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Define your purpose. Own your power. Achieve parity.
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Don’t Lose Pride: The Business Leadership Case For LGBTQ+ Support

What do vodka, credit cards, automobiles, haircare, soft drinks, beer, home repair, cars and investment companies have in common in June?

Unfortunately U.S. business leaders at more than a dozen major companies that produce these products are reportedly decreasing or eliminating their promotions for National Pride Month this year due to aggressive politicized efforts, even as many business leaders call for pride support and visibility in workplaces and communities.

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Michele WeldonComment
Mark Your Calendar: Have the Courage to Lead Every Month, All Year

Issue 2848— June 2, 2025

May holds multitudes of identities.

It’s Asian Pacific Islander Heritage Month. Older Americans Month. Jewish American Heritage Month. Mental Health Awareness Month. Victorious Women Month. Military Appreciation Month. And—yes—Respect for Chickens Month.

June? It’s Pride Month. Also, National Iced Tea Month. Caribbean American Heritage Month. Men’s Health Month. Dairy Month. And don’t forget National Black Bear Month.

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Yes, You Can: People Working Together Can Change Anything

Issue 2847— May 19, 2025

This was the No. 1 lesson I learned when I joined with civil rights advocates in Odessa, Texas, as they achieved school desegregation and housing restrictions.

 People working together, even if they have little formal power, can make change happen if they have a strategy, discipline, and the courage to lead to the goal despite barriers and even setbacks along the way.

It was exactly this observation that has driven my work for social justice ever since. 

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Launching A Movement: Hope Holds Power To Enact Change

Does hope really spring eternal?

Award-winning author of more than 20 books, Rebecca Solnit has a few things to offer about the possibility of hope and long path of change.  

“In this time period,” says Solnit, author of Hope in The Dark, and her most recent, No Straight Road Takes You There, “we are trying to keep hope alive. Change never stops so you do what you can and know you will not fix everything.”

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Michele WeldonComment
Power Sources: Learn The Stories of Women Changing Systems Past, Present, Future

“There is power in narrative,” said Nikole Hannah-Jones, Pulitzer Prize-winning author and creator of the 1619 Project, to an eager and nodding crowd of hundreds of fans and book lovers at the recent 22nd Annual Annapolis Book Festival.

Noteworthy that 32 out of 53 featured authors speaking at the festival identify as female,  the authors shared their work documenting in nonfiction and fiction books –among many topics--the stories of women across history for audiences from children and young adult to adults. More than 3,000 attendees savored 35 sessions throughout the day of panels, discussions, talks and signings.

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Chaos to Catalyst: How To Make Disruption Your Leadership Superpower

How are you feeling today?

If you responded “anxious,” “unsure of the future,” or “immobilized,” you aren’t alone.

We live in an era of permanent disruption — economic shocks, political upheaval, technological leaps, and personal curveballs that throw even the best plans into disarray. It seems like every day, there is a new threat to job security or the cost of necessities. There’s constant talk about the price of eggs and the looming price increases on almost everything as a result of tariffs, or maybe the threat of tariffs is just that, a threat, and everything will be fine.

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Create a Movement from Chaos: How To Change the Present and the Future

Everyone in this country is trying to get clarity on the overwhelming confusion caused by daily changes to politics, the economy, business, healthcare, education, culture, and “the pillars of American society.”

And it is women—specifically older women—who are organizing, enlisting male allies, and taking action.

 “We are beyond ‘let’s talk about it’ and into a movement,” says Heather Cox Richardson, Boston College History Professor, and author of the 2023 bestseller, Democracy Awakening: Notes on the State of America.

Speaking recently at the Chicago Humanities Festival, in conversation with William Howell, author, political scientist, and dean of the Johns Hopkins University School of Government and Policy, Richardson says, “I see American people standing up. I am doing my part. We are 100% in this together. We are beyond ‘let’s talk about it’ and into a movement.”

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Early Signs: Seeing Successful Role Models Plus Mentorship Helps Young Girls, Women

When they see it, they can not only be it, they can succeed.

A new global study of nearly one million people from adolescence to adulthood shows that teenage girls 13-16 more often become successful entrepreneurs by the time they are 35-40 than boys do. They also are more successful than girls that same age who are not seeing successful  entrepreneurs in these formative years.

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Women, Wealth, and Power: What We Can Learn from Lilly Ledbetter’s Courage

Sometimes, what you want to say is better said by others.

And sometimes articles write themselves as a result. That’s the case with my “Sum of the Week” blogpost today. My heart is so full of joy and appreciation for the powerful film “Lilly,” about the long fight for equal pay, written and directed by Rachel Feldman and produced by many investors, including Jyoti Sarda, who graced the panel with her experience bringing forth the independent film.

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Survival to Success: Stay Solvent, Financially Secure Leading In Scary Times

 This is real life.

So there is no cause to get panicked that because of recent economic shakeups, tariffs, threats of a recession, and wild market fluctuations, you will end up in financial ruin.

Your life will not mimic that of the fictional Victory Ratliff (so perfectly played by Parker Posey) in the recent finale episode of “The White Lotus,” when her husband, Timothy, says their lives are about to change because they have lost all semblance of wealth and prosperity.

“Nooooo.”

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