Mind Ya Business

#13 El Teatro del Pueblo: Teatro Tariakuri ft. Karla Galvan

46 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio #13 El Teatro del Pueblo: Teatro Tariakuri ft. Karla Galvan

Descripción

El Teatro del Pueblo: How Karla Galvan Built a Cultural Institution and a Business A theater 22 years in the making, Karla Galvan runs Teatro Tariakuri out of the heart of Marquette Park on Chicago's southwest side, a bilingual theatrical and cultural center she built after hitting real walls in the arts world as a Mexican and Peruvian immigrant. Instead of walking away from the arts entirely, she built her own stage. In this episode, Karla joins us to talk about what it actually takes to run a nonprofit theater as a business: from securing 501(c)(3) status in the middle of a pandemic, building a sustainable revenue mix beyond grants, and balancing her role as both creative visionary and executive director. We dig into the financial lessons she learned the hard way, why staying rooted in this community is a strategy and not just a mission statement, and what 20+ years of building "El Teatro del Pueblo" has taught her about sustainable growth. Whether you're running a bakery, a salon, or a theater, this conversation is full of smart moves for entrepreneurs at every stage. 📍 Teatro Tariakuri: 3117 W 63rd St, Chicago, IL 60629 🎥 Check out the YouTube video: https://youtu.be/omfmdQc3U4Q 🎙️ Mind Ya Business is brought to you by the Southwest Collective, a City of Chicago-designated Neighborhood Business Development Center serving Archer Heights, West Elsdon, Gage Park, Garfield Ridge, Clearing, and West Lawn.

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13 episodios

episode #13 El Teatro del Pueblo: Teatro Tariakuri ft. Karla Galvan artwork

#13 El Teatro del Pueblo: Teatro Tariakuri ft. Karla Galvan

El Teatro del Pueblo: How Karla Galvan Built a Cultural Institution and a Business A theater 22 years in the making, Karla Galvan runs Teatro Tariakuri out of the heart of Marquette Park on Chicago's southwest side, a bilingual theatrical and cultural center she built after hitting real walls in the arts world as a Mexican and Peruvian immigrant. Instead of walking away from the arts entirely, she built her own stage. In this episode, Karla joins us to talk about what it actually takes to run a nonprofit theater as a business: from securing 501(c)(3) status in the middle of a pandemic, building a sustainable revenue mix beyond grants, and balancing her role as both creative visionary and executive director. We dig into the financial lessons she learned the hard way, why staying rooted in this community is a strategy and not just a mission statement, and what 20+ years of building "El Teatro del Pueblo" has taught her about sustainable growth. Whether you're running a bakery, a salon, or a theater, this conversation is full of smart moves for entrepreneurs at every stage. 📍 Teatro Tariakuri: 3117 W 63rd St, Chicago, IL 60629 🎥 Check out the YouTube video: https://youtu.be/omfmdQc3U4Q 🎙️ Mind Ya Business is brought to you by the Southwest Collective, a City of Chicago-designated Neighborhood Business Development Center serving Archer Heights, West Elsdon, Gage Park, Garfield Ridge, Clearing, and West Lawn.

Ayer46 min
episode #12 Roots, Culture & Play: La Casa Playroom's Story ft. Angie Maciel-Wright artwork

#12 Roots, Culture & Play: La Casa Playroom's Story ft. Angie Maciel-Wright

This week on Mind Ya Business, we sat down with Angie Maciel-Wright, first-generation Mexican-American, mother of two, and co-founder of La Casa Playroom, a bilingual, multicultural play space at 4371 S. Archer Avenue in Brighton Park on Chicago's southwest side. Angie's story starts where so many entrepreneurial journeys do, with a problem nobody else was solving. When she became a mom, she looked at Brighton Park with fresh eyes and realized southwest side families were constantly having to leave their own neighborhood to find enriching, welcoming spaces for their young children. So she and her husband Jeremy did something about it. In the summer of 2025, they opened La Casa Playroom, a warm, intentional space where children ages 6 and under can explore and grow through bilingual programming, multicultural storytelling, and hands-on experiences that celebrate culture and heritage. And where caregivers, often overlooked, finally have a space to breathe, connect, and feel seen. In this episode, we get into: 🏡 How growing up watching her parents run a Mexican grocery store in Brighton Park shaped Angie's entrepreneurial identity, even before she knew it 💡 The moment she realized her neighborhood had a gap that needed to be filled, and the decision to fill it herself 💰 The financial reality of launching a brick-and-mortar business, from early planning and pricing strategy to building a sustainable revenue model across open play, events, after-school care, and private rentals 📣 How she built community trust and got the word out to the southwest side families she was built for, without a traditional marketing budget 👫 What it's really like to run a business with your spouse, divide responsibilities, and pace growth without burning out 🌎 Why affordable, culturally rooted spaces matter on the southwest side, and what La Casa represents as a community anchor, not just a business 🎙️ Plus, Angie drops some real talk in our Mind Ya Business Rapid Fire, the best advice she's received, and what's next for La Casa Playroom

3 de jun de 202658 min
episode #11 From Birthday Cakes to Brick-and-Mortar ft. Rachel Diaz of Borinken Cakes artwork

#11 From Birthday Cakes to Brick-and-Mortar ft. Rachel Diaz of Borinken Cakes

From birthday cakes to brick-and-mortar: Rachel Díaz of Borinken Cakes on pivots, pan sobao, and building a business that represents. This week, Rachel sits down with us to talk about the full arc; From family kitchen to pop-ups to a mall kiosk to multiple storefronts, and what it actually took to know this was more than a hobby. And if you've been sleeping on TikTok for your business? Rachel has something to say about that. Eighty percent of her customers come from the app, and she'll tell you exactly what she did differently after Facebook and Instagram didn't deliver. This one's got the lessons, the receipts, and the realness. Don't miss it. 🎙️ In this episode: * The leap from pop-up to brick-and-mortar, and knowing when a hobby becomes a business * How product design training shaped the way she built Borinken Cakes * Closing Logan Square: operational constraints vs. a tough season * Sourcing pan sobao from Puerto Rico and managing a cross-island supply chain * Why TikTok worked when nothing else did, and how to actually show up there * The one part of the business she hasn't fully cracked yet

20 de may de 202655 min
episode #9 Oh Hi, We're Back & Better Than Ever artwork

#9 Oh Hi, We're Back & Better Than Ever

We're back ... & better than ever. 2025 laid the foundation. Now, Mind Ya Business is stepping into a bigger role. In this reintroduction episode, our full Southwest Collective small business team — Jamie (Business Operations & Marketing), Marlin (Human Resources), and Hugo (Design & Strategy) — sits down to tell you exactly who we are, what we're continuing to do, and what we're bringing to Chicago's southwest side in 2026. As a Neighborhood Business Development Center (NBDC) designated by the City of Chicago, we serve small business owners & emerging entrepreneurs in Archer Heights, West Elsdon, Gage Park, Garfield Ridge, Clearing, and West Lawn. In this episode: * Meet the team and the credentials behind the conversation * Learn what the NBDC designation means for your business * Get a first look at our 2025 events, programming, and episode calendar * Find out how to work with us, ask us your questions, and get involved New episodes drop twice a month. Subscribe so you never miss a move. Smart Moves for Sustainable Growth.

1 de abr de 202636 min