Good Neighbor Podcast: Bergen

Ep # 153 Designing Peace On Any Budget With Katie Rose Inspired

Doug Drohan Season 2 Episode 153

What if your home actually helped you breathe out at the end of the day? Katie, a former math and personal finance teacher turned interior designer, shares how she built Katie Rose Inspired to give families calm, beautiful spaces without the overwhelm. We trace her leap from a tenured classroom to a buzzing studio, the $2,000 bedroom makeover that kickstarted her portfolio, and why decision fatigue—not paint color—is the real enemy in most renovations.

We get practical about money and process. Katie explains how designers price their work, why trade relationships matter, and the hidden costs of DIY decisions that don’t scale, fit, or perform. From cabinet hardware placement to sconce heights and tile direction, she shows how hundreds of micro‑choices can sink a project—and how floor plans, scaled renders, and 3D walkthroughs prevent costly mistakes. We talk about building a high‑end feel on real‑world budgets by getting proportions right, layering lighting, and choosing durable materials that look good and live well with kids and pets.

You’ll hear how Katie structures services for different needs: full‑service design with white‑glove installs, e‑design packages for self‑installers, and kitchen and bath guidance where she acts as the design liaison alongside your GC. With a teacher’s mindset, she turns chaos into checkpoints and makes the journey feel human. Beyond the reveal, we explore the psychology of home—why color temperature, texture, and storage flow shape your mood—and how a clear brief anchors every choice to function, budget, and feeling.

If you’ve ever stared at blank walls for five years, argued over light bulbs, or felt lost in a showroom, this conversation will save you time, money, and stress. Subscribe, share with a friend who’s renovating, and leave a review to tell us which room you’re ready to reimagine next.

Katie Rose Inspired
Katie Rose
katieroseinspired@gmail.com
katieroseinspired.com

Intro/Close:

This is the Good Neighbor Podcast, the place where local businesses and neighbors come together. Here's your host, Doug Drohan.

Doug Drohan:

Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of the Good Neighbor Podcast from Bergen County, New Jersey. I am Doug Drohan, the owner of the Bergen Neighbors Media Group. And today we are inspired by Katie Roscoparis. Katie is a Bergen County native uh former school teacher who actually taught a really cool class that my 12-year-old son in Harrington Park has got a kind of finance uh literacy class. And yesterday they had did something called um Treps, where they had to create a business and then they had a marketplace where all the kids got to sell things. And interestingly, is that a lot of the boys just basically resold trading cards like uh you know, like Pokemon cards and baseball cards, where my son and his friend created origami and oh there you go and pillows, and I thought that would be it, but they didn't sell as much. This kid next to him selling cards and oh packages got $200. My son, they they uh they grossed $80, and I told him they probably netted more than his friends because his friends had to buy those cards.

Katie Rose:

Yeah, exactly.

Doug Drohan:

I don't know if they sold it for a hundred percent profit or not, but you forget about those upfront costs, right? Yeah, but that's but that's what they had to learn. They had to have that in the whole program. The teacher, you know, you have to write what your costs are and things like that. So sure, sure. Anyway, I divert a little bit. So you are no longer a math teacher, you are now a uh, I guess, interior designer. Is that that's correct? Right. So welcome to the show.

Katie Rose:

Thank you. Thanks for having me. It's good to be here.

Doug Drohan:

Yeah, yeah. So so let's get into that. How did you go from being a um, you know, a math teacher and personal finance teacher for 15 years?

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Doug Drohan:

Uh to becoming a uh a business owner of a um, you know, interior design firm called Rady Katie Rose Inspired.

Katie Rose:

