About

ABOUT ME

SUZZEN STROMAN

WIFE AND BUSINESS ADVOCATE

SUZZEN STROMAN was born in Bogalusa, Louisiana, reared in Oakland, California and now calls Frisco, Texas home. She is a wife of 31 years, mother of three adult children, grandmother of three granddaughters and business owner. She and her husband have Master’s degrees in Organization Management and Project Management; they are business and life partners as owners of The Brass Effect, Inc., a technology company based in the DFW area. They share a passion for generational leadership and business development which inspired the creation of DAVINE Flow and Daversity Business Network; both are platforms inspired to shift personal and professional mindsets across mental and physical boundaries.

While navigating the busyness of life, Suzzen cultivated a passion for the position of wife; as it encompassed the mother and businesswoman she has become. She found herself advocating for wives in every area of her life. She embraced the call to create environments that support wives and women who have a heart to be a wife in the marketplace as business owners, CEO’s, Mothers and Individuals and it became her life’s work.

Suzzen is the founder of IAMwife Foundation, a partnership with proven professionals uniquely teamed to fit the need of each woman as she develops her vision as a wife. It is our mission to support her as she master’s her position as “Suitable Helper”.

As the founder of IAMwife Foundation Suzzen authored “Beautifully Burned”; her story – the memories she married. She has shared her story nationally across many platforms; instructional, motivational and inspirational through media and group settings with one goal, to reach ONE.

suzzen-about-me Wife of 31 Years Mother of 3 Grandmother of 3 Business Owner 11 Years

WHAT CLIENTS SAY?

KIND WORDS FROM MY LOVELY CLIENTS

“She’s been like the sister that I never had”

— KELLY MURRY 

“It was good to study at the feet of someone who has been through it”

— MRS. LARSON 

“She keeps it real and tells you the sometimes uncomfortable truth”

— ERICA DICKENS