Make Yourself Proud: A Humanization Message for Builders, Workers, and Small Business Leaders
NABA shares Di Tran’s Make Yourself Proud as a humanization-centered message for builders, workers, entrepreneurs, and community leaders.
Read MoreNABA shares Di Tran’s Make Yourself Proud as a humanization-centered message for builders, workers, entrepreneurs, and community leaders.
Read MoreA NABA policy note using Louisville Beauty Academy’s U.S. Chamber CO-100 recognition as a careful Kentucky proof model for affordable, state-licensed workforce education, student choice, written accountability, and reduced red tape without weakening student protection.
Read MoreLicense renewal systems are part of the public-interest infrastructure behind safe, lawful, and student-protective workforce education.
Read MoreDi Tran’s new book, The Lost Majority, offers a serious framework for why structure, reliability, and useful motion matter not only to individuals, but to small businesses, immigrant families, and the communities they help hold together.
Read MoreLouisville should not merely admire small business from a distance. It should actively support the families and owners who create gathering spaces, jobs, trust, and economic dignity for the city.
Read MoreLouisville grows stronger when disciplined families create beautiful, useful places for coffee, meetings, children, and neighborhood life. This new Paris Baguette shows exactly why.
Read MoreThe first Paris Baguette in Kentucky is not a side story. It is a visible example of how immigrant-owned small businesses create jobs, neighborhood life, and civic strength in Louisville.
Read MoreBehind Louisville’s first Paris Baguette in Kentucky is a deeper story of professional discipline, immigrant-family courage, and the hard beauty of a family’s first small business venture.
Read MoreLouisville’s first Paris Baguette in Kentucky is more than a bakery opening. It is a family-led small-business milestone, a new gathering place for the Prospect and Northfield corridor, and a reason for Louisville to support small business owners more visibly and beautifully.
Read MoreBy the New American Business Association (NABA) Louisville is having a moment—and it’s being shaped by small-business owners who see
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