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Tuesday, July 7, 2026

The July / August Edition of MBC Today

Here's the most recent edition MBC Today, including my letter from the editor and a link to the digital version preview of the magazine (the full version is an exclusive benefit for its subscribers).

Thank you to all who contributed to this issue of the retail print, mailbox, packing, shipping, logistics, and business center industry's leading publication, keeping both independent and franchise stores across the country up to date, in the loop, and networked together. It's a privilege to produce and edit this publication, but it's because of your hard work that it has such rich content.




Dear Readers,

Wow! What an issue!

I am so grateful for all of the outstanding contributions to this edition of MBC Today. As always, please read it cover to cover.

Then read it again.

And again, because you'll get fresh insight each time!

In the last edition, I was sharing my excitement for our upcoming time together in Vegas. My AYM High Consultants colleagues, Seema and Fahim, and I will be attending the PRINTING United Expo as print consultants, which is one of our most in-demand specialties. We'll be guiding some of our clients around the million square feet of exhibits, learning what's new and what's next in print techniques and technology, and also representing some of our non-attending clients, fulfilling their special requests.

But the cherry on top is that we've been invited as special guests of the PRINTING United Expo's organizers to do an interview there...and because our AYM High videographer, Aiden, will be with us, we hope to also record a follow-up MoJo Motivation™ podcast episode (probably for season three, as season two is already fully booked) to the popular season one episode that PRINTING United's team was on (which has great information on the expo, so check it out on your favorite podcast platform or at mojomotivation.com.)

We're also thrilled to be sponsoring the Friday night meetup for the AMBC event that's brilliantly partnered with and piggybacking on the PRINTING United Expo. Seema and Fahim will be attending the AMBC event as there-to-learn AMBC Members and I'll be attending as a helper and instructor. 

The seminar I'm slated to teach at the AMBC event is called "Outside Sales Strategies," and I'm bubbling over with great ideas to help AMBC Members soar with new strategies to build community and make connections that bring in big bucks!

Then, because why not hang around in Vegas a little longer (benefits of being a semi-retired consultant and no longer a store owner), I'll be spending a few days in the desert with some more clients to assist them with a very special project. (And also taking some time to experience The Wizard of Oz at The Sphere.) It's exciting! 

I hope to see you there.

With care,









Marty Johnson (he/him)

Founder | Uncle Marty's
Columnist | Ask Uncle Marty™
Editor & Producer | MBC Today
Co-Host | MoJo Motivation™ Podcast
Business & Leadership Coach | AYM High Consultants

askunclemarty.com · @askunclemarty

Sunday, July 5, 2026

Watch Your Back

The following Ask Uncle Marty™ column piece is slated to be shared in MBC Today Volume 28 Issue 4 on July 7, 2026. It was also published on aymhigh.com on July 6, 2026.


I had a dear friend who died in 2018, shortly after her 100th birthday. Her name was Mary and she and my grandmother and some of my great-aunts were friends as teenagers.

Mary was an amazing woman. She didn't get married young and start a family, as many women of her generation did. Instead, she began a career at IBM, which was started in my hometown, and got to know many of its original executives as a message courier between offices.

She eventually did marry, but she and her spouse Howard chose to travel the world as often as they could rather than follow the traditional homebodied family route. Mary had a pilot's license and she and Howard would often hitch rides on freighter ships to far-away places, staying and eating with the crew as guests, allowing the globetrotting couple to see parts of the world that other tourists wouldn't normally have access to.

I loved Mary very much. Because she never had children or grandchildren, she took my siblings and me under her wings and was a formidable and formative figure in our lives. And I learned a lot from her; she inspires me to this day with her willingness to break the mold, do her own thing, travel as much as possible, and not live by other people's standards.

Howard, who had turned into quite the curmudgeon, died quite a while before Mary did, as he was a good bit older than her. He left a note pinned to his shirt that said something like, "No funeral. No obituary. Let 'em guess." So, that's exactly what she did! I love her for that.

