• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
MENUMENU
MENUMENU
  • Home
  • About
    • Contact Us
    • FlaglerLive Board of Directors
    • Comment Policy
    • Mission Statement
    • Our Values
    • Privacy Policy
  • Live Calendar
  • Submit Obituary
  • Submit an Event
  • Support FlaglerLive
  • Advertise on FlaglerLive (386) 503-3808
  • Search Results

FlaglerLive

No Bull, no Fluff, No Smudges

MENUMENU
  • Flagler
    • Flagler County Commission
    • Beverly Beach
    • Economic Development Council
    • Flagler History
    • Mondex/Daytona North
    • The Hammock
    • Tourist Development Council
  • Palm Coast
    • Palm Coast City Council
    • Palm Coast Crime
  • Bunnell
    • Bunnell City Commission
    • Bunnell Crime
  • Flagler Beach
    • Flagler Beach City Commission
    • Flagler Beach Crime
  • Cops/Courts
    • Circuit & County Court
    • Florida Supreme Court
    • Federal Courts
    • Flagler 911
    • Fire House
    • Flagler County Sheriff
    • Flagler Jail Bookings
    • Traffic Accidents
  • Rights & Liberties
    • Fourth Amendment
    • First Amendment
    • Privacy
    • Second Amendment
    • Seventh Amendment
    • Sixth Amendment
    • Sunshine Law
    • Third Amendment
    • Religion & Beliefs
    • Human Rights
    • Immigration
    • Labor Rights
    • 14th Amendment
    • Civil Rights
  • Schools
    • Adult Education
    • Belle Terre Elementary
    • Buddy Taylor Middle
    • Bunnell Elementary
    • Charter Schools
    • Daytona State College
    • Flagler County School Board
    • Flagler Palm Coast High School
    • Higher Education
    • Imagine School
    • Indian Trails Middle
    • Matanzas High School
    • Old Kings Elementary
    • Rymfire Elementary
    • Stetson University
    • Wadsworth Elementary
    • University of Florida/Florida State
  • Economy
    • Jobs & Unemployment
    • Business & Economy
    • Development & Sprawl
    • Leisure & Tourism
    • Local Business
    • Local Media
    • Real Estate & Development
    • Taxes
  • Commentary
    • The Conversation
    • Pierre Tristam
    • Diane Roberts
    • Guest Columns
    • Byblos
    • Editor's Blog
  • Culture
    • African American Cultural Society
    • Arts in Palm Coast & Flagler
    • Books
    • City Repertory Theatre
    • Flagler Auditorium
    • Flagler Playhouse
    • Flagler Youth Orchestra
    • Jacksonville Symphony Orchestra
    • Palm Coast Arts Foundation
    • Special Events
  • Elections 2024
    • Amendments and Referendums
    • Presidential Election
    • Campaign Finance
    • City Elections
    • Congressional
    • Constitutionals
    • Courts
    • Governor
    • Polls
    • Voting Rights
  • Florida
    • Federal Politics
    • Florida History
    • Florida Legislature
    • Florida Legislature
    • Ron DeSantis
  • Health & Society
    • Flagler County Health Department
    • Ask the Doctor Column
    • Health Care
    • Health Care Business
    • Covid-19
    • Children and Families
    • Medicaid and Medicare
    • Mental Health
    • Poverty
    • Violence
  • All Else
    • Daily Briefing
    • Americana
    • Obituaries
    • News Briefs
    • Weather and Climate
    • Wildlife

FPC Grad, CEO and Author Kristen Hadeed Interviewed By Megyn Kelly On Today

October 20, 2017 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

Kristen Hadeed, center, with Megyn Kelly, right, this morning, and Rachel Simmons. (© FlaglerLive via NBC)
Kristen Hadeed, center, with Megyn Kelly, right, and Rachel Simmons this morning. (© FlaglerLive via NBC)

Kristen Hadeed, who grew up in Palm Coast and graduated from Flagler Palm Coast High School in 2006, was interviewed this morning by Megyn Kelly, host of NBC’s Megyn Kelly Today, part of Hadeed’s promotion of her first book: “Permission To Screw Up: How I Learned To Lead by Doing (Almost) Everything Wrong” (Penguin).


The book traces Hadeed’s evolution from an amateur leader of her cleaning company, Gainesville-based Student Maid, which she started halfway through her undergraduate years at the University of Florida in Gainesville, through the company’s decade’s growth, which paralleled her own as a now-accomplished and highly-sought speaker on the leadership circuit.

The segment with Kelly was barely five minutes long. “It was scary,” Hadeed said in a text afterward, though it was Kelly who was not entirely prepared for the interview, repeatedly focusing on her own assumptions about millennials, and focusing almost exclusively on millennial stereotypes–which Hadeed takes pain to debunk in her book–rather than on the book’s more revealing insights.

