Boardbound passes the baton to partner organizations

At the 2023 Capstone Event held September 18, 2023, Boardbound by Women’s Leadership Foundation announced the partner organizations it is depending upon to continue opening board positions to women.

For more than a decade, Boardbound by Women’s Leadership Foundation is proud to have served as a catalyst in Colorado for helping to increase the number of women on boards through its programs and advocacy.   

As one of the first organizations in Colorado to champion this cause, we’ve operated as a volunteer-fueled group for over a decade. As our programs and goals have grown, we realized the mission will be best advanced by other leading organizations that are well-funded and resourced.   That is why 2023 is our last year of operations.

We are excited that we are able to make financial contributons to these organizations as a token of our appreciation for their good work.

Partner Organizations

Boardbound passed the baton to partner organizations to continue opening board positions to women.



Get Board Ready

Are you interested in serving on a corporate board? Since 2023 will serve as the Women’s Leadership Foundation’s and its Boardbound programs’ final year, we’d like to invite you to a webinar on Thursday, April 27th, where we will share resources, tips in your board search and other ways to continue your journey to board service.  Learn about many other board training programs to find the one that meets your needs.

Sue Williamson will welcome you and Carly Wendt, CFP® will facilitate a discussion that includes Jo Lynne Whiting giving an overview of many alternative board training programs, Chris Schmidt explaining the Colorado Deloitte Board Readiness Program, Lisa Zúñiga Ramírez, CFA, FSA sharing her board journey which includes Corporate Boardbound and the NACD (National Association of Corporate Directors) Directorship Certified, Betsy Berkhemer-Credaire explaining the workshops offered by 50/50 Women on Boards, and Lissa Lamkin Broome sharing the University of North Carolina School of Law Director Diversity Bootcamp.

See a listing of many board training programs here.

Future of Boardbound by Women's Leadership Foundation

An Important Message

From Our Board President, Cheryl Campbell


For more than a decade, Boardbound by Women’s Leadership Foundation is proud to have served as a catalyst in Colorado for helping to increase the number of women on boards through its programs and advocacy. Thanks to supporters like you, we have been able to make a tremendous impact on the number of board opportunities available to women.
 
As one of the first organizations in Colorado to champion this cause, we’ve operated as a volunteer-fueled group for over a decade. However, as our programs and goals have grown, we have realized the mission will be best advanced by other leading organizations that are well-funded and resourced. 
 
Therefore, 2023 will serve as the Women’s Leadership Foundation’s and its Boardbound programs’ final year, with our current cohorts completing the last Corporate Boardbound programs in September.
 
When we began our board training programs in Colorado over a decade ago, there were not any local alternatives and only a few very expensive national alternatives. Today, there are a significantly greater number of board training programs women can choose from. This new generation of organizations – many affiliated with larger entities – have joined us in the mission to achieve gender balance on boards.  
 
We believe that organizations like these— Latinos Corporate Directors Association, National Association of Corporate Directors, Him for Her, Women Corporate Directors, Private Directors Association, Deloitte, 50/50 Women on Boards, Athena Alliance and Women in the Boardroom, to name a few—are now well-positioned to carry this important work forward. 
 

We Have Made a Meaningful Difference, but There is More Work to Be Done

 
Since Boardbound by Women’s Leadership Foundation launched its flagship Boardbound program in 2011, our mission has been to open more board positions to women in Colorado and beyond. When we began our work, women only held 7% of the board positions in Colorado public companies. As of 2022, women hold 24% of board positions. 
 
Through our programs specifically, we’ve had over 125 Corporate Boardbound participants, including women of color, since our inception. Since the revamped program in 2017, 60% of the Corporate Boardbound participants who have graduated at least two years ago have attained a corporate board position. Our Nonprofit Boardbound program has included over 65 women and we’ve facilitated over 200 candidate submissions through Boardconnect. 
 
However, we recognize that what we’ve started isn’t finished. Colorado is moving in the right direction, but there is more work to be done to achieve gender balance on Colorado boards, particularly for women of color. There is great momentum and a strong sense of urgency about the need to put more time, effort, resources and capital investments into achieving these goals. We are confident that like-minded organizations, partners, Colorado companies and CEOs will embrace the work we started.
 