In fact, my sister and I loved Howard's phrase, "Let 'em guess," so much that we both now wear bracelets that have that phrase engraved on the underside—a quiet reminder to each of us that many things are simply no one else's business.

A quick cremation and burial of crotchety old Howard later, Mary swiftly sold the home they had built and loved for many, many decades and moved into a brand new, quite fancy retirement community. Eventually, she continued graduating to more assisted living in that all-in-one facility and ended up in the skilled nursing section before she finished her adventures.

Mary and I would often go on dates. She drove well into her 90s, but after she gave up her car I would sometimes pick her up and we'd go out to eat, go shopping, or just have a nice Sunday brunch in the beautiful restaurant at her complex. One thing she would tell me over and over again—each time she took a little too long (by her standards) to get up, walk somewhere, or do something that she used to be quite capable of doing—was, "Don't get old!" She always said it with a smirk and a wink, but she also meant it.

I'm not old. But I am solidly middle-aged, and I now need to wear bifocals with a special anti-glare coating that allows me to drive at night more confidently. Just yesterday, I walked up my stairs four times to get a roll of paper towels from my storage closet to bring back downstairs to my kitchen, and three of the four times had to go back downstairs because I forgot what I walked up the stairs for in the first place.

At a recent appointment, my dermatologist kindly let me know that what I thought was eczema on the back of my hands are actually age spots, and my barber loves to point out that my beard is now just as much gray as it is brown—but I kinda love the grey beard and am very grateful to still have a full head of very thick still-heavier-on-the-pepper-than-on-the-salt hair.

Regardless, at a sprightly 47 I'm doing my best to put my health as a priority and exercise daily, successfully maintaining my goal weight that I finally reached at the end of 2025. I moisturize, get regular facials, massages, manicures, and pedicures, and take various and sundry prescribed cholesterol medications, blood pressure medications, arthritis medications, and diabetes medications, as well as vitamins, supplements, and a daily fiber regimen that has changed my life (I'll spare you those details).

One thing most of my Gen X peers and I experience now, much more than ever before, is back pain. Could mine be due to decades spent in the shipping industry, lifting heavy packages less than correctly? Certainly. Could it also be due to the aforementioned arthritis I now am blessed with in my lower back and knees? You bet! It's just part of life now.

In fact, just this morning I woke up all wonky. I'm an incredibly sound sleeper and didn't even notice the severe thunderstorms my area experience during the night. I woke up with four of my five pillows splayed on the floor and my body lying perpendicular across my bed. I was in a position that really got me scratching my head, and when I tried to get up I could barely stand because of a totally twisted back.

I trusted fully in the handrail as I slowly made my way down the stairs and stumbled to the kitchen (to pour myself a cup of ambition). I live in a townhome community with neighbors all around, so I'm sure if anyone was looking in they must have had a good laugh. Hobbling (and at times crawling) around for a few hours until I could walk normally again and make it back upstairs to my home office, I heard Mary's voice going over and over in my head saying, "Don't get old."

I'm embracing getting older. And I'm embracing the bonus years that I've been living in since getting my cancer-free news over 13 years ago, as well as embracing the ability I had to semi-retire at 44 when I sold my business two and a half years ago. I'm determined not to waste the incredible gifts that I've been given while also accepting the fact that there are some things that I can't do as well as I once could, while at the same time also embracing the things that I'm getting better at as time goes on...and the wisdom that I hope I'm gaining as a result.

But the back pain worries me.

I know it'll be fine and I'm doing my best to stretch it out and work through it. It's infrequent, but powerful when it shows up. I'm sure many (most) of you can relate, as back issues tend to plague many people who have had long careers in labor-intensive fields.

Because I know many of you are still young enough to not yet have back issues, or haven't yet lifted that super heavy box that you shouldn't have lifted alone, I want to share with you a safety protocol I installed in my business well over a decade ago, albeit too late for those of us who had done damage already: lift with your legs, not with your back. And when you do have to lift something too heavy for you, don't be a hero. Ask for help. Team lift and use braces and tools available to you to assist.

