• Introduction by Women of NATE Committee Member Monica Vink
  • WON Profile: LaTavia Bowens
  • Where will you find the Women of NATE?
  • Upcoming Events
  • Recent Event Highlights
  • Feature Article: People Are Still Afraid of Powerful Women
  • Book Recommendation

Release:
March 2, 2022

Women of NATE Today Newsletter
Volume 4, Issue 3

On the heels of an amazing week of networking, togetherness, and connectedness at NATE UNITE 2022 I am reminded of the sense of renewal this season brings. Last week many of us celebrated being together again and reconnecting with vigor and renewed energy. This season and month seem appropriate for those celebrations as spring is near and the world is starting to wake up from a long winter nap. This time of year is perfect for stretching our arms, getting up, and reconnecting with the outside, with nature, and with each other. 

“Connection is the energy that is created between people when they feel seen, heard and valued – when they can give and receive without judgement.” ~ Brene Brown, Ph.D., LMSW

Connectedness reminds me of the principles in which Women of NATE (WON) was founded and our overall mission of lifting each other up and advancing the industry. Our mission is to foster an exchange of ideas, expertise, and camaraderie among NATE members at all levels. Women support women and all members of NATE to advance this industry forward. It starts with the simple act of connecting with one another.

I am amazed at how the WON organization has grown since its inception and how it has fostered growth for WON members. Connectedness is that feeling of belonging to or having an affinity with a particular person or group. As I stood and chatted with many other women at the WON networking event at NATE UNITE last week it was clear to me just how connected we are. We need that connection to foster growth for each other. It is about partnering, trusting, and supporting one another. WON is about women connecting on many levels; from sharing ideas to mentorship to creating long-lasting friendships. It is a testimonial to the leadership and character of our members.

As we get busier with events and the hustle and bustle in our business of connectivity, let’s not forget to truly connect with each other and encourage others to join us and invite them to connect. 

Here are a few simple things we can do to deepen the connection with others:

1. Smile. It takes fewer muscles to smile and it brightens up a room.

2. Be present. Put down the device for a few moments, make eye contact, and engage
    in the conversation. 

3. Listen. Actually, listen and hear what someone has to say. Make eye contact and let
    them know you are hearing them. No devices on this one either my friends. 

4. Dig Deeper. Get to know someone. Ask them questions and allow them to open up
    and share about themselves. I bet you will find something awesome.

5. Connect in person and, if that does not work, use this great technology: Zoom or
    Facetime. I often get a video message from my best friend that brightens my day
    because I see her face and see her smile, and I send her the same type of video
    message to brighten her day. 

This winter was a long one, so let’s take a moment to embrace the spring upon us. Take the opportunity to lift someone up today, tomorrow, and every day.  

 

Monica Vink is a member of the Women Of NATE Committees and is the Marketing Director of Legacy Telecommunications, LLC in Gig Harbor, Washington. She can be reached at monica.vink@legacytowers.com.

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WON Profile: LaTavia Bowens

 

LaTavia Bowens has eleven years of experience in the dynamic telecom industry. She currently serves as Vice President for Nexius, a top provider of end-to-end telecom deployment services and solutions. At Nexius, Bowens' role focuses on customer operations and program management on a national level.  

Bowens believes in and advocates for diversity, equity, and inclusion. She also serves as a founding member of Nexius' employee resource group WISE, Women Impacting the Smart Economy. WISE is a network that highlights growth opportunities, nurtures career development, and builds rewarding professional relationships for women in telecom and beyond. She is passionate about mentorship and servant leadership and is a recently inducted member of Chief—a private network for women in executive leadership roles.

Tell us something about yourself that would surprise us.

I have 12 siblings.

Tell us three things most people don't know about you.

I am an avid reader. I watch television maybe once a week. I love football (Da Bears and Roll Tide).

What does true leadership mean to you?

