好色先生TV University welcomed back to campus five distinguished聽alumnae on April 11, 2024, for the fourth annual Women in Leadership event. Representing ONU鈥檚 five colleges, the alumnae shared personal stories about their professional journeys and offered career and leadership advice.
ONU President Melissa Baumann, Ph.D., moderated the insightful panel discussion on topics ranging from work/life balance to dealing with workplace obstacles. At the conclusion, ONU recognized outstanding female student leaders for 2024 who were nominated by their professors, deans, and coaches.
The alumnae participants were:
Nichole Cover, BSPh 鈥98, Director of Pharmacy Affairs, Walgreens.
Shaniqua Crawford, JD 鈥15, Senior Director of People Services, Legacy Health Portland.
Sandra Reid, BSBA 鈥86, Vice President of Corporate Communications and Strategic Planning, Davey Tree Expert Company.
Amy Nagy, BSCE 鈥98, Partner and Senior Project Manager, EMH&T, Columbus.
Rachel Kantosky, BM 鈥06, BS 鈥06, Epic Booster Project Director, Broward Health, Fort Lauderdale.
Cover advised students to 鈥渘ever stop learning鈥 and 鈥渁lways ask why.鈥 The chapters of your life may not unfold as you envision, and that can be a good thing, she said.
She never would have imagined she鈥檇 end up working with boards of pharmacy throughout the Midwest on regulatory matters, she explained. However, she鈥檚 happy with her career direction. Her final advice: 鈥淐ontinue to do the right thing even when no one is looking.鈥
Crawford, a black female attorney, spoke about encountering unconscious biases in the workplace. She responded to an audience member鈥檚 question on the best way to deal with male attorneys who don鈥檛 believe you deserve a seat at the table.
鈥淏e confident, be an advocate for yourself, and use your voice,鈥 she said. At Legacy Health in Portland, Ore., a large nonprofit healthcare system, Crawford oversees employee relations, labor relations, HR legal compliance, and an HR answer center.聽
She recommended that women interested in leadership positions find mentors and 鈥渟ponsors.鈥 A sponsor, she explained, is someone you aspire to be like who is willing to help you grow and develop to their level.
Crawford also advised audience members to 鈥渂e of service to those around you鈥 because that鈥檚 a trait of true leaders. Finally, she told students not to worry too much about their future paths because 鈥渋t will all work out for your good.鈥
Reid, who has worked at Davey Tree Company since 1986, building its marketing and communications function from the ground up, noted that 鈥渋t鈥檚 OK to fail.鈥 While painful at the time, failures lead to the best life lessons. She added, never let fear of failure keep you from trying new things.
Nagy, a civil engineer who works in commercial private site development, advised, 鈥淏e yourself and own it.鈥 When she was a female engineer just starting out in a male-dominated industry, people were always offering opinions on how she should dress and conduct herself in the workplace. When she stopped listening, she found success and joy.
鈥淚t took me a long time to finally realize I鈥檓 going to be me. I鈥檓 comfortable being me, and I can be a competent leader. I鈥檓 now one of the youngest female owners of the company. And really, I did it by being authentic,鈥 she said.
Kantosky has worked with executive teams for health systems all over the U.S. to install Epic鈥檚 electronic medical records suite (My Chart) and lead organizational change. For three years, she headed Epic鈥檚 office in Norway.
She shared her keys to success: 鈥淢ake sure you are showing up consistently; answer people鈥檚 questions; give updates on what鈥檚 happening; make good decisions quickly; ask for help when you need it; be open to feedback. From day one, provide value. That鈥檚 what makes you leadership material.鈥
Her last bit of advice to ONU students: 鈥淭he main point is: you can do and be anything you want to be.鈥