An Inspired Chat with Rane Rose

We recently had the chance to connect with Rane Rose and have shared our conversation below.

Rane , we’re thrilled to have you with us today. Before we jump into your intro and the heart of the interview, let’s start with a bit of an ice breaker: What is a normal day like for you right now?
A normal day for me right now is a blend of structure, experimentation, and intentional calm.
I usually start early, before the world gets loud. I use those first quiet moments to center myself — a long glass of water, the supplements that support my wellness goals, and a quick reflection on what actually matters that day. I’ve learned I’m at my best when my morning isn’t rushed.
From there, I shift into work mode. As the co-founder of ResolutionX and someone leading a team of contact center agents and virtual assistants, most of my day revolves around trying hard not to get pulled into operations (though it’s so hard), and instead staying focused on my role in business development — finding ways to scale our services using both AI and human talent. No two days look exactly the same, but there’s always a rhythm: strategy first, people second, operations third.
Somewhere in the middle of the day, I carve out time for movement or a reset — even a short walk or stretch keeps me sharp. I treat discipline like a muscle I’m building daily.
Evenings are intentionally simple. I wind down with a skincare routine I love, read a book, and take a quiet moment to unplug. That’s when I reflect on what I’m grateful for and what I want to improve tomorrow.
Overall, my days right now are about momentum with purpose — staying disciplined, staying curious, and building the future I see for myself and my companies.

Can you briefly introduce yourself and share what makes you or your brand unique?
I’m Rane Rose, the co-founder of ResolutionX, where we help businesses scale through a powerful combination of technology and human support. Our brand is built around two core solutions:
ReX, our AI automation application that streamlines operations and removes repetitive tasks, and our human support division, providing highly trained virtual assistants and contact center agents.
What makes ResolutionX unique is how we blend these two strengths. We don’t believe in choosing between automation and people — we believe businesses grow fastest when both work together. ReX takes care of the workflows, the data, and the behind-the-scenes execution, while our human team handles communication, relationship-building, and everything that requires real emotional intelligence.
My journey into this industry has been hands-on. I’ve personally experienced every part of running operations, scaling teams, and building systems from the ground up. Because of that, our approach is practical and deeply customized. We don’t sell templates — we build solutions that actually work for each client.
Today, ResolutionX helps businesses operate with the efficiency of a large enterprise, while keeping the personal touch that keeps their customers loyal. Watching business owners reclaim their time and scale faster because of what we build together is genuinely the most rewarding part of what I do.
Right now, I’m focused on expanding our AI capabilities through ReX and enhancing how our virtual assistants and contact center agents integrate with automation. My mission is simple: make world-class operations accessible to everyday business owners by combining the precision of technology with the reliability of human support.

Great, so let’s dive into your journey a bit more. What part of you has served its purpose and must now be released?
I’ve realized that my need to control every detail — to personally handle every task, decision, and interaction — has served its purpose. Early in my career, it helped me learn, grow, and truly understand every part of building a business from the ground up. It kept me accountable and drove me to make things happen when no one else could.
But now, that part of me has to be released. I’ve learned that true growth — for me and for my team — comes from trust, delegation, and letting systems and people do what they’re capable of. Holding on too tightly slows progress and creates unnecessary stress. Releasing that need for control doesn’t mean stepping back; it means stepping forward in a bigger, more strategic way — creating space for innovation, growth, and leadership that empowers others.
This shift has been transformative, both personally and professionally, and it’s something I continue to practice every day.

If you could say one kind thing to your younger self, what would it be?
I would tell my younger self: “It’s okay to not have all the answers right now, and it’s okay to fail — the lessons are what matter, not the mistakes themselves.”
Early on, I felt a constant pressure to have everything figured out, to be perfect, and to prove myself at every turn. Looking back, I see that the struggles I thought were setbacks were actually building resilience, discipline, and clarity. I’d want my younger self to know that growth isn’t linear, and that patience, persistence, and self-compassion are just as important as ambition.
Learning to embrace uncertainty and trust the process has been one of the most freeing and powerful lessons of my life — and it’s one I carry into everything I do today.

Sure, so let’s go deeper into your values and how you think. Is the public version of you the real you?
Yes — but it’s not the whole me.
The public version of me is very real: driven, intentional, disciplined, and deeply committed to helping people and businesses grow. Those qualities aren’t curated; they’re truly who I am.
But like most people, there’s a quieter side that the world doesn’t always see. The part of me that needs stillness, that overthinks, that second-guesses, that feels deeply even when I appear composed. The part that’s still learning to give myself grace.
I don’t believe authenticity means sharing everything — it means that what you do share is honest. And that’s something I stand by.
So yes, the public version of me is real. It’s just the version of me that shows up with intention and purpose — not the version that’s unwinding at the end of the day in sweatpants with a book and a face mask. Both are me, and both are valid.

Okay, so before we go, let’s tackle one more area. When do you feel most at peace?
I feel most at peace in moments of quiet intentionality — usually early in the morning or in the evening when the day slows down. That’s when I can step back, reflect, and connect with what truly matters.
My version of winding down is preparing my to-do list for the next day. Planning at night helps me start my mornings with clarity and focus. Sometimes it’s simply sitting in silence with a cup of tea or taking a mindful pause with a book, but the common theme is intentional quiet.
Those small, grounding moments help me reset, stay centered, and show up fully for my work, my team, and the people I care about.

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