Latest news with #positiveimpact


Forbes
18-05-2025
- General
- Forbes
How To Translate You Leadership Story Into Positive Impact
The word impact is silhouetted against an orange and blue sunset. The I in the word is made from a ... More figure with their arms raised up in the air in a successful victory pose. Most people get out of bed in the morning wanting to have a positive impact. Yet, it's easy to get distracted by caregiving responsibilities, never-ending emails or to-do lists. Life intervenes. Time is a deficit. We don't spend the time reflecting on what impact we hope to create. With a few simple prompts, our own personal stories reveal clues to what that positive impact might be. I recommend journaling out your responses encircling key themes—activities, people or experiences—that have had a positive impact. The answers to these questions may reveal an opportunity that has always been present, or uncover an overlooked theme in your life with deeper meaning. For some, it could be volunteering for causes you care about, spending time with people that you care about, or even endeavoring into business ideas or nonprofit organizations. Turning your personal story into a positive impact starts by asking, 'What is your purpose?' 'What impact do you hope to create?' and 'How will you communicate your purpose?' In my interview with Chela Gage, whose background is in corporate HR (human resources) and executive coaching (including a recent role as chief diversity officer at Starbucks), we discussed the launch of her new nonprofit, 1 Million Fosters. Inspired by her own experience growing up in foster care, where she navigated instability and a lack of guidance into adulthood, Gage aims to create a supportive community for adults who have aged out of the foster care system. Her mission is to empower these individuals through transformative life and career coaching, fostering personal growth, independence and long-term well-being. The name itself reflects the ambitious goal of reaching and impacting a large number of former foster youth, creating a sense of belonging and shared experience akin to a "fraternity or sorority." Gage explains that the idea for 1 Million Fosters evolved from a desire to share the powerful stories and resilience of former foster youth. Encouraged by her advisory board and inspired by The Million Person Project, she decided to establish it as a 501(c)(3) to maximize its impact. Gage said, 'Despite the challenges of starting a nonprofit, including navigating paperwork and building a board, I leveraged my network and resources to make it happen. I envision creating a strong community where former fosters support each other, offering masterclasses from her network, and becoming a talent database for corporations seeking diverse and resilient employees.' Gage highlights the unique strengths fostered by the experience of being in foster care, such as independence, resilience and adaptability. Gage drove to connect her personal experience with her professional work to create meaningful impact on a large scale, ultimately leading to the creation of her nonprofit. "After ending my role at Starbucks, I wanted to really make an impact in the world. At Starbucks, I could impact 430,000 employees. It was like a ripple effect that brought me joy. I wanted to launch something that I felt personally connected to and qualified,' Gage said. One impact of Gage's 1 Million Fosters is storytelling. One of her former fosters, Eric Kellum, wrote a poem about his experience through grief, serving as an inspiration for others. With a strong desire to build a supportive community and facilitate positive change in the lives of former foster youth, Gage shows how her personal story of resilience can turn into a positive impact. 'My purpose is to build a strong community for former foster youth by offering coaching and guidance and connecting them, helping them navigate adulthood and live their fullest potential. I want us all to opt in and for us to be a community that supports each other. I want to connect them by being the bridge that helps people get from where they are to where they want to be." Want to have a purposeful impact? Start by asking, 'What is your purpose?' 'What impact do you hope to create?' and 'How will you communicate your purpose?'


New York Times
17-05-2025
- Business
- New York Times
Rutger Bregman Wants to Save Elites From Their Wasted Lives
The world is full of highly intelligent, impressively accomplished and status-aware people whose greatest ambitions seem to start and stop with themselves. For Rutger Bregman, those people represent an irresistible opportunity. Bregman, 37, is a Dutch historian who has written best-selling books arguing that the world is better (mostly meaning wealthier, healthier and more humane) than we're typically led to believe, and also that further improving it is easily within our reach. Sounds a little off in these days of global strife and domineering plutocracy, doesn't it? Even Bregman, who is something of a professional optimist, is willing to admit that the arguments in his first two books — 'Utopia for Realists: How We Can Build the Ideal World' (2017) and 'Humankind: A Hopeful History' (2020) — land less persuasively now than when they were published. But his new book, 'Moral Ambition: Stop Wasting Your Talent and Start Making a Difference,' is his attempt to meet the current moment by redirecting self-interest into social good. He is trying to entice the people I mentioned earlier — society's brightest and most privileged — to turn away from what he sees as meaningless and hollow (albeit lucrative) white-collar jobs in favor of far more exciting and even self-aggrandizing work that aims to solve society's toughest problems. That's also the driving idea behind a nonprofit of which he is a founder, the School for Moral Ambition — a kind of incubator for positive social impact. A key question, though, is how exactly he plans on persuading people to rethink their own goals and values — which is to say, their own lives. Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | YouTube | Amazon | iHeart | NYT Audio App Your new book is an argument for why talented, high-achieving people should direct their energies toward more morally ambitious behavior. Do you see your writing as morally ambitious? Well, look, the reason I wrote this book was that I became frustrated with myself. I had a bit of an early midlife crisis. I was mainly spending time in this quote-unquote awareness business: You write books to convince people of certain opinions and then you hope that some other people do the actual work of making the world better. And I was working on a new book about the great moral pioneers of the past — the abolitionists, the suffragettes — but as I was studying their biographies, I experienced this emotion that I describe as moral envy: You're standing on the sidelines and wishing, gosh, wouldn't it be awesome to be in the arena? To actually have skin in the game? Want all of The Times? Subscribe.