expenses—they serve as the backbone of your business, guiding decisions and ensuring profitability.

What Are Financial Systems?
In the simplest terms, financial systems are the processes and tools that help you track, manage, and optimize the money flowing in and out of your business. This can range from setting up a proper accounting system, automating payments, monitoring cash flow, to forecasting future expenses and revenue.

For women entrepreneurs, especially those running service-based businesses or tech startups, these systems are crucial. They don’t just keep your business running smoothly—they give you clarity, reduce financial stress, and allow you to make informed decisions that push your business toward growth.

Let’s dive into why financial systems are important:
1. Clarity and Visibility Over Your Financial Health
Without clear financial systems in place, it’s easy to lose track of your money. You might find yourself guessing how much profit you’re making or wondering if you’ll have enough cash to cover upcoming expenses. Financial systems, like accurate bookkeeping and real-time dashboards, provide you with up-to-date information on your financial health.

This clarity empowers you to make better decisions. You can quickly see what’s working, what’s not, and where your money is going. As a result, you’ll be able to spot potential problems before they escalate into bigger issues.

2. Managing Cash Flow Efficiently
Cash flow is the lifeblood of any business. You could be bringing in a lot of revenue, but without a system to manage cash flow, you might still find yourself struggling to pay your bills.

Setting up financial systems allows you to forecast when money will come in and when it will go out, helping you avoid cash crunches. With a solid cash flow management system, you can plan for upcoming expenses, save for future growth, and ensure that your business is always running with enough liquidity.
3. Strategic Budgeting and Forecasting
Every successful business has a plan, and financial forecasting is a key part of that plan. Financial systems help you create realistic budgets and forecasts that align with your business goals. Whether you’re planning to hire new staff, invest in marketing, or launch a new product, these systems give you insight into how those moves will impact your finances.
Budgeting and forecasting also allow you to be proactive rather than reactive. Instead of scrambling to find funds when opportunities arise or challenges pop up, you’ll already have a clear financial strategy in place.
4. Tracking Profitability
It’s not enough to simply generate revenue; your business needs to be profitable. Financial systems help you track profitability at a detailed level. You’ll be able to see which services, products, or projects are making you the most money and which are underperforming.
By knowing what’s driving your profits, you can focus your energy on the most lucrative parts of your business and either improve or eliminate the rest. This ensures that your business continues to grow sustainably.
5. Tax Compliance and Deductions
Proper financial systems also ensure that you stay on top of your taxes, reducing the stress that often comes with tax season. With a well-maintained financial system, you’ll have all the information you need to file taxes accurately and on time. Plus, it allows you to take advantage of all the deductions and credits available to you, which can save you a significant amount of money.
6. Supporting Business Growth
As your business grows, the complexities of managing finances will as well. Without proper financial systems in place, this growth can become chaotic. With strong financial processes in place, scaling your business will be more manageable. You’ll be able to invest in growth confidently because you have a clear understanding of your financial situation and how much you can afford to expand.
The bottom line is that the most successful businesses have one thing in common: they all have rock-solid financial systems in place. If you want to build a sustainable, scalable business, you need to prioritize getting your financial systems in order. Not only will this give you peace of mind, but it will also provide the foundation you need to make informed decisions and achieve long-term success.

SC’s book ban regulation is in effect. School librarians are caught in the crossfire.

Just who ought to be in charge of the books?For decades it has been the librarian. Librarians on site in local schools are in the best position to know their school’s needs, they say, and have been trained in how to build a collection and, when necessary, cull it according to developmental and academic needs.Increasingly, however, the people in South Carolina making such decisions are elected officials, political appointees and back-office district personnel who are pulling books from shelves preemptively without input from the public or professional librarians.

Books stacked at a Barnes and Noble store in Greenville, Sept. 11, 2024, are some of the 25 titles on the “book removal list” for Greenville County Schools. Nineteen of the titles, including Nobel-prize winning author Toni Morrison’s debut novel “The Bluest Eye,” were banned in 2024 alone.

Anna Mitchell/Staff

Librarians interviewed by The Post and Courier say they enjoy support from students, parents and school colleagues, but feel attacked by policymakers and by strangers ranting on X, on private Facebook pages and in social media messages about alleged dark intentions.