Yeah, um, it's it's funny. I, you know, people think you're crazy for leaving um a tenured position ever, right? Um, and teaching certainly no different. I I did. I loved, loved, love teaching math. I was a middle school math teacher and personal finance for 15 years, like you mentioned, um, at in a Bergen County school. And it was, you know, it was my purpose, it was my call for many years, and I loved it. But um it's it was sort of not by accident that this happened because the like home design and decor and sort of finding these ways of creating a cozy space um on a budget really was like, you know, teachers hello. So that was like always my thing. And I, you know, my friends and my family kind of noticed the um the knack that I had for it. Um, and so it was always a passion. It was a little bit of a side hustle, even for a few years, um, especially through COVID. Um, you know, uh my fellow teachers who might be listening can appreciate teaching middle school kids through COVID on a computer was tested, tested, tested all of the things. Um, and so, but when I wasn't teaching online, um I was able to really invest and kind of think on and concentrate in my own home. And then that sort of started being something that I also helped friends who were also home, working from home and looking around at their four walls and saying, Oh, like I don't like this place anymore. Like it doesn't feel like me. And so I started helping my friends, you know, decorate and design their homes. And um, finally one day, my um, my actually my sister, my brother-in-law, um, I I owe a lot to him because he was the one that gave me my first kind of job, we'll call it, of redesigning their their primary bedroom as a surprise for my sister. And he was like, Katie, I have $2,000. Go and redo my whole bedroom, do what you can do. And I was like, great. And I was so pumped. Um, and I started my Instagram with that. Like, I was like, let's just see where this goes. Anyway, a long story short is that it really started to grow and people kind of took notice. And um, so by 2022, um, I had actual, like, you know, real clients, people that were either referred or uh found me through Instagram, which is wild. And so my husband kind of looked at me and was like, Katie, you should probably pursue this. Like you're really good at this. Um, you know, what's the worst case, right? You you you go back to teaching, it's fine, like you love that too. So anyway, I I I did pursue it and um it really took off almost immediately. And it's been such a joy ever since. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Doug Drohan:

So that $2,000, did that include buying like new furnishings? And yeah, that was all furnishings.

Katie Rose:

We didn't paint, you know, it just it was all furnishings.

Doug Drohan:

Okay, so furnishings and your fee was included in that two thousand dollars.

Katie Rose:

What fee? It was for my sister.

Doug Drohan:

All right, all right. But I just yeah, okay.

Katie Rose:

So yeah, yeah, yeah.

Doug Drohan:

I did but typically that's how it works, right? So correct. So you you have, you know, I know a lot of interior designers get great discounts at pottery barn and places like that. So not only do you recommend something, but then you can give them a price break on some of the um furnishings and decorate, you know, decorative things they buy, correct?

Katie Rose:

Well, so sure. Everyone kind of works differently, but um really the the trade pricing that you know uh your contractor will get at a plumbing store, like it's sort of the same idea where um some designers will will share or pass along a trade uh price, but really if you're gonna run a profitable bit profitable business, you really shouldn't be passing along um your trade pricing because that's how your business can maintain and stay profitable. And that's just you know, uh, from coming from many, many experts in the field who have been in business far longer than me. Um, but I do um I do find ways to uh either share that pricing with my clients and give them value. Um, but really the part of the whole scope of a design designer's kind of fee goes into not only the time and the expertise, but it's also the relationships with trade vendors and sources, right? If I go to a restaurant, I'm not expecting a wholesale price for my steak. But you know, the markup price is part of the experience that I'm that I'm getting when I go to that restaurant and the relationships that that restaurant has had to get those pricing. You know, it's a lot to it.

Doug Drohan:

Right, right. Okay.

Katie Rose:

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Doug Drohan:

Yeah. But, you know, I you mentioned about um, you know, when you started it, you were a school teacher, so you wanted to make your business um attainable because I think the you know, when you open up these design magazines, you or these like high-end up market, you know, you see these interior designers, or if you watch, I don't know if you watch um open house NYC on Sunday mornings. Yeah, yeah. So, you know, they're always touring these beautiful homes or apartments in Manhattan. Yeah, anyhow, the an interior designer is gonna cost you 50, 100 grand or whatever.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Doug Drohan:

So, you know, for most of us, you think, well, yeah, that's great, but I can't afford an interior designer.

Intro/Close:

Right.

Doug Drohan:

So, was that one of the reasons that you um I mean you mentioned it, but because you were doing it yourself. Is that one of the things that drove you to say, hey, look, there's a lot of interior designers out there.

Katie Rose:

Yeah.

Doug Drohan:

Um, you know, why are you different? You know, what can I do that's different? Is that one of them?

