Good day and welcome to Trendy CEO! I’m Stephanie Mehta, CEO and chief content material officer of Mansueto Ventures. Every week this text explores inclusive approaches to management drawn from conversations with executives and entrepreneurs, and from the pages of Inc. and Quick Firm. In case you acquired this text from a pal, you’ll be able to sign up to get it yourself each Monday.
When girls’s management neighborhood Chief launched in 2019, it got down to present mentoring and peer-to-peer connections for ladies “already inhabiting the manager degree,” Quick Firm wrote on the time. “These girls who’re on the high are usually alone on an island,” cofounder Lindsay Kaplan added.
Quick-forward to at this time: Chief nonetheless goals to serve government girls. (The corporate boasts members from 77% of the highest 100 firms on the Fortune 500 listing of America’s largest companies by income.) Nonetheless, almost 20% of the neighborhood is way more entrepreneurial, or what the corporate describes as “solopreneurs or senior leaders in transition.”
One chief, many titles
Consequently, Chief’s membership displays the altering face of ladies in enterprise: a mixture of founders, company execs, board members, and nonprofit leaders and volunteers, who additionally occur to toggle amongst these roles. “They’re taking completely different paths to management and considering not a few ladder however a lattice,” or a extra versatile, nonlinear profession observe, says Alison Moore, CEO of Chief. Greater than 15 years in the past, my former Fortune colleague Pattie Sellers used the analogy of a “jungle health club” to explain such nontraditional skilled journeys.
Moore factors to Chief members akin to Rabia Farhang, who constructed an government profession in retail and style earlier than founding BGood Collective, a strategic consultancy targeted on purpose-driven organizations, leveraging her enterprise experience for social affect. On the identical time, we’re seeing outstanding businesswomen simply switching from company jobs to startups and again. Alicia Boler Davis, whom we’ve profiled in Trendy CEO, labored at Normal Motors for 25 years, held senior roles at Amazon, grew to become CEO of a fast-growing on-line pharmacy, and was recently named president of Ford Motor’s Ford Professional enterprise.
Strengths of the multihyphenate
Moore believes these diverse experiences make Chief members and their friends well-suited to handle in at this time’s fast-changing enterprise world. “What’s occurring in company environments has grow to be more and more dynamic,” Moore explains. Girls leaders who’ve worn or put on many hats—Moore describes them as multihyphenates—have the “capacity to run groups centered on resilience, effectivity, and execution,” she says.
Moore speaks from expertise: She joined Chief after 5 years as CEO of Comedian Reduction U.S. and senior roles at HBO, DailyCandy, NBCUniversal, SoundCloud, and Condé Nast. She was additionally a founding member of Chief. “Every completely different expertise sharpens your management ability set,” Moore explains. “I sit the place I’m at this time as a result of I’m drawing from the entire experiences that I’ve needed to make me a greater chief.”
Are you a frontrunner carrying many hats?
Does the time period “multihyphenate” consult with your profession trajectory? When your function development isn’t linear, how do you determine the place to go subsequent? I’d love to listen to your tales and probably embody them in a future challenge of Trendy CEO. Ship them to me in an e-mail message: stephaniemehta@mansueto.com.
Learn extra: girls in management
How women in leadership can form how others see them
Meet Inc.’s 2025 Female Founders
The CEO I wanted didn’t exist. So, I became her