What You Can Expect This Year

 
With 2023 as our capstone year, we are committed to the full delivery of our programs and to engaging all of our stakeholders to make as much progress as possible in this final year. We’re also committed to providing continued support for organizations carrying this work forward, as well as resources and alternatives for women in the community interested in similar programs beyond 2023. Therefore, we’d like to invite you to a webinar on Thursday, April 27, where we will share resources, tips in your board search and other ways to continue your journey to board service. Keep an eye out for an email with registration information if you’re interested in attending.  

 

A Shared Success:  We Could Not Have Done It Without You

 
We’d be remiss not to mention all who have made Boardbound by Women’s Leadership Foundation a successful organization for the past 11 years. The volunteer contributions of the community extend well beyond the Board of Directors and includes our mentors, donors, alumnae, committee members, sponsors and those who contributed their time and talent by serving as speakers at workshops and programs. Because of the time, energy, support and passion dedicated to this cause, we’ve all worked together to transform the board diversity landscape for women in Colorado.

See all that has been accomplished 

Learn more about alternative board programs

About Boardbound by Women's Leadership Foundation

Boardbound by Women’s Leadership Foundation is a 501(c)(3) dedicated to opening more board positions to women in Colorado and beyond. Boardbound inspires leaders to champion and pursue greater board diversity; equips women to skillfully step into board service; and connects board-ready talent to organizations eager to achieve extraordinary results.  For more information, visit www.womensleadershipfoundation.org

Increase in Women on Boards Stalls

Thanks to Judith Kohler, Denver Post reporter, for covering the “Women on Colorado Boards: State of the State” study. Read the article here and see more of the study results here.

A new report by Boardbound by Women’s Leadership Foundation said 24% of the board seats at Colorado public companies were held by women last year, roughly the same percenatge as in 2021.

Another disappointing finding: research identified just four of the 33 new female directors as women of color. About a third of the women who joined boards in 2021 were women of color.

“There really are a lot of business-driven advantages to having women and women of color,” Zamora said.

Latinos, for example, are part of a fast-growing buying force in the U.S. and accounted for $2.8 trillion in GDP in 2020, Zamora said. From 2010-2020, Latinos made up 73% of the growth in the U.S. labor force, according to a report by the Latino Donor Collaborative.
— Gloria Zamora, Board Director of Women's Leadership Foundation

Boardbound Collaborates with WoMAN for November 15th Event

Cost for Guests is $50.00

Agenda:

10am- Networking and Light Refreshments

10:30- Opening Comments by Kerry Crandell and Brief Overview of where women stand on Colorado and U.S. boards by Jo Lynne Whiting

10:45- Panel Presentation

11:30- Q&A and Open Networking

This year, our panel will be moderated by Carly Wendt, and we are excited to present the following speakers/panelists:

  • Maureen Upton - is on the board of ATAC Resources, a gold & copper exploration company, as well as mutual fund board.

  • Lisa Neal-Graves - is on Coherent's board of directors which is a public company that has grown via acquisitions including a recent combination with II-VI.

A special thank you to our venue sponsor Holland & Hart for their support of our annual Women on Boards event!

Sue Williamson is Interim Executive Director for Boardbound

DENVER, Colorado, October 31, 2022 – Boardbound by Women’s Leadership, a nonprofit with the mission of opening more board positions for women in Colorado and beyond, is announcing the appointment of an Interim Executive Director. 

 

We are excited to announce Sue Williamson will be serving as our part-time Interim Executive Director. Sue previously served on the Corporate Boardbound program committee and served on our Board. She has a strong commitment to this organization and board diversity and has a wealth of experience in leadership in corporate and non-profit organizations, serving as both CEO, Executive Director and past board chair.

 

Barbara Bauer, who has been in the role since December 2020 has decided to step down as Executive Director at the end of September 2022 for personal and professional reasons.

 

“The Board wants to thank Barbara for her meaningful work and engagement over the last two years in this role,” said Cheryl Campbell, Chair of the Board for Boardbound. “Barbara demonstrated a great deal of support for our mission and continues to be a supporter of board diversity.”   

 

The Board is currently working on restructuring the organization through their strategic planning process. The mission for board parity is still vital for companies in Colorado and beyond and the organization is fully committed to their current Corporate Boardbound program cohort.