“Let me catch you teach in CRT (critical race theory) and sex to my kids. Ill find you,” one Facebook user messaged directly to the president of the South Carolina School Library Association, Jamie Gregory, in March 2022.

“It is time to not only fire these people but to prosecute them for child endangerment and anything else that will stick,” another Facebook user posted after Gregory was named the state’s School Librarian of the Year. “I hear they just reenacted the firing squad.” Since Aug. 1, all public school educators, including teachers and librarians, have had to follow a new South Carolina regulation that prevents schools from providing students with materials that are not “age and developmentally appropriate,” though the definition of that phrase remains vague.

The regulation also states that materials must be removed from buildings if they contain any descriptions or visual depictions of sexual content — and defines that by borrowing from the state’s obscenity law. The regulation does not address exceptions for literary, artistic or scientific merit. One district last month banned “What to Expect When You’re Expecting.” 

Despite protestations in an Oct. 2 Department of Education memo that the rules target materials, not employees, the regulation puts educators’ licenses in jeopardy if the state school board decides teachers or librarians are deliberately violating it. Writer and retired school librarian Pat Scales of Greenville called the regulation “anti-education.”But the greatest impact of the state’s book-ban regulation is self-censorship, librarians told The Post and Courier. They have begun to play it safe rather than risk personal or professional reprisal, they said.Growing disrespectKaren Gareis, the head librarian at Bluffton High School in Beaufort County, said that two years ago her job largely consisted of reading professional journals and reviews, noting any trigger topics (homelessness, drug use, suicide, rape, teen pregnancy and alcoholism, among others), determining how potential titles might fit in among books already on her shelves, and weighing all of that against her budget, requirements for refreshing her collection, and what her 1,350 students might need.

“You have to look at what the story is about, what the story arc is,” Gareis said. “Is it redemption? Are there kids in my population that are looking for this kind of material? Are they trying to identify with this story because it is their experience? What’s the end result? Is that person learning a lesson?”That was before Beaufort County dealt with 97 challenges to book titles on school shelves in early 2023, and before the South Carolina Board of Education’s new regulation on proper use of instructional materials, enacted this summer, gave state officials the power to yank titles in every district and punish educators who open their doors to banned materials. Now Gareis examines passages to assess just how explicit any suggestion of sexual activity gets.

“I’m skimming through and saying, okay, yeah, here’s a … all right, okay, here’s, oh, this is a make-out scene. How heavy does it get, you know? And is that considered sexual conduct? Is it just intercourse, or is it absolutely everything, you know?”

Despite initial outcries from professional librarian groups and the ACLU about censorship and embedded biases against marginalized groups, the regulation does not, at first glance, appear to have had a measurable impact on the number of books banned. Charleston County said none have been removed as a result of the regulation; same goes for the Columbia-area Richland 1 and Lexington-Richland 5 districts.

One exception is Greenville County, where book fairs have been canceled this year and where a 26th book — “All Boys Aren’t Blue” — was added to the district’s public book removal list on Oct. 9. George M. Johnson’s 2020 best-selling young adult memoir is among at least seven books removed from Greenville schools since the state regulation went into effect this summer. All seven were removed without a public hearing. 

“At no time do we get any explanation as to specifically why we are being forced to remove it, simply that academics reviewed the book and have determined it needs to be removed from all schools,” said Laura Treffinger, librarian at Blue Ridge High School in Greenville County.The district’s superintendent said these actions are taken to protect employees.State Education Superintendent Ellen Weaver penned a letter last year to SCASL that framed the issue as a feud between activist librarians and concerned parents. Weaver said her department “deeply values” librarians but that she was severing ties with the organization and would correspond directly with librarians in the future.

Superintendent Ellen Weaver

File/Laura Bilson/Staff

No one at the state or local level has ever sought feedback from her on book bans, Treffinger said.Parents who support the new state regulation, and similar earlier ones at the local level, describe being “disgusted” by library books with “sexual immorality” in them. Many spoke at a November 2023 state board of education meeting in favor of the state regulation. They described “sexually explicit,” “questionable” and “illegal pornographic” content on their school libraries’ shelves and said school-level book review committees were biased and unfair when they tried to get titles removed.

