WHEN SHE WAS 15 years old-decades before she would go on to revolutionize health care staffing-SnapNurse founder Cherie Kloss was emancipated from her family. Her mother was suffering from acute mental illness and had to leave the home to get care. Her parents divorced. Then her father, a Korean immigrant, decided he needed to return to Seoul to pursue a job opportunity. Cherie, who was on the Venice High School swim team and content being a 1980s Southern California kid, declined to go with him.
"If you don't leave with me, you're on your own," her father told her.
"OK," she said. "I'll be alone." Even though her family had been "super poor" before it broke apart ("inner city, government cheese, the whole thing," she says now), Kloss grew up hearing from her father that if she worked hard and studied hard, she could make it here in this country-especially if she pursued a career in engineering or medicine. She'd have to fend for herself, but her father had armed her with an immigrant's faith in the American dream.
Thus emerged Kloss's skill for winging it. She moved in with a friend, got a full-time job at a bakery, finished school, and landed a scholarship to a small Christian liberal arts college called Westmont, outside of Santa Barbara. College "felt like summer camp" after her childhood, she says. After college came nursing school at Atlanta's Emory University, then a master's in anesthesiology, and then 10 years as a working anesthetist.
But next emerged another consequence of her formative years: a restless instinct to not get too comfortable. Anesthesia, she says, "is a little like flying a plane-hours and hours of boredom but potentially some excitement when you take off and land." It was 2006, the height of the reality-TV craze, and when Kloss met a producer for A&E Networks, she decided that sounded like more fun. "How do I get started?" she asked.
"Do you have any experience?"
Denne historien er fra September 2022-utgaven av Inc..
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent ? Logg på
Denne historien er fra September 2022-utgaven av Inc..
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
Karen Dillon
I moved my wedding to attend a company offsite. It was a terrible decision, but a vital lesson on balance.
The Ultimate Home-Based Business
Thirty years since her breakout on Friends, Courteney Cox is taking on a new role-entrepreneur.
An Uphill Battle
Zwift has been through layoffs and a leadership change in 2024, but co-founder and CEO Eric Min says he's learned that building a startup, like cycling, is an endurance test.
The GLOW UP
How Glossier broke free from DTC, survived the skeptics, and finally achieved profitability.
The Snack That Gives Back
With a new partnership, SkinnyDipped is supporting women founders worldwide.
A New Path to SuCCESS
AllTrails may have achieved the impossible-an app that truly helps you get away from it all.
The Back-lash Survivors
Don't challenge Elizabeth Gore and Carolyn Rodz to a game of highs and lows. The Hello Alice co-founders will win-by a long shot.
The Spa Surge
Prime IV Hydration & Wellness has successfully weathered stormy waters.
Riding the Waves
With Beehiiv, Tyler Denk built a buzzy newsletter platform and a brash online persona. Both are lucrative.
Home Economics
How Chairish brought the circular economy to furniture.