 

“The program has been well received over the years and we are proud to announce that the 2021-2022 cohort had a 100% New Promoter Score rating, said Cheryl Campbell.  “We want to thank our Corporate Boardbound Chair, Kate Frazier, and her committee on providing such a high quality and successful program this year. We look forward to another impactful year with our current Boardbound cohort which started this fall.”

 

 

About Boardbound by Women’s Leadership Foundation

Founded in 2002, Boardbound by Women’s Leadership Foundation advances the cause board parity; connects companies seeking women board members with board-ready candidates; prepares women to be board-ready through its Boardbound program and; runs the Nonprofit Boardbound program to enable women to serve on nonprofit boards.

Denver Business Journal: Every Fortune 1000 company in Colorado had at least one woman on their board last year

Women have long been underrepresented in the boardrooms of public companies. But a report released in March shows that Colorado companies are taking a step toward equality.

According to the Women on Colorado Boards: State of the State analysis, a biannual report conducted by the Denver-based nonprofit Boardbound by Women’s Leadership Foundation, 100% of Fortune 1000 companies headquartered in Colorado reported having at least one woman on their board last year — the first time those numbers were achieved since the foundation began releasing the report in 2011.

Boardbound works to open board positions to women, a mission that’s been shown to benefit companies. Gender-diverse boards are a draw for some women seeking work in their industry, and data shows having women on the board is associated with an increase in innovation, effective risk management practices and a trustworthy company image in the eyes of the public.

Read the full article.

Denver Post: "Women make up 24% of Colorado company boards, up from 7% a decade ago"

Thanks to the Denver Post article covering the foundation’s “Women on Colorado Boards: State of the State” study.

The article features Corporate Boardbound alumna Lisa Zuniga Ramirez’s journey to her first board and highlights that one-third of women board directors appointed to Colorado boards were Latinas, African American and Asian. This is a very needed improvement since women of color are so underrepresented in corporate boardrooms.

We are also excited Javier Rodriguez, CEO of DaVita, was interviewed for the article. Here’s an excerpt:

“What we strived to do very deliberately and very intentionally, was to make sure the boardroom represented the community and fell philosophically in line with how we view society and the world,” said DaVita CEO Javier Rodriguez.

Corporate Boardbound alumna Lisa Zuniga Ramirez was interviewed for this story.

Boardbound by Women’s Leadership Foundation has been tracking Colorado progress on gender diversity on boards since 2011. Here’s a snapshot of the various publications that have reported our results over time.

CEOs for Women on Boards

Intentionality. Thoughtful, intentional focus on diversity and inclusion at all levels of an organization was the theme that emerged during the evening. Boardbound by Women's Leadership Foundation CEOs for Women on Boards event brought together executives from across Colorado's largest and most respected public companies, emerging startups, established private businesses, and government-private/public partnerships.   

Led by DaVita’s CEO and host of the March 9th virtual conference, Javier Rodriguez, the group discussed Navigating the Future of Work. Mr. Rodriguez set the tone with his opening remarks, "These unprecedented times have impacted how we work, expectations from employees, and the culture in which we operate.” The discussions included: talent development and retention in a hybrid world, the impact of the great resignation, and the growing importance of diverse representation in the boardroom and C-suite. 

“For years, a company’s C-suite and board of directors could focus solely on shareholder value. Now we are expected to focus on multiple issues, including things like ESG, DE&I, shifting customer expectations, retention, and digital transformation," Rodriguez said. Corporate Boardbound, our year-long, intensive program trains qualified, executive-level women from diverse backgrounds to not only serve on boards, but provide the leadership needed in 2022 given the array of issues impacting business. 

Mr. Rodriguez was joined by three respected Colorado CEOs, Anne Noonan, CEO, Summit Materials; Dave Boennighausen, CEO, Noodles & Company, and Adam Contos, CEO, RE/MAX; each facilitated breakout sessions during the event. 

From these discussions, several actionable viewpoints were shared:

·       Select a small cohort of your highly talented leaders for a 1-year experience where they are exposed to the board, attend board meetings, learn from those that prepare boards in order to expose them to what happens behind those doors.

