Elena Ledoux is the portrait of the American Dream. She is the CEO of Superb Maids, servicing Las Vegas, Tampa, and Portland, the CEO of American Security Screens, and the COO of Boss Security Screens.
Elena is ethnically Korean; when she was 21, she left her home in the Soviet Union to immigrate to America. She knew America provided opportunities women could not easily get in Uzbekistan. She beat the odds and obtained a law degree in Delaware, going on to practice litigation.
Elena then founded “Superb Maids.” She transformed her company into the top house cleaning service in Las Vegas, winning the SBA’s Small Business Person of the Year award in Nevada. She turned her start-up into a million-dollar company.
But that’s not all.
Elena knows we can all be victims in our own homes. Property crimes are some of the most harrowing to experience – and among the most common. Elena became the COO of Boss Security Screens which addresses this fear by providing families with a product designed to keep criminal intruders out.
“Entrepreneurship is one of the best things you can do for yourself. Culturally, we as women, especially Asian women, are placed in this position of being discouraged to take a risk,” said Elena Ledoux, lawyer, and successful entrepreneur. “That’s a waste of our potential, so go for it.”
Consumer fear over the spread of coronavirus has lifted sales for companies like same-day grocery delivery services such as Instacart and Las Vegas-based home cleaning service Superb Maids.
After immigrating to the U.S. from Uzbekistan, Elena Ledoux tackled challenge after challenge to achieve her American dream.
In March, state lawmakers introduced a bill seeking to protect outdoor workers from the brutal heat.