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This season of Rocket City Momentum, we’re bringing you the real stories of Huntsville entrepreneurs — from the mess to the breakthrough — and why it matters for every dreamer in the Rocket City. In Episode 5, we meet Alisa Clark, founder of Welcome Home Huntsville Magazine. After nearly a decade in academic publishing in Boston, Alisa moved back to her hometown during COVID with two young kids. But when she returned, she discovered something surprising: Even as a Huntsville native… she no longer knew the city. New restaurants. New neighborhoods. New parks. New schools. So she built something to solve that problem. Welcome Home Huntsville is designed to help people moving to the Rocket City quickly connect with the best local businesses, resources, and experiences. But building a media company from scratch comes with a brutal reality many entrepreneurs discover the hard way: The thing you're passionate about is only 10% of the job. In this episode, we explore: Why print isn’t dead — it’s become a luxury product The real pressure of building a business when your family is depending on you to succeed What happens when your company grows faster than you can manage alone The hidden cost of entrepreneurship: becoming the salesperson, marketer, publisher, operator, and community builder all at once Why most founders hate sales — and why avoiding it can stall growth How networking and partnerships can turn cold sales into warm conversations The strategy behind turning a local magazine into a scalable media brand The idea that could eventually turn Welcome Home into a multi-city franchise model Key Moments “Print isn’t dead — print is a luxury product now.” “I quit my corporate job, cashed out my 401k, and started this magazine.” “I’m dropping balls left and right.” “If something doesn’t change, I’m going to burn out — and the magazine will burn out with me.” “Entrepreneurship isn’t just the thing you love doing… it’s everything wrapped around it.” The Real Entrepreneur Lesson Most people start businesses because they’re passionate about something: Writing. Plumbing. Dog training. Event planning. Media. But the reality is: Running a business means becoming good at everything around the craft. Sales. Marketing. Systems. Partnerships. Delegation. The turning point for Alisa’s business may not be working harder — but building a team, a process, and a scalable model. Action Steps for Business Owners If you’re building something right now, these takeaways apply directly: Map out your future org chart — even if you fill every role today Identify what tasks you can delegate first to free up time Shift sales from cold outreach to relationship-driven referrals Turn your content into authority-building opportunities Start documenting systems so your business can scale beyond you Because the real goal isn’t just building a business. It’s building one that doesn’t burn you out in the process.