·       Review your leadership matrix to identify current depth, gaps, and opportunities for building skill sets with your executive and upper-middle management teams. 

·       Add women and diversity to your board because you want a better board, one better equipped to bring different experience and perspective to new business challenges in the face of disruption and growth in a very tumultuous global market.   

·       Use coaching and training as both a retention tool and mental health benefit.  It provides one more important touch point for executives and managers. 

REMAX has been mindful of its promotion path for women. More than 60% of REMAX's overall organization is women, so the board room and C-suite reflect the employee base and their buyers and sellers. 

Mr. Boennighausen, Noodles & Company CEO, shared with the group, “It's intellectually stimulating all the challenges that we've had to work through and the vulnerability that we've needed as leaders. That’s where the role of a board can be particularly valuable in terms of breaking down some of those older, more rigid expectations or stereotypes of the role boards play, especially during the last couple years.” 

As the first female CEO in the heavy construction materials industry, Ms. Noonan was fortunate to adopt a gender-balanced board. This mirrors what Boardbound by Women’s Leadership Foundation tracks with our annual “Women on Colorado Boards: State of the State” report. Colorado is moving in the right direction. Women now hold 24% of the board positions of Colorado public companies, nearly three percentage points higher than a year ago. However, Colorado lags the national average. 

Since 2016, Boardbound by Women's Leadership Foundation has partnered with Colorado CEOs and board directors to add women and women of color to their corporate boards. CEOs have hosted annual gatherings of peers to highlight the economic benefits to companies with gender-balanced boards and to share lessons learned on how to build strong, diverse boards. "We are very proud of the commitment of our Colorado CEOs and board directors, who are leading the way by adding women who bring new perspectives and impressive backgrounds to strengthen their boards, ensuring Colorado's continued economic growth," said Gloria Zamora, director of Boardbound.

Boardbound celebrates and recognizes the achievement of our Colorado CEOs who have achieved gender-balanced boards. 

Boardboud appreciates the commitment our CEO community has made to our shared mission. Ms. Noonan captured that spirit with her remarks at the CEO event, “The challenges for me is setting a purpose and a mission in our company that transforms our strategy and culture at a time when we're going through a post-COVID environment. So how do we operate effectively and efficiently while we continue to drive diversity and inclusion?”       

CEOs for Women on Boards

Since 2016, Boardbound by Women’s Leadership Foundation has partnered with Colorado CEOs and board directors to add women and women of color to their corporate boards.  CEOs have hosted annual gatherings of peers to highlight the economic benefits to companies with gender balanced boards and to share lessons learned on how to build strong diverse boards.  “We are very proud of the commitment of our Colorado CEOs and board directors, who are leading the way by adding women who bring new perspectives and impressive backgrounds to strengthen their boards, ensuring Colorado’s continued economic growth,” said Gloria Zamora, director of Boardbound.

Gender balanced boards are half women, or one more or one less when there are an odd number of board positons.

Akerna, Crocs, Summit Material and RE/MAX are especially noteworthy because their Named Executive Officers, as well as their board of directors, are gender-balanced. 

We don’t need to just talk about the importance of women in leadership positions, we need to demonstrate that it’s important. Two of our four C-Suite executives are female, over 40% of our board is female and even at the network level we’re close to 50/50 in terms of agents and franchise ownership. RE/MAX is a business that builds businesses and we’re proud our model has fostered the growth of more women entrepreneurs and business owners over the years. Leaders should reflect and represent the communities they serve so the more we see various groups represented, the better for us all.
— Adam Contos, CEO of RE/MAX

50/50 Women on Boards Events

Barbara Bauer and Jo Lynne Whiting are co-chairing the 50/50 Women on Boards Denver Conversation.

Help build the momentum for gender-balanced boards. Spread the word to your friends.

We would love to have you join these virtual events. One registration covers both the Global Conversation and the Denver Conversation.

The cost for both events is $150.

Learn how women are faring on boards of directors around the world in the Global event.Meet Colorado CEOs and Board Directors at the Denver event—and join a breakout session to address your top interests.

Learn how women are faring on boards of directors around the world in the Global event.

Meet Colorado CEOs and Board Directors at the Denver event—and join a breakout session to address your top interests.

