Written by Elizabeth Exline
If one word could sum up Trina Celeste Limpert, the CEO of and co-founder of the nonprofit organization , it would be harmony.
Harmony is what this working mother of eight strives for in her own life. It鈥檚 what she seeks to create in the companies where RizeNext implements its diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives. In fact, it鈥檚 even the name of her upcoming book, The 6 Boundaries for Life Work Harmony.
鈥淭here is no balance,鈥 she says, addressing the elephant in the room when talking about the juggle of being a working mother. 鈥淚 was reading an article where Jeff Bezos was talking about the word harmony, and the word itself felt so much better. Like, I can breathe. And the word balance just feels pressured and hard with that sense of, 鈥楬ow do I make it all work?鈥欌
Limpert has actually figured out how to make it all work. But, as with every success story, hers has its own set of challenges and solutions.
She grew up in Utah as one of 10 kids within a blended family. College was an 鈥渋t鈥檇 be nice to have鈥 rather than a given until she took a job working in fast food at 18. When she found herself 鈥渟liding around on greasy floors,鈥 she decided then and there that college was non-negotiable.
Eventually, she took a full-time job working nights at Hill Air Force Base so she could earn her associate degree in computer science.
Armed with her associate degree, she found a job with Novell, a software company based in Utah. She worked full time and started going to school nights at 澳门天天彩开奖记录 (UOPX) where she earned her bachelor鈥檚 degree in business and information systems.
Limpert鈥檚 field of study positioned her for a long and successful career in technology, a path she has often wondered why more women don鈥檛 take. The salary and flexibility are ideal for women, she notes, especially mothers and single mothers. And yet she鈥檇 often find herself as the only woman in a team of 80.
Never one to idly wonder, Limpert has characteristically dived headfirst into the question. She describes how, during her tenure at eBay, she led an聽employee resource group聽for women in IT. They worked to implement DEI initiatives, which was an experience that led her to discover two passions that would shape her future career: DEI and recruiting more women to technology.
Limpert earned her executive MBA and, later, a certification in business strategy from an Ivy League university, all while focusing on how to cultivate DEI in a way that could be both effective and embraced by the executives on down within an organization. So often, she says, DEI work is treated like聽learning and development聽rather than business strategy.
Limpert grew so inspired that she left her corporate job to start her consulting firm, RizeNext, in 2018. Today, RizeNext specializes in cultivating a culture of inclusion at a diverse range of companies.
Limpert also found an outlet for her other passion. In 2020, she co-founded Tech-Moms.org, which goes beyond teaching technology to working mothers to truly cater to the women themselves.
鈥淲e put the women first, not the technology,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 think that鈥檚 where a lot of these organizations have maybe gone wrong is like, 鈥極h, we teach them tech and then go.鈥 The technology they can get. That鈥檚 not the issue. It鈥檚 that the barriers and challenges for women are so much more than people recognize, and trying to help them overcome those things is what鈥檚 creating our success.鈥
The classes, which take place on Saturdays over two months, feature applicable skills and knowledge as well as input from experts in fields ranging from UX/UI to cybersecurity.聽聽
The organization also cultivates networking opportunities. Not only do the students stay in touch to support each other throughout their careers, but Limpert draws on her own extensive network to foster opportunities.
鈥淚t鈥檚 been amazing,鈥 she observes. 鈥淲e have tech moms who hire tech moms, tech moms who refer tech moms. It鈥檚 like the networks that a lot of men have had in the tech industry. We鈥檙e trying to build that same networking and connectedness for women.鈥
While Limpert is devoted to her career, she also has worked hard to create a full life. Harmony, after all, is a fluid concept in which many parts make a cohesive whole. She remarried after separating from her first husband as he battled (and eventually overcame) a heroin addiction. She has built a new family with her three sons, her husband and her five stepchildren. And she has surmounted the biggest struggle of all: a breast cancer diagnosis, which she received in 2019 while on her way to take her team to lunch.
鈥淵ou just kind of go numb,鈥 she says simply.
Her family was no stranger to cancer. Her mother, her father, her cousin 鈥 so many people she knew and loved 鈥 had had it. But that moment of her diagnosis was a turning point for Limpert.
