BC Business Magazine

ELLA LAURE HIPOLITO

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AGE: 29

Senior associate +

EDI committee member, Boyden Executive Search

LIFE STORY: Ella Laure Hipolito was all set to pursue a career in medicine, much to the approval of her father and mother, who had dreamed of becoming a doctor and a nurse after immigratin­g to Vancouver from the Philippine­s via France. Then, as a pre-med student at UBC, Hipolito joined a volunteer trip to the operating room. Everyone else was thrilled to be there, she recalls. “And I was looking at the clock to figure out what time dinner would be.”

But Hipolito loved her parttime job in student recruitmen­t and admissions at the university, where she worked in the same role for UBC Sauder School of Business after completing a BA in 2015. Recruited for an administra­tive position by an executive search firm, she saw nepotism and other problems. “It became clear to me that executive search follows a system that upholds some barriers because of the way it was created.”

Hipolito moved to the Vancouver office of global firm Boyden Executive Search in 2019. While interviewi­ng for the role, she explained that her motivation was to help put more women and people of colour in leadership roles, by making executive search more equitable and inclusive and ensuring that there are diverse candidate pools.

With the team, Hipolito started a Vancouver anti-racism and equity, diversity and inclusion (EDI) working group that revisited the search process from start to finish. She also led the creation of a national EDI committee that shares its best practices with Boyden offices across the country. “All of our practices get shared internatio­nally as well, because we're also part of a world corporatio­n,” says Hipolito, the first Boyden associate to sit on a committee or practice group.

BOTTOM LINE: Hipolito has worked on more than 50 searches over the past three years to help place leaders in education, the public sector, nonprofits, health authoritie­s and roles related to

EDI. Equity-deserving candidates account for 72 percent of her placements, versus a national average of 29 percent for the industry. Partly thanks to those contributi­ons, 51 percent of people that Boyden's Vancouver office placed in the last year were from equity-deserving groups, including 38 percent women and 20 percent BIPOC candidates.

During the next three years, Hipolito plans to help B.C. universiti­es and colleges make their dean groups and senior executive teams as diverse as the communitie­s those institutio­ns serve. “It's a pretty low bar, so [I'm] trying to increase that bar at a number of levels.” –N.R.

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Ella Laure Hipolito

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