How this Army vet who served in Iraq became a Fit Body Boot Camp Fitness Franchise Owner
Jodi Rund has actually constantly had an interest in fitness, education and learning as well as nourishment-- however it's her military experience that provided her and also her spouse the right foundation to run their own company.

"The military really does give us an advantage," Rund told FOX Business. "It does give you a set of skills that you can easily apply to a business."
Rund, 40, and her husband Thad stay in West Palm Beach, Fla., and own 3 Fit Body Boot Camp franchises in the state.
They moved to Florida from Costa Rica, where they had actually lived since Rund finished her solution in the Army National Guard, which lasted from 2001 to 2006.

Rund spent 15 months in Iraq as a machine artilleryman as well as a Combat Lifesaver and over the course of her service, her unit suffered 39 casualties-- including Rund's friend.
"She was a bridesmaid in our wedding," Rund said. "She had a six-year-old daughter, so there was lots to deal with, lots of tragedy and hardship."
Nonetheless, it was likewise throughout that time that obtained Rund began considering what an excellent education can do.
"I just realized that these people, it wasn't that they were evil, it was that they lacked a lot of education," she said. "So when I got back, I ended up pursuing my Master's in global studies and education. And that's kind of what spurred my husband and I to get out of the country."
She claimed that she and also Thad had visited Costa Rica as well as fell for it, so Rund obtained a job training at a local secondary school and working as a health and fitness trainer at the Four Seasons Resort in the area.

Rund and her other half eventually started one more institution-- where Rund started a ladies' basketball group-- as well as a church, where she utilized her level in theology from Chicago University to aid young adults.
"We did a lot of counseling, a lot of helping. Which in retrospect, helped me, just being able to help somebody else," Rund said. "It was, I think, an easier transition for me. But I wasn't in the United States. I was in Costa Rica, which was kind of an adventure."
"I think me escaping the United States really helped," she added. "I didn't get to hear about all of the political drama and what's going on in the United States. I got to focus more on a different country, different culture, different humanity out there that we could really dive into."

However, she as well as Thad had to return in 2015. They still have their residence in Costa Rica, today they're living in West Palm Beach also.
Within their very first year there, Rund heard concerning Bedros Keuilian's Fit Body Boot Camp franchise and also chose to enter.
"Thad and I weren't strangers to risk and companies and starting our own businesses, so we just said, let's do it," Rund said. "We looked into it and we ended up buying into this franchise and opening our first location in 2016 in May."

Now they have workshops in Palm Beach, Fla., North Palm Beach, Fla., as well as Delray Beach, Fla., where Rund claimed she still uses her army experience to assist her run business, particularly to create a kind of "brotherhood" among her team.
"We structure our businesses kind of in a similar military fashion where we do want [employees] to own our mission, to understand our vision and where we're going and [we] really explain the whys of everything that we do," Rund said.
"We want them to take ownership of every decision they make and let them know that it's okay to fail as long as you tried and course-corrected," she added. "Having them take a lot of ownership and buy-in has really helped create a team/family aspect."

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