Architect of Change: Building a Future Rooted in Equity
I come from a lineage of resilience: women who built lives from the ground up, who led with instinct, intelligence, and grit. Being an Architect of Change is not about simply adapting to what exists. It is about imagining and building something radically better. It means challenging outdated systems and replacing them with structures that center people, not power.
My artist mother taught me that leadership cannot be cramming oneself into outdated systems. It has to be building better ones from the ground up. Check out my three pillars for being an Architect of Change -- and why Richard Florida's Great Reset is exactly the moment we are in right now.
What Inclusivity Really Means to Me
When Rose Kaz launched Business 4 Good, she was canceled once a week by people who said she did not belong. This is what she learned about inclusivity, slowing down, and building stages so everyone else can get in the roo
Feeling Inclusively Home
I really want you to know about where I have come from and why I am building this marketplace to be truly inclusive and feel like home, like Grandma's house. Everyone has a different version of home but often Grandma's house is safe, has some Big Mama energy and her own fair rules. That is what we are building here.
Social Media Is Making Us Lonely. Rose Kaz Has the Antidote.
Am I the only one that gets a bit of a rash from the mainstream way of doing social media? The chirping birds, the billionaire ego trips, the hologram of connection that somehow leaves us more alone. There is an antidote. And it is not another app.
I Never Really Felt I Belonged
I never really felt I belonged. Anywhere. Until one day I began to notice why, and how I could maybe, just maybe one day, find belonging. Inclusivity matters to me because I know what it feels like to search for it. And I have been searching since inception.
An Origin Story: Bubblicious to Business Activist
I started my first business under my bunk bed selling Bubblicious Gum to the neighborhood kids. I was six. And honestly, I have not stopped since.