True leadership is developing your team members so they can reach their highest potential. It is listening when needed, coaching and/or giving constructive feedback when necessary but always doing it in kind. It is taking the weight of worry off of my team's shoulders so they can focus on their work and be their best selves.

What aspect of your role do you enjoy the most? 

It would have to be coaching and mentoring our teams. I truly believe the measure of a leader is how you are remembered by those who worked for/with you and how far they go in their careers.

What do you like to do in your spare time? 

Hang out with my husband. I travel a lot for work so my spare time is focused on family.

What advice would you give to recent new hires?

Listen intently, take every opportunity to learn something new, and stay ready for the impossible to happen, because it always does.

If you could interview one person (dead or alive) who would it be?

My sister Venita. She passed away when I was 13 and she was 25. Now that I am older I have so many questions to ask her that I didn't think to ask when I was a child. She and I were very close.  

What are three career lessons you've learned thus far? 

1. Speak up and advocate for yourself.
2. Do not dim your light.
3. Be mindful of how your treat others.

What does a typical day look like for you?

I wake up at 5:00 a.m., pray, work out, meditate, journal, read and call my mom. I am ready for the day by 7:00 a.m. I work until 6:00 p.m. (obviously some days it's later depending on the need). I cook/eat dinner no later than 7:30 p.m., relax until 9:30 p.m. and head to bed to start all over again the next day (this cadence helps me focus).

What has been the most important innovation you have witnessed in your lifetime?

I have two: the first has to be the cell phone. I remember when the brick phone was released. I believe it was the early 90s when I saw one for the first time and to see how far they have come is simply amazing. The second is social media. Who knew this would be a phenomenon of epic proportions?

If you could witness any historical event, what would you want to see? 

Sojourner Truth's "Ain't I A Woman" speech in 1851.

Top three life highlights?

Being the first in my family to graduate from college and grad school, the birth of my Goddaughter, and marrying my best friend.

What do you like most about your job?

The dynamic environment. There is something new if not every day, definitely every week. There is always something to work on or perfect.

Three words to best describe you.

Smart, Loyal, Direct.

Where will you find the Women of NATE?

Take Women of NATE with you!

Are you traveling for work or taking a leisure vacation? Take a creative photo holding a Women of NATE (WON) logo in front of a landmark that lets us know where you are. 

(Above) Women of NATE Committee members met for their annual meeting during NATE UNITE in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Submit your photos along with your name and location to nikki@natehome.com for a chance to be showcased in an upcoming Newsletter or social media post.

Download the Women of NATE logo here.

Upcoming Events

International Women's Day
March 8, 2022 

IWD 2022 campaign theme: #BreakTheBias

Imagine a gender-equal world.

A world free of bias, stereotypes, and discrimination.

A world that is diverse, equitable, and inclusive.

A world where difference is valued and celebrated.

Together we can forge women's equality.

Collectively we can all #BreakTheBias.

Be part of a movement 

Individually, we're all responsible for our own thoughts and actions - all day, every day.

We can break the bias in our communities.

We can break the bias in our workplaces.

We can break the bias in our schools, colleges, and universities.

Together, we can all break the bias - on International Women's Day (IWD) and beyond.

Strike the IWD #BreakTheBias pose

Whether deliberate or unconscious, bias makes it difficult for women to move ahead. Knowing that bias exists isn’t enough, action is needed to level the playing field.

Are you in? Will you actively call out gender bias, discrimination, and stereotyping each time you see it?

Will you help break the bias? 

Cross your arms to show solidarity.

Strike the IWD 2022 pose and share your #BreakTheBias image, video, resources, presentation, or articles on social media using #IWD2022 #BreakTheBias to encourage further people to commit to helping forge an inclusive world.

Access IWD resources and guidance

Get help and guidance on how to plan International Women's Day 2022 activity and how to support the #BreakTheBias campaign theme.

Make sure you have registered in the IWD Community here to access IWD resources.

Send in your #BreakTheBias images

Keen to show solidarity and support for breaking the bias?

