Journal Pioneer

Women blaze own trail

After corporate life, women are starting their own business

- BY MAGGIE RAHR

EDITOR’S NOTE: Internatio­nal Women’s Day is annually held on March 8 to celebrate women’s achievemen­ts throughout history and across nations. It is also known as the United Nations Day for Women’s Rights and Internatio­nal Peace. Following is a package of stories marking Women’s Day. When Maureen Googoo set foot into CBC Radio studios on day one of her internship, she made history as the first Indigenous reporter to work in mainstream media in the Maritimes. But it was the early 1990s and her editors at the time didn’t recognize the rare access to a mine of stories they’d just acquired.

“(They said) the stories were too internal, that it wouldn’t appeal to a wider audience.” Googoo says she was told, when she’d pitch ideas from her own community, Indian Brook. Her stories didn’t speak to their audience, they told her.

“They said: ‘The listenersh­ip is majority white, and they wouldn’t understand, or be interested in it.’”

But the discourage­ment didn’t keep Googoo from pursuing journalism. Over the next 25 years, she went on to work in print, television, more radio, and even opened the Halifax location of the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network, or APTN, when it launched here.

Then, after a master’s in journalism at Columbia University, she was inspired to break out and go into business for herself. Ku’ku’kwes News (kukukwes. com) will be celebratin­g its third year online this summer, covering indigenous stories from across Atlantic Canada. It’s the only site of its kind in this region, and Googoo says she only has one competitor: her old colleagues at APTN. Googoo represents a growing number of businesswo­men in Nova Scotia who are striking out on their own.

“There are a lot more women entreprene­urs, the last three or four years,” confirms Becky Davison, director of marketing with the Halifax Chamber of Commerce. Of the 1,600 businesses the Chamber works with, 83 per cent are small businesses. And the biggest growth therein, Davison says, appears to be among women. Davison says, the impact of the growing presence of women is palpable, even in her own office, at the chamber of commerce. She credits the concrete changes in her workplace to one former colleague. Davison tells the story of a woman who was concerned she’d lose her job with the chamber when she became pregnant, 10 years ago. “She marched into the CEO’s office and said ‘Listen. I love working here but I’m going to start a family and I can’t stay here if you don’t have a maternity plan.’”

That was the tipping point. The chamber of commerce developed a parental leave plan with health benefits, and began offering flexible scheduling. Today, Davison says, there are four young mothers working with the chamber.

Women in Engineerin­g

Andrea Doncaster had a similar conversati­on with her boss, some 10 years ago. She had been the first woman hired in an engineerin­g or technical role with BMR Structural Engineerin­g, a prominent Halifax firm responsibl­e for many business towers dotting the harbour skyline.

“I was almost a test case,” she laughs, re-telling the story of her hiring, and posing the question her male colleagues were asking of themselves, “Could we work with a woman?” Of course, the answer was yes, and Doncaster enjoyed a 12-year career with BMR, who went on to hire two more female staff during her time there. But when Doncaster tried to ask for a four-day work week, or reduced hours, as she prepared to become a mother, her boss simply couldn’t accommodat­e her.

“You just can’t,” she says he’d told her, “the contractor­s are calling, they want you.” This is what drives many women to leave corporatio­ns, and firms, says Davison of the chamber, and could account for the recent spike in growth among women entreprene­urs. Today, Doncaster runs her own business, (doncastere­ngineering.com), has one fulltime employee, and a casual she hires to come in when the work picks up, during busy weeks, like this one.

In fact, the demand is so great for Doncaster’s work, she’ll be leaving her job teaching at Dalhousie University, a side gig she’s maintained since she left BMR, six years ago, to make more time for her own projects. Doncaster says there’s no real difference between men and women in the role, but says, “it’s the reason for being in business” that differs, she explains, pointing back to her own path, and a need for flexibilit­y.

“There aren’t a lot of examples to follow, so you have to chart your own way.” Doncaster aims to grow her business to a small firm of three-to-five profession­als in the coming years and eventually hire a technician.

As to the question of gender disparity, Doncaster simply says: “As more women become engineers, it sort of dispels the idea women (can’t) do it.”

This is backed up by statistics. According to Engineers Nova Scotia, the number of women in the industry is on the rise.

“Thirty years ago we had less than one per cent,” says CEO Len White, “but this year, 28.6 per cent of new engineers in training are women.”

White says it’s no accident. They are actively trying to attract more diversity. Meanwhile, Googoo’s plan for Ku’ku’kwes (which means ‘owl’ in mi’kmaqi and is the original spelling of her own surname) is to grow the site’s advertisin­g base, to eventually provide a sustainabl­e travel budget given the rural geographic­al distance between the many indigenous communitie­s she covers. Right now, Googoo, and her husband photograph­er Stephen Brake run the site alone, supported by advertisin­g and a Patreon account.

For her part, Googoo says she never really thought much about her gender, at work. “For the longest time, I never thought about my role as a woman. I thought about my role as a mi’kmaq person.

“It’s just been kinda me. As a trailblaze­r.”

 ?? 123RF PHOTO ?? Business woman
123RF PHOTO Business woman

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada