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5 career lessons from book “Hidden Figures”

May 29, 2017 by JaneSutter Leave a Comment

The book “Hidden Figures” offers an in-depth character sketch of the African-American women who worked behind the scenes in aeronautical research.

I haven’t seen the movie yet, but I found the book Hidden Figures by Margot Lee Shetterly filled with inspiring lessons for women, still relevant in these days that are long past the 1940s-1970s.

Hidden Figures is the story of a group of highly intelligent, even brilliant, African-American women who worked as “computers” at the Langley Memorial Aeronautical Laboratory in Hampton, Va. They started their jobs during the still segregated times of the 1940s, when the country was united in defeating the Axis powers of World War II. These women persevered to help the country eventually catch up and beat the Soviets in the space race.

Here are five lessons that struck me as I read about Dorothy Vaughan, Mary Jackson, Katherine Goble Johnson and Christine Darden.

The ability to defend your work gets you noticed.

Lee writes that the best women mathematicians were known for accuracy, speed and insight. “But having the independence of mind and the strength of the personality to defend your work in front of the most incisive aeronautical minds in the world — that’s what got you noticed…That’s what marked you as someone who should move ahead.” 

To advance in your career, you have to get close to where ideas are created. 

Not easy to execute, but essential to moving up the career ladder, was mounting a different plan of attack than just holding on to your job. Lee writes about the changes taking place in the late 1950s  — the beginning of the space race and the end of segregation at Langley — and the need for the African-American female employees to evolve, too. “If a woman wanted to get promoted, she had to leave the computing pool and attach herself to the elbow of an engineer, figure out how to sit at the controls of a wind tunnel, fight for the credit on a research report. To move up, she had to get as close as she could to the room where the ideas were being created.” 

Related post: 5 Lessons from ‘Dream, Girl’ entrepreneurs 

Keep asking until you get the answer you want. 

Persistence pays off. Lee gives the example of Katherine Goble Johnson putting aside any personal insecurities to ask her superiors repeatedly to let her attend the important editorial meetings, where research findings were picked apart and had to be defended. Johnson figured she had as much right as her male engineer colleagues to be there, and so she kept up her inquiries, “gentle but persistent,” until she basically wore down the engineers who got tired of saying no.  Lee writes: “Who were they, they must have figured, to stand in the way of someone so committed to making a contribution, so convinced of the quality of her contributions that she was willing to stand up to the men whose success — or failure — might tip the balance of the outcome of the Cold War?” 

Serendipity, not luck, plays a part in your career.

With modesty and years later, Johnson would claim it was luck that she of all the female “computers” was sent to work in an engineering group that eventually focused on putting a man in space and then on the moon. But Lee dismisses that, writing that “simple luck is the random birthright of the hapless. When seasoned by the subtleties of accident, harmony, favor, wisdom, and inevitability, luck takes on the cast of serendipity. Serendipity happens when a well-trained mind looking for one thing encounters something else: the unexpected. It comes from being in a position to seize opportunity from the happy marriage of time, place, and chance. It was serendipity that called her in the countdown of John Glenn’s flight.”

Help the young women and men coming behind you. 

The fact that these “women computers” gave countless hours to talking to African-American high school students about careers in math and engineering, inspiring them, and mentoring them one-on-one, is not insignificant. In the 21st Century, it’s pretty much a given that if you are a successful person in whatever field, you should be a mentor. But back when good jobs were so scarce for women, especially black women, it would have been easy to just focus on their own careers. But Lee devotes a significant amount of space to chronicling how the women in her book spent nights and weekends speaking on career panels, raising money for scholarships, and so on.

Writing about Mary Jackson, Lee notes “Mary, however, was determined to clamor over every fence she encountered and pull everyone she knew behind her.” And later in the book, talking about women, both black and white: “Each one had cracked the hole in the wall a little wider, allowing the next talent to come through. And now that Mary had walked through, she was going to open the wall as wide as possible for the people coming behind her.”

I finished reading Hidden Figures carrying each of these women inside my head and my heart, inspired by how they overcame so many challenges. I’m thankful to Margot Lee Shetterly for uncovering this unseen story.

What books have you read lately that have offered you inspiring lessons?

You might also be interested in:

A don’t-miss podcast: Interview with Susan Wojcicki: CEO of YouTube 

Event of the week: Rochester Philharmonic “Women Rock” concert June 3-4

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Filed Under: Leadership, Small business Tagged With: Hidden Figures, Langley Memorial Aeronautical Laboratory, Margot Lee Shetterly

5 lessons from ‘Dream, Girl’ entrepreneurs

May 18, 2017 by JaneSutter Leave a Comment

 

Roc Girl Gang brought the inspiring doc “Dream, Girl” to The Little.

Hey, gals. If you don’t like it when your boss makes an inappropriate comment about your attire, don’t get mad, become entrepreneurs and CEOs of your own companies.

entrepreneur
Erin Bagwell

That’s what Erin Bagwell did. First, though, she found inspiration from strong and passionate female entrepreneurs she met online. Then she started writing a blog called Feminist Wednesday and profiling them. Then she began attending networking events and meeting even more inspiring women. After a particularly bad day at work, she quit her job as a designer of computer graphics for a big Manhattan firm to fulfill the dream she’d had for a while, making a movie.

Dream, Girl is the result.