“If the actions of the characters in these books can’t be discussed in a staff room at work, why do we want to fill our children’s minds with it?” said Carly Carter, chair of Moms for Liberty in Anderson County at that state board meeting.Gregory, who works at Christchurch Episcopal School in Greenville, said she and other members of the South Carolina Association of School Librarians regard the regulation as a political effort to “de-professionalize” librarians, take local control away from school districts and homogenize school libraries across the state. Gregory is currently president of SCASL.

“One school’s library collection is not going to look the same as anybody else’s, but that’s what’s going to happen under this regulation if the state has final say over what can be in your school library,” Gregory said.

The political push for a state book-ban policy has been a couple of years in the making, with some school districts, including Horry County, Spartanburg 1, Berkeley County, Lexington-Richland 5 and Beaufort County, forging ahead with sometimes limited, sometimes far-reaching bans between 2022 and summer 2024. In 2023, Berkeley County faced 93 book challenges from a single parent, costing the district more than $6,000, said Loni Lewis, a school librarian there. 

Highly trainedSchool librarians strive to instill lifelong reading habits, emphasizing the importance of reading for pleasure, Lewis said. Librarians also provide a safe space for students.Libraries have been part of American schools for centuries, and professional librarians (or media specialists as many now are called) became essential school staff members with the creation of free public schools in the 19th century. They have been active opponents of book banning since the American Library Association launched its Office of Intellectual Freedom in 1967.

“It’s important for us to know the history of that in our country and what our legal rights are,” Gregory said.EDUCATION LABThe Post and Courier’s Education Lab focuses on issues and policies that affect South Carolina’s education system. It is supported by donations and grants to the nonprofit Public Service and Investigative Fund. For more information, and to donate, go to https://postandcourierfund.com.

Becoming a school librarian takes years.A master’s degree in library science, a field of study that dates back more than a century, is required for South Carolina school librarians. School librarians here also must have a teaching license, pass the national Praxis exam on library media content, complete hundreds of internship hours, and undergo state-regulated performance evaluations throughout their careers.

“There is a lot of professionalism that a lot of people just don’t know about,” Gregory said.In addition to maintaining and refreshing the book collection, the job often includes troubleshooting Chromebooks, printing and laminating posters, maintaining the school website and teaching kids how to conduct research.

These are some of the 25 titles on the “book removal list” for Greenville County Schools as of Oct. 9, 2024. Nineteen of the titles, including Nobel-prize winning author Toni Morrison’s debut novel “The Bluest Eye,” were banned in 2024.

Anna B. Mitchell/Staff

Librarians lean on nonprofit and business organizations such as the American Library Association, the South Carolina Association of School Librarians and Follett Content to stay up to date with materials and professional standards, Treffinger said. Greenville County’s librarians also meet quarterly. It was at one such meeting that Treffinger got a heads-up about the latest Sarah Maas novel.

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Sign up for our Education Lab newsletter.Laura Treffinger, Blue Ridge High School librarianTrust that I’m an educated, intelligent professional, and let me do my job. — Laura Treffinger, school librarianInappropriate books like the “Court of Thorns and Roses” series by Maas can sometimes fall through the cracks, Treffinger acknowledged. She has taken feedback from students, parents and other librarians to catch those mistakes.Even as school districts across South Carolina cement the state regulation into day-to-day routines at schools, librarians insist they have the best training for curating their shelves.

“I have no problem taking things off the shelf that are inappropriate for high school students,” said Treffinger, “But trust that I’m an educated, intelligent professional, and let me do my job.”

Fissures formingIn 2022, Gregory won the South Carolina School Librarian of the Year award.

State Sen. Josh KimbrellI stand with thousands of South Carolina parents in unequivocally calling for these sort of sexually suggestive books to be removed from any and all publicly funded schools immediately and permanently. — State Senator Josh Kimbrell, R-Spartanburg

Shortly after, the S.C. Association of School Librarians received a letter from state Sen. Josh Kimbrell, R-Spartanburg, expressing strong disapproval over the the decision to honor Gregory. The reason: Gregory’s policy stances on which books should be allowed in classrooms, as he said she had aggressively fought against efforts to have books of a sexually suggestive nature removed from public school libraries.”I stand with thousands of South Carolina parents in unequivocally calling for these sort of sexually suggestive books to be removed from any and all publicly funded schools immediately and permanently,” Kimbrell wrote.Gregory said even after a couple of years, she is still hurt by the online harassment that followed the letter. “Sometimes I’ll have a student come in and ask me about that whole situation because they’ve heard of it,” she said.

