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Spotlight

Shirin Ahmed

IPN Spotlight: Shirin Ahmed (Senior Project Manager, International Rescue Committee)

Shirin Ahmed is the Senior Project Manager at the International Rescue Committee (IRC) where she works with IRC’s innovation unit to design solutions for people affected by conflicts. In addition to managing the Center’s portfolio, Shirin supports research and implementation of programs to prevent domestic violence in Liberia & Uganda.
Prior to IRC, Shirin was a Program Manager at Yale University’s Global Health Leadership Institute where she worked on a multi-country program focusing on supply chain management in Africa. Their focus was to evaluate best practices from corporations such as Coca-Cola, and provide recommendations to ministries of health to improve access to critical medicines in remote areas of Tanzania, Ghana, and others. Here, Shirin also helped launch a research project/startup called PremieBreathe to develop a low-cost breathing device for newborns in Ethiopia. Shirin grew up in Pakistan & completed her undergraduate degree in Political Science & International Studies from Yale University in 2012.

What skills have helped you in your career?
• Project management
• Qualitative research and analysis
• Field experience in developing countries
• Communications

What do you wish you had known or done differently throughout your career?
I wish I was more confident in my career choices – I remember spending many hours worrying about not applying to consulting jobs as my peers did and instead choosing to spend a summer in Uganda (which ultimately deepened my interests in the social impact space). I wish I had known at that time that it is okay to experiment and to create our own career path.
At the same time, I wish I had experimented even more with my career – worked on different gigs, startups, done multiple projects at one time. I think those experiences would have given me a broader perspective to bring to my next job and grad school.
Finally, while I took some basic French and Arabic in high school and college, I wish I was proficient in one of those languages. We live in a highly-globalized world so whether working abroad or in the US, knowing another language would have opened many more opportunities for me.

What do you do for continuing education and improvement?
I am fortunate to be living in NYC where I am constantly exposed and have the opportunity to seek out a variety of educational experiences – documentaries, art shows book tours, cultural festivals that continue to broaden my perspective.

What is next for you in your career?
In the short-term, I will continue to enhance my project management skills within the innovation and design space through my work at the International Rescue Committee. Down the road, I plan to pursue a Master’s degree in health economics and policy that would complement my field experiences.

What advice would you offer to others?
Don’t get too comfortable in any job or profession. As soon as you reach a point of saturation, move on to do something different so you can continue learning from your experiences.
Secondly, don’t worry about becoming an expert in the early years of your career. I speak with a Project manager bias but I do think that companies find it extremely valuable to have people on their team who can work across disciplines. I have been lucky to be in positions where I have communicated with government officials, corporate leaders, tech experts and designers, and all these interactions have allowed me to work effectively across many functions.

Areas where you can help other Ismailis:
• Nonprofits placements
• Working in developing contexts
• Research and project management jobs

Please provide the link to your LinkedIn profile:
Shirin Ahmed

If you would like to nominate someone to be a part of the spotlight, click Here.

Categories
Resources

Job and Internship, Search Advice and Tips for International Students (Dec. 3, 2017)

 

Job and Internship, Search Advice and Tips for International Students
Webinar was held on Sunday, December 3, 2017

Webinar Overview
Are you an international student in the U.S.? Are you thinking about coming to study then work in the U.S.?
If you answered yes to either of those questions, this webinar is for you. Come hear a panel of international students who recently got jobs/internships talk about their searches and experiences. This webinar will also feature a presentation from an immigration attorney, a compilation of job search best practices, and live Q&A with the panelists.

Notable Points in Webinar to Jump to
Webinar Purpose: 2:27
Presentation by immigration Fauzia Amlani US Employment Options for F-1 Students After Graduation: 5:10
Speaker Panel Discussion: 28:00
Overview of Job Search Tips and IPN Resources: 52:15

Speaker Profiles
Zeba Medhi (View IPN Profile)
I came to USA from India in 2011 to pursue my MBA from Ohio (Kent State University). After I graduated in 2013 , I found it really difficult to find a job as none of the companies were willing to sponsor me since I was not from an IT background. Finding jobs in my field (Business or Finance) became extremely challenging. Then I decided to take some IT courses and got myself certified in Salesforce (CRM application). Today I work as a Business Lead/Product Owner with AT&T handling IT projects aimed at streamlining business models and sales flow processes to increase efficiency and revenue. My responsibilities include understanding client requirements, analyzing and suggesting pathway for success,drafting technical documents for my development team, performing testing to check viability of solution and finally training client agents to get accustomed to the new process.