Thanks to Roc Girl Gang for bringing that documentary to The Little on May 16. A few hundred women were enthusiastic attendees, and it was a great idea to have a panel of local women share stories of their journeys as entrepreneurs. Here are five  key points I picked up from the film and the panel:

entrepreneur
Komal Minhas

Recognize self-sabotage and stop it in its tracks.

You believe in yourself but others don’t. Tune them out. Don’t procrastinate as that is a prime way you sabotage yourself. (Guilty!) You can read more of Dream, Girl producer Komal Minhas’ thoughts on this topic here.

No woman is an island. 

Even entrepreneurs need all kinds of partners. As Dream, Girl shows, when Bagwell started writing her blog, she reached out to other women to write for her blog, too. When she started making her movie, she built an all-female team to help her. She even ended up working closely with two of the women whom she originally met when she wanted to feature them in her movie: Komal Minhas and Joanne Wilson. Minhas became the doc’s producer. Eventually Wilson invested in the movie and found other investors. (See next item.)

Network with each other and support each other.

Thirty years ago, women had to compete much harder with each other because there were so few opportunities at the top and even in the middle. While there are still too few female CEOs, studies show that when women are at the top, more women advance throughout the organization. Angel investor Joanne Wilson, featured in Dream, Girl, talks more about that here. (Her blog is Gotham Gal and I just subscribed.) There are many good networking organizations in Rochester. I’m definitely going to keep a closer eye on Roc Girl Gang now that I know about them.

 Pick one dream and focus on that one.

A recent Rochester Institute of Technology grad in the audience at The Little told the panel that she has many great ideas. She asked: “Do I have to pick just one?” Yes, the panelists said, nodding and smiling, but then once you fulfill that one dream, move on to the next.

Behind successful women are super supportive spouses/partners.

I second that emotion! That partner can be someone who shares your dream and will make dinner every night. (From my personal standpoint, my husband Gary Brandt has kept me sane through years of a hectic newspaper career, and yes, he did make dinner pretty much all the time!)

entrepreneur
Audience hears from local Rochester entrepreneurs.

After absorbing all the powerful messages in the movie, it was good to talk about it with local entrepreneurs. The panelists from left to right are: Simone Boone of Apogee Wine Bar;  Jacquie Daley Parnell of Jacquelyn Daley Photography; moderator and Roc Girl Gang founder Sarah Knight; Leah Stacy of Boomtown Table; and Nicole Renee Kazimer of Hikyoga.

What lessons can you share about being an entrepreneur? 

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Filed Under: Media, Small business Tagged With: Dream Girl documentary, female entrepreneurs, Roc Girl Gang

Rochester SCORE names therapeutic rec specialist, veteran Clients of Year

May 4, 2017 by JaneSutter Leave a Comment

Rochester SCORE Client of the Year
SCORE Client of the Year Anita O’Brien of Rochester Accessible Adventures and her mentor Bob Zinnecker.

I love to see entrepreneurs take their great ideas from seeds and fertilize them with creativity and hard work until they’re shooting up from the ground, growing and branching out. Two such talents were honored on May 3 as SCORE Clients of the Year. The Greater Rochester Chapter of SCORE is the sponsor, and I’m a volunteer.

Rochester Accessible Adventures 

Anita O’Brien is the executive director of Rochester Accessible Adventures.  I was fortunate to sit at her table at the SCORE luncheon. She told me she’s a certified therapeutic recreation specialist who has worked for 20 years with people with disabilities.

Before I met Anita, it never occurred to me that if one person in a family has a disability, it can mean that the entire family can’t enjoy recreation activities together. RAA, the non-profit that Anita founded, is working to change that. Her organization trains businesses and community rec programs to offer their services to everyone.

That means Erie Canal Boat Company now has adaptive kayaks and bikes, so an entire family can enjoy time on and along the canal. Read more here.  RAA’s latest initiative is making pickleball inclusive, working with Bob Stokes of  Pickled Power.

“We work so others can play,” Anita told the group of SCORE clients and volunteers at the luncheon at Oak Hill Country Club. Anita had high praise for SCORE, saying that the mentoring from volunteer Bob Zinnecker, along with workshops, webinars and helpful documents had a great impact on the success of RAA.

Rochester SCORE Client of the Year
SCORE mentor Dale Dewey with Albert Urban of Global Urban Enterprise, SCORE Client of the Year.

Global Urban Enterprise LLC

A military veteran also was named SCORE Client of the Year. Albert Urban is the president and CEO of the construction company Global Urban Enterprise. Al has an incredible background in construction, project management and leadership.

He’s a 26-year veteran with the Pennsylvania National Guard who’s done multiple deployments, including in Bosnia and Iraq, acting as a planning officer and executive officer among other duties. He’s overseen major projects for Rochester General Hospital and Newark Hospital. He also worked for two years in Australia on the $70 billion Gorgon Gas Project.

His new company provides general construction services to the federal government and New York State agencies. As a Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Business, Al’s company is eligible to compete for government contracts set aside for SDVOBs.

Al had high praise for the help he’s received from SCORE, including his mentor Dale Dewey. Everyone knows the saying, “It takes a village to raise a child.” Al put his own twist on that: “It takes a village to build a business.”

 

 

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Filed Under: Small business

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New book focuses on magic, love, healing on Seneca Lake

The trilogy about the American-Giroux family is complete with the publication of “That Old Lake Magic: A Search for Love and Healing on Seneca Lake” by G.A. Brandt. Here’s the plot: “JOA Giroux has devoted nearly a decade to helping unwed mothers and children in Ottawa, Canada, at the Giroux family’s charitable foundation. She is near […]

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