#WerqueLikeABoss

Millennials that Slay Their Careers-Chasity Cooper

To continue my #WerqueLikeABoss series, Iโ€™m highlighting millennials that slay their careers, while also inspiring and giving back to their communities. These millennial women are nothing short of amazing, simply because they arenโ€™t afraid to use their passions to help them live their best lives. Throughout this series, youโ€™ll learn about a diverse group of women who took the initiative to jumpstart their careers.  

MEET CHASITY COOPER: COMMUNICATIONS SPECIALIST, JOURNALIST AND WINE ENTHUSIAST

unnamed.jpg

Share your career journey. How'd you land at HerAgenda.com? Share more about your current role at the Regional Plan Association. 

I started at Her Agenda as a contributor in 2013 and last summer, was asked to come on the team as the Digital Director to manage our Slack community. Since then, I've been able to curate content for our community of 300 women, host conversations with women across several disciplines and partner with different brands on cool activations for our subscribers. My career has been quite the adventure thus far: I graduated from Syracuse University in 2011, moved to Washington, D.C. for a summer internship and six years later, I thought it was time to switch it up. I studied Public Relations and Marketing, so my career has been centered around communications. I moved to New York City four months ago, and started working for Regional Plan Association and I'm responsible for managing our social media channels, and creating strategies around how we discuss our work and tell our story both traditionally and digitally. 

Give your best career advice for the millennial woman who is trying to navigate within the PR/Communications field. 

Absorb as much as you can. Ask all of the question. Try, fail and try again. In communications, it's all about building relationships and do your best to be consistent. Your work will always speak for itself, but it's how you take the time to connect with others that will be remembered. 

Where do you hope to be professionally in 5 years? 

I like to think I have a dual career: one as a communications specialist and a freelance journalist. By the time I'm 33, I hope to be a Vice President of communications at a company and still writing for myself and others. I would also love to have a wine certification under my belt too because that's a hobby of mine that's growing more and more every. I hope that my career affords me the opportunity to travel around the world, to meet different people and to share my God-given gifts with others. 

The Importance of Living Your Truth: A Conversation With Sequoia Blodgett Presented by ColorComm

The Importance of Living Your Truth: A Conversation With Sequoia Blodgett Presented by ColorComm

Last night, I was able to finally meet a woman that Iโ€™ve looked up to for about two years, Sequoia Blodgett, Tech Editor at Black Enterprise. I first became familiar with Sequoia when I started writing for her wellness platform, 7am.life. Through ColorCommโ€™s Phenomenal Women Action Campaign, we had the unique privilege to hear about Sequoiaโ€™s career journey and important lessons sheโ€™s learned on the way.

Read More

Millennials That Slay Their Careers-Michelle Banks & Mariah Smith

Millennials That Slay Their Careers-Michelle Banks & Mariah Smith

A few months after I graduated from the University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA) I came to Google as a โ€œNew Gradโ€ in August 2014. Iโ€™ve always been ambitious and I remember during my freshman year at Howard University, that someone told me โ€œfreshmen arenโ€™t offered internships.โ€ I took that as a personal challenge. I was so determined and ended up accepting an internship offer from Travelers Insurance as a Claim Leadership Development intern, completing not one but TWO summer internships.

Read More

Millennials That Slay Their Careers-Jasmyn Lawson

Millennials That Slay Their Careers-Jasmyn Lawson

So I began my career in media while at Spelman College. I had a few internships throughout college but my biggest opportunity came my Junior year when I got the chance to work for Cartoon Networks digital team at their headquarters in Atlanta. That's when I first realized that I had a passion for both television and digital media. After graduation in 2013, I moved to New York to start the NBC Page Program, a post grad program for those wishing to pursue a career in media. I then left NBC in 2014 and moved over to Showtime where I had the chance to help manage their e-commerce site for fans of their shows and their internal sales teams. 

Read More