Riyaz Gilani
Riyaz is currently a 2nd year MBA student at Michigan State University’s Broad college of Business. He has chosen a career in strategy consulting and will be joining Mckinsey & Company after his MBA. Prior to his MBA, Riyaz has 5 years’ experience working for one of India’s largest Oil&Gas company. He has a degree in Mechanical Engineering and is passionate about technology and business.

Fauzia Amlani
Fauzia Amlani is an associate attorney in the Atlanta office of Ogletree Deakins. Fauzia has practiced immigration law exclusively for four years, and currently focuses her practice on employment-based immigration, assisting corporate clients in the process of hiring and employing foreign nationals.

Ashish Merani (View IPN Profile)
Ashish Merani is a Software Development Engineer in Test at Research now, the world’s leading digital data collection company. He graduated with Master of Science degree in Computer Science from California State University Fullerton.

Alisha Sonawalla (View IPN Profile)
Alisha is originally from India, and came to the US for herundergraduate studies. She is currently in her junior year at NYU (New York University) and is pursuing a dual degree program in Computer Science & Data Science. She had the opportunity last summer to work on Natural Language Processing at IBM and hopes to pursue a software engineering role in the future with a focus on AI and NLP.

Ali Maredia (View IPN Profile)
Ali Maredia is a software engineer at Red Hat working on open source cloud storage software. He graduated from the University of Michigan in 2014, and works in Ann Arbor Michigan. He has been on the IPN Connect team since April 2017, and is the current IPN National Jobs and Careers Lead.


The presenter(s) have granted permission for use of this content for IPN members only.  Please do not share this content outside of IPN without requesting permission from the presenter(s).

Categories
Resources

VIDEO: Fields and Skills of the Future & Discovery, Sharing, & Application of Knowledge in Islam (Dec. 10, 2017)

 

Fields and Skills of the Future & Discovery, Sharing, & Application of Knowledge in Islam – Zain A. Gulamali (View IPN Profile)
Webinar was held on Sunday, December 10, 2017

Program Overview
Join the Ismaili Professionals Network (IPN) for a Spotlight Session on Fields and Skills of the Future and Discovery, Sharing, and Application of Knowledge in Islam. Zain Gulamali, venture capital investor at Amazon’s Alexa Fund, will guide us through Fields of the Future (e.g. computational linguistics, food science and technology, early childhood development); Skills of the Future (e.g. coding and digital literacy, intellectual humility, global orientation, empathy); and their foundational roots in Islam. We will also explore how to incorporate constantly-changing trends into one’s career path planning process.

Speaker Profile
Zain A. Gulamali works in Corporate Development and Ventures at Amazon in Seattle. At Amazon, Zain manages the Amazon Alexa Fund, which is Amazon’s $100 million venture capital fund to invest in consumer and enterprise applications of voice technology, IoT / connected devices, artificial intelligence, robotics, and more. Prior to Amazon, he worked in mobile gaming (Pocket Gems), private equity (Warburg Pincus and Monitor Clipper Partners), and investment banking (Goldman Sachs). Zain is a graduate of the Stanford Graduate School of Business and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). He has served as a National Board Member of the Aga Khan Education Board since 2012, and he has served in various national and local leadership roles in Muppies (Muslim Urban Professionals).


The presenter(s) have granted permission for use of this content for IPN members only.  Please do not share this content outside of IPN without requesting permission from the presenter(s).

