Believe in yourself. You are enough.

An interview is about mutual selection.

Your energy is a barometer for your passion.

I have always been fascinated by entrepreneurship.

You thrive in your career when you thrive with yourself.

Power is ultimately about the energy you emanate from within.

Entrepreneurship is a muscle, and winning is an endurance game.

Look at an interview as an organic part of building a relationship.

The interview is not over when the meeting is over. Never forget that.

Trust me: Every entrepreneur has felt like an utter loser at some point.

Just displaying your resume online, which LinkedIn lets you do, isn't enough.

There's this huge taboo around talking about money that we have as a society.

I want every single millennial woman to feel like Levo has improved their lives.

You are bigger than your self-doubt. Remind yourself of that each and every day.

A smile and good energy. They will take you farther than any material possession.

You don't get what you deserve - it would be amazing if life worked out that way.

The issue of women in the workplace is not a women's issue: it's an economic problem.

Taking care of myself used to be at the bottom of my list, but I'm all about wellness.

If what you're doing today is moving you closer to your passion, then that's wonderful.

Education has rules and parameters. Women outperform men when the parameters are clear.

Don't let the good days get to your head, and don't let the bad days get to your heart.

We are very committed to highlighting women succeeding in entrepreneurship or technology.

I'm nicknaming millennials 'the purpose generation' because we're making so many decisions.

Having women who are already successful take the leap of faith to help younger women is critical.

I really believe that cultivating creativity, as a general principle, is about managing your energy.

When faced with an obstacle or uncertainty in your abilities, use it as an opportunity to grow your talents.

Give yourself time to digitally detox from your constantly connected life, and keep your phone away from your bed.

As individuals, we professional women need to learn how to raise our hands and ask for more throughout our careers.

As a tech optimist, I believe productivity woes can be solved through cleverly imagined and implemented technology.

As CEO of Levo, a millennial-focused career platform, I'm fascinated by how others turn their passion into success.

You need to be really great at your job. You need a strong network of peers, and you need a strong network of mentors.

Impostor syndrome, or feeling like a fraud at work, at home, or anywhere else in your life, will probably affect you at some point.

A mentor is someone who is willing to give you advice that isn't in the best interest for them. It takes a real mentor to put you first.

A lot of the magic that is behind success can be unlocked through mentorships. Mentorships are a fundamental part of the success equation.

The power of storytelling - of elevating the voices and examples of incredible leaders who have overcome odd after odd - remains absolute.

I live my life as an entrepreneur in every possible way I can by applying the question 'What can be done better and how?' at every juncture.

The failures that you beat yourself up over are the ones where you experienced warning signs and can connect the dots backwards after the fact.

We cannot solve the STEM gender gap without solving it for millennials. They're our first digital natives, and they're willing to learn quickly.

Fashion doesn't boost my confidence - rather, it provides a canvas to express or reflect it and whatever is influencing me in my life at the moment.

The most important thing that I did was to actually take the time to sit down every month and do a review of what I spent and look at it objectively.

One of the biggest questions that we hear from young graduates is, 'I'm not even sure where to start because I'm not quite sure who I want to be yet.'

Whenever you have to figure out things that aren't explicit, like in salary negotiations, you see differences in how women and people of color succeed.

I first began to realize that it was time to leave my job when the sight of my manager's telephone number on my screen made my heart contract and burn.

Collaboration is like carbonation for fresh ideas. Working together bubbles up ideas you would not have come up with solo, which gets you further faster.

The way in which you accomplish your goals and help your customers needs to be very flexible depending upon how those customers are reacting in real time.

I admire people who operate from a place of love and who have gone through the rigorous process of finding and articulating their purpose, whatever it may be.

From a professional standpoint, our transformation of the labor landscape at scale through technology with Levo is the highest and best direction of my energy.

There's nothing worse for a mentor than being asked generic questions that anyone could answer. They want to ensure that their time is having an impact on you.

Trust your instinct. And if you can't tell what your instinct is telling you, learn how to peel back the noise in your life that is keeping you from hearing it.

I would encourage everyone in their first job not to ask themselves, 'Where do I want to be?' but 'What do I want to learn from this?' Use that opportunity to be a sponge.

Share This Page