I have too many friends whose backs are shot and it affects their lives in too many ways. I feel that I still have a lot to see and accomplish on this planet and, universe willing, I'll be gracing your magazines, blog rolls, and podcast feeds for years to come with lessons I've learned along my life's trajectory that may (or may not) be of value to you. And if there's one piece of learned-the-hard-way wisdom that I can impart, in the spirit of dear Mary's "Don't get old" and grumpy Howard's "Let 'em guess," it's that you need to protect your health, your privacy, and your peace.

Please don't break your back, literally or metaphorically. Work hard, yes. Work very hard! Invest that all-important sweat equity, because I promise it pays off. Most of you are entrepreneurs like me, sacrificing the traditional 40-hour work week and comfortable pension to build something that will have a good return in the end. So, make decisions with that end goal in mind, but also with your long-term mental and physical health in mind.

Work smart—in balance, taking necessary time to enjoy life and all of the blessings it has to offer. Someday, if you're lucky enough to reach your 100th birthday like Mary did, you can look back and be very grateful for decisions you've made to get to that end—even if they did go against a traditional mold.

...

 

Marty Johnson is a Business & Leadership Coach at AYM High Consultants, a columnist, an editor, and Co-Host of the MoJo Motivation™ podcast. In 2023, he sold his popular shipping, storage, and printing business, Uncle Marty’s, and retired from shopkeeper life in order to focus on writing and coaching. Subscribe to his free newsletter and read more at askunclemarty.com; follow him on socials @askunclemarty. 

Friday, June 26, 2026

Raise Those Prices!

The following was written by my dear friend, colleague, and brother from another mother (BFAM) Fahim Mojawalla. It was published on June 25, 2026 on the AYM High Consultants blog and is slated to be published in MBC Today Volume 28 Issue 4 in July.




Why we keep telling our clients to raise their prices...

...and why their profits almost always soar when they do.


One of the most expensive mistakes a business owner can make is assuming that guests and clients think the same way they do.

We see it every day. A store owner says, "I would never pay that much for a mailbox." "I wouldn't spend that on business cards." "Nobody will pay that much for packing services." "That's too much for a banner."

But here's the question: Are you your guest or client?

"The only thing worse than selling a $1,000 product to a $100 buyer is selling a $100 product to a $1,000 buyer." -Alex Hormozi 

In the first scenario, you lose a little money. In the second, you leave a fortune on the table.

The Mechanic's Problem

Imagine asking a mechanic to change your oil. The mechanic shrugs and says, "It's easy."

Of course it's easy. They've done it thousands of times.

But for most people, changing oil means buying supplies, making a mess in the driveway, disposing of used oil properly, and spending a Saturday afternoon doing something they'd rather avoid.

The value isn't in the task. The value is in removing the inconvenience.

The same principle applies to every service we offer in our industry.

Guests aren't paying for ink. They're paying for professional marketing materials that help them grow their business.

They're not paying for a mailbox. They're paying for privacy, professionalism, security, and convenience.

They're not paying for packing. They're paying for peace of mind.

Price Is a Signal

One of the most surprising lessons we've learned coaching store owners is that raising prices often improves close rates.

That sounds backwards. Yet we've seen it happen repeatedly.

Why?

Because price communicates value.

When something is priced too low, customers often assume it's lower quality.

When something is priced appropriately, customers believe it will deliver the results they need.

Think about the last time you bought something important. Did you automatically choose the cheapest option? Probably not.

Most clients don't either.

They want confidence.

They want reliability.

They want expertise.

And they expect to pay for it.

The Mailbox Pricing Mistake

For years, many mailbox operators have treated mailbox rentals as a commodity. They compare themselves to competitors and race toward the bottom.

Meanwhile, clients who truly value privacy, package acceptance, business credibility, and professional mail handling would gladly pay more.

