Daily Observer (Jamaica)

SHAWNA KAYE LESTER talks growth

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SHAWNA Kaye Lester is the founder and CEO of Memorable Essay, where she helps ambitious medical residency, graduate school, and college applicants stand out and get into their dream schools and programmes. She sat down with All Woman to talk about her life and work.

AW: What would you say is your best career achievemen­t to date?

SL: In 2020, a philanthro­pic colleague connected me to his mentee and charged me with helping her to get into college. First, she got into a community college. Then early last year, 2023, I got an e-mail from her expressing her thanks after she parlayed the applicatio­n we had created into an admission to Williams College, one of the top colleges in the United States. She said, “That’s over US$84,000 in tuition that I do not have to worry about. The school is giving me everything down to housing and meals, health insurance and even summer storage. In your own way, you make my life better!”

I get messages like this quite often, because I work as an admissions consultant, and each one is special. I spend most of my time now helping doctors who completed medical school outside of the United States get into US residencie­s and fellowship­s, and I still support people applying to college (like this client who e-mailed) and to graduate school. My best career achievemen­t to date is honing my gifts, skills, and experience­s to establish Memorable Essay, my admission consulting company. If I didn’t have the courage to start Memorable Essay and the grit to continue, I would not be able to help deserving clients get lifechangi­ng opportunit­ies.

AW: When would you say you have worked the hardest?

SL: I have never ever worked harder than the summer between my second and third years at Bates College in Lewiston, Maine, when I took a course called cellular and molecular biology, which students call “Cell Hell”. I took it during Bates’ “short term”, so the regular monthslong material was condensed into a weeks-long course involving classes, lab experiment­s, study write-ups, and exams. I very clearly remember oftentimes trying to decide if I should use the bathroom, take a nap, or study, and I often chose to study. Not even writing my theses at Bates or Columbia was as intense!

AW: What is your go-to for inspiratio­n/ motivation?

SL: When I need inspiratio­n or motivation, I turn to music. I listen to almost every genre, and to artistes from various geographie­s and time periods. Some of my modern favourites are Chronixx, K’naan, and Dobet Gnahoré, but India Arie is my ultimate go-to. Ninety per cent of the time I’m turning to music for inspiratio­n, I put on India.

AW: What is your advice to young women who are looking to pursue a career in your field?

SL: Well, it depends on the stage of life that young woman is in and her particular goals. However, I will share three things I think are fundamenta­l.

1)If you’re a teenager or in your 20s, expose yourself to different fields and to different profession­s, and profession­als, within each field. You can read about profession­s, but also try to see jobs in motion through internship­s, even if they are not paid. Talk with people in the jobs about what one needs to do that job, what the job enables them to do, and what the job prevents them from doing. I have had eclectic career tastes my whole life and I dealt with a lot of people telling me I was not focused, or confused when I was simply exploring. I think exploratio­n and exposure are critical for finding your career match, which may or may not be entreprene­urship.

2) If you’re an older woman thinking of entering entreprene­urship, or re-entering entreprene­urship, it is totally fine to do so from the safety of another job until you have objective evidence (sales) telling you that your endeavour has a market that will be willing to pay what you need to have a profitable business.

3) You have to fall in love with growth. I am currently planning the inaugural Caribbean Medical Profession­als’ Summit (CAMPS), which will take place at the Jamaica Pegasus from May 31-June

2, 2024. It’s a vehicle for the holistic developmen­t of medical profession­als who study or work in the Caribbean, or are otherwise invested in healthcare in the region.

The version of me that started Memorable Essay could not have envisioned or created CAMPS. My experience­s running the company, and the time and money I have invested into being taught and coached, have created a version of me that can do this. I would tell any young woman looking to pursue entreprene­urship: relentless­ly invest in your holistic growth, because your ventures and your life can only grow as fast as you do.

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