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The Hardest Worker on a Construction Project: A Working Mom

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说明

While the construction industry prides itself on being family oriented, it doesn't do as good a job of celebrating the realities of being a working mom. Challenges that mothers in architecture, engineering, and construction (AEC) face every day include finding daycare that works with construction hours, balancing the emotional load of working the long days a project requires, having difficult conversations with employers for much-needed flexibility, and striking a balance between career ambitions and the pull of motherhood. Even more difficult is the fifth trimester—those first three months back at work after maternity leave ends—when new moms navigate their return to a male-dominated environment, and struggle to find resources such as a safe and sanitary place to pump and community to commiserate with. How can managers and industry leaders make it easier for mothers who need flexibility, empathy, and support? And how can they create a more inclusive environment, and continue to maximize the strength of women who chose construction as a career?

主要学习内容

  • Discover how leaders can help build policies and guidelines to help attract moms and those returning to the workforce.
  • Get tips for balancing work with motherhood, including how to build a support network and handle the "sick call" from school.
  • Get ideas for how to advocate for change at companies and on an industry level.
  • Get empowered by knowing that if you are a working mom, you share similar experiences with other working moms in AEC.

讲师

  • Meredith Obendorfer
    A consummate storyteller, Meredith Obendorfer has 20+?years of experience in corporate communications, public relations, and marketing in the tech industry. Currently Director, Strategic Communications at Autodesk, she oversees executive communications, strategic customer communications, and analyst relations for Autodesk's construction efforts. Prior to her current position, she was Autodesk construction's head of?PR, communications and social media, initially entering the role at PlanGrid, which was acquired in 2018 by Autodesk for $875 million. Meredith has handled PR for some of the biggest powers in tech including Facebook, Medium, Hearst, and Oracle, as well as aggressive upstarts that were then acquired by Google, LinkedIn and Apple. Meredith has a Bachelor of Arts in Sociology and Women's Studies from the University of California at Santa Cruz, is mom to a very rambunctious toddler, and in her blink of spare time is an outdoor athlete.?
  • Savy Francis
    Savy wears many hats; she's a wife, a mother to three children, a Union Pipefitter, and a part-time lead instructor for Boston's Pre-Apprentice program, Building Pathways. This program is dedicated to helping individuals prepare for entry into a Union trade. Savy, a proud board member and a graduate of Building Pathways herself, completed the program in 2012 as part of an all-women class in Cycle 3. In 2013, she joined and became a Union Pipefitter for Boston's Local 537. In 2020, Savy was honored as the "Tradeswoman of the Year" by Boston Women in Construction. During the same year, she played a pivotal role in co-founding the 537 Women's Committee. In 2021, Savy and four other trade sisters initiated a Facebook group called "Boston Union Trade Sisters," which has now grown to include over 900 union members. When she's not at work, Savy enjoys spending quality time with her family and delights in cooking for them.
  • Ruhi Thakur
    Meet Ruhi Thakur, a dedicated and humble force in the construction industry, setting new standards as a project manager at Webcor Builders. With a genuine passion for creating sustainable and enduring infrastructure solutions, Ruhi is on a mission to leave a lasting impact on the industry. Known for her humility and ambition, Ruhi excels in the realm of project management, leveraging cutting-edge technology to bring her projects to life. A natural problem-solver, she approaches challenges with a positive mindset, viewing each one as an opportunity for growth. Recently taking on the role of a working mom, Ruhi is learning to integrate the responsibilities of motherhood with her demanding career. Balancing the intricacies of managing large scopes of work and being a hands-on mom, she ensures a harmonious life balance. In her recent experiences in the aviation and wastewater/biosolids industry, Ruhi has demonstrated her ability to navigate complex projects with finesse. A team player through and through, Ruhi fosters collaboration among colleagues, yet she steps into a leadership role with grace and determination when the situation demands. For Ruhi Thakur, the construction site is not just where buildings are raised; it's a playground for innovation, a platform for growth, and a canvas for creating a sustainable legacy in the industry.
  • Jennifer Suerth
    As Senior Vice President of Virtual Construction, MEP and Operations Technology, Jen provides strategic direction for Pepper Construction in these areas and serves as a key advisor to project teams on constructability and implementation strategies throughout the early stages of project design through construction and facility management. With more than 16 years of experience in architecture, engineering and construction, Jen leads teams to think creatively and solve problems for our clients in ways that are not expected, incorporating technology and virtual construction tools in to how we deliver work. She is a forward-thinking industry-recognized innovator, continuing to work to pilot new technologies and leverage tools in new ways. Jen helps deliver a consistent experience for clients, aligning technology with the firm's operational needs from the office to the field. This includes setting standards across all locations, improving workflows and ensuring technology is consistently implemented and teams are thoroughly trained. Jen's career spans award-winning structural engineering projects, leading our industry to adopt 3D design and construction practices while serving as one of the foremost thought leaders, conference speakers and interviewees on the use of virtual construction technology to deliver better buildings more efficiently. She has been recognized among Crain's Notable Women in Stem, BD+C's 40 Under 40, Builtworlds Top 50 Technology Adoptions Leaders, Women in Construction by Constructech Magazine, Chicago Building Congress Future Leaders and ENR Midwest's Top 20 Under 40. Jen holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Architectural Studies and a Master of Architecture, Structures, both from University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
  • Karima Maloney
    Karima is a dedicated and skilled Senior Project Manager responsible for the oversight and management of all necessary project resources and documentation. Karima ensures that all safety, budget, schedule, and quality standards for the project are met or exceeded. Karima manages overall team progress alongside the project plan through consistent and transparent collaboration. Karima has spent nearly her entire career working on healthcare and life sciences projects for Suffolk in the Greater Boston area. Throughout her tenure at Suffolk, Karima has played an integral role in the construction of many notable projects, including Foundation Medicine at 400 Summer Street in Boston, which consists of a build-out of laboratory and office space in the new 16-story building, including a lobby lounge, reception area, conference center, lab & workspace, innovation space, and amenities; Amgen Next Generation Laboratory in Cambridge, which consisted of a comprehensive three-year site redevelopment plan to renovate seven floors of the Amgen building into highly flexible next generation laboratories, lab support areas, vivarium space, and office space, and the installation of 500 disposable technology-based pilot development labs. Karima has also worked on The Broad Institute in Cambridge, a new 375,000 square-foot biomedical research facility building, lab, office, and vivarium space, and many other healthcare and life sciences renovations for Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston Medical Center, Boston Scientific, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, and more. Karima earned a Bachelor's degree in Civil Engineering and Mathematics and a Master's degree in Education from the University of Massachusetts Amherst.
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Transcript

