What’s That Entrepreneurial Girl?
We're fixing the founder visibility problem.
In 2023, 5.5 million businesses launched, but we only hear from a few.
The problem isn't a shortage of remarkable founders. It's a broken media system that overwhelmingly favors hustle-first stories and those who are already advantaged.
We focus on the mission, not the hype. We celebrate effort, not just exits.
The local construction business? Your favorite designer? The team who raised 2 million last week? All of these people have one thing in common: the entrepreneurial mindset.
Some of us know we want to be entrepreneurs, while others want to learn foundational innovation skills. Either way, we can help each other on our entrepreneurial journeys.
But first, we need a place to learn about the world of entrepreneurship!
Welcome to That Entrepreneurial Girl— where we educate, entertain, and inspire people to start their entrepreneurial path.
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We are currently posting the building in public journey on social media, and our first episode airs during Summer 2025!
The Founder
Bella Pivo has been building for 8+ years. She taught herself American Sign Language and built a 100k+ TikTok following in high school, and now spends over 4 years in the Boston startup ecosystem. She’s served in roles such as CEO of Boston's largest undergrad startup accelerator (IDEA at Northeastern) to distribute $500K+ in non-equity grants across 400+ ventures, Storytelling Founder In Residence with Techstars Startup Weekend, and Speaker for Boston Startup Week.
What did she consistently find? The entrepreneurship stories being told weren't representative of reality. The media celebrates unicorns and hockey-stick growth while overlooking the mission-driven founders who are solving real problems. The narrative focuses obsessively on fundraising and exits rather than impact and sustainable growth.
That Entrepreneurial Girl was built to change this narrative. Because Bella believes entrepreneurship shouldn't just be about profit-chasing, it should be about purpose. And the founders building businesses that matter deserve to have their stories told, regardless of whether they fit the hustle stereotype.