Hope Happens with Catherine De Vrye
By Meghan Dengate
Catherine
De Vrye started life in an orphanage in Canada. She was adopted by loving
parents and then lost them both to cancer within a year of each other.
Following their untimely deaths Catherine arrived in Australia, despondent,
with nothing but a backpack and $200.
Today Catherine is a best-selling author and motivational speaker who
has worked with business leaders and elite athletes around the world.
A keen sportswoman herself, she's cycled over the Andes, climbed
20,000 feet to the summit of Mt Kilimanjaro and in December 2001 went
climbing in the Antarctic. Catherine also had one of her dreams realised
when she was given the honour of carrying the Olympic torch on the Opening
Day of the Sydney Olympics in 2000.
The former Australian Executive Woman of the Year is well known for her
number one best-selling business books, Good Service is Good Business
and Hot Lemon and Honey. Her latest best-seller Hope Happens! is
a beautifully presented gift book featuring her own photographs from around
the world, alongside her favourite inspirational quotes. Catherine's
book is a tribute to the way in which hope brings healing and happiness
to our lives.
What challenges have you faced on your road to success?
Like all of us, there have been challenges along the way. But I try to
think of every problem as an opportunity in disguise
sometimes,
very heavy disguise!
What made you decide to set up your own publishing company?
I'd published six books with major international publishing companies
and enjoyed considerable success with a couple of them one book
becoming a number one best-seller on the Dymocks list.
However, I realised that a large company was unlikely to get Hope
Happens! published within the time frame I wanted and I also wanted
total editorial control over the contents. So I sold some bank shares
to invest in what was essentially a self-publishing venture. I decided
to invest in myself rather than the blue chip bank shares. Sure, it was
a huge gamble, but I'm pleased to report the book is already in a
second print run after only six weeks. If anyone had told me how much
work would be involved, I wouldn't have believed them.
Like any entrepreneurial venture, there's been an incredible learning
curve with Everest Press, and I felt there were times that I should have
been wearing safety ropes. I thought of changing the name to Never Rest
Press.
Can you offer any advice to women looking to set up their own business?
Any small business venture (or adventure) is akin to climbing a mountain.
It's important to set your sights high, realise that it's a
long, hard slog and sometimes it can only be attained by taking three
steps forward and two back, and knowing there is a risk but managing that
risk prudently with a strong support team behind you, in an ever changing
climate of uncertainty. And when you're halfway up a peak, you always
think, 'I should have prepared more. No one told me it would be this
hard.'
There has been the unexpected workload of getting the little things right
behind the scenes, as I firmly believe that in publishing or any venture,
bigger isn't necessarily better. Only better is better. The best
decision I made was to surround myself with an incredibly talented and
diverse team.
Who or what has inspired you in your life?
As a professional speaker, I am fortunate to meet many household names
in sport, entertainment, business and politics. Sir Edmund Hillary, who
provided a jacket comment for my last book, was a childhood hero. Never
in my wildest dreams did I think I'd meet the man who not only was
the first to climb Everest but has built over 20 schools and hospitals
in Nepal. As he so eloquently says, it wasn't the footprint he left
on Everest that was as important as what that footprint has allowed him
to do. He's an inspiration because he's put so much back into
the community and remains so incredibly humble.
Where did the idea for your latest book come from?
I sat in the lounge of Brisbane Airport on September 11, 2001, having
just addressed the World Airline Entertainment Association. I felt incredibly
sad and numb.
In addition this global tragedy, a friend phoned to say her mother had
died. Certainly, she shared compassion with thousands of people on the
other side of the world, but the loss of one life weighed far heavier
on her mind.
I couldn't help but think that, undoubtedly, global tragedy impacts
on us all in various ways, from the personal to the economic. Yet, ultimately,
it's the everyday tragedies in life that cause us the greatest grief,
wherever we live on the globe.
I've collected motivational quotes, poems and stories since my grandfather
died when I was 16. As I was an only child, he had been my confidante
and best friend, and when my parents passed away a few years later I revisited
those initial inscriptions in my diary and have since added to them over
the years.
Even though I had not lost any loved ones on September 11 and it has
been over a quarter of a century since my parents passed away, I felt
a strangely similar sense of disbelief and sadness. So once again I turned
to the pages of my diary, searching for words of encouragement and scribbling
some thoughts. Before I knew it, I was gathering them into Hope Happens!
Words of Encouragement for Tough Times to hopefully help others work
through their tough times, faster than I did mine.
Interviewed by Meghann Dengate, Publicist at Mediaworks International.
For more information on best-selling author Catherine De Vrye and Hope
Happens! and for all your PR and publicity needs, contact Meghann on (02)
9662 4911 or email meghann@mediaworksinternational.com.au
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