Welcome to the Forty Over 40 blog. We frequently spotlight one of our honorees and their thoughts on reinvention, mentorship and momentum…plus a peek into what makes them tick.
This Q & A is with Sharon Wienbar, the CEO of Hackbright Academy. Sharon is innovating her field of work by being dedicated to closing the gender gap in the technology industry by providing women and underrepresented genders a safe space to learn and the resources to successfully transition into a software engineering role.
1) What was a pivotal momentum of reinvention for you?
In November, 2015 I gave up 14 years of cushy venture capital investing and advising to become the CEO of Hackbright Academy, a software engineering school for women, that was also a bootstrapped startup. I’d held operating executive jobs at startups and public companies before becoming an investor, but I’d never been the CEO. And as a bootstrapped company (meaning, self-funded with no outside investors), Hackbright was operating on a thin cash cushion as it reached for growth. I went from being a board member giving advice to CEOs with many millions of dollars of “other people’s money” to the hands on doer at a small company with only our own resources and only the founder as my co-board member.
2) Who has been a valuable mentor or sponsor?
My partner at Scale Venture Partners, Kate Mitchell, has been a guide and awesome teammate since she recruited me to the firm in 2001. I didn’t realize how lucky I was at the time to join one of the few venture capital firms in America with a woman partner, and we had multiple. Kate set the tone that allows inclusion and diversity to flourish at ScaleVP.
3) What is your biggest goal right now?
Hackbright is growing. My biggest goal right now is for us to keep delivering the incredible quality experience our women students love while we open new campuses. I came to Hackbright from Scale Venture Partners….I am now learning to scale myself and my company.
I also recently achieved a personal goal, which was to join the board of a non-tech company to help give them insight to Silicon Valley. In June 2016, I joined the Board of Directors of Colfax Corporation, a diversified industrial company with global operations.
4) How did you get your first job? How did you jump to your second job?
My first job was in a contemporary fine jewelry store in a middle-class suburban mall. I LOVED the abstract jewelry and could sell it like crazy because I believed. Now that I’m more experienced in business, I’m grateful that I learned selling at an early age, as it is part of any career in some form. When I left college, I worked as a consultant at Bain & Company, which was a fabulous intense course in business and leadership.
5) What time do you typically wake up? What do you do every morning?
My alarm goes off at 4am most mornings, because I’m on the water or the rowing machine with my competitive rowing team almost every day. I took up rowing in my late 40’s to have a reason to work out in the morning—I was a night owl and a sloth—and didn’t realize how much the sport would become part of my personal identity.
6) How do you unplug? How often do you unplug?
When I row, I have to totally unplug because rowing demands your full attention. It’s mind-cleansing to focus just on the power and the technique of the stroke and to release your tensions to flow with the other rowers in the boat.
7) What challenge / achievement are you most proud of?
My daughters are my proudest achievement. They are kind, funny and hard working young adults. As a working mom, I often agonized over them versus work. Late in their teens they came to me to say “we know we ragged on you for working when we were little, but now we see how your work has prepared us to be adults, and we want you to know we are happy that you did what you did.”
8) What was the last business book you read?
I’m reading “Shoe Dog” now, Phil Knight of Nike’s memoir. There are excellent leadership and business lessons in many books. Two favorites are “Boys in the Boat” and “Shackleton’s Endurance” because both chronicle a team’s success through incredible hardship.
9) What song can’t you get out of your head?
I make a lot of custom playlists for my rowing team’s workouts. A favorite earworms is “Everything is Awesome”.
10) What is your secret indulgence?
Chocolate. Dark chocolate.
Check outSharon Wienbar’s full 40 Over 40 profile here!