Professional from the desert- Huguette Rahme

Huguette Rahme personifies the female professional in the middle east. People like her set trends for women in a society where not a lot of women entrepreneurs are out and about. Having met her, I found her drive, passion and ambition exemplary. A few words from her and we hope it serves an inspiration to other budding talent in the region. Huguette is Lebanese and here’s what she shares with us.

HG-1

 

Q- What is your profession and tell me about yourself, your background?

HR- Entrepreneur /General manager Since 2011, Scalla human resources consultancy, based in the UAE.

However main activity is the liaison between the client’s requirement in terms of human force and candidates searching for a growth in their career. Very dynamic and enthusiastic business environment. A lot to do with human interaction/ attitude/values.

Prior to that, I was working as business development Manager with a French company in the UAE for 6 years. Earlier, I handled an American franchise in Lebanon for 4 years and earlier, for around 6 years, as a business development manager covering six international territories ( Turkey, Cyprus, Egypt, UAE, Qatar, Lebanon) which involved a lot of traveling to conduct meetings and discussions.

I have a master degree in business administration followed with an MBA.

 

Q-What drove you to choose this career path?

HR -A- 50% is coping with life path I didn’t have an interference with. As if it was imposed by life itself, but I had to deal with 50% i can say is by my own choice.

-B-

The entrepreneurial drive, the love for adventure and trying to achieve something and be someone in life.

-C-

I do not have the luxury to be rich, so having to live and take care of dependents I need to work hard and generate income.

 

Q- Have you moved a lot for your profession and do you like travelling?

HR- Yes, as stated above

 

Q- What in your opinion are the three major traits to be successful in your profession?

HR- 1- To start something and to finish it

2- To have a creative mind and a problem solving mind

3- To love what you do, to be honest and clear on what you do.

Even when you face challenges and disappointments, and when reaching the bottom

4- to be flexible and accept people as they are.. And manage to work with the given components

 

Q- What have been your biggest challenges over the course of your career?

HR- 1- Taking major risks financially.

2- Given it all. Mainly Time.

3- Believe in something before it is realized

 

Q- Anything you did in your career you’d advise other upcoming professionals not to do

HR- Yes. Try to check the background of your clients before Signing a contract with.

Some can drag you down without your approval and knowledge

 

Q- Would you recommend this profession to young hopefuls?

HR- Of course. Very dynamic one.

 

Q- What is your advice to young graduates and professionals?

HR- 1- Keep learning every day in every way

2- Don’t take yourself too seriously no matter what. (We r far from perfection)

3- Believe in team work

4- Be honest with yourself. And with others

5- Take risks

6- Be positive.

7- Be happy and appreciate what you have. Don’t think of what you don’t have. This will lead you to nowhere.

8- Do not eat/ sleep/ rest before finishing the task on hands.

9- Pray

10- Live your life

Raquel Lopez- An interview

Raquel López is from Spain. She is a successful architect and much more. She is also a translator, trainer and a multi faceted blog critique. And to top it all up, she also writes. Her responses echo her talent and that wry sense of humor.

A mini interview-

Q- What is your profession and tell me about yourself, your background?

  1. I am A Spanish architect. I am very fond of all that has to do with Art&Creation. I also write fantasy stories and I sing in a jazz band.

 

Q- What drove you to choose this career path?

  1. Architecture is an artistic engineering. I like the combination of those two extremes.

 

Q- Have you moved a lot for your profession and do you like travelling?

  1. I love travelling, but, unfortunately, all jobs that include staying abroad for a while are usually given to male Architects.

MA

 

Q- What in your opinion are the three major traits to be successful in your profession?

  1. Ambition, hard work and relatives who are architects.

 

Q- What have been your biggest challenges over the course of your career?

  1. I cannot recall all of them: since the very moment I put my feet on University ground my life became a hard daily challenge.

 

Q- Would you recommend this profession to young hopefuls?

  1. Only if they have a strong vocation and an Architect daddy.

Q- What is your advice to young graduates and professionals?

