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Ed Latimore Is Touching Millions With His Work

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“There’s nothing better than your words being responsible for someone making a change or being able to get through a tough time,” says Ed Lattimore. The personal branding advisor and full-time author is using his prior challenging experiences to cultivate his work, touching, and helping millions in the process. 

The entrepreneur once faced poverty and grew up in public housing, and later turned to alcohol abuse and addiction as a result. He’s been sober since December of 2013, and that experience is what fuels his passion for helping people in need. Latimore uses his internet and author platform to put out self-improvement and motivating content to help his viewers get through their various life struggles.

Latimore, as an author, has written many Amazon Best Selling books sharing his life experiences. His title “Sober Letters To My Drunken Self” was the best seller in the addiction category for quite some time. Currently, Latimore is working on creating a membership portal through his website. This membership will allow subscribers to get the help they desire by directly connecting with Latimore and other people who may be going through the same experience.

The once professional heavyweight boxer and veteran of the U.S. Army National Guard Ed Latimore is changing lives through his words on paper, speeches, and content of his website. 

Check out Ed Latimore’s website here: https://edlatimore.com/

Follow Ed Latimore here:

https://www.instagram.com/edlatimore/

https://twitter.com/EdLatimore

Michelle has been a part of the journey ever since Bigtime Daily started. As a strong learner and passionate writer, she contributes her editing skills for the news agency. She also jots down intellectual pieces from categories such as science and health.

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Lifestyle

Why Derik Fay Is Becoming a Case Study in Long-Haul Entrepreneurship

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Entrepreneurship today is often framed in extremes — overnight exits or public flameouts. But a small cohort of operators is being studied for something far less viral: consistency. Among them, Derik Fay has quietly surfaced as a long-term figure whose name appears frequently across sectors, interviews, and editorial mentions — yet whose personal visibility remains relatively limited.

Fay’s career spans more than 20 years and includes work in private investment, business operations, and emerging entertainment ventures. Though many of his companies are not household names, the volume and duration of his activity have made him a subject of interest among business media outlets and founders who study entrepreneurial longevity over fame.

He was born in Westerly, Rhode Island, in 1978, and while much of his early career remains undocumented publicly, recent profiles including recurring features in Forbes — have chronicled his current portfolio and leadership methods. These accounts often emphasize his pattern of working behind the scenes, embedding within businesses rather than leading from a distance. His style is often described by peers as “operational first, media last.”

Fay has also become recognizable for his consistency in leadership approach: focus on internal systems, low public profile, and long-term strategy over short-term visibility. At 46 years old, his posture in business remains one of longevity rather than disruption  a contrast to many of the more heavily publicized entrepreneurs of the post-2010 era.

While Fay has never publicly confirmed his net worth, independent analysis based on documented real estate holdings, corporate exits, and investment activity suggests a conservative floor of $100 million, with several credible indicators placing the figure at well over $250 million. The exact number may remain private  but the scale is increasingly difficult to overlook.

He is also involved in creative sectors, including film and media, and maintains a presence on social platforms, though not at the scale or tone of many personal-brand-driven CEOs. He lives with his long-term partner, Shandra Phillips, and is the father of two daughters — both occasionally referenced in interviews, though rarely centered.

While not an outspoken figure, Fay’s work continues to gain media attention. The reason may lie in the contrast he presents: in a climate of rapid rises and equally rapid burnout, his profile reflects something less dramatic but increasingly valuable — steadiness.

There are no viral speeches. No Twitter threads drawing blueprints. Just a track record that’s building its own momentum over time.

Whether that style becomes the norm for the next wave of founders is unknown. But it does offer something more enduring than buzz: a model of entrepreneurship where attention isn’t the currency — results are.

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