At AYM High, we've encouraged clients across the country to raise mailbox prices.

Not recklessly.

Not without improving value.

But appropriately.

The result?

Higher profits.

Better clients.

Greater appreciation for the service being delivered.

And in many cases, almost no meaningful drop in occupancy.

Why?

Because client who understand the value of a professional mailbox aren't shopping for the cheapest mailbox.

They're shopping for the best solution.

The Printing Opportunity Most Stores Miss

Printing is another area where owners routinely undercharge.

A guest needs brochures for a trade show. Business cards for a networking event. A banner for a grand opening. Marketing materials for a new product launch.

The store owner sees paper and toner.

The guest sees opportunity.

The guest sees growth.

The guest sees revenue.

The guest sees a chance to make a great first impression.

When you understand that, pricing changes.

You're no longer selling paper.

You're selling outcomes.

Stop Building Your Business Around the Cheapest Guests

One of the biggest reasons businesses struggle is that they spend most of their time trying to satisfy guests who complain the most and spend the least.

The guests who constantly negotiate.

The guests who demand discounts.

The guests who compare every penny.

Those guests are often the hardest to serve and the least profitable.

Meanwhile, there are other guests and clients who value expertise, convenience, trust, speed, and professionalism. Those guests are often delighted to pay more when they receive exceptional service.

The goal is not to serve fewer people.

The goal is to serve the right people better.

What We've Seen Firsthand

Over the years, AYM High has advised store owners to increase pricing on:

- Mailboxes

- Printing services

- Packing services

- Freight

- Graphic design

- Notary services

- Specialty business services

- Value-added offerings

And time after time, when owners have followed the process, their profits have increased.

Sometimes dramatically.

Not because guests and clients suddenly became richer. But because owners finally started charging what their services were actually worth.

Your Clients and Guests Are Buying Confidence

People don't walk into your store looking for paper, boxes, tape, or a mailbox.

They're looking for solutions.

They're looking for expertise.

They're looking for confidence.

They're looking for experience.

And confidence has value.

The next time you hesitate to raise your prices, ask yourself, "Am I pricing based on what I would pay?"

Or

"Am I pricing based on the value I create for the customer?"

Those are two very different numbers.

The stores that understand that difference are the ones that consistently build stronger profits, stronger teams, and stronger futures.

At AYM High, we've seen it happen again and again.

And that's exactly why we keep encouraging our clients to charge more.


...

Fahim Mojawalla is a Business & Leadership Coach and the AYM High Lead at AYM High Consultants. He loves what he does and would love to show you how to make 21st century sales and marketing easy, simply by being authentic, appreciative, respectful, responsive, empathetic, collaborative, and all-around awesome. Along with his wife Seema, he is an effervescent co-owner of Island Ship Center, the Spa of Shipping.

Are You "Nose Blind" to Your Business?

The following article was written by a dear friend and mentor of all of mine, Crysta Reeves. It was originally published in MBC Today Volume 28 Issue 3 in June of 2026 and is shared here with permission.


We’ve all seen those commercials—the ones where someone walks into a home and is immediately hit with an unpleasant smell, while the homeowner stands there completely unaware. The tagline usually lands the same way: you’ve gone nose blind.

It’s funny because it’s true.

And it got me thinking about my own store.

Customers regularly walk in and say, “Wow, it smells amazing in here.” They linger, they smile, they comment on it as if it’s something special. Meanwhile, I’m standing behind the counter thinking…What smell? I don’t notice it at all anymore. After spending hours—days—years in the same space, I’ve become completely desensitized.

I’m nose blind.

But here’s the uncomfortable truth: that same phenomenon doesn’t just apply to pleasant things like a well-scented retail space. As owners, we can also become nose blind to the things that aren’t working.

And those are the smells that matter most.

No one opens their store intending to overlook problems. But over time, small issues become familiar, and familiar becomes invisible.

