Jessica Higgins, JD MBA is a highly credentialed and experienced business growth consultant. She gets involved in unique opportunities at the crossroads of finance, technology, and marketing to create innovative growth. She holds investment and advisory positions in a portfolio of companies and is a published author who writes about her business and personal passions. Her first book, The 10 Essential Business Communications Skills, released at #1 on Amazon New Releases for Communication and Behavior Skills. She has given keynote speeches on topics ranging from culture to emergent technologies. in addition to her graduate degrees in law and business, and her undergraduate degrees in behavioral psychology and political science, She Holds certifications in operations management, operations design and behavioral design. she lives in Miami, FL, San Diego, CA and Washington, DC.

For speaking engagements, interviews and other inquiries please contact her publicist, Kat Fleischman, at kathfleisch@gmail.com. 

A Recession by Choice

A Recession by Choice

Great article from our Chief Economist on the history of recessions and useful information to consider during our current economic crisis and the Corona virus. Read it HERE.

Jessica Higgins, JD MBA BB is a highly credentialed and experienced business growth consultant who has consulted seven of the Fortune 100 companies, won national awards for her marketing and written a best selling business book. She gets involved in unique opportunities at the crossroads of finance, technology, and marketing to create innovative growth. She holds investment and advisory positions in a portfolio of companies and is a published author who writes about her business and personal passions. She lives in Charleston, SC and occasionally in Miami and Los Angeles. Her growth accelerator, The Research and Innovation Institute, can be found HERE.

For all requests contact PR@curateadvise.com

A Crowdsourced Innovation for Economic Recovery

A Crowdsourced Innovation for Economic Recovery

Why The Coronavirus May Be Causing a Recession

Why The Coronavirus May Be Causing a Recession