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Posts Tagged ‘The Catalyst Canada Honours’

Champions for Change

Champions make a difference. They challenge their colleagues to stretch for greater achievements. They encourage their communities to become better than they thought they could be. Their example motivates people they have never met to change their lives for the better.  They sponsor advancement for talented women and men.

The Catalyst Canada Honours 2011 Champions have done all of that and more. Company/Firm Leader Champion Monique F. Leroux would have set an example of achievement for young Canadian women if she had done nothing more than become the first woman to lead a Top 10 financial institution in Canada as Chair of the Board, President and CEO of Desjardins Group. But she chose to mark her career with a commitment to the advancement of other women. Perhaps most important, she has “walked the talk” as a mentor and sponsor of other women and as a speaker who generously shares her experience and knowledge with other women.

The Business Leader Champion is Jennifer Tory, Regional President, Greater Toronto Region, RBC. Her career and her community activities reflect her commitment to identifying and advancing talented people. Her business strategy of cultivating talent includes such
initiatives as increased development opportunities to allow high-potential women and visible minorities a greater chance to demonstrate their ability. As a community volunteer, she has promoted opportunities for participation by women, visible minorities and new Canadians.

Human Resources/Diversity Leader Champion Michael Bach, Director of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, KPMG LLP, has a long history of advancing diversity through his work with Pride at Work Canada; Women’s Executive Network; the Canadian Board Diversity Council and the Rotman School of Management’s Back to Work Program. In his current position, Mr. Bach has been able to influence change at the organizational level and gain support for diversity initiatives from senior leaders within the firm.

These three champions share many traits: vision, the courage of their convictions, and the power of persuasion. They have personal stories that motivated them to become champions.  Together, they represent the many Canadian business people who recognize that advancing women in business is advancing women and business.  It is sound business practice, ensuring that our economy has the benefit of the broadest spectrum of talent and perspective.

Since the establishment of The Catalyst Canada Honours last year, we’ve seen encouraging signs of a growing recognition that what’s good for women is good for business. Our membership has grown as organizations in all parts of Canada recognize the need for active strategies to include and advance women and visible minorities. The conversation is expanding, and becoming more positive.

With all this positive energy, why are champions so important? One compelling reason is that more than 30% of all Canadian FP500 companies lack even one woman senior officer—with no significant shift in the past two years.

Champions can make the difference, as role models and as sponsors who are at decision-making tables advocating for talented women to advance and contribute value that will benefit their organizations.

This year’s honourees set a high bar! Thank you, Monique, Jennifer, and Michael, for leading change and offering inspiration to the emerging champions in corporate Canada!

 

Watch our Champions!

Do we know how to pick them? Champions, that is. Another of our inaugural The Catalyst Canada Honours Champions has been recognized for making a difference!

First, our Champion in the Company/Firm Leader category, TD Financial Group President and CEO Ed Clark was named CEO of the year. Now Colleen Sidford, our Champion in the Business Leader category has been recognized for her solid business ability and dedication to the advancement of women.

Colleen, who is Vice President, Treasurer of Ontario Power Generation, Inc. (OPG), has been appointed president of Women in Nuclear Canada. She will also represent Canada on the WIN International board.

The appointment recognizes Colleen’s great contribution to advancing women in the male-dominated nuclear industry. She initiated emPOWERed Women at OPG to help women develop their networking, career development, and mentoring skills. When she was honoured at last year’s The Catalyst Canada Honours, more than 300 women had participated in the program and were acting as “diversity ambassadors.”

We’re proud to congratulate Colleen on this latest recognition by the women in her industry—and we’re proud to count her as a Champion and a friend of Catalyst Canada. Her example demonstrates what one woman and a powerful idea can achieve.

We’re beginning to sense a trend of even greater achievement by The Canada Catalyst Honours Champions. We suggest you watch for the announcement in June of The Canada Catalyst Honours Champions of 2011—because you’re sure to be hearing more about them!

Ten Great Years!

The hum of excitement around Catalyst Canada’s office is becoming a crescendo as we prepare for The Catalyst Canada Honours dinner on Wednesday, October 6.

We are delighted that it’s a sold-out event—500 members and friends of Catalyst Canada will join us to celebrate our tenth anniversary!  Ten years of making friends and building partnerships.  Ten years of research and advocacy for the advancement of women in Canada.  Ten years of producing what is considered the “gold standard”  research on advancing women and business.  And ten years of growth and taking on new challenges.

We’re thrilled to celebrate three of the people who have been leading change by encouraging and supporting diversity in their organizations.  The first Catalyst Canada Honours Champions—  TD Bank’s Ed Clark; Scotiabank’s Sylvia Chrominska; and OPG’s Colleen Sidford—are proving what we already know:

What’s good for women is good for business.

Honouring Leaders

Someone once said, “If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more and become more, you are a leader.”

Today, Catalyst Canada celebrates three remarkable leaders who have made a difference in the lives and careers of countless women in Canadian business. TD’s Ed Clark, Ontario Power Generation’s Colleen Sidford, and Scotiabank’s Sylvia Chrominska share a common trait (aside from their personal success!). Each has made it their mission to champion women in their organizations, their industries, and their communities.  

And for each of them, the reward comes not in personal recognition, but in seeing others become and achieve more than they ever dreamed possible. 

There are few of us who can’t point to a time when our lives were changed by someone who offered advice, or an opportunity, or shoulders to stand on.  Certainly, if there’s one thing I hear consistently from women who have risen to the top of their fields in Canada, it’s that they didn’t make it on their own.  They benefitted from mentors and champions who stepped in, often at critical moments, and set their careers on a new path. 

And that’s why we’ve created the Catalyst Canada Honours – to recognize champions of women in business and to mark Catalyst Canada’s tenth anniversary. It’s our hope that in recognizing these champions, we will inspire others to step forward and create real change that will benefit both women and organizations.  

The Catalyst Canada Honours began about a year ago, with a conversation I had with a woman who attended Catalyst’s first Canadian event.  She was surprised that the event was hosted by a CEO.  Today, no one would be surprised to hear a business leader in Canada talking about the importance of women to the bottom line.  Over the last ten years, the conversation has shifted.  Diversity—with women at its core— has become a strategic imperative for Canadian businesses.     

And it started with a leader, who stood up and did something unexpected. 

While today is primarily about Ed, Colleen and Sylvia, it’s also about all of the other leaders— today and tomorrow—changing workplaces and changing lives.  Thank you for what you do.  We are truly inspired.