• The outdated signage you’ve never updated

• The clunky hardware and outdated technology that frustrates both staff and customers

• The slightly worn counters, scuffed floors, or dim lighting

• The “that’s just how we do it” customer service habits

Individually, they may seem minor. Collectively, they shape the customer experience.

The problem? You don’t see them anymore.

Just like that homeowner in the commercial, you’ve adapted.

Your Customers Still Smell It

Here’s the key difference: your customers are walking in fresh every single time.

They notice everything.

They feel friction where you feel routine. They see missed opportunities where you see normal operations. And while they may not always say it out loud, it influences how long they stay, how much they spend, and whether they come back.

In other words, what you’ve gone nose blind to… they haven’t.

For me, it started with that simple compliment about how the store smelled. It made me realize something important:

If I can become blind to something positive, I can absolutely become blind to something negative.

That realization forced me to step back and look at my business differently—not as the owner who lives in it every day, but as a first-time customer walking through the door.

And what I saw surprised me.

There were small inefficiencies I had accepted. Little cosmetic details I had stopped noticing. Processes that worked—but not as well as they could.

Nothing catastrophic. But enough to hold the business back from being exceptional.

So how do you fix something you can’t see?

You have to actively break your own familiarity.

Here are a few ways to do it:

1. Walk into your store like a stranger

Literally. Step outside, walk in, and experience your business from the front door to the checkout. What stands out? What feels off?

2. Ask for honest feedback

Not just from loyal customers who love you—but from new customers, employees, or even other business owners. Fresh eyes are invaluable.

3. Audit the details

Look at your store in layers:

• Cosmetic: Cleanliness, lighting, signage, layout

• Technology: Speed, reliability, ease of use, is it up to date

• Customer experience: Greeting, communication, problem-solving

4. Challenge “that’s just how we do it”

This phrase is often the strongest indicator that you’ve gone nose blind. It doesn’t mean that because you do it that way you need to keep doing it that way. Be open to change.

Here’s the encouraging part: most of these issues are fixable.

Unlike major strategic overhauls, the “nose blind” problems are often small, incremental improvements. But when you address them, the impact compounds quickly.

A cleaner space. A smoother transaction. A more intentional customer interaction.

Individually small. Together, transformative.

Your business has a “smell.” Not literally—but experientially. It’s what customers sense the moment they walk in.

The question is: are you aware of it?

Or have you been breathing it in so long that you no longer notice?

Because whether it’s amazing…or in need of attention…your customers can still smell it.

...

Crysta Reeves is the proud owner of three shipping stores located in Northern Minnesota communities, as well as AMBC Advisor to the Board and past Board Chair. She also operates NorthlandCheerheads.com, expanding her businesses into the printing market and supporting her three kids’ school activities in a fun way.




Monday, May 18, 2026

Entrepreneur of the Year

The following article was published in the Ask Uncle Marty column in MBC Today Volume 28 Issue 3 on May 1, 2026:


I am so, so proud.

My heart is beaming.

I'm not a parent and don't fully know the feeling someone might have when their kid does something truly amazing, however I am indeed the world's best uncle (seriously, I have the mug to prove it) and now a soon to be thrice-over great-uncle, and also have had many "work kids" over my tenure as a business owner. And I certainly know the pride and heart-beam feelings that I get when my niblings, great-niblings, and work kids do amazing things.

One such amazing thing happened on April 29th, when my former work kid, dear friend, and mutual mentor Clark received the prestigious Entrepreneur of the Year award from the Tompkins County Chamber of Commerce.

  

Those who read my column regularly or follow me on socials (@askunclemarty) know that Clark and his wife, Codey Noel, purchased Uncle Marty's from me at the end of 2023. What they've done with the brand that still bears my name is something that both blows my mind and makes me smile...like a really, really big smile.

This power couple has built upon the foundation that this now-semi-retired founder of the business laid and have blown it up to a multi-location chain, revamped systems, added lots of amazing new print equipment, grown the storage arm of the business to a multi-warehouse and multi-vehicle operation, and, most importantly, have strengthened and grown relationships within the greater Ithaca, New York community that they both live in and serve diligently.

