Natasha Noel
Natasha Noel is an Instagram celebrity and a trained yogini. A motivational speaker, she talks about her experiences with rape, abuse and mental illness.
Natasha Noel is an Instagram celebrity and a trained yogini. A motivational speaker, she talks about her experiences with rape, abuse and mental illness.
Jaya Virwani heads the Diversity and Inclusiveness strategy for EY’s (Ernst & Young) Global Delivery Services.
Sucheta Pal is a Global Ambassador and a Master Trainer for Zumba(R). She is responsible for successfully growing Zumba in India.
Anu Aggarwal is Co-Head of Conglomerates and Corporate Groups at Kotak Mahindra Group.
Deciding to choose an unconventional career is not easy – or is it? We speak to two such women who have chosen to go down the path less trodden.
Jasmeen Patheja, a TED and Ashoka Fellow, is the founder of Blank Noise – an art collective focused on sexual violence.
Keeping women in the workforce is imperative as it gives women a great sense of accomplishment, keeps them in the leadership pipeline, and helps the overall economy. But, how easy is it for women to come back into the workforce? And, is a career break career suicide for women?
Are millennial women more confident about their career prospects? Kesha Shah, 23, Technology Associate at Morgan Stanley and Manasa Ramakrishna, 26, Founder of Curricooler, an education startup have a candid conversation on what success means to them as millennial women, moderated by Shonali Advani.
Women are still underrepresented in the IT sector. There are few women in senior leadership positions in the IT industry today. Is it tougher for women to succeed in tech? And, are they being taken seriously? Madhura Purnaprajna, Associate Professor at Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham, and Rajitha Shenoy, Lead Database Application Developer at Oracle share their experiences as female technologists in a male dominated industry.
Krithi Karanth is a leading conservation biologist. She has been studying wildlife conservation in India and its human dimensions for 16 years, and was chosen as National Geographic Society’s 10,000th grantee in 2011 and Emerging Explorer for 2012.