Katie Rose:

For sure. So I've always kind of took pride in the fact that I can really create a beautiful space on a very low budget. Um and really it's funny because even those very luxury designers that are designing the multi-million dollar spaces, um, you know, they're they're actually saving their clients a lot of time and money and expensive mistakes. Um, so really the the higher the budget, the the higher the stakes are. Um and so not hiring a designer can actually cost you a lot more stress, time, and money than people realize. And that's actually something that I've continued to find to be the truth in my own experience.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Katie Rose:

Again, even on small single room, you know, kind of refreshes. Um, I just find that clients have such decision fatigue. Like, I can't tell you how many times I've walked into a consultation, and my clients are like, I don't know what to put on my walls, so I haven't put anything on my walls in five years. Um, and that I don't want to go spend my weekends walking up and down, you know, up and down Route 17, looking through all the different storefronts and getting haggled by, you know, the people there. And so you're hiring a designer to help you navigate, say, here's here's the money that by the way, the hard-earned money that I have invested towards creating a space that feels good to me and my family that I want to walk into and feel at peace and at home at, right? And I don't take that lightly. So a budget, you know, a client might come to me with a tight budget, where, you know, really the challenge is harder to find the things that are going to work and create this beautiful space on a tight budget. Um, and right, every even the budgets, the clients that have really great and healthy budgets. Um, the challenge for me and um kind of the joy for me and my why I'm different is that I can really work in many different facets for all of those clients to find the right places that we're sourcing, um, to find them the highest quality that I can given that budget. Um, and so really that's kind of my my niche, I'll I'll call it, because I'm able to provide my clients with high-end feeling design, even if it's a tight budget.

Doug Drohan:

Yeah, yeah. And you know, what you said about saving time and um maybe saving money in the long run. I found that when we redid our kitchen in 2020.

Katie Rose:

Yeah.

Doug Drohan:

And I hired a GC and I thought that they were gonna help guide me, and they really don't. And I understand they might say, Well, this is what some people are doing, but it's up to you because they don't want to ingest something and then you're not happy with it, you know. And it came down to simple things like, okay, where do you want the the knob on the drawers in your kitchen? I'm like, really?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, oh yeah.

Doug Drohan:

You better bring your wife down here because I don't wanna, you know, what if we you know had it too high up or it's too much centered, she didn't want it centered, and like, all right, you know, all these little things that go into it, and I we did it all ourselves until the very end when it came to buying uh you know lights to hang over the island. And I finally found an interior designer to help me with that, and she gave some great suggestions and the chairs that we put there. But perfect part of that, we did it all ourselves, and um it turned out okay in the long run, but uh it would have been a lot easier if we just hired somebody that we trusted that that had the same vision that we had. And and I think the visual of the before and after, like you know, like uh Magnolia does, you know, when you see these HG TV shows. But it's important to see, okay, this is what you're talking about, but what's that gonna look like? Like uh give me an uh representation of what I can expect.

Katie Rose:

Yeah.

Doug Drohan:

Then you have my trust and say, okay, yeah, let's do it.

Katie Rose:

You know, 100%. That's in fact, I think that's really the coolest part of my job and the what I provide uh for my clients is I'm able to give them those visual renders. And actually, the design program that I use, we can actually do like a 3D model walkthrough of a space. Um, so they really get a sense of where the furnishings are gonna be placed, the size, the scale of the room, um, a little bit of like the colors and any sort of design aspects that we're gonna be including in the room. Um, so that helps a ton. But to your point, I've done a a number of construction jobs now working with different GCs in our area. And I can't tell you how often the clients are like, wait, there's like so many decisions, you know, that go into, to your point, like a kitchen design or a bathroom design, elevations, you know, how tall are these sconces, how wide are the sconces, are they gonna fit in this space, you know, where's the center of the mirror gonna be? Is it a widespread faucet? Is it a single fossil? Like there's just there is a lot of decisions.

Doug Drohan:

And then when they do it, you're like, oh God, I'm gonna do it. Yes, yes, too big.

Katie Rose:

In fact, I've had I've had jobs where I've had to come in and kind of save the job a little bit because they've spent so much money buying things that they, you know, the electrician hangs the light and they're like, Oh, this doesn't work at all. I'm like, I know it's way too small. So yeah, it's just it's like it's like anything else, Doug, in in our lives as adults, especially. I think as we the you know, kind of the more established and mature we become and the more we experience life. Yeah, I'm I am a big advocate of leaning on the experts to help me navigate the things that I don't know because I can't be the expert in every field.

Speaker 3:

Right.

Katie Rose:

I'm not gonna go do my taxes. I no, no, I love math, but I'm not doing my taxes. I'm gonna lean on my expert to help me do my taxes, you know. Um, Godspeed to all those turbo tax people out there. That's not me. You know, it's gonna cost me and I understand that, but it's gonna give me a better experience and a better product at the end of the day.