Clark started working with me when he was a teenager. Now, he's in his late-mid-20s, is married, and is a first-time expectant father. In fact, he owns multiple businesses and somehow manages to keep them all not only sustained, but growing...considerably!

Networking and the absolute importance of relationship-based business is something I did my best to instill in Clark when we worked together. He knew this instinctively and from being one of the wisest and most capable teenagers that I ever hired (his sister and brother, who also worked with me and started as teens, excluded, as they too are incredibly wise and capable and all-around awesome humans).


The potential I recognized in Clark has been proven now over and over, and the whole community sees it. He and Codey Noel aren't in business just to make money. Yes, that's important, but they have a greater mission: to serve.

Tompkins Weekly, a local publication in Upstate New York, quoted Clark when he outlined how the Uncle Marty's team views their role: “A big part of what we do is we take kind of a consultant role when people come in, to be able to help them find the best option for what they need,” Young said. “If you need it done right, you can come to us and we take care of it all for you.”

This is the essence of service. And service is the essence of Uncle Marty's.

I had been an active member of the Tompkins County Chamber of Commerce when I owned Uncle Marty's. It was important for me to participate, network, and build relationships. In addition to that, we were part of many other local networking organizations and committees, as well as frequent sponsors of local community events. It's so important.

In my now-role as a leadership coach, editor, columnist, and podcaster (I'm not very good at being semi-retired, staying busier than ever...but loving every minute of it and still taking time to enjoy the local beaches in Southern Delaware where I now live, and to travel as often as I can), I find myself often telling clients that it's essential that they get involved in local networking groups.

 

In fact, at AYM High Consultants, where I coach alongside my colleagues Seema and Fahim, one of the first things we tell any new client is that they must—must, must, must—join their local chamber of commerce. We get pushback from this directive every now and then, but each time a client follows through on this advice we see incredible growth in their business. Why? Because relationship-based business works! Networking works! Serving works! Sponsoring works! As Fahim often says, "Visibility leads to credibility, which leads to profitability."

I hope every young person reading this takes time to watch the video I posted on my TikTok  (@askunclemarty) on April 30th to see clips from Clark's acceptance speech. It's inspiring. You can see from it what's truly possible when you put in the work to build relationships in your community, and the visibility, credibility, and profitability that follow—always in that order, with no shortcuts. That same video will soon be posted on AYM High's YouTube channel and socials (@aymhighconsultants), as well as on my own Instagram, once the AYM High media team finishes zhuzhing it up (yes, we have our own videographer now, as well as a couple of media editors we work with!)

I hope everyone reading this article also will take a few minutes to read the Tompkins Weekly article (tompkinsweekly.com/news/tompkins-chamber-honors-businesses-and-community-leaders-56d276cb), as it really captures the essence of service that Clark and Codey Noel and their team embody, which is the key to their tremendous success.

Onward!

 

Marty Johnson is the Communication and Vision Lead at AYM High Consultants, a columnist, an editor, and Co-Host of the MoJo Motivation™ podcast. In 2023, he sold his popular shipping, storage, and printing business, Uncle Marty’s, and retired from shopkeeper life in order to focus on writing and coaching. Subscribe to his free newsletter and read more at askunclemarty.com; follow him on socials @askunclemarty. 

The May/June Edition of MBC Today

Here's the most recent edition MBC Today, including my letter from the editor and a link to the digital version preview of the magazine (the full version is an exclusive benefit for its subscribers).

Thank you to all who contributed to this issue of the retail print, mailbox, packing, shipping, logistics, and business center industry's leading publication, keeping both independent and franchise stores across the country up to date, in the loop, and networked together. It's a privilege to produce and edit this publication, but it's because of your hard work that it has such rich content.