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Event

IPN Career Panel : Webinar on Sunday, December 10th 2017 – Fields and Skills of the Future & Discovery, Sharing, & Application of Knowledge in Islam

Join the Ismaili Professionals Network (IPN) for a Spotlight Session on Fields and Skills of the Future and Discovery, Sharing, and Application of Knowledge in Islam. Zain Gulamali, venture capital investor at Amazon’s Alexa Fund, will guide us through Fields of the Future (e.g. computational linguistics, food science and technology, early childhood development); Skills of the Future (e.g. coding and digital literacy, intellectual humility, global orientation, empathy); and their foundational roots in Islam.
We will also explore how to incorporate constantly-changing trends into one’s career path planning process.

When: Sun, Dec 10, 2017 12:00 PM – 1:00 PM EST

For more details and to register click Here!

Categories
Spotlight

Nabila Alibhai

IPN Spotlight: Nabila Alibhai (Founder, inCOMMONS)

Nabila Alibhai leads inCOMMONS, a new cultural production lab focused on invigorating public spaces and inspiring collective responsibility for our cultural and environmental heritage. Nabila Alibhai has had significant career in strategic and creative consulting. She has held positions in the Aga Khan Development Network, the United Nations and the International Organization for Migration and has worked on projects in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Kenya, Tanzania, the United States and Switzerland.
She has a Master of Public Health from Yale University and is trained in conflict resolution. She was also mid-career fellow in MIT’s Special Program for Urban and Regional Studies in order to advance her efforts on community solidarity through public spaces. She is a TED Speaker and author.

What skills have helped you in your career?
Skills: Strategic planning, communications, policy development.
Sectors: conflict resolution, community resilience, public health, urban planning.

What do you wish you had known or done differently throughout your career?
I wish I had put less effort into trying to define myself. Being at TED Global this year I met so many more people who have eclectic lives, and whose passions don’t quite fit a conventional mold. Though not without it’s challenges, doing new things necessitates stepping out of old paradigms.

What do you do for continuing education and improvement?
Working as a consultant means I’m constantly learning. A mid-career fellowship (MIT Special Program in Urban and Regional Studies) was also a wonderful way of taking a step back and redirecting my life’s work.

What is next for you in your career?
Enabling pluralism, solidarity, health and safety through leadership development, governance and creating scalable public space initiatives. I do this through consulting, designing projects through inCOMMONS, and thought leadership – public speaking and writing.

What advice would you offer to others?
Figure out what you would do if no one was paying you to do it and do more of it.

Areas where you can help other Ismailis:
• Thinking through careers in development
• Figuring out career transitions
• Thinking through whether to go back to school
• Experience sharing in working in conflict and in public health

Please provide the link to your LinkedIn profile:
Nabila Alibhai

If you would like to nominate someone to be a part of the spotlight, click Here.

Categories
Spotlight

Alim Hirani

IPN Spotlight: Alim Hirani (General Manager/Managing Director at Hilti India)

Alim Hirani has been General Manager / Managing Director of Hilti India since October 2015. He is responsible for the strategy and long term development of the Hilti organization in India. He began his career with Hilti in 2004 in the United States and he has held various diversified roles in sales, finance, strategic marketing and general management. Alim has lived in Houston, Dallas, Tulsa and in San Francisco where he was Divisional Head for Northern California, Oregon, Washington & Alaska.
In 2015, he was appointed as General Manager / MD for Hilti India and relocated to New Delhi for this role. He has always been instrumental in developing and implementing strategy in alignment with Hilti’s mid- and long-term goals. Alim has majorly contributed towards steering the business results through the execution of strategic initiatives while fostering the development of organizational talent. He holds a Bachelor in Finance/Marketing and an executive MBA from the University of Houston.

What skills have helped you in your career?
Empathetic leadership, passion for people, relentless pursuit to deliver results, listening more talking less, being curious and being patient yet persistent.

What do you wish you had known or done differently throughout your career?
Don’t get dishearten by failures. Failing is learning and it is part of the development process. Take every moment positively and don’t be to hard on yourself when things don’t go right. If you are not making mistakes, you are making the biggest mistake.