Doug Drohan:

So that's just you know, I think we can all you're right. Because um, you know, having said all that, um we didn't pay attention to the hi-hats in my kitchen. And um, and the the guy that did the kitchen, he didn't, you know, he hired an electrician to like install stuff.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Doug Drohan:

Then when my interior designer came in, she's like, You have all different light bulbs here. Why didn't you have color, you know, you have all different kinds of light, right?

Katie Rose:

Light temperatures, yeah.

Doug Drohan:

And you know, now you have those flush LEDs that could like why didn't they do that? And I'm like, I don't know, I didn't think about it, you know, but he should have done that, you know. So I didn't have somebody just helping me.

Katie Rose:

Right.

Doug Drohan:

Yeah. So anyway, that was um, you know, I totally understand, you know, why you exist, like why you do what you do. And I think there's you know, I'm I'm I'm assuming there's some great satisfaction when somebody has that aha moment when they see what you did to their room. Oh man, um, or their house or whatever it is. And there's a feeling of peace, right? When you when you come into a bedroom, because there's a lot of um psychological and emotional, I guess you know it better than me, that certain colors and the way you know things are arranged uh affects you emotionally.

Katie Rose:

100%. Yeah. Our our homes um can really when we walk into our homes at the end of the day, we bring, we bring a lot of baggage right with us, no matter what, whatever stuff that we've kind of experienced that day. And we can either walk into our homes and feel that that breath of like release and relaxing, and I and I'm so happy I'm here, or we walk into our homes and it becomes a more like, oh, you know, I hate this, this doesn't work, it doesn't feel good, it doesn't feel peaceful. And so uh yeah, one of the greatest, like truly, I say joy, but it really is just as a joyful experience is being able to gift that to my clients for them to walk in and experience a well-designed space. Um, and with someone who has sort of been the guide, it's not stress on my student on my students on my clients. It's not stress on them because I've helped like my client experience, I think is something that's also unique. I really uh my personality shines through in my client experience as well. I create a really easy guided experience where they know what they're getting, they know what the what's coming next. Um, and so by the time we're done and it the we reveal that space or a whole home to my clients, yeah, the emotions, right? That like the and it's kind of like that TV moment where you're just overwhelmed with relief. It's like this relief of like, oh, this this is what we've been missing, and thank you so much for guiding us through that.

Doug Drohan:

Yeah, yeah. I mean, even organization, just being having your organized or your closets organized or your bedroom closet, it does have um does bring a lot of peace. And and lighting is a lot of things. Like I, you know, I went through that, but I'm sure you know, the way we have lighting in my house could definitely be re reconfigured because it's tons of hi-hats and the colors, you know, whatever.

Katie Rose:

Um yeah, yeah.

Doug Drohan:

The bedroom, we have like a wrought iron bed. I hate it because it's not comfortable. You can't lean your head back.

Katie Rose:

Uh yeah, it's like little things in life that when we really stop to think about it, you're like, huh, that could be better.

Doug Drohan:

Yeah, yeah, yeah. So uh you might be learned from me.

Katie Rose:

I'll put you in my calendar for 2026.

Doug Drohan:

There you go. What was it like? I mean, you you made that leap, right? I mean, you you said people thought you were crazy, and I always use the line from John Lennon, whose uh anniversary was this week and is oh neat. Um, where his song that was released at the time of his death, um, called Watching the Wheels, it's uh people think I'm crazy doing what I'm doing. They give me all kinds of advice to save me from ruin. And uh I felt the same way when I walked away from the corporate world. I mean, I'd gotten laid off, but I was um I worked at Nickelodeon at Viacom, and before that I was in the music industry at Sony Music, so two big companies my entire career, and I decided to bet on myself because I didn't want to have somebody deciding what I was worth anymore. And um, you know, in 2018 when I started a magazine, people thought, what are you crazy? Nobody reads magazines anymore. But it was also a lot of things I didn't know, you know, just aside from that, it's like you know, what is it like? Like on the sales part or running a company and and all the things that go, you know, into it. And and uh luckily I don't have inventory, but you have so many different things that no one really told you about. You think it's a great idea, your husband was behind you, right? Yeah, then you leap into it and you're like, oh wow, there's marketing, there's there's this, there's you know, account like you were saying, you have to hire an accountant, but there's so many different things. What has it been like for you when you made since you've made that, you know, that leap?

