
Faithful Career Moves
Shelley Hunter
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Top 10 Faithful Career Moves Episodes
Goodpods has curated a list of the 10 best Faithful Career Moves episodes, ranked by the number of listens and likes each episode have garnered from our listeners. If you are listening to Faithful Career Moves for the first time, there's no better place to start than with one of these standout episodes. If you are a fan of the show, vote for your favorite Faithful Career Moves episode by adding your comments to the episode page.

How She Went from Nursing to Network Marketing (And WHY!)
Faithful Career Moves
10/23/20 • 28 min
Forget everything you know about network marketing and listen to this interview with Megan Hunter, a doTERRA Wellness Advocate, who has been building a thriving business for nearly a decade.
About Megan Hunter RN and Diamond doTERRA Wellness Advocate
Megan Hunter used to be skeptical about network marketing. It is not the type of business she ever pictured herself doing, especially after training nearly five years to become a nurse.
But with bills piling up, a house full of kids to care for, and a desire to have a flexible work schedule, she started to wonder if she could make money selling doTERRA essential oils instead of doing shift work at the hospital. And more importantly, she wondered if she could be as proud of this type of business as she is of her nursing career.
Nearly a decade later, Megan is proud of her business, for sure, but she is even more excited about what she and her husband (my brother) have accomplished together--financial stability, a healthier lifestyle, residual income that continues to grow, and a way to help people on a daily basis.
HOW TO BE SUCCESSFUL IN NETWORK MARKETING
In spite of her success, Megan is quick to point out that network marketing is not for everyone. To be successful, she says you need the following:
- A Product That Sells Itself. Though you can be successful selling a variety of products, Megan prefers consumable items that generate repeat business because that is how you generate residual income over time. "I am still paid on that class I did that was two hours away five years ago," for example.
- Authenticity. Although Megan truly loves the products she sells, she recognizes that they might not be a fit for everyone. And that's okay. Like her job as a nurse, her goal is to help people with the tools and resources she has available. For some, that means recommending a product. For a select few, that means a chance to become a business partner. But to all, Megan offers love and friendship.
- Perseverance. Megan recognized that building a successful book of business would require long-term effort. Thankfully, she is no stranger to hard work. She has noticed that the people who do well in her line of work are accustomed to setting goals and working hard to achieve them with consistent and persistent effort. it took her nearly five years to become a nurse. She applied that same level of dedication to become finding success at doTERRA.
Lastly, Megan encourages anyone considering network marketing to research the products and the company. She says, "I probably wouldn't have had the same experience if I chose something else to sell."
What You'll Learn in this Episode
- How Megan transitioned into network marketing and why
- What she says you need to be successful in network marketing
- Why she loves doTERRA and how she made peace with starting a business
- How networking marketing is like missionary work
- Most Importantly: How Megan has seen the Lord’s hand in her career
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PLEASE: Rate and Review this podcast so other women can be inspired in their faithful career moves.
Visit the website:
FaithfulCareerMoves.com: Faith-based Career Coaching for Stay-at-Home Moms
Get the book:
Return to Work with Confidence: A faith-based guide to help stay-at-home moms re-enter the workforce
Follow us:
- Instagram @FaithfulCareerMoves
- Facebook @FaithfulCareerMoves

At the Pinnacle of Her Career at NASA, She Left the Artemis Program to Serve a More Important Mission
Faithful Career Moves
06/01/22 • 41 min
Sister Michelle Amos had just started to flourish in the empty-nest phase of her career when she got called to serve a mission instead.
Having been a NASA Engineer at Kennedy Space Center for 30 years, Sister Michelle Amos is passionate about her career. But it's not the most important thing in her life. Instead, she prioritizes God and Family (in that order) above her work.
Sister Michelle Amos and a colleague at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Here are some of the ways she has shown allegiance to those priorities over the years:
- Engaging in Service. Despite working full-time, Sister Amos never turned down a church calling or an opportunity to serve in the community. She served as the Relief Society President, Young Women President, Stake Young Women President, Cubmaster, and more at church. She did plenty of outreach at schools for NASA and led community events in Orlando as well.
- Carefully Choosing Projects. When colleagues pushed for bigger and better opportunities at work, Sister Amos stood down, determined to be available to her children as much as possible. She went to the office early so she could leave in time to pick the kids up from school and rarely worked on projects that required overtime.