Individuals and organizations are invited to send in #BreakTheBias images as we will be sharing some of the best images from around the world leading up to International Women's Day 2022.

So strike the IWD #BreakTheBias pose with your arms crossed to show your commitment to calling out bias, smashing stereotypes, breaking inequality, and rejecting discrimination.

Image submissions may be photographs or illustrations of individual or group compositions striking the #BreakTheBias pose - ideally 16:9 aspect ratio (landscape composition; 3000 pixels max. width). All gender identities are welcome.

Please submit #BreakTheBias images as early as possible.

Submit International Women's Day Image
WON Leadership Summit - Sponsor Now!
WON Leadership Summit - Register Now!

Recent Event Highlights

2022 WON 5K Fun Run/Walk

WON Meet & Greet Lounge

 

 

(Right) Jessica Cobb, Women of NATE Committee member and NATE Board of Director, converses with NATE UNITE Featured Speaker Charlie Ergen, Co-Founder and Chairman of Dish Wireless. 

 

 

 

(Left) Abby Nace of TESSCO Technologies and Women of NATE Committee member Jessica Cobb stop for a photo during the WON Meet & Greet at NATE UNITE 2022.

 

People Are Still Afraid of Powerful Women

Women and those who support them have made incredible progress since the women’s movement in the 1960s. From the United States White House to the head of New Zealand, women are rising to the top tiers of government. In the entertainment industry, women are hitting all-time highs regarding profits (Rihanna), demanding safer work environments (Selma Hayek, Ashley Judd), and taking on power positions to integrate the media (Eva Longoria, Shonda Rhimes).

Business is seeing more women sitting in the C-suite and leading national and global companies. So why is it that powerful women still make people uncomfortable? Why are there still double standards when it comes to these powerhouse females? 

Related: 100 Women of Impact in 2021

Where We Were

In the early to middle decades of the twentieth century, the expectations and roles for women and men were clearly demarcated within society. Men were the breadwinners. Their role was to provide financial stability and comfort to their families. They were expected to be strong, objective, and logical. They were the heads of their households. Women’s roles offered a balance to that male persona. Women were considered the weaker sex. Women were considered more nurturing, passive, and emotional. They followed rather than led. Their primary role was as caretakers of their spouses and children and as managers of the home.

From a psychological perspective, norms and standards offer comfort. We know what to expect. We know what we can rely upon. There are no surprises to throw off the day-to-day functioning of society in general, or homelife specifically. Of course, as the twentieth century progressed, these traditional norms changed. The delineation of what a woman’s role was became blurry. They started asking for things they wanted: education, equal pay, leadership positions. They began postponing or rejecting the idea that they were meant to get married and have children. Essentially their actions, thoughts, and words no longer aligned with societal scripts, the scripts society was comfortable with.

When two behaviors or two thoughts don’t align, it creates cognitive dissonance in humans. This cognitive discomfort is not a state people can exist in, and to reduce cognitive dissonance, something must change. When women clearly were not going to give up on their new rights and freedoms, that meant the members of society had to change their definitions, perceptions, and understanding of women’s roles. The problem is that changing concepts that are decades, if not centuries, old doesn’t happen quickly.

Where We Are Now

As powerful women become more common in society, it is less acceptable to verbalize any discomfort with their changing roles. Members of society are expected to accept the changes, fully and happily. If they have reservations about women in leadership roles, most know the backlash it will create to voice their unease, and they squelch their discontentment. The biases don’t disappear simply because women’s roles are changing.

Instead, the biases are shoved down, silenced, or hidden. The expression of these biases has gone from overt declarations that divide women and men to covert belief systems, sometimes without the owner of the bias even realizing it. They don’t say the biases out loud, but these outdated standards still influence the owner’s reactions, thoughts, and feelings about strong women. So, the cognitive dissonance isn’t resolved. There is still the misalignment between what is changing in the roles of women and that person’s beliefs, and because of this, there is a continued discomfort with these women who aren’t following the norm.

