I was born in Oklahoma and spent most of my life in Arkansas, and then moved to New York and worked here for 10 years.
Candice Mary Stewart
When I returned to Arkansas, I knew I wanted to be in fashion, but apart from that I knew I wanted to reach out to the best people in New York. Harvest is here in New York, so I was willing to do my best to get here, but to stay here.
After moving to New York], I realized that I needed to do something radical to differentiate myself The city was already highly competitive and a black woman ties from Arkansas, I had to do something that would be in my resume. Then I decided to do my MBA program To continue focusing on finance and marketing. Although finance was not my passion, I was really looking forward to the corporate side of the fashion industry. It wanted to know, so I’ll be ready and I know how to start and run a successful business and have a different perspective than my fashion peers.
Until the end, business is fashion, marketing, retail, food.
Candice Mary Stewart
For me (the choice of money) it was like I could always get this degree no matter what industry I went into, because in the end you have to make money for the business - whatever. This is for the company.
In the 10 years I’ve spent in New York, I haven’t heard this word many times, it’s a bit ridiculous. But I knew it would just take a “yes”. I can always resort to it. You may not get millions, but literally all you need is yes. Then it is easy to find Yesam from there. I am in a good place in my career where I do not have access to opportunities. People come to me all the time, which, in my opinion, is the ethics of my work over the years and its proof.
At that time, my first internship started working as the editor-in-chief of Sir Magazine. I’ve learned a lot about the editorial industry that I’ve only seen from afar in Arkansas.
Candice Mary Stewart
To this day I remember how he said, what do you want to do next? "And I told him I wanted to suffer after the Surrey internship. Then he wrote me his first letter of recommendation and I immediately suffered. My career started with the idea that I wanted to come into fashion journalism, because I got the same look. And I looked home, but writing and journalism took me to a path of social networks that I could never have imagined, the essence, the enjoyment and the people who started me in their social media department at Refinery 29.
The social network departments weren’t actually present when I wanted to do journalism. So, if I wrote an article for publication, I would also write a social signature to go to Facebook and or Twitter. I found that I liked this aspect of the work more because I found the article to be more noticeable thanks to the presence of the post on social networks. That’s when I wanted to find a place that was ahead of the social media space and try to exploit it as much as possible. And it was refinery 29 for me.
Although I learned a lot from living in Refinery 29, I quickly realized that I wasn't really into pop culture. It's not really my thing.
Candice Mary Stewart
I started looking for ways to get back into designer fashion, but are still in the place of social networks. At the same time Barney exposed the role of social networks in New York. A quick glance at the job description, and I knew the job was right for me. I can marry two things I like - on social networks with designer fashion and I can work with many designer brands.
For each (social) platform you should be considered as a separate platform. Each of your platforms has a different audience and direction and some plans are not consistent in all aspects. Basically, you don't want to treat Facebook the way Instagram does, or tick like Snapchat.
Candice Mary Stewart
When I returned to Arkansas, I knew I wanted to be in fashion, but apart from that I knew I wanted to reach out to the best people in New York. Harvest is here in New York, so I was willing to do my best to get here, but to stay here.
After moving to New York], I realized that I needed to do something radical to differentiate myself The city was already highly competitive and a black woman ties from Arkansas, I had to do something that would be in my resume. Then I decided to do my MBA program To continue focusing on finance and marketing. Although finance was not my passion, I was really looking forward to the corporate side of the fashion industry. It wanted to know, so I’ll be ready and I know how to start and run a successful business and have a different perspective than my fashion peers.
Until the end, business is fashion, marketing, retail, food.
Candice Mary Stewart
For me (the choice of money) it was like I could always get this degree no matter what industry I went into, because in the end you have to make money for the business - whatever. This is for the company.
In the 10 years I’ve spent in New York, I haven’t heard this word many times, it’s a bit ridiculous. But I knew it would just take a “yes”. I can always resort to it. You may not get millions, but literally all you need is yes. Then it is easy to find Yesam from there. I am in a good place in my career where I do not have access to opportunities. People come to me all the time, which, in my opinion, is the ethics of my work over the years and its proof.
At that time, my first internship started working as the editor-in-chief of Sir Magazine. I’ve learned a lot about the editorial industry that I’ve only seen from afar in Arkansas.
Candice Mary Stewart
To this day I remember how he said, what do you want to do next? "And I told him I wanted to suffer after the Surrey internship. Then he wrote me his first letter of recommendation and I immediately suffered. My career started with the idea that I wanted to come into fashion journalism, because I got the same look. And I looked home, but writing and journalism took me to a path of social networks that I could never have imagined, the essence, the enjoyment and the people who started me in their social media department at Refinery 29.
The social network departments weren’t actually present when I wanted to do journalism. So, if I wrote an article for publication, I would also write a social signature to go to Facebook and or Twitter. I found that I liked this aspect of the work more because I found the article to be more noticeable thanks to the presence of the post on social networks. That’s when I wanted to find a place that was ahead of the social media space and try to exploit it as much as possible. And it was refinery 29 for me.
Although I learned a lot from living in Refinery 29, I quickly realized that I wasn't really into pop culture. It's not really my thing.
Candice Mary Stewart
I started looking for ways to get back into designer fashion, but are still in the place of social networks. At the same time Barney exposed the role of social networks in New York. A quick glance at the job description, and I knew the job was right for me. I can marry two things I like - on social networks with designer fashion and I can work with many designer brands.
For each (social) platform you should be considered as a separate platform. Each of your platforms has a different audience and direction and some plans are not consistent in all aspects. Basically, you don't want to treat Facebook the way Instagram does, or tick like Snapchat.

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