MoBetter News
Business

How This Black Female Founder Is Helping Women and Minorities Get Ahead at Work

SistersInc. podcast Episode 5

When a successful venture capitalist comes to a turning point in her career where she’s not sure what step to take next, what does she do? She co-founds a startup to give other women the professional tools and guidance she wished she’d had. In Episode 5 of the SistersInc. podcast, “Making an Impact,” Lisa Skeete Tatum shares how tech platform Landit is that solution.

“After over a decade as a venture capitalist—the thing that I thought I’d worked for all my life—I realized I didn’t want to do that anymore. But I didn’t know what I wanted to do,” Skeete Tatum says.

“Everyone expected me to know. It felt pretty horrible,” she continues. “We know there’s a social cost to walking around saying, ‘I need a little bit of help,’ or ‘I don’t have it all figured out.’ So we suffer in silence.”

!function(n){if(!window.cnx){window.cnx={},window.cnx.cmd=[];var t=n.createElement(‘iframe’);t.display=’none’,t.onload=function(){var n=t.contentWindow.document,c=n.createElement(‘script’);c.src=’//cd.connatix.com/connatix.player.js’,c.setAttribute(‘async’,’1′),c.setAttribute(‘type’,’text/javascript’),n.body.appendChild(c)},n.head.appendChild(t)}}(document);

cnx.cmd.push(function() {
cnx({
playerId: ’84ab7bc2-7cca-4366-9b8f-8d5d05851c53′
, mediaId: ’21a7377c-7cab-471b-a723-d04e1482e295′
}).render(‘ea8b22e0df9343d5b83f773f2cc3d211’);
});

So she started working on a project that would “change the world” by helping diverse talent—women and people of color—unlock their professional potential.

“If I could address that massive problem of wanting to achieve success on your own but not knowing how, then I would have impact,” Skeete Tatum says, “because so many of us are not bringing the full measure of our talent to the workplace.”

Landit, billed as a “one size fits one” approach because it can offer a personalized career playbook, can be used both by individual professionals and by companies looking to develop and retain their diverse talent.

Last year, it raised $13 million in series A funding, putting Skeete Tatum in rarefied air as a black woman founder. To hear how she did it, check out Episode 5 of the SistersInc. podcast.


SistersInc. is Black Enterprise’s podcast for and about women business owners, hosted by Executive Managing Editor Alisa Gumbs. Black women are the fastest-growing group of entrepreneurs in America and on every episode, we’ll sit down with one successful CEO to share how she slays the challenges of being a black woman in business.

 

Read Full Post

Related posts

Krystal Barker Buissereth, CFA

TNJ Staff

Atlantic City Mayor And Superintendent Wife Accused Of Physically and Emotionally Abusing Teenage Daughter 

Sharelle Burt

Jay-Z Puts His Money Behind Criminal Justice Reform With Lawsuit Against Mississippi Prison

Cedric 'BIG CED' Thornton