How We Can Grow

How can the standards regarding women change enough that they eradicate the old definitions? The umbrella response is to keep adding women to the ranks of leaders, whether it is the leader of a classroom or the leader of a country. The more commonplace this is, the more acceptable it will become simply because there’s nothing novel about it. To do so, people, and specifically women, can take steps to facilitate the acceptance of powerful women as the norm rather than the exception.

1. To start, push back against the societal standards, definitions, and roles

Pay attention to the words and phrases you use that relegate women to outdated identities or foster stereotypes about women. In turn, develop an intolerance for others' use of these terms. Words have an impact on culture and behaviors. They influence thoughts and beliefs sometimes without people even realizing it. You can decide if you want to promote the idea of powerful women as a norm or undermine it by using words that subvert women’s power.

Related: Why Women Leave Tech: It Isn’t Because ‘Math is Hard’

2. Next, don’t let challenges or failures stop you from achieving your goals

These are your moments to learn and grow. A great example of this is Whitney Wolfe Herd’s experience. Wolfe Herd was ousted as vice president of marketing at Tinder amid reports of sexual harassment from her former boyfriend, another executive at the company. Instead of letting that experience stop her, Wolfe Herd moved on to create Bumble, the billion-dollar app that lets women control their dating experience. She didn’t follow the old standard of quietly leaving the company or letting it stop her career. She used the situation to develop an idea, to grow it, and change one aspect of life for other women.

3. Another way to progress as a powerful woman is to create your own model of power or leadership

Masculine traits and perspectives tend to dominate leadership models, leaving little to no room for feminine approaches. Often female leaders will work to fit into these models, to adopt the approaches of male-dominated templates, instead of creating a model that works best for them. When you create a model that emphasizes your specific strengths — feminine, masculine, or some combination — you function at your best and build your influence. You demonstrate that the way leadership was done in the past is not the only option.

4. Define what you want

Rather than approaching your professional and personal life from the perspective of shoulds and have tos, reframe your thinking to account for what you want. By asking for what you want and working towards that goal, you flourish because you are enjoying going after something desirable to you. Your energy increases. Your focus is heightened. You become more satisfied and happy. Essentially, you live as your authentic self. You articulate yourself as a priority alongside the other important people in your life, instead of behind them. Ultimately, you change the paradigm: Women are not only givers to others, but also givers to themselves. 

5. It is also important to promote other women

We are not each other’s competition. When we support one another, we create opportunities, experiences, and connections that foster other women’s growth and our own. We challenge the ideas that women are “catty" and instead help other women achieve their goals. Women grow powerful together, personally and collectively. This also means contributing to the growth of next-generation women. Whether you teach or mentor or donate towards organizations that empower young women, these are the generations that will continue to foster the new norms.

Related: To Shatter Glass Ceilings, Spread These 4 Messages to Young Women

6. Be realistic about the 100% you're able to give

Women cannot meet all the old standards and all the new ones at 100%. We can’t give 100% to our career and 100% to our partner and 100% to our kids and 100% to self-care and 100% to our community work. Your time, energy, and focus can be represented as a pie chart. The whole pie is 100%, and each day your activities are divided within this pie. Trying to give 100% to each part every day is a mathematical impossibility. This leads to burnout and failure, and it undermines our success. 

As women strive to change expectations, they often hear they can have it all, meaning you can meet the old standards and the new ones. While you can, you won’t likely have it all at the same time, and maybe the pressure of trying to do it simultaneously is too much. Supporting your own and other women’s choices about how to allocate time and make decisions in ways that may diverge from the norm encourages the new model for women as powerful leaders. 

 

Robin Buckley, PhD

Entrepreneur Leadership Network Contributor

A cognitive-behavioral coach with a Ph.D. in clinical psychology, Dr. Robin Buckley helps successful women and couples thrive in their careers and relationships.

This article last appeared online on the Entrepreneur website and can be viewed at the following link: https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/390665. Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

 
 
 
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