“You’ve heard it, they’re all raised by helicopter parents who don’t allow their little cupcakes to fail,” Kelly said, opening the segment with one of her repeated uses of the word “cupcakes” (which never appears in Hadeed’s book), though she conceded that Hadeed and another author she appeared with, Rachel Simmons, author of “Enough As She Is,” themselves are living examples that belie the stereotype.

hadeed permission to screw upKelly, at any rate, had read the press release advancing Hadeed’s book and asked her about what launched her into the cleaning business. “I was a student at the University of Florida,” Hadeed said, “I thought I wanted to be an investment banker, and one day I walk into the mall, saw these jeans, had to have them, knew my parents would never ever, in any universe, give me the money to buy them”–her father, Al Hadeed, is the Flagler County Attorney–“and so I put an ad on Craig’s List to clean a house, thinking that would be an easy way to make the money, and I did a terrible job. But miraculously the woman hired me back every week, and that’s how it started. That was 10 years ago.”

“So now you run your own business, you only hire millennials,” Kelly said (not actually true: Hadeed mostly hires students and, aside from realizing that “my hiring requirements were BS,” makes a point of noting that students these days cut across all ages, and that her challenges had little to do with the students’ age so much as their status and schedules as students). Kelly then referred to the time when Hadeed lost most of her workforce when 45 employees walked out on her as she was enjoying a salad with her feet up.

“That moment was really defining for me,” Hadeed said. She was 21 at the time. “I had no idea what leadership was, I was sitting in this air-conditioned clubhouse while my employees were cleaning filthy apartment, and I thought that was leadership.” But she managed to get the 45 back–she actually invited them to her place and turned them around with pizza and apologies and her first venture into exposing her vulnerabilities rather than presuming to know better than they did, a strategy that would turn out to be key to her subsequent successes.

Kristen Hadeed. (Pete Longworth/Penguin)
Kristen Hadeed. (Pete Longworth/Penguin)
She’d need it: That was before her “homies” became “team members.” The book then becomes a chronicle of failures more than an anthem to her successes, but a chronicle told with endless wit and self-deprecation that also belies the myth of millennials as a stuck-up generation foreign to self-analysis.

“We have parents who want to be a part of the interview,” Hadeed said in her chat with Kelly, eliciting laughter from the audience.
“Or, you know, how can you say that my son or daughter needs to be a better duster, and I’m like, well?”

“OMG,” Kelly said. “Are you serious?”

“We both have the same goal, we want the child to be successful,” Hadeed said, explaining that it’s just a matter of letting the students having room to figure it out. She could not on the air reflect the irony of the word “child,” as she used it with Kelly, though she reflects it archly in the book when she notes the “rare occasions I even got emails from their parents— those same overhelping moms and dads— who wanted to know why I’d dared to criticize their twenty-year-old ‘child’s’ dusting techniques. (Oy vey.)”

Kelly missed the part about the rarity of those contacts from parents, preferring again to focus on the the exception. “Who are these parents who interfere with their children’s every move,” she insisted. The occasional and disappearing Dick Cavetts aside, television hosts are not paid, of course, for their book-reading skills, as authors invariably discover in their few minutes on set.

The segment appears below.

Support FlaglerLive's End of Year Fundraiser
Thank you readers for getting us to--and past--our year-end fund-raising goal yet again. It’s a bracing way to mark our 15th year at FlaglerLive. Our donors are just a fraction of the 25,000 readers who seek us out for the best-reported, most timely, trustworthy, and independent local news site anywhere, without paywall. FlaglerLive is free. Fighting misinformation and keeping democracy in the sunshine 365/7/24 isn’t free. Take a brief moment, become a champion of fearless, enlightening journalism. Any amount helps. We’re a 501(c)(3) non-profit news organization. Donations are tax deductible.  
You may donate openly or anonymously.
We like Zeffy (no fees), but if you prefer to use PayPal, click here.

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Wishful thinking says

    October 20, 2017 at 9:03 pm

    Another Hadeed succeeds!
    Wonderful family indeed

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

  • Conner Bosch law attorneys lawyers offices palm coast flagler county
  • grand living realty
  • politis matovina attorneys for justice personal injury law auto truck accidents

Primary Sidebar

  • grand living realty
  • politis matovina attorneys for justice personal injury law auto truck accidents

Recent Comments

  • Mothersworry on Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris Thinks the FBI or CIA Is Bugging His Phone
  • Paul T on Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris Thinks the FBI or CIA Is Bugging His Phone
  • Deborah Coffey on Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris Thinks the FBI or CIA Is Bugging His Phone
  • Let it burn on Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris Thinks the FBI or CIA Is Bugging His Phone
  • Using Common Sense on Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris Thinks the FBI or CIA Is Bugging His Phone
  • Billy B on Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris Thinks the FBI or CIA Is Bugging His Phone
  • Marlee on NOAA Cuts Are Putting Our Coastal Communities At Risk
  • James on Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris Thinks the FBI or CIA Is Bugging His Phone
  • D. on Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris Thinks the FBI or CIA Is Bugging His Phone
  • Enough on Florida Republicans Devour Their Own
  • Alice on Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris Thinks the FBI or CIA Is Bugging His Phone
  • Big Mike on Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris Thinks the FBI or CIA Is Bugging His Phone
  • Justbob on Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris Thinks the FBI or CIA Is Bugging His Phone
  • Ed P on The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Friday, May 9, 2025
  • Ed P on The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Saturday, May 10, 2025
  • Lance Carroll on Without a Single Question, Bunnell Board Approves Rezoning of Nearly 1,900 Acres to Industrial, Outraging Residents

Log in