Waikato Herald

Hillary Fellowship to Waikato woman

-

Waikato woman Cheryl Reynolds is one of only nine Kiwis who has been accepted into the Edmund Hillary Fellowship (EHF), alongside 30 others from around the world.

The EHF is a three-year fellowship that brings together a community of visionary entreprene­urs, investors and startup teams to create positive global impact from New Zealand by helping them bring their purpose-driven ventures to life.

“It is very much focused on challengin­g the status quo, building new paradigms, solving pressing global problems, and impacting the course of humanity,” Ms Reynolds said.

“New Zealand is a country where you can incubate ideas and then launch them to the global stage.”

Ms Reynolds said she feels honoured to become an Edmund Hillary Fellow, and says the timing of the fellowship could not be more perfect as she begins her next entreprene­urial venture.

She currently has 11 successful ventures under her belt and has 15 years’ experience in the New Zealand’s startup scene.

Her entreprene­urial journey began in her 20s with her first project — Focal Point Gallery, a contempora­ry public art gallery, which is still thriving in the United Kingdom where Reynolds grew up.

After several successful ventures in the UK, including a number of social enterprise­s, Ms Reynolds moved to New Zealand in 2003.

She calls the Waikato home and says living in Raglan is her “paradise on earth”.

Ms Reynolds has since establishe­d herself as a leading entreprene­ur, founding SODA Inc as an entreprene­urship hub and awardwinni­ng startup business incubator programme.

From SODA Inc, she also cofounded Innes48, named after the pioneering 1900s Waikato entreprene­ur, Mary Jane Innes. Innes48 is a 48-hour high energy startup competitio­n, which is the largest event of its kind in New Zealand with $15,000 in prize money.

More recently, Ms Reynolds founded Momentum Waikato, a philanthro­pic foundation that pools donor funds and distribute­s grants strategica­lly to projects that can achieve transforma­tional intergener­ational change in the Waikato.

Momentum’s projects include the Waikato Regional Theatre, and the three social enterprise projects selected to share the Foundation’s first $1million distributi­on through the Vital Impact Programme.

During her time at Momentum Waikato, Ms Reynolds began participat­ing in the Community and Enterprise Leadership Foundation (CELF) programme, which brings together businesses and community not-for-profit organisati­ons to increase the leadership capital of the Waikato region.

“CELF is a wonderful programme, and I am very grateful to my sponsor, Foster Constructi­on, for their support. The co-founders of CELF, David Irvine, Bernie Crosby and John Cook, have designed a truly brilliant model that matches for-purpose with forprofit leaders who go on a shared learning journey together. I’ve never seen anything like it in the world, it’s unique and it’s brilliant that it’s happening here in the Waikato,” she said.

She says being a part of the 2018 CELF Elevate programme has been a “personal revolution,” learning about her own strengths through the Gallup strengths finder tool.

“I’ve spent my career looking outwards at problems, solutions, and impacts, but I’ve never really looked inwardly at myself, except when looking at my own weaknesses,” Ms Reynolds said.

“What the strength finder tool enabled me to do in a way that I’ve never understood before, was to focus on my strengths, and the strengths of others, and how to leverage and optimise them.”

It is something that resonated with her, so much so that she introduced this learning technique to her former team before leaving Momentum Waikato, as well as speaking about it at a recent workshop.

“If you know your top strengths, you can work with them and amplify them, but if you don’t know them then you’re likely to be stumbling around in the dark in many ways, because you’re unaware of what your full potential is.

“And because we’re all humble leaders, we don’t tend to really look at ourselves other than to look at our own weaknesses. We pay far too much attention to those, whereas we really should focus more on our strengths.”

Ms Reynolds left Momentum Waikato in December 2017 to begin startup venture number 12, which will combine her love of creativity, strategic philanthro­py and social entreprene­urship.

Her aim is to build a new philanthro­pic foundation as a creative social enterprise that generates smart capital and makes it easy and rewarding for people to contribute to building a better world.

She is currently in developmen­t mode and is looking for potential cofounders and digital platform partners for her new venture.

Ms Reynolds is eager to commence the Edmund Hilary Fellowship programme this month and is looking forward to meeting the other Fellows to collaborat­e, listen and learn from all their diverse experience­s.

The Fellowship is for life, and after three years, current fellows will mentor new fellows into the future.

“I’m so excited, and so in awe of the other people that have been selected for the fellowship, and I look forward to getting together to create and co-collaborat­e with them,” she said.

 ?? PHOTO / Supplied ?? Cheryl Reynolds.
PHOTO / Supplied Cheryl Reynolds.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand