Thinking Big: Women Closing the Ambition Gap

Sheryl Sandberg, Facebook COO, delivered the keynote address at Barnard College’s commencement in May; her speech was inspiring and powerful. What she said will forever resonate with me, as young women of the 21st Century, we have a duty to close the ambition gap – that is what will spur true social change. Enough talking about the glass ceiling – break it!

“So today, we turn to you. You are the promise for a more equal world. You are our hope. I truly believe that only when we get real equality in our governments, in our businesses, in our companies and our universities, will we start to solve this generation’s central moral problem, which is gender equality. We need women at all levels, including the top, to change the dynamic, reshape the conversation, to make sure women’s voices are heard and heeded, not overlooked and ignored. So my hope for all of you here, for every single one of you, is that you’re going to walk across the stage and get your diploma. You’re going to go out tonight or maybe all summer and celebrate. You deserve it. And then you’re going to lean way into your career. You’re going to find something you love doing, and you’re going to do it with gusto. You’re going to pick your field and you’re going to ride it all the way to the top. So, what advice can I give you to help you achieve this goal? The first thing is I encourage you to think big. Studies show very clearly that in our country, in the college-educated part of the population, men are more ambitious than women. They’re more ambitious the day they graduate from college; they remain more ambitious every step along their career path. We will never close the achievement gap until we close the ambition gap. But if all young women start to lean in, we can close the ambition gap right here, right now, if every single one of you leans in. Leadership belongs to those who take it. Leadership starts with you.”

An Interview with PoverUp Founder, Charlie Javice

I found that microfinance resonated with me, considering that $200 in Thailand, China and Laos, where I had been, makes a difference. You see that impact. We came back and said, ‘Wow, students can really play the most powerful role.’ You don’t need a lot of money to do it. -Charlie Javice

In this video, Charlie Javice, my amazing cousin who is a rising sophomore at Wharton and founder of PoverUp, is interviewed by Diana Drake, editor of Knowledge@Wharton High School.  Charlie talks about why she decided to launch PoverUp (which was named once of Inc. Managazines “11 Coolest College Startups”) and explains how small amount of money can go a very long way in developing countries. Charlie was named one of Fast Company’s “100 Most Creative People in Business 2011,” and she definitely lives up to this title. Charlie is an inspiration for young people and women alike.

BetaShower, An Inspiring Social Startup

I had originally read about The BetaShower in @zoebfox‘s Mashable article, ”10 Social Good Startups Worth Your Time.” Zoe did a great job of pulling together a list of truly innovative and inspiring startups, but The BetaShower would be at the top of my list.

BetaShower is an offshoot of soon-to-launch social company BetaBüro. I’m looking forward to seeing the other companies BetaBüro develops! I love their mission to find solutions to “major global issues.” Lofty goal, but inspiring none the less. I read more about the BetaShower in the article below via curious things.

Introducing ‘The BetaShower’: A step towards hygiene revolution

This is a big day for us (@robmartinmurphy and @itsvalli)

What we started 3 months ago is now at a pivotal stage of what we would like to achieve. We started a social company called BetaBüro (website to come) which aims to find solutions to major global issues with the help of design students.

First of our series of workshops was done in Lisbon with IADE and we gave a brief on clean water availability, unemployment, homelessness, energy and moderated a 3-day workshop. We had some cracking ideas at the end of it. We picked one of them and now it is ready for the world to see.

We are submitting our idea to the COMMON Pitch. Today is the deadline. If we are shortlisted, we will get a stage to present to people with money who can really make the difference.

Hope you like the idea show us some love. Go to Vimeo and Like them (if you really like, we are not expecting sympathy votes here – after all that’s the worst possible thing you can do for people in need) and share comments – we are ok for criticisms too. We have come across quite a few in our careers.

Stay curious!

Why Invest in Women?

50 years ago JFK crated the United States Agency for International Development. Today, USAID is celebrating their 50th anniversary. With the mission of improving the lives of those struggling abroad, recovering from a disaster, or striving to live in a more democratic county, its mission still resonates just as strong today as it did 50 years ago. To further its goal, USAID has developed an Entrepreneurs Project, empowering entrepreneurs globally, with a particular focus on female entrepreneurs.

Why I’m blogging

Internet technology has been the driving force of social change throughout the 21st Century. At the center of this transformation has been the way it has sped up our networks of communication and socialization. In doing so, internet technology has impacted culture: in some cases intensifying tradition; in other cases spurring the growth of subcultures, thereby diluting tradition; and in other cases, spawning the global homogenization of culture, reconfiguring tradition altogether. Technologies ability to bring about change, though, is not new. The industrial revolution brought about social, economic, and political transformations on an unprecedented scale; similarly, today, we are in the midst of unpredictable changes that have already begun to impact every facet of our daily lives. Just as the steam locomotive appeared grandiose to cinema audiences during the industrial revolution, AOL, it’s initial dial-up sound and all, appeared to be a beckoning-call into an age of digital communication. With that said, this blog is born out of my own glorious memories of social communication via AOL chartrooms, but also my all-women’s-educated curiosity of why and how men and women use the internet differently. I’m interested in macro-issues dealing with technological innovation; specifically, how group thought has shaped the way internet companies have scaled and stayed sustainable, and what hurdles they will have to overcome to continue doing so.

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