  1. If you want to live in peace, choose another path. Women architects: your profession might become your own Mr. Grey.

The Interview series- Feedback sought

I hope you’ve been enjoying reading the last few interviews published on this blog site. I am trying to cut a swath of a good cross section of professionals ranging from Americans to Aussies to Indians. The next step is to get insights into some female professionals who have IMG_0958.JPGmade it in life.

I am hoping this will further keep the enthusiasm alive and attract more readers. Thanks for the comments and keep them coming

An interview- Heath Suddleson

LDRHeath Suddleson is a management leadership consultant and a published author as well. Heath comes off as a gregarious personality, gets along with people like a house on fire and seems to have a degree in people. He shares his thoughts with us today.

  • What is your profession and tell me about yourself, your background

I turn project managers into project leaders. I am a professional trainer for leadership development in the project management space.  For more than 25 years I have managed design and construction projects all over the world.  In addition to being in some leadership positions in the corporate space, I have held many leadership positions with Not For Profit organizations.  In one of these global Not For Profits, I served on their International Board of Directors.

 

  • What drove you to choose this career path? As my job required me to conduct more and more training, I realized how much I loved doing the training more than the project support. One benefit was that when I was conducting so much training there were fewer project demands I needed to meet, which lowered my stress level. Still, the biggest benefit was actually seeing those “ah ha” moments in the classroom as people began to connect the dots. There are few rewards greater than knowing you have helped someone improve themselves and their lives.

 

  • Have you moved a lot for your profession and do you like travelling?

I have changed companies more than a few times, in part because I didn’t want to move my home. In the construction industry, it is difficult to always stay in one area because you need to go where the work is located.  Wanting to stay home based, it did cause me to do a lot more travel.  In some aspects, the travel is great and you get to see exciting parts of the world and experience different cultures.  However, there is a dark and lonely side to travel that takes a toll on the body and the soul.  Spending so many countless nights eating dinner alone, not seeing your family, not being there for the plays and piano recitals of your kids all makes the road that much harder.  Now that I own my own company, I have more control over when I travel, how often, and how long each trip will be.  That makes the travel more fun again.

 

  • What in your opinion are the three major traits to be successful in your profession? To be successful as a trainer, there are three levels of mastery. The first is to be a subject matter expert. There are some out there who think that if you can present well you can speak about anything, but the truth is that your credibility is based on what you have accomplished and what you can teach others who have similar experiences. When teaching technical skills in the workplace you will not be the only expert in the room.  Lose the confidence in those other experts and you will quickly lose the class.  You have to know your stuff.  The second level of mastery is to be an engaging presenter.  Especially in the engineering fields, many presenters are lack luster and some are just plain boring.  If you are going to present for hours on end, you better be entertaining and engaging.  The third level of mastery is to be a trainer.  Again, there are misconceptions that if you have the first two levels licked then it’s easy to be a trainer, but it is a completely different set of goals to be able to gauge the knowledge gap and when you find one know how to fill it.  You need to be able to adjust material based on the class attendance and not just the slides.  Being a true trainer is to master all three levels.

 

  • What have been your biggest challenges over the course of your career?

The biggest challenge over my career has been learning to deal with difficult people and to not become one myself. The construction industry is filled with people who lack people skills.  On some projects and in some companies, those who are the harshest to deal with are sometimes celebrated, which only promotes less focus on human capital.  Of course, those people cost the company money in ways unseen through high turnover of staff, loss of continuity, and sometimes even lost clients.

 

  • Would you recommend this profession to young hopefuls?

The construction industry, yes. It is a great industry if you want a lot of great opportunities to work on projects that have real meaning to people.  There is a sense of satisfaction when you go see a completed project and know that you were part of the team that made that happen.  The pay is good and the chance to travel is great.  Just know that it will be long hours and high stress at times.

 

  • What is your advice to young graduates and professionals?

My advice to graduates and young professionals is to do something you truly enjoy. If you love what you do, and you are doing what you love, you will do it with passion and inspiration.   Because you are putting so much of yourself into your work, it will be recognized and you will be rewarded.  Millennials seem to understand the concept of work-life balance more than previous generations.  There may be some changes in the workplace coming as a result of this that will be seen in another decade.  Why this is important is because those people who succeed the most are those who can see where the market is going more than where the market is now.  See where it is going and put yourself on the leading edge.