鈥淭here鈥檚 something that happens when you face your mortality that way,鈥 she observes. 鈥淚t changes you, and a lot of experiences happened for me during that process of learning how to let go and say, 鈥榊ou know what? This is out of my hands.鈥欌
Limpert was buoyed by family and friends, all of whom turned out in an enormous show of support for a 300-strong party just before she underwent a successful bilateral mastectomy.
Being able to come out the other side of a cancer diagnosis has been a blessing Limpert incorporates into her worldview. 鈥淵ou end up cherishing every year you get,鈥 she says. And that may just be the first step to finding harmony in any life or career.
Here, Limpert shares other insights on what motivates her and how she鈥檚 working to change the world, one woman or company at a time.
It鈥檚 always going back to recentering where I feel true to myself. All this work I do is hard work. It鈥檚 emotional work, and it can get very draining. So, it does take a lot to stick with it and persevere, but I think my motivation comes as I see the outcomes of the work I do. I hang on to those.
You鈥檝e got to prioritize. We sometimes allow everybody to just drain us, and it鈥檚 not healthy for us or anybody else because it鈥檒l burn us out. I think the key is just finding space for yourself, to be able to reset.
Mom guilt is a real thing. It is so severe sometimes, and it took me way too long to start getting rid of that guilt. It wasn鈥檛 doing any good. I mean, I was designing and building systems for millions of people around the world and creating positive change. At times, that meant I needed to take a 20-minute call, and my son would be screaming outside my door for a little while, and that was OK. Once I was done, I鈥檇 go snuggle with him, he would be content and life would move on.
We hear it a lot when our Tech-Moms students get up and do their presentations. They feel so guilty for taking time to study. Why? Why do we do that to ourselves? It鈥檚 OK to invest in ourselves and our careers. Sometimes work comes first.
I look back, and my son is now 20. He enlisted in the Marines, and he will graduate from Camp Pendleton on his 21st birthday this coming January. I wish I would have known back then when I was thinking, 鈥淥h, I鈥檓 not doing enough. I鈥檓 not there enough. I need to be there 100% of the time,鈥 that it鈥檚 just not true. There are things he鈥檚 learned from my working example that are enabling him now.
Putting together a diversity strategy focused on experience. Maybe it鈥檚 not artistically creative, but it鈥檚 something that I don鈥檛 know why we鈥檙e not doing.
The largest change-management initiative we have in our organizations is being able to address the culture and diversity, equity and inclusion challenges. Yet, when we create programs, we don鈥檛 do a good job of creating great experiences for people. People have a lot of fear and a lot of hesitancy to talk about these things. The topics themselves make people uncomfortable.
Throughout my career, I focused heavily on customer-relationship management and customer experience. I kept asking myself, 鈥淲hy are we not doing the same thing within our companies to create change initiatives that have great experiences?鈥
The curricula and training I do within RizeNext place experience first. I look at the DEI initiatives that are out there, and they create horrible experiences that nobody wants to go through again. In fact, McKinsey & Company had a report that $8 billion was spent on DEI last year, and .
How do we approach these things to make sure that our executives are having a good experience? How do we do this so everyone comes forward saying, 鈥淚 want to do more of this. I want to get involved more.鈥 That鈥檚 the shift I鈥檓 seeking within the organizations I work with.
I鈥檓 the biggest believer in the power of transformation through education. It鈥檚 why I do what I do. Receiving the knowledge of business fundamentals allowed me to start my own company. The technology and operations piece of it provided me a successful tech career, which I use in everyday execution. My ability to be an entrepreneur resulted from business experience enabled by my extensive education.
Limpert is in good company when it comes to UOPX alumni committed to changing the world for the better. Read how Ruben Mireles overcame a pandemic and a climate crisis while going to school and providing for his family.
Elizabeth Exline has been telling stories ever since she won a writing contest in third grade. She's covered design and architecture, travel, lifestyle content and a host of other topics for national, regional, local and brand publications. Additionally, she's worked in content development for Marriott International and manuscript development for a variety of authors.
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