Women Leading the Way
Reflections on Life and Leadership
Foreword
“To know the
road ahead, ask those coming back.”
-
Chinese proverb
If
you’re like most young women, you have a lot of dreams for the future. Some are
likely big dreams that would affect everyone, such as changing the world for the
better, while others are probably small dreams that would affect only a few,
such as having a child of your own or landing your ideal job. But all these
dreams need an incredible amount of intelligence, determination, and heart to
become reality; perhaps not coincidentally, it’s exactly those qualities that
are essential to becoming a leader both in work and in life.
The Academy
for Leadership and Governance would like to give young women – and, by
extension, young people – a sense of how to turn hopes for becoming a leader
into reality. By young women we mean women in their twenties and thirties, most
likely working, and either interested in joining or already a part of the
nonprofit professional community.
Although
there is still a gender gap in both leadership responsibilities and compensation
(see our epilogue for details), women are strongly represented in nonprofit
administration. We believe that
young professional women can and will build on the achievements of their
predecessors to lead at the highest levels of nonprofit management in even more
organizations. This book offers you the combined wisdom of five women nonprofit
executives, gained through career and life experiences both positive and
negative, with the goal that their stories will help you along your own
leadership journey.
To elicit
that wisdom, we brought together a publication Advisory Committee of
nine
young women (all under 40) who are currently building their careers in the
nonprofit sector. They are working in education, the arts, social service, and
health care; some are also young mothers just beginning to strike the important
balance of work and family life.
After some discussion, the committee gave us their questions about what it takes
to become a nonprofit leader to be relayed to our panel of co-authors. They also reviewed drafts of the
book as it was taking shape, making sure it spoke fully to their most pressing
challenges. We are grateful to them
for sharing so much of themselves and their dreams with us.
Our
co-authors are current central
Ohio
executives who over the course of their careers have led a variety of nonprofit
organizations with annual budgets ranging from five hundred thousand dollars to
five million dollars. In response to the Advisory Committee’s questions, the
co-authors shared their distinctive personal and career histories to illustrate
how individual each person’s leadership journey must be. One co-author started
her career as a scientist and astronaut before becoming the executive of a
museum of science and industry. Another was a dancer and dance professor before
rising to leadership within academia. One had children before pursuing full-time
employment, while several others had children mid-career. Two co-authors have
doctorates; one has a master’s degree, one a law degree, and one a bachelor’s
degree.
Each began
her career with a path other than nonprofit leadership in mind and evolved into
her current roles through service on nonprofit boards, through education and by
stepping up to take responsibility.
We would be
remiss if we did not thank three more women who worked behind the scenes to make
this publication a success. First,
the text reads smoothly thanks to Laura Bidwa’s careful eye as editor. The fine look and layout of the book
is the work of Cyndi Daines, our designer.
Finally, the publication was carried through its final stages by the
always capable direction of Anna Duke Reach.
Many
well-respected authors have contributed to our understanding of the field of
leadership, some of them men, most of them writing from a private sector
perspective—their insights guide and support our work here. What we hope to add
is the perspective of successful women leaders working in the nonprofit sector,
the place where some of humanity’s highest aspirations for itself are realized.
These women have rich and varied stories to tell about being women, being
leaders and finding their own leadership voices along the way.
I hope that
in these pages you find the beginnings of what you need to reach for your
dreams, as well as the reassurance that your leadership journey has in fact
already begun. We’re honored to lend a hand
Emily Redington
The Academy for Leadership and
Governance
Dottie Gerrity
Chair of the Board
The Community Foundation of
Collier County, Florida