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: And welcome everybody. Thanks so much for joining us. I'm really excited to get started. So my name is, for those of you who don't know, my name is Meredith Obendorfer. I'm a director of strategic communications for Autodesk construction business group. And I'm joined by several women here who I'll have introduce ourselves, introduce themselves, in just a moment.

But as I dive in, I just kind of wanted to set a little bit of context. I was spurred on with this idea, an idea for this panel by my own experience of becoming a mom. I, as many of you have heard me say, I underestimated every single part of it. And I just became passionate about talking about what it was like to balance the motherhood, my newfound motherhood, with my career, which was challenging. But challenging and exciting.

And as you know at Autodesk we serve the construction industry, and I conferred with my good friend Alison Scott about whether there were challenges unique to women in construction, and she gave me a resounding yes. So we put together this panel, which is being live. It's not being live streamed, but being recorded, as I understand it for future audiences. So if you're watching digitally, thank you.

And with that, I'm going to turn it over to our participants. And they'll have them introduce themselves and tell us a little bit about what-- as you introduce yourselves why don't you tell us your name and your company and what you do for the company, and then maybe a little bit about what your day to day role looks like as a mom. As a working mom in construction.

SAVY FRANCIS: My name is Savy Francis. I am a journeyman pipefitter which is HVAC for the Boston local Union 537, and I work for a company E.M. Duggan. My day to day is I wake up at 3:30 most mornings, because I have to start work at 5:00 AM. My husband drops our daughter off to daycare. I work until 1:30 usually, sometimes 3:00, 4:00 if it's a push on the job site I'm on now, and then I go into Boston to pick up our daughter and head home and continue with motherly duties. Putting away clothes and cooking dinner, things of that nature. And then getting her ready for school the next day.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: Savy, how many kids do you have?

SAVY FRANCIS: Three. One biologically for me, and two stepchildren.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: And what are their ages?

SAVY FRANCIS: One is 22, another one she is 12, and the youngest who runs the household is four.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: Awesome. Jen, how about you?

JENNIFER SOURETH: Yeah, hi. I'm Jen Soureth. I am a senior vice president at Pepper Construction based in Chicago. It's a general commercial