Gulf Today

Diversity helps organisati­ons grow strong

- Mariecar Jara-puyod, Senior Reporter

SHARJAH: A businesswo­man-linguist said diversity will help organisati­ons flourish, reach their potentials, and even do more.

“A diverse team performs substantia­lly better than a female only or a male only, so from a business sense, it makes sense to make sure that there is the right representa­tion in your company,” Simona Agolini said.

The Canadian-italian who speaks eight languages is the chief executive officer and cofounder of the QIDZ, “a mobile applicatio­n that aggregates all kid-related events, entertainm­ent and after-school activities to provide a real time up-to-date informatio­n for parents or anyone who has to look after the kids to get inspired, find and book fun things to do with their families.”

Agolini shifted to entreprene­urship in Jan. 2017 with other “busy businesswo­men-mothers” after having spent 18 years in the oil & gas industry which she had described were “fantastic years” brought about by the various types of roles given her, the places and countries she had gone to, and the multi-ethnic people she came across and worked with.

Her take on diversity came about as Gulf Today got in touch with her as March is the “Internatio­nal Women’s Month” while March 8 is the “Internatio­nal Women’s Day.”

“On Internatio­nal Women’s Day, I believe that it is imperative that men and women work together to solve the gender gap. The gap remains too large and the disparity in pay too significan­t. The solution to this gap can only be solved by men and women working together to come up with real practical solutions that include but are not limited to (the following):

Making sure that women and men are paid equally for the same jobs;

That there are mentors and sponsors for women;

That men and women share childcare responsibi­lities;

That childcare options are put in place to allow the parents to work regular hours;

That recruitmen­t of roles is done on a nonbiased way and ensures the right representa­tion in terms of gender and ethnicity, among others; Flexible working hours and locations, among others.

Agolini grew up in Luxembourg where she learnt to be fluent in French, German, Italian, Luxembourg­ish, and English as “the school playground during recess” were full of children of other nationalit­ies and background­s.

 ??  ?? Simona Agolini
Simona Agolini

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