Rachel Rodgers is the founder of Hello Seven, a multi-million dollar company that teaches women how to earn more money and build wealth. Rachel has been featured in Time, Forbes, Entrepreneur, Fast Company, the Washington Post, on NBC News, and Cosmopolitan. Rachel’s mission is to teach women—especially women of color—how to end the cycle of overworking, under-earning, and financial stress, once and for all.

Through her podcast and blog, Rachel reaches over 50,000 women every week—sharing guidance on how to take charge of your financial situation, increase your income, work smarter, and make decisions like a millionaire (even if you aren’t one, yet).

As a business coach, attorney, CEO, Black woman, working mother, and self-made millionaire, Rachel brings a powerful combination of professional and personal insight. She’s known for her blunt, sensible advice and for calling out the elephant in the room—whether it’s racism, misogyny, or centuries of unfair legal practices that have stripped financial power away from women. Rachel teaches her clients how to succeed financially in spite of the very real obstacles along the path.

Rachel started her career working on The Hill with nonprofits, federal judges, and iconic leaders including Hillary Clinton. When she realized that changing the world is a lot easier when you have some cash in your bank account, she decided to become wealthy and teach other women how to do the same.

Rachel is the host of The Hello Seven Podcast and founder of We Should All Be Millionaires: The Club, an online network for professional women. Her best-selling book, We Should All Be Millionaires, from HarperCollins Leadership was released in 2021.

She resides in North Carolina with her husband and four kids on a 53-acre ranch, leading a life that is beyond her ancestors’ wildest dreams.

Topics:

  • A broke ass decision, a.k.a. a B.A.D. decision is one that steals your time and energy, makes you feel weak and insecure, and eliminates options rather than creating them. A million-dollar decision is one that creates time and energy, frees up mental space, and creates space for the stuff that matters to you. In this talk, Rachel walks you through her story and the lessons learned to make million dollar decisions with real-life examples of the B.A.D. decisions many of us make on a daily basis. By providing alternatives to incorporate in your own life, Rachel shows you exactly how to plan your goals with the expectation to win, including putting the systems in place to provide emotional, physical, and professional support when needed as well as how to make smart decisions with your current finances to build future wealth and get to seven figures.

  • As dismal diversity statistics and empty promises in anti-racism proclamations in corporate America have shown, taking a step towards a more equitable, anti-racist organization is harder than it looks. But with small businesses at the heart of America’s future, there’s hope that what may start small will build much bigger by example. Join Rachel for this presentation exploring the concepts around racism and white supremacy that ultimately will challenge attendees to think about how to build a more diverse workplace as well as an equitable community in their own lives. Sharing basic tools and strategies that can be easily adopted internally no matter the size of the organization, Rachel shares the five key components that can help you make real change far beyond a single public statement.

  • Women comprise half the earth's population so they should control half the wealth, right? This is not the world we live in—not even close. Nationwide, 13% of men earn $100k or more a year, while only 6% of women earn that much. Worldwide, 89% of the world billionaires are men—only 11% are women. We have a huge wealth gap between men and women, but a redistribution of wealth is possible, and it starts with you. During this talk, Rachel shares how women can invest in their financial success and their futures by overcoming fears, challenges and self-sabotages when it comes to money. When one woman becomes wealthy, it changes her community. When millions become wealthy, it changes the world. Learn how female wealth reinvests much higher than men back into communities as well as how to bring the economy into balance by helping women face their financial challenges.