Denver VIP Panelists

  • Paul Szurek, CEO of CoreSite and Director of CoreSite & Four Corners Property Trust

  • Rhonda Wallen, EVP Caresyntax and Director of Ekso Bionics and Boulder Community Health

  • Mary Beth Vitale, CEO of Pellera and Director of Luna Innovations & GEHA & more

  • Eric Donnelly, CEO of Crossroads Systems and Director of Crossroads systems & InBank

Breakout Sessions

There will be breakout sessions with Director Coaches for the last part of the Denver session . . . so bring your questions and ideas.

Perspective on Board Diversity - National, Local, Economic, Investment, Personal Journey

Listen to the Webinar: "Perspectives on Board Diversity”

Despite having tripled over a decade ago, only 23% of Colorado public company board positions are held by women.

We need over 200 more women on Colorado public company boards to achieve gender balanced boards -- and with that diversity achieve improved economic and social results.

Join moderator Carly Wendt as she questions four experts to discuss the benefits and challenges of opening more board positions to women, especially women of color.

Join us to dive into questions like these:

  • What is driving the National improvement in board diversity?

  • Do companies and Colorado's economy benefit from more diverse boards?

  • How does a woman make her way onto public company boards?

Panelists.png

Colorado Nears the National Average for Women on Boards of Directors

Colorado is opening more board positions to women--and yet lags the national average.

Here are highlights from the June 30, 2021 "Women on Colorado Boards: State of the State" research, conducted by Boardbound by Women's Leadership Foundation. Read the Denver Business Journal article that reports on the study results.

Thanks to Colorado CEOs and board directors who have achieved greater board diversity.

THE PRESENCE OF WOMEN IN COLORADO CORPORATE BOARDROOMS HAS REACHED 23%.

Women now hold 23% of the board positions of Colorado public companies.  This is a 4 percentage point increase in the last year.  Notice how the pace began to increase in 2017.

Women now hold 23% of the board positions of Colorado public companies. This is a 4 percentage point increase in the last year. Notice how the pace began to increase in 2017.

COLORADO LAGS THE NATIONAL AVERAGE.

COLORADO RUSSELL 3000 COMPANIES LAG THE NATIONAL AVERAGE BY 1 PERCENTAGE POINT AND ARE 6 PERCENTAGE POINTS BELOW THE TOP STATE OF MINNESOTA Of the 117 public companies in Colorado, 82 are listed on the Russell 3000.

COLORADO RUSSELL 3000 COMPANIES LAG THE NATIONAL AVERAGE BY 1 PERCENTAGE POINT
AND ARE 6 PERCENTAGE POINTS BELOW THE TOP STATE OF MINNESOTA
Of the 117 public companies in Colorado, 82 are listed on the Russell 3000.

CELEBRATE THESE COMPANIES WHO LEAD THE WAY WITH GENDER BALANCED BOARDS

Gender balance is achieved when half of board positions (plus or minus one seat) are held by women.

Gender balance is achieved when half of board positions (plus or minus one seat) are held by women.

Women of Color on Colorado Boards

It is exciting to see Latinas, African American and Asian women joining the boards of directors of Colorado public companies. Some recent appointments are:

Pictured:

  • Joanita Karoleski at Pilgrim’s Pride

  • Gina Loften at TTEC

  • Tse Li “Lily” Yang at CSG Systems

  • Anddria Varnado at Red Robin Gourmet Burgers

  • Pavithra Mahesh at InnovAge

  • Patricia Arvielo at Century Communities

This is a sampling.  We do not have a source for a comprehensive census of women of color directors.

This is a sampling.  We do not have a source for a comprehensive census of women of color directors.

Not pictured:

  • Jewel Burks Solomon at Crucible Acquisition

  • Kimberly Ellison-Taylor at EverCommerce

  • Debby Soo at EverCommerce

  • Patricia Salas Pineda at Frontier

  • Anaal Udaybabu at Gaia

  • Lydia Kennard at Healthpeak Properties

  • Christy Haubegger at Liberty Trip Advisor

  • Diana Sands at PDC Energy

  • Hannah Cho at Riot Blockchain

  • Tamla Oates Forney at Summit Materials

  • Nayaki Nayyar at Veritone