Librarians across the state — accused of harming students, grooming students or providing students with pornography — say these accusations are eroding their historically strong relationships with their communities.”We go into these jobs with the promise of some autonomy, and that’s not to say that we can just do whatever random thing we feel,” Gareis said. “We’re highly trained. We know how these programs work. We know how to develop a collection that meets the needs of our population.”

Katherine Freligh, head of the legislative committee for SCASL, said banning books can affect childhood development, reducing an individual’s ability to empathize with others.

And Lewis, the Berkeley County librarian, expressed concerns that the new book rules are pitting parents against librarians.

Librarians want to work with parents and listen to their concerns about a book, she said. The state regulation instructs parents to contact schools first if they have a problem with a book, but Berkeley County already has a history of parents going straight to the district office, Lewis said. And it can escalate within the school bureaucracy from there.”I don’t know if people are really going to make that good-faith effort,” Lewis said.Where clarity endsGareis, a retired master chief for a helicopter maintenance program in the Navy, said she hoped a statewide regulation would remove ambiguities and differences from district to district.”Where I come from, militarily speaking, standardized is the way to go. You know, then there’s no questions,” Gareis said.

Under the regulation, book challenges can only come from parents whose children attend a local public school, and all challenges must be submitted on a standard form.

But the clarity ends there, librarians say.The regulation bans “sexual conduct,” compelling educators to ask whether words or passages describing sexual thoughts or implying but not explicitly describing actions also count. Books dealing with LGBTQ topics might be perceived as sexual in nature when, in fact, they are dealing more with identity issues. In addition to “All Boys Aren’t Blue,” Greenville County has banned has banned “This Book is Gay,” “George,” “A Day in the Life of Marlon Bundo,” “The Deepest Breath,” and “Flamer” — all of which feature LGBTQ characters.Sherman Alexie’s Printz-award winning, young adult novel “The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian” uses profanities 26 times, and the main character contemplates erections and masturbation five times — but the book never describes him doing it.

“So does that cross the line?” Gareis said. “That’s one of the best books that gets reluctant boy readers to read because they can totally relate to that character and all of his struggles and all of his feelings of, you know, just not being adequate. So it’s really a good book.”

Other books banned last month include: Nobel-prize winning author Toni Morrison’s debut novel “The Bluest Eye” and Volume 8 of “My Hero Academia.”

Freligh said her librarian friends wonder why policymakers think students, who have access to social media, Google and YouTube, can’t handle these books.Also unclear are the penalties for noncompliance. An Oct. 2 Department of Education memo explained that the state exercised oversight of instructional materials, not people, but penalties for knowingly violating the regulation still can include losing your teaching license.

Librarians don’t want to get on the wrong side of parents, administrators or district officials and so are self-censoring, Lewis said.Equity through accessFreligh said she has heard parents challenging certain titles at local school board meetings say it should not be considered a “ban” since books are still widely available for purchase online and at stores. In an executive summary, the Department of Education agreed, saying a ban is “when the government seeks to prevent you from buying, selling, owning, or reading a book.”

Freligh has a different definition for ban: When you limit access, “It’s a book ban.”Proponents of the state regulation do not understand that there is inequitable access to resources, Freligh said, “not only in different parts of our state, but financially, right here, in Charleston County.”

For some students, school libraries are the only means available to access books that might impact their lives or inform their views, many librarians said. 

Scales said literature can serve as mirrors for some students and windows for others, and that the regulation will create hardships for students who rely on their schools to access such books.

Pat Scales, retired librarianWhen we are denying a student’s access to books where they see themselves or want to read about others, we are also denying their civil rights. — Pat Scales, retired librarian”Lack of access is a form of censorship,” she said. “When we are denying a student’s access to books where they see themselves or want to read about others, we are also denying their civil rights.”

Education goes beyond just learning something out of a textbook, Scales said.“We serve children as a whole in public schools,” she said. “Sometimes we can use books to help us do that.”Education Lab reporter Ian Grenier contributed to this story from Columbia.

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