- Waiting to Further Her Education. Though she wanted to obtain a master's degree, Sister Amos delayed post-graduate studies until the kids were older and a little more self-sufficient. She recalls, "I was a mother, I had small children, so I had to wait until my children were in high school or out of the home to take on management training or get my master's degree. I remember sitting at the table with my kids; we were all doing homework."
- Partnering with Her Husband. President John Amos encouraged Sister Amos to apply for the job at NASA. He supported her desire to work after the kids came along as well. She says, "President Amos has always been supportive of my career as an engineer. ... President worked locally in the city, so he could be there if there were emergencies at school. We knew our positions. We were able to plan if there were school activities or school events."
In addition to those daily choices, this successful engineer also had to make big decisions too.
When the kids went off to college, Sister Amos finally got the chance to further her career and take on more significant opportunities. In November of 2018, she got selected to join a flagship project as a Systems Engineer for the Mars 2020 Rover--a role she relished and temporarily moved to California to fulfill. Then just as the team prepared for the launch, Sister Amos and her husband got called to serve as mission leaders for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Once again, Sister Amos sublimated her career aspirations to put God first in her life.
In this interview, you'll learn how she made the decision, what it cost her, and the unexpected blessings her obedience brought. Plus, as amazing as her career at NASA was, you'll hear why Sister Amos believes it was simply preparation for the higher calling she now holds.
It's a good s
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PLEASE: Rate and Review this podcast so other women can be inspired in their faithful career moves.
Visit the website:
FaithfulCareerMoves.com: Faith-based Career Coaching for Stay-at-Home Moms
Get the book:
Return to Work with Confidence: A faith-based guide to help stay-at-home moms re-enter the workforce
Follow us:
- Instagram @FaithfulCareerMoves
- Facebook @FaithfulCareerMoves

Holding On When Finding Your Career Takes MUCH Longer than Expected
Faithful Career Moves
07/06/22 • 34 min
Before becoming a journalist, Stacey Carruth started a lengthy investigation into her own career--only she didn't see it that way at the time. She only saw failure.
After serving a mission as a young adult, Stacey returned to college at Brigham Young University. Though she had started her post-secondary education as a science major ("to prove she was smart"), her thoughts changed while on her mission. She recalls, "I discovered a whole new area of life that sparked me and sparked my interest. I loved learning languages. I loved talking to people. I loved learning about the culture and what causes people to make the decisions they do or live the way they do."
This change of heart led Stacey to change her major to Latin American studies. A campus event called "The Hunger Banquet" prompted her to lean further into helping people in developing countries.
But practicality won out. Nervous about being in college for so long and needing to make money, Stacey switched her major back to clinical laboratory science so she could graduate as soon as possible.
After graduation, she worked in a lab for a year before quitting to be home with her kids. Of the job, she said, "It served its purpose. It helped us get my husband through college. It paid the bills, but I only did it for a year because it was just so boring."
Longing for a Career
As a new mom, Stacey loved being with her children but discovered she didn't love the homemaker lifestyle all that much. And though she felt guilty for wanting to work outside the home, she still longed for a career. But at the time, Stacey couldn't find a job that inspired her enough to justify disrupting the family arrangement or paying for childcare. So she spent the next several years experimenting--enrolling in various degree programs, starting projects, writing a blog, researching, and more--all to find purpose beyond life as a stay-at-home mom.
To be clear, Stacey valued the time spent with her kids. But with every passing year, she felt a little more lost in her faith and out of touch with the job market.
She remembers lamenting to a friend, "I'm so proud of how I've spent the last 12 years. I have no regrets. I built an amazing marriage brick by brick with blood, sweat, and tears. I have amazing children, and I worked so hard to get rid of cultural and old habits from my upbringing, build a good relationship with them, and raise good children. I've tried to do wonderful things with my faith journey and in my faith community. I'm so proud of what I've done, but none of that shows up on a resume. That's a blank resume."
Ironically, that gap on her resume plus the unseen career attempts would one day be the perfect "lack of experience" necessary for Stacey to become a sought-after journalist with a much-needed fresh perspective. And though she didn't know it then, her career launch could not have come at a better time.
It's a good story. Have a listen.
Mentioned in this Interview
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PLEASE: Rate and Review this podcast so other women can be inspired in their faithful career moves.
