She loves working from home.
While some parents find it hard to concentrate when their kids interrupt their workday, Meghan thrives on it.
“My office is right by the kitchen, and I love that I can work from home,” she said. “It’s a great luxury.”
Meghan added that her four-year-old daughter, Lilibet, will occasionally sit on her lap “in the middle of a meeting, whether it’s about P and L [profit and loss] or it’s about something creative.”
She is consistent.
Whether it be her work or personal life, Meghan said she approaches each occasion with the same level of commitment.
“When people start to see your work ethic and really understand how dedicated you are to things, how you are in one place, I believe, is how you are in other places,” she said.
“So for me, that’s how I show up when I do potlucks at my kids’ school, that’s how I show up when putting a party together for my friend who just had a baby, that’s how I show up in my business.”
She doesn’t believe in perfectionism.
Meghan believes in learning from mistakes, and wants her kids to do the same.
“I’m a mum with kids at that age where they are constantly learning something new,” she said.
“I watch them face things that feel completely insurmountable every day. But you can remember and say, ‘I know it seems really hard right now, but trust me, that’s going to come so easily soon.’ I can give myself the same grace as a founder. There’s no such thing as perfect. I, too, get to make mistakes.”