Hult Alumni Magazine Hult Alumni Magazine 2020 | Page 24

#5000 by 2020 Elpida Kokkota Huge it certainly is, with Elpida’s ef- forts now spanning upward of ten countries as far-flung as Costa Rica and Ukraine. The MeXOXO pro- Athens, Greece @elpidamexoxo gram has evolved to offer three stages to women in need of “a little push,” In 2015, Elpida Kokkota made a commitment to the as she describes it. The educational as mentioned, kick off with Clinton Global Initiative to empower 5,000 women parties, interactive sessions in both hard and by 2020. Naturally, this recipient of the Greek soft skills, with plenty of motivation and encouragement. One-to-one International Women Award for Social Responsi- personal consultations follow, con- bility is on track to hit her target—and beyond. As ducted by MeXOXO’s team of ex- from which participants take Elpida’s non-profit community MeXOXO contin- perts, away a fully formed business plan, ues to build momentum on the global stage, she three-year financial plan, and pitch The third stage, recently re- discusses adapting her offering for the current cli- deck. vised, places MeXOXO women in mate and upholding a positive outlook in the most front of investors, offering the chance to see their business ideas re- challenging of times. alized. In the first 18 months of op- eration alone, the program has opened $1M worth of opportunities to women previously excluded from the business world. “I learn so much from them,” says Elpida of the global “sisterhood.” “We support women through serious health and/or family issues. And it’s through this that we learn to see life differently.” Her infectious positivity, she thinks, is in part generational: “We are driven by higher values. Our How many organizations do you parents … raised us to be more free, know that throw “educational par- more creative. I believe chaos is ties”? Welcome to MeXOXO, important to existence because it where positivity, color, and fun radi- means happiness is coming—it’s like ate from the activities of a diverse the Big Bang.” But it’s also on entre- network of women who are, con- preneurs like herself to “draft the versely, facing some extremely tough future of the world,” she says. “The situations. “We’re more of a com- more [they] create, the better this munity than a network,” says Elpida world will be. The majority of Refer a friend of her creation. “Our model is [based people who create social enterprises Do you work with people with Hult on] synergy. We have recorded that do this because they don’t want to DNA? Recommend a colleague, friend, for every woman we help, she testi- see pain anymore. At the end of the or family member to study at Hult to fies to support four more women day, if we are not imagining some- receive rewards for both you and them. within her family and community. thing bigger, higher—then what’s Contact [email protected] for more info. The indirect impact is huge.” the point?” Founder & CEO 24 MBA Class of 2011 Changing Planet The Human Moment By Dr. Amy Bradley Leadership professor, Hult International Business School Our organizations are becom- ing increasingly dehumanized. The move toward an AI-driven world of work means intense competition for a finite number of “human” resources, and in our drive to get ahead, our capacity to notice and care for ourselves and others is diminished. → Faculty 25