Visit the website:
FaithfulCareerMoves.com: Faith-based Career Coaching for Stay-at-Home Moms
Get the book:
Return to Work with Confidence: A faith-based guide to help stay-at-home moms re-enter the workforce
Follow us:
- Instagram @FaithfulCareerMoves
- Facebook @FaithfulCareerMoves

Why Your Future Career May Depend on Knowing Your Personal Brand
Faithful Career Moves
07/07/20 • 31 min

Pivoting Her Way to a Thriving Stay-At-Home Business
Faithful Career Moves
07/07/20 • 26 min
When Debbie Bromley started Showbiz, she had the talent and experience needed to teach kids how to perform, but running a business took several twists, turns, and leaps of faith.
About Debbie Bromley
For over two decades, Debbie and her husband, Dave Bromley, have worked with thousands of youth producing a fast-paced song-and-dance revue patterned after their experiences as performers in the BYU Young Ambassadors program.
The company is called Showbiz.
At the start, Debbie taught just a handful of teenagers. As her own children got old enough to perform, she added classes for younger kids so her boys could be part of the program. As the family grew, the business grew until Debbie had over 120 performers (plus parent helpers) coming in and out of her at-home studio every week.
As former professional artists, the Bromleys certainly have a great deal of talent to share with youth, but they started Showbiz to do more than simply teach kids how to sing and dance. They wanted their family and the students they taught to learn to serve as well.
Debbie says, "Our mission statement is we believe in building the character of youth through the magic of song, dance, and service." She goes on to say, "service was key for us because lots of times, kids that are involved in the performing arts tend to be a little self-centered because the profession in and of itself is about that. You get critical of yourself. You are always having people look at you, you're performing. Our goal was to turn that around on kids and help them realize that their talents were pretty special and God-given and that the real purpose of them was to help and uplift other people."
Listen to the episode to learn more about how Showbiz evolved, the many pivots made to grow the business alongside of a growing family, and the challenges Debbie faced in learning how to run a business.
What You'll Learn in this Episode
- How Showbiz started and evolved into a community-wide, highly respected program
- How they incorporated service, team building, and other aspects into the Showbiz program
- The business skills Debbie needed to learn to run and grown the company successfully
- Several pivots they made, from expanding classes, to shortening the season, to converting their garage to an at-home studio, and more
- Most Importantly: How Debbie has seen the Lord’s hand in her career
Mentioned in this Episode
- BYU Young Ambassadors - Produced by the School of Music at Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah.
- BYU Young Ambassadors Alumni - Debbie and Dave Bromley are chapter chairs.
- Vocal Point- Debbie's youngest son, Jason Bromley, is currently performing with this group.
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PLEASE: Rate and Review this podcast so other women can be inspired in their faithful career moves.
Visit the website:
FaithfulCareerMoves.com: Faith-based Career Coaching for Stay-at-Home Moms
Get the book:
Return to Work with Confidence: A faith-based guide to help stay-at-home moms re-enter the workforce
Follow us:
- Instagram @FaithfulCareerMoves
- Facebook @FaithfulCareerMoves

Yes! You Can Make Money as a Life Coach
Faithful Career Moves
03/25/21 • 26 min
To become a successful life coach, Heidi Benjaminsen got serious about her certification and her business—the latter being the most important. Learn how she plans to make a six-figure salary in less than three years.
WHAT IS A LIFE COACH?
Though I am a fan of the life coach process--having benefitted from consulting a life coach myself--I wanted to learn more about life coaching as a career. Specifically, I wanted to know if anybody besides Jody and Brooke are making money in this business. And, if so, how new life coaches find their place in an industry that is becoming heavily populated.
To this end, my friend and recently certified life coach, Cassie Anderson, introduced me to her mentor, Heidi Benjaminsen.
Heidi has been a life coach for a little over two years and she is most definitely making money. In this interview, she shares her journey to becoming a life coach as well as the steps she's taking to become successful in her business too.
ABOUT HEIDI BENJAMINSEN
Heidi Benjaminsen is a certified life coach who helps women lose weight and gain confidence. As a mother of three teenagers and having lost over 70 pounds herself more than a decade ago, she now helps women uncover the confidence that has always been within them. She hosts a weekly podcast called Hi, This is Heidi, and has a free Facebook group called Lose Weight and Gain Confidence.