Katie Rose:

Yeah, uh exactly. You nailed it on the head. I think it's just this uh, I'm so excited, like this is gonna be great. And right, like it's like I I was I was flying the plane and fixing it too, right? At this like I already had clients, so I was already working on jobs when I kind of started I when I officially resigned from teaching, and then I that summer sort of opened up and established the LLC and uh and I was already working. And so, you know, it was a I gotta learn on the job experience, I gotta figure this out. And I'm, you know, again, as a teacher, as a former teacher, I love learning. Um so I have just and still to this day, um any sort of education that I can get, um, I'm there. I'm listening to podcasts that help me learn about running a business.

Doug Drohan:

Which one do you listen to?

Katie Rose:

Uh so there's a really good podcast for that's specifically, it's called a well-designed business. And Louanne Nigera is a local New Jersey. Uh she is the it's the number one rated podcast for interior design in general. Um and so she just talks about uh she has tons of guests that talk about running the business, running a profitable business, um, and specifically for the interior design community. Um so that's been a huge help. There's a ton, right? There's a ton of podcasts, business podcasts out there. So I do. I'm a I'm not a sit-down reader, I'm a on the go, constantly the dog in the car.

Doug Drohan:

I make my car my university. Yeah, exactly right. There's a podcast that this one was kind of built around, which was called How I Built This.

Speaker 3:

Oh.

Doug Drohan:

Um, the host's name is Guy Raz, and he and he interviews people to talk about how they built their business. And what was important. Important for me was hearing stories of people from all different backgrounds, businesses that I've heard of, like Jet Blue or Sierra Nevada Beer, or you know, things I never heard of before, but they were going through the same struggles I was going through.

Speaker 3:

Oh, yeah.

Doug Drohan:

So it wasn't just like what I was experiencing and saying advertising or you know, being a much smaller company than somebody starting uh away, you know, bags and and going to uh VCs for funding. It was the same kind of struggles and the same moments of doubt and fate, of doubt and pain, I should say, and and trying to find the true believers in what you're doing. So that one and then Donald Miller, I would recommend um Story Brand Framework, Marketing Made Simple, Business Made Simple. Those are great podcasts to learn from, and you can follow me on Instagram. And right.

Katie Rose:

Yeah, I mean, there's there's tons of information out there if you really want to know how to do it well. And so I think um for me it's it's just been a learning experience, but it's been really fun to um see my business grow and and and right to your point, like I think a lot of people uh when I say I'm an interior designer, they're like, Oh, that's so cute. You like decoration and paint, pick paint. And you're like, you have no idea the marketing and the finances, and it's just an overwhelming, you know. And by the way, I'm still, you know, creating all these projects and a client experience and uh and my own personal growth. So it's it is a lot, but it's been again I for me having that regimented eight to three schedule as a teacher and now going from hey, I'm it's Friday morning at you know, nine o'clock and I'm here recording the podcast with you, like having that flexibility of my schedule, especially for my family, has been life-changing and worth worth the stress and worse, worth the heartache. You know, I mean, I feel like it's running a business is no joke, and you really have to take it seriously. And to your point, you have to really believe in yourself to that you're able and willing to do the hard work. Um, so, and really at the end of the day, like I want to be here five years from now, I want to be doing this 10 years from now. And so, how am I going to set myself up for success and still be here for my clients in five years and 10 years, um, while still being there for my family and being, you know, a good mom and a good wife and and all the other things, right?

Doug Drohan:

So, yeah, and I was gonna say, you know, you're doing all this while you have three small kids. Um, and I think, you know, for um, you know, for the decision you made, you know, it like you said, it it's it's great. Oh, I have the flexibility to do a podcast at nine and be home for my kids and pick them up from school.

Intro/Close:

Sure.

Doug Drohan:

But I always use another line from pop culture, which is from Spider-Man with great power comes great responsibility. You want the flexibility to be able to do this at 9 a.m. or pick your kids up. Well, you better kill it the rest of the time. You have to be like, you know, as a teacher, you had your lesson plans and you had everything. If you're not an organized business owner, like a lot of people, I think love the idea of oh, I own a interior design firm, or I'm gonna start a magazine or I'm gonna, but then they get punched in the mouth, and and um you know, everybody has a plan until they get punched in the mouth. What are you gonna do? Yeah, so I think um it does take a special kind of personality to persevere. Yeah, and I like you, you know, if you if you talk about making the the design process stress-free and attainable, like I think you have to make when you're running a business as stress, it's not gonna be stress-free. No, um, but uh as stress-free and attainable to you as as possible, right?