What do you do for continuing education and improvement?
1) Read – I travel alot and as a result find time to read a lot in the air. I recently read Hit Refresh, by Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella. It’s an authentic masterpiece about the importance to stop what we’re doing, rethink, re-energize, & recalibrate
2) Social media platforms – I believe social media if utilized correctly can be a huge learning platform to continuously learn and develop
3) External stimuli – once a year I make it a point to engage in an external conference or executive education to gain different perspectives and stay relevant. The world is changing at such rapid speed and it’s important to try and keep up. It’s very easy to get blinders on and begin to see the world from your viewpoint
4) Mentorship – Leadership can sometimes be a very lonely job and it’s important to have someone to give you feedback and that you can reflect with from time to time

What is next for you in your career?
I have had a very simple policy of not worrying about what is next. I believe in focusing on doing the role you are in, doing it well, developing people and delivering results. As long as I am personally growing, having fun and having the opportunity to have an impact and difference in people’s lives, I am happy doing what I do. When the time is right and if I am ready, the organization will give me a new challenge.

What advice would you offer to others?
1) Set your own benchmark on what success looks like – don’t let others define your personal journey
2) Have a mentor and be a mentor – I truly believe that you can have everything in life you want if you will just help enough other people get what they want
3) Don’t forget to give back – when you give back (in any form) and are a contributing member of civil society, I believe you always receive much more than you give
4) Discipline and focus are underrated and boring, however, they are cornerstones for success

Krish Dhanam said it best – “Plan w/attitude, prepare w/ aptitude, participate w/ servitude, receive w/ gratitude, & that should be enough to separate you from the multitudes.”

Areas where you can help other Ismailis:
• Building high performing teams
• Career advice
• Sales leadership
• Job placement
• Strategic Marketing

Please provide the link to your LinkedIn profile:
Alim Hirani

If you would like to nominate someone to be a part of the spotlight, click Here.

Categories
Event

IPN Economic Forecasting Summit 2018 : Atlanta, GA on Thursday, January 18th 2018

IPN is proud to present our 2018 ANNUAL ECONOMIC FORECASTING EVENT!

Come join IPN for its third annual Economic Forecasting Summit. The Former Director of Economic Forecasting for the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, Galina Alexeenko, will share her thoughts on opportunities and challenges in the economy and real estate for the coming year. This event will be held at the prestigious 103 West in Buckhead on January 18th. Enjoy an exquisite lunch along with an amazing presentation by renowned Economist of the Region.

WHEN: Thursday, 11am-1pm

WHERE: 103 West Paces Ferry Road, Atlanta GA 30305

Be sure to purchase your Tickets and reserve your spot, as space is limited!

Categories
Event

IPN Career Panel : Webinar on Sunday, December 3rd 2017 – Job & Internship Search Advice & Best Practices for International Students

Are you an international student in the U.S.? Are you thinking about coming to study then work in the U.S.?

If you answered yes to either of those questions, this webinar is for you. Come hear a panel of international students who recently got jobs/internships talk about their searches and experiences on Sunday, December 3rd at 11:00AM EST. This webinar will also feature a presentation from an immigration attorney, a compilation of job search best practices, and live Q&A with the panelists.

Register at the link below!

https://register.gotowebinar.com/register/9081294630636385549

Categories
Event

IPN Networking Event : Edison, NJ on Saturday, December 2nd 2017

The Ismaili Professionals Network (IPN) is excited to invite you to a networking event to be held in Edison, NJ on Saturday, December 2nd 2017.
We are grateful to our panelists to be able to share their expert knowledge on a variety of topics. Below are the names of the panel members and the tentative topics that will be discussed-

1) Ayeesha Sachedina: BOA Payment innovation
2) Shanif Dhanani: Startup- Stages and Structures
3) Salman Himani: Retail- Traditional versus Trending

Where : Edison, NJ Jamat Khana
Time: 11am onwards followed by lunch at 12pm
Open Q&A session from 12:30pm onwards

Categories
Event

IPN Panel Discussion : Washington, D.C. on Sunday, December 3rd 2017

IPN will be holding a panel discussion on “Making an Impact Through the Public Sector” in Washington, D.C. on December 3rd 2017. The panel will include jamati members with experience working for a variety of different government institutions. The discussion will be held prior to the Dua gathering and food will be served after the gathering.

Address: Downtown DC, at 1111 19th Street NW
Time: 5pm onwards