MAKING MONEY AS A LIFE COACH
Before talking to Heidi, I had been waffling on something.
Though I have helped hundreds of people find dream jobs, start businesses, prep for interviews, and more, I only decided to call myself a "career coach" because I needed a title for my Instagram business account. In doing so, I felt a little like an imposter. This is new feeling for me. I generally own what I do and feel confident in my career moves, but creating this business has been a leap of faith like no other.
To level up my business and to feel better about my qualifications, I started toying with the idea of getting certified as a career coach. But I lost my enthusiasm when I saw the price of the program.
Then my interview with Heidi happened.
In the interview, I asked Heidi how she made the jump from helping friends for free to charging clients handsomely for her services. She responded: "Women that are willing to invest the money in themselves, the transformation that they make is just amazing. It's just beautiful because it's coming from a place where they realize, I am worth improving and I am worth investing in. It's been wonderful to see that."
Heidi's answer hit me square.
I haven't made an investment in myself since college.
But after hearing Heidi's empowering words, I moved to action. I signed up for the career coach certification course I really wanted to take. And though I am still a little anxious about the cost Heidi's words remind me that making an investment in myself will help me to require the same of others.
What You'll Learn in this Episode
- How Heidi makes money as a life coach
- Why she believes it's important to invest
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PLEASE: Rate and Review this podcast so other women can be inspired in their faithful career moves.
Visit the website:
FaithfulCareerMoves.com: Faith-based Career Coaching for Stay-at-Home Moms
Get the book:
Return to Work with Confidence: A faith-based guide to help stay-at-home moms re-enter the workforce
Follow us:
- Instagram @FaithfulCareerMoves
- Facebook @FaithfulCareerMoves

A Business Born out of Grief
Faithful Career Moves
01/11/22 • 28 min
When the family business failed and her father passed away, Jennifer Hilton left the industry she loved to lessen the pain. Now she's back.
All her life, Jennifer Hilton wanted to be a businesswoman. While other girls dressed up like princesses, she walked around in her mom's heels carrying a briefcase fashioned out of a McDonald's Happy Meal carton. While other kids listened to fairytales and bedtime stories at night, she listened to her dad read Human Resources (HR) manuals instead. She loved it. So when her dad opened an employment agency during her teenage years, she went to work in the family business.
Jennifer remembers, "I worked in the employment agency. I did everything from answering phones and cleaning toilets to interviewing people for different positions, whether it was day laborers or executives. It was the whole gamut of people."
Had the business succeeded, Jennifer eventually would have taken over the company and achieved her ideal of being a successful businesswoman at a very young age. Instead, she found herself out of a dream job and working part-time as a seasonal recruiter for a toy company. Not long after that, her dad passed away.
In the midst of her disappointment, loss, and grief, Jennifer left the employment industry to lessen the pain. But it didn't work. Instead she found herself in the middle of what might appear to be a series of unfortunate employment events.
But as you will hear in this interview, there are no wrong turns, and with God, there are no "wasted opportunities" either. Because with each job she accepted and later left or lost, Jennifer inched closer and closer to realizing that most businesses simply do not know how to hire. Which then led to the realization that her experiences uniquely qualified her to be able to fix this problem. And that is the day Jennifer Hilton became a successful businesswoman in her own right.
Jennifer is now an accomplished recruiter who helps startups and small businesses get amazing employees by teaching proven and effective recruiting, hiring and onboarding practices.
In this interview, she shares some of that knowledge plus tips for people who are returning to the workforce after taking time off to be home with children.
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PLEASE: Rate and Review this podcast so other women can be inspired in their faithful career moves.
Visit the website:
FaithfulCareerMoves.com: Faith-based Career Coaching for Stay-at-Home Moms
Get the book:
Return to Work with Confidence: A faith-based guide to help stay-at-home moms re-enter the workforce
Follow us:
- Instagram @FaithfulCareerMoves
- Facebook @FaithfulCareerMoves

Working with Gratitude and Grief
Faithful Career Moves
03/21/23 • 37 min
Taking Turns Building Their Careers
Lisa Valentine Clark is not living the life she planned. After several years of supporting her husband's artistic career, raising five kids, and working freelance to be at home and provide for the family, Lisa's husband, Christopher Clark, got diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS or Lou Gehrig's disease) and later passed away.