Katie Rose:

Yeah, time management is everything, right? I think if you're not a good time management, well, time manager, um, the days can quickly get away from you and suddenly your priority list is now, you know, doubled. You know, so yeah, yeah, yeah. It it's uh it's a daily grind for sure.

Doug Drohan:

Yeah. So uh let's go through the services that you provide and then how people uh can can contact you.

Katie Rose:

Awesome.

Doug Drohan:

What are you doing with services?

Katie Rose:

Yeah, so I mean, I'm a residential interior, full service design studio. So what that means is uh I mainly do residential. I have done a few small kind of commercial projects. Um, but really my passion is residential, helping families. Uh, a lot of my clients are families with kids who, again, just don't have the time, energy, or really just understanding of you know what to do and how to make their house what they want it to be. So, my main service that I offer is uh a full service design. And so that goes from everything from um our consultation in home where I'm gathering information about budget, aesthetic, you know, a lot of depending on the room or rooms that we're doing. I have an um intake form that kind of helps navigate those questions and what are we going to dig into all the way through. I am literally, we are we are hanging curtains and and Roman shades and photo photography on the walls, and we are installing and scheduling deliveries for you and white glove service all the way. So that full service is really the all done for you um package. That's the most popular, obviously. Um, I also have an e-design package, it's called just the design. Um, and this is really more for my clients who could be on a budget crunch, right? Where I the I don't have an excessive budget here by any means. I'm on a tight budget, Katie, but I really just need help with the floor planning. Like, where am I putting furniture? What size furniture am I looking for? And where am I getting that furniture? So I will put together the floor plan, the renders for them, and then we'll I will also provide a shoppable uh shopping list really for them of like here's all the products that you're now gonna buy on your own time, you know, as you want to, and you'll you'll install basically on your own. Um and then from there, really, I can do everything from a in-person consultation where it's just a you know up to two hours of my design advice. It could be, hey, we're painting a whole house, you know, I need some paint color recommendations and some, you know, little things here and there.

Speaker 3:

Okay.

Katie Rose:

Um, and I also have done a lot more of kitchen and bath design where right, like someone's read up up, what's the word I'm looking for? Refreshing, right? Redoing a kitchen or a bathroom. Um, and so there's packages for those people too, where I sort of I call myself the design liaison where I'm really helping guide those choices to your point of where is the knob gonna go on the cabinet and what kind of hardware are we doing? Are we doing knobs or pulls? What's the lighting gonna be? What's the flooring, the tile, the tile direction, the tile design, the plumbing? So I help kind of navigate all those selections and put together a beautifully designed room or bathroom. Um, so yeah, I mean, I kind of do a little bit of everything, but those are the main packages that most of my clients sort of dive into. Yeah.

Doug Drohan:

And then how do people find you? You said you're on Instagram, it's Katie Rose Inspired.

Katie Rose:

Yeah, Instagram's the best. Um, you know, I'm not on TikTok, um, but Instagram is the the most, the latest and the greatest. That's the really where I get to showcase my portfolio of my projects that I'm working on. Um, in my stories is where I'll kind of show clients and and followers my day-to-day life. What does it look like to be a designer? Um, and really the best part of the Instagram is the before and the afters. I'm that's that has sort of been why people start following me in the beginning was seeing that transformation um from in my projects. Um, I'm also there's a you know, I have Katie Rose Inspired on Facebook as well. And then my website, yeah. Yep, katyroseinspired.com. And actually that's getting a my new website is going to be launched within the next couple weeks. So that'll look that'll look nice and new and refresh soon.

Doug Drohan:

Okay. And it's katyroseinspired at gmail.com. And um there's an intake form they could fill out as well.

Katie Rose:

Correct. Yeah, if you go to my website and you're interested in seeing my work or working with me, katyroseinspired.com, and you can go to the work with me tab, and that will just kind of start the process of you know chatting with me and talking about how I can help you in the next project.

Doug Drohan:

That's great. Well, Katie, I really appreciate you coming today. And you know, with the holidays coming up, I'm sure you're busy helping people get their home.

Katie Rose:

Yeah, crudge before Christmas, exactly.

Doug Drohan:

Yeah, exactly. So uh yeah, we're gonna have Chuck take us out, and then you and I will be right back. Thank you very much.

Intro/Close:

Thank you for listening to the Good Neighbor Podcast. To nominate your favorite local businesses to be featured on the show, go to gnpbergen.com. That's gnpbergen.com or call 201 298 8325.