Franchise Update Magazine Issue I, 2015 | Page 36

BY EDDY GOLDBERG UPWARD! Building and leveraging your network to advance your career “Increasingly, leadership today is defined not just by how many hours you spend at your computer, but your ability to connect to others, says Carol Bartz, former Yahoo CEO and Lisa Lambert, founder of UPWARD.” T self, what can I do to help effect change?” Her answer? UPWARD, founded on the premise that women need access to the same types of informal networks and mentorship that men often leverage to succeed in business. UPWARD’s first event was in May 2013. Today the organization has more than 1,600 members, obtained through word of mouth. Lambert says the nonprofit organization chose to focus on senior professional women because there hat’s the start of “Why women should do less and network more,” an article the two wrote for Fortune last November. It’s also the premise behind UPWARD (Uniting Professional Women Accelerating Relationships & Development), the global networking organization for senior professional women that Lambert founded in 2013. “It’s something I had been thinking about for some time. I’ve seen the disparity in opportunities for men and women in high-tech and in venture capital,” says Lambert, who has worked at Intel Corp. for nearly 18 years. “In venture capital, 4 percent of the general partners are women, just 4 percent, which is amazing to me. And in tech, the numbers aren’t much better.” Across all industries, sadly, the numbers say it all. If you look at the professional workplace in America, women are 51.5 percent of the professional workforce, says Lambert. Lisa Lambert “But when you get to the executive positions, the number drops to 13 percent, is ample support for younger women beand when you get to the CEO’s office, it ginning their careers. drops to 4 percent.” “If there is a glass ceiling and you can’t While technology and venture capi- advance further than middle management, tal are not exactly bastions of progress then you’re really stuck if you haven’t for women, those numbers illustrate the built a professional network. That was problem that Lambert, along with many the problem I sought to overcome with women in business face: the conscious UPWARD: creating a global commuand unconscious bias about women in nity of professional women where we’re executive and leadership positions, no 1) learning from each other; 2) educatmatter the industry. ing ourselves; and 3) proactively helping “If I’m experiencing it,” says Lambert, one another advance,” says Lambert. “If vice president of Intel Capital, Intel’s ven- you’re stuck, there’s no reason to stay ture capital arm, “then how many other stuck. There’s a way you can overcome women are experiencing it? I’m a fairly that, and that is in relationship with other senior woman at Intel, yet this happens senior professionals who have your interto me on a regular basis. So I asked my- ests in mind.” 34 Heads up! “A lot of us [women] are ‘heads down’ on our jobs. We’re naturally work-oriented, so we sometimes under-invest in other important areas such as networking,” says Lambert. “When your head is down, you’re on a mission,” says Shane Evans, president of Massage Heights, who co-founded the franchise in 2004 with her husband Wayne. “It’s absolutely necessary at times, there’s no doubt about it, especially if you’ve just started the company. You’re in growth mode, you’re just pushing forward, and there are things you have to do to gain that growth.” Today the brand has 120 units, with 40 more on the way this year. “I had my head down for 10 years, doing everything I needed to do and more, working a lot of hours, not really having any kind of balance in my life. My kids forced that balance to some degree, but outside of that, there was none,” she says. “If you can find a way to balance that kind of go-hard mentality—I’ve got to do this, we’ve got to move fast, get these things done, that passion and diligence for growth—with selfgrowth, it’s a great combination that can make a big difference in both your personal and professional lives.” In mid-2013, with the help of a business coach, Evans decided to lift her head up. “My mission for the past 18 months has been to make meaningful connections, both professional and personal,” she says. “It has been my mission since I was able to identify the one thing I could do that no one else could do. And that one thing was deliver the message of Massage Heights: who we are as a brand, what we stand for, what our values are, and pretty much be the face of the brand.” It wasn’t an easy transition. “Initially I thought, How is that going to help? What is that going to do? There are all these things that have to be done. We’re a grow- Franchiseupdate ISS U E I, 2 0 1 5 fu1_lead_network(34-36).indd 34 2/6/15 6:05 AM