The story is tragic, but it's not entirely a tragedy because she has no regrets about the choices they made together. Toward the end of her husband's life, Lisa recalls Christopher saying, "I don't have regrets. I went for it, did as much as possible, and did the best that I could."
She agreed.
At the start of her career, Lisa taught junior high and high school English before transitioning to at-home work to start a family. From there, she got creative, literally and figuratively. Lisa took on various projects, from developing an online curriculum to voiceover work, acting, writing, and more, to earn income while her husband pursued master's and doctorate degrees. But Lisa had goals too. She also wanted an inspired career.
Her husband agreed.
Together, the couple supported each other in building the life they wanted, primarily by taking turns. Lisa said, "it worked because it wasn't about the money. It was about supporting our family, using our creative gifts, making a difference in our little corner of the world, and making it count. I feel a lot of satisfaction that we earned that together."
Trading Places
By all accounts, the family had a beautiful life packed into too-few years. Then, just as Christopher reached the pinnacle of his career, he told Lisa he was ready to switch places and stay home more, so she could pursue her career more earnestly. Unaware of the foreshadowing in that statement, his health declined until he eventually lost the ability to move and speak, forcing him home on permanent disability. With the loss of his income, Lisa sought full-time employment to get health benefits and a salary--not quite the career "leaning in" she longed for, but a move that would turn into an unexpected blessing.
BYUradio hired Lisa to host a podcast in a time slot that, by divine design, lined up perfectly with her family's schedule so she could work and still be her husband's primary caregiver. After he passed in 2020, she slowly returned to a little freelance acting and writing in addition to her work on The Lisa Show.
Despite the unfairness of the plot twist, Lisa remains faithful and grateful, describing her feelings as a "weird mixture." She explains, "I didn't get what I wanted. This isn't my Plan A, but I have to be careful to express the gratitude that I really do feel. It gets so complicated with grief...being so grateful and seeing 100% the Lord's hand in caring for my family and me" while suffering simultaneously.
Listen to the episode as Lisa shares her journey with heartfelt authenticity and her typical sense of humor. She is grateful for all she's experienced, God's guiding hand, and the unexpected blessings received. So it's worth the listen.
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PLEASE: Rate and Review this podcast so other women can be inspired in their faithful career moves.
Visit the website:
FaithfulCareerMoves.com: Faith-based Career Coaching for Stay-at-Home Moms
Get the book:
Return to Work with Confidence: A faith-based guide to help stay-at-home moms re-enter the workforce
Follow us:
- Instagram @FaithfulCareerMoves
- Facebook @FaithfulCareerMoves

Hidden Potential: The Quiet Power of Being an Introvert
Faithful Career Moves
07/18/23 • 37 min
From Hiding to Thriving
Growing up shy, Rebecca Greenhalgh ran upstairs to hide in a toy box whenever someone outside her family came to the house. There she would stay until her mom came to fetch her a few moments later. The two repeatedly played this "game" of hide-and-seek for no apparent reason other than Rebecca's later explanation that people made her nervous.
Though she would eventually view this shyness as part of being an introvert, as a youth, Rebecca had to push herself to endure social situations so she could attend school, attend church, and get a job. However, when she entered college with education and career goals in mind, this timid teen decided she would need to adopt some outgoing characteristics to get where she wanted to go.
Rebecca recalls, "I would look around me and see other people being successful by being extroverted, and I thought I know what I want to achieve and I know what I want to do. ...And so I started putting myself in situations where I would have to practice being an introverted extrovert, and that started making a difference."
Now an accomplished content and course creator for Harvard Business School Online, Rebecca sees her more quiet and reserved qualities as superpowers because she uses these skills to interview and connect with people on a deeper level before retreating to her solo self to write and research after the meetings. "It literally is the perfect mix," she says.
Have a Listen: In this interview, Rebecca shares strategies she used to get "outside of her bubble a bit," the types of jobs she excels at, and how her career has evolved (and is still evolving) thanks to divine guidance and inspiration.
