Successful Women Entrepreneurs Invest in
Smith Women
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GWIB
members at their first
tailgate of 2004. (l to r)
Yoss Missaghian (VP), Jeanne
Hill (Pres), Chris Vitt
(member), Alice Chen
(member) & Mary Byrd (VP,
Finance). |
According to the United Small
Business Administration Web site, women
business owners are critically important
to the American economy. America's 9.1
million women-owned businesses employ
27.5 million people and contribute $3.6
trillion to the economy.
It was with this in mind that the
Graduate Women In Business (GWIB) in
conjunction with the Dingman Center for
Entrepreneurship hosted a panel of women
entrepreneurs on September 22, 2004 in
an event entitled Hot Mommas: The New
Rules for Having It All
Jeanne Hill the GWIB president says,
Women have many different options that
they can pursue outside traditional
paths and they need to be flexible and
open-minded about their career choices.
The event was aimed at both women who
are looking to start their own business
or those who just wanted to hear from
others about successfully balancing life
and work as an ambitious businesswoman.
Kathy Korman Frey the managing
director and founder of Vision Forward,
a consulting firm and adjunct professor
of entrepreneurship at the George
Washington University and a Harvard
Business Case author, led the panel.
According to a BusinessWire.com, "Hot
Mommas," a term coined by Frey, is
described as: educated female
entrepreneurs who maintain a successful
business career and family life. The
companies run by these Hot Mommas are
not the typical home-based cottage
ventures, but rather high potential
businesses built by well-educated,
creative women. This was the angle the
panelists wanted to share with Smith
women.
On hand to demonstrate that it is
possible to have a high-powered career
and a successful family life were local
business women Lita Miller, Rebecca
Fair, the founder of Inde Partners, and
Ellyn McKay, the founder of Ellyn McKay
& Associates. All married with children
and either running or are in the process
of starting a consultancy firm, they
talked extensively about work-life
balance issues. Working towards clear
goals, following a schedule and actively
making time for family were listed as
some of the ways to achieve a balance.
Frey discussed the importance of
mentorship among women in the business
world. Working with a mentor who is
where you want to be that is running
your own business and doing it well --
is truly one of the most valuable
learning experiences an upcoming
entrepreneur can have, she said. Mentors
have experience with various components
of entrepreneurship; finance, sales and
advertising, the areas most upcoming
entrepreneurs worry about.
Drawing from her own experience as a
strategic consultant where she has
worked with hundreds of companies and
thousands of business executives to
support growth initiatives, Frey cited
mentally steeling oneself for the risks
involved as a crucial ingredient of
success.
Commenting on the speech Hill said
Kathy is a very impressive speaker and
most of us left the event feeling
empowered and ready for the challenging
role of working women.
GWIB hopes to hold more events with
an entrepreneurship angle in conjunction
with the Dingman Center. For more
information visit the
GWIB homepage or the
Dingman Center For Entrepreneurship.
▓ Smith Media Group, Priscilla
Mwangi, MBA Candidate 2006