A sociologist by training and an optimist at heart, Julie Maloney is a sought-after coach, trainer, speaker and author in the fields of leadership, career and work-life balance. She has designed and delivered hundreds of programs for professionals and executives, and her most recent book is The Blue Jean Manifesto: Working & Playing in a Jobless World (Amazon Kindle, 2011).
Laid off from a job she loved at the height of an enviable career with Coca-Cola, Julie became the CEO of her own career and life. She has now led Julie Maloney Inc. (JMI), a career management and leadership development company, for more than a decade. As someone who has “been there and lived that,” she truly understands today’s corporate talent.
Julie holds a Master’s in Sociology from Brown University and a Bachelor’s in Sociology from Loyola University of New Orleans. She was born and raised in Atlanta, Georgia, and now makes her home in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Julie’s passions include her two step-grandkids, travelling to visit friends, fall hiking, winter snowshoeing, photography, meditation, reading on her Kindle and writing.
Clients, Past and Present
| AT&T | Merck & Company | The Coca-Cola Company |
| Bell Helicopter/Textron | Meredith Publishing | The University of Michigan |
| Boehringer Ingelheim USA | Microsoft Corporation | Wells Fargo Insurance |
| Ernst & Young LLP | Spectrum Health | |
Julie has shown thousands of executives and professionals how to lead, work and play at the top of their game, and she can help you too.
Contact Julie to request a complimentary 30-minute coaching call, get her speaker one page or schedule a speaking engagement, presentation or workshop.
You can also learn more about Julie on her blog: LeadWorkPlay.com.
P.S. Why the open circle in Julie’s logo? It represents a mind that is open and free to create new possibilities. It also symbolizes a reinforcing cycle—leadership, work and play. These three drivers of success feed into one other, and our ability to thrive is directly proportional to our ability to engage all three.