What You'll Learn In this Episode:
- How Rebecca got to Boston and how she discovered the HBS opportunity
- Why she quit working after having her first child
- How being an introvert is a gift she now appreciates
- How she and her husband make decisions together
- What calms her "forward thinking" mind when making decisions
- Why she said "yes" to an opportunity she didn't have time for
- A leap of faith she had to take to get where she is now
- An unexpected blessing that came from following the promptings
- How she's seen the hand of God in her career
- And so much more.
Mentioned on the Show:
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PLEASE: Rate and Review this podcast so other women can be inspired in their faithful career moves.
Visit the website:
FaithfulCareerMoves.com: Faith-based Career Coaching for Stay-at-Home Moms
Get the book:
Return to Work with Confidence: A faith-based guide to help stay-at-home moms re-enter the workforce
Follow us:
- Instagram @FaithfulCareerMoves
- Facebook @FaithfulCareerMoves

Everything You Need to Know About Working With a Recruiter
Faithful Career Moves
09/28/20 • 37 min
Jennifer Anderson, recruiter and career coach of 22 years, shares how to use a recruiter to find your next opportunity to bless the world.
ABOUT JENNIFER ANDERSON
When I wake up at 3AM, I just want to fall back asleep.
When that doesn't happen, my "please help me to fall back asleep" prayer usually starts as a simple request. By 4AM, it's a frustrated plea for divine assistance. By 5AM, I've either solved the world's problems or created new ones. Never once have I considered that the Lord may keeping me awake for a reason.
But after talking to Jen Anderson, career coach, recruiter, and author of the "3am With God" Journal, I am starting to wonder if He's been trying to tell me something.]
A 3AM WAKE-UP CALL
The "3am With God" journal and guided course is something Jen felt prompted to create after she received an impression at (you guessed it) 3AM.
After pushing the idea aside for a bit, she finally got to work collaborating with God on what is now a tool she uses to help others figure out what the Lord may be prompting them to do.
Of that experience, she said, "What that did for me was it introduced a new product into my business world that was basically telling the world that I am a Christian woman, and as a woman of faith, I'm inviting other people to recognize the inspiration they're getting at 3:00 AM in the mornings. That that's a secret divine time. If you read in the scriptures, there's many examples of people being awakened from dreams and visions and all sorts of stuff in the middle of the night."
A BETTER RECRUITER
The funny thing is, the journal is not why I wanted to interview Jen.
I wanted to talk to her because she's been a career coach and job recruiter for more than two decades. She's helped thousands of people find meaningful employment through a process I know very little about. But after talking to her on this subject as well, I'm starting to wonder what I might have been missing during the day now too.
I learned in this interview that a recruiter could be your biggest ally in making a faithful career move. A good recruiter can help you find employment opportunities that are not posted on job boards, make sure the hiring manager carefully reviews your resume, get you in for an interview, and help you negotiate a higher salary.
WHY WOULDN'T YOU USE A RECRUITER?
Listen to this interview with Jen Anderson to learn more about the role of a good recruiter, how to find one that specializes in your field of expertise, and what you need to do to make the relationship work. I promise, after listening, you too will be wondering what else you've missed.
What You'll Learn in this Episode
- The role of a good recruiter
- The difference between a recruiter and a corporate recruiter
- How to find a recruiter who will be a good fit for you
- How to manage the recruiter relationship
Mentioned in this Episode
~~~~~
PLEASE: Rate and Review this podcast so other women can be inspired in their faithful career moves.
Visit the website:
FaithfulCareerMoves.com: Faith-based Career Coaching for Stay-at-Home Moms
Get the book:
Return to Work with Confidence: A faith-based guide to help stay-at-home moms re-enter the workforce
Follow us:
- Instagram @FaithfulCareerMoves
- Facebook @FaithfulCareerMoves
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FAQ
How many episodes does Faithful Career Moves have?
Faithful Career Moves currently has 47 episodes available.
What topics does Faithful Career Moves cover?
The podcast is about Career Advice, Podcasts, Business, Careers and Christian.
What is the most popular episode on Faithful Career Moves?
The episode title 'LinkedIn Tips That Will Change Your Job Search Completely' is the most popular.
What is the average episode length on Faithful Career Moves?
The average episode length on Faithful Career Moves is 29 minutes.
How often are episodes of Faithful Career Moves released?
Episodes of Faithful Career Moves are typically released every 16 days.
When was the first episode of Faithful Career Moves?
The first episode of Faithful Career Moves was released on May 25, 2020.
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