Anna Lithagen. Foto: Sofia Ernerot. |
Anna Lithagen är projektledare för Maud Olofssons
ledarskapsgrupp inom Hillary Clintons internationella toppråd för att stärka
kvinnors ekonomiska ställning i världen, ICWBL (International Council on
Women’s Business Leadership). Anna medverkade
på vår konferens Global Symposium on Women’s Entrepreneurship 1-2 juni.
I bloggen nedan berättar hon bland annat om sitt möte med Hillary Clinton
häromveckan. /Jonas
I am. Inspired. Full of energy. Prepared to connect the
talents and strong voices. Follow great ideas. Listen to and be part of the
change making. Ready to dream and think big. Encouraged and moving forward by
the urge to see where the limits lay.
And then go beyond them.
Currently, I work as advisor and project manager with the
Swedish Agency for Economic and Regional Growth for the Subcommittee on
Leadership, aiding Subcommittee chair Maud Olofsson, with the International
Council on Women’s Business Leadership (ICWBL).
The ICWBL is an initiative taken and chaired by U.S.
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, whom Maud Olofsson and I met at the
inaugurational meeting in Washington D.C. earlier this year and, once again,
when she was in Stockholm on the Sunday following the Global Symposium on
Women’s Entrepreneurship.
I feel fortunate to be part of this initiative and
involved in actively promoting economic sustainable growth, and to pursue and
promote business leadership among talented women entrepreneurs and current and
future women leaders, in Sweden as well as internationally.
At the Global Symposium on Women’s Entrepreneurship I was
inspired by the dynamic speakers and participants and the unequivocal drive to
create and build companies, networks and sustainable solutions, presenting
their products and business ideas creatively and fast-paced,
elevator-pitch-style…”doors closing”…in front of the entire audience…”and,
we’ve arrived!”.
I also had the honor of being one of the speakers
together with Shelly Porges at the Global Entrepreneurship Program with the
U.S. Department of State and with whom I have been collaborating closely on the
Subcommittee on Leadership.
Together, and with the leverage of the extraordinary
members of the Council and subcommittees and their combined networks, by
connecting and influencing organizations and corporations and by creating
synergies between the public and the private sectors, we hope to make it clear
that there will only be winners -worldwide- as a result of overcoming some of
the major barriers preventing women from rising to leadership positions!
One of the most important factors that we have
identified, for women to view themselves as leaders and entrepreneurs, is the
importance of role models. Therefore, at the Symposium, I also brought up one
of the flagship initiatives of the Swedish Agency for Economic and Regional
Growth, the Ambassadors for Women’s Entrepreneurship.
The initiative shows that there are as many different
ways of doing business as there are entrepreneurs, that business is conducted
in all possible sectors, and that there is not one, already-cut-out way of
building a successful company or a certain management style to be taken on. As a
result, the women entrepreneurs chosen to take part in the initiative might
become mentors, business partners and catalysts to each other and role models
-through speaking engagements at schools and universities- to future
entrepreneurs and leaders.
The world, undoubtedly, needs women to be able to step
forth as leaders and entrepreneurs.
Sometimes, all you really need is that extra word of
encouragement from someone you look up to, to understand that he or she
believes in you, in your potential, and in your ability.
For you to step forward.
To take a leap.
And soar.
Further and higher than you might have thought possible
at first.
The world needs women and men alike to pay their
experience and insights forward, and to –to the best of their knowledge and
ability- be role models and mentors to talents and aspiring leaders.
You might already be aware of this and it is also highly
possible that you have been for a while. And that now is the time.
You might not hear the ticking of the clock… (referring
to the Mutewatch, being courageously pitched on stage by innovator and founder
Mai-Li Hammargren)
But it IS time. To take part. To get off the sidelines
and try to make a difference.
And be ready to win!
/Anna Lithagen
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