Dear Readers,

Watch out, Vegas, three big events are coming your way! And along with them, a peculiar (in the best way) group of retail printers and shippers, ready to hit the strip and let it rip!

In this issue of MBC Today, you'll find information on these three events: the MBC Education Symposium in July hosted by FotoZoomer, the PRINTING United Expo in September, and AMBC's print-focused event that is in partnership with—and following immediately after—the PRINTING United Expo.

I, for one, am a huge Vegas nut. Outside of the city that will always have my heart—New York—I'm a total Vegas favortist and love that we find ourselves there every year or two (or multiple times a year, as the case may be) for events. 

I have my favorite Vegas restaurants, favorite Vegas bagel joint, and favorite Vegas venues that I try to hit up every time I get to that fabulous desert (and dessert) oasis...as likely you do too. Each time I go, I try to stay at a different casino—often at some of the older ones to feel the nostalgia and smell the decades of smoke infused in the walls, which brings back sensory memories of my grandmother's apartment. It makes me smile. 

And the over-the-topness of everything in lights and glittery is certainly something I most definitely appreciate. (I don't know if you've picked up on it before if you've been around me much at events or have taken any of my classes, but I think it's safe to say that I'm "just a little extra.")

On top of our Vegas travels, we also have other great industry events to look forward to, like the ShipRite convention coming up in a few weeks. I'll be there, slated to teach a "Becoming a Destination" class with Fahim and give advice to attendees about targeted marketing, specialization, and the extreme powers of word-of-mouth and flowing profits that destination messaging brings to a business. It's an event you don't want to miss!

Events aside, what has really excited me lately on coaching calls, client visits, and other things that keep me entirely too busy in what is supposed to be semi-retirement, is seeing my industry peers, mentors, and mentees soaring because of simple relationship-based strategies and business practices that they've implemented. Our industry is all about relationships; it's all about people serving people. Those who do it with integrity and heart are filling their karma banks...and money banks. Facts.

Thanks to all of the writers and contributors who have made this yet another great edition of MBC Today. And thanks, most of all, to you, the readers. Please read and reread with intent, focus, and an open mind, because that's what allows growth to occur.

With care,









Marty Johnson (he/him)

Founder | Uncle Marty's
Columnist | Ask Uncle Marty™
Editor & Producer | MBC Today
Co-Host | MoJo Motivation™ Podcast
Communication & Vision Lead | AYM High Consultants

askunclemarty.com · @askunclemarty

MoJo Motivation™ Episode 4: Raising Others Up and Rising Along with Them with Dr. Stacey Wat


Episode four of the MoJo Motivation™ podcast has just dropped…and it’s one of my favorites so far!

Experienced physician Stacey A. Watt MD, MBA, MHPE, FASA, a pediatric anesthesiologist, proud mother of two, academic leader, community volunteer, entrepreneur, two-time NCAA All-American, and President of a multimillion-dollar nonprofit heartfully discusses confidence, empathy, collaboration, engagement, finding the right coaches and mentors, celebrating others, and the importance of raising others up, which allows us to rise in turn.

Watch now at mojomotivation.com or search “MoJo Motivation” on your favorite podcast platform. And please subscribe, rate, and share!


Friday, April 17, 2026

Thank You, FedEx!

The following post was just shared on the AYM High Consultants blog, which I have the honor of managing and contributing to. I'm so excited about it, that I have to share it here as well!

The FedEx ShipSource® newsletter just dropped yesterday--Wednesday, April 17, 2026. This excellent, important publication goes out to nearly 5,000 FedEx Authorized ShipCenters®, as well as to many other newsletter subscribers and those in the FedEx network. And, guess what they shared in it: the MoJo Motivation podcast!

We were so honored to have FedEx leaders Shari Jones and Ty Deal as our inaugural podcast guests--on episode one, which dropped in February. That episode, as well as other episodes released monthly since, have had a wonderful response.

We are so, so grateful. Here's a clip of AYM High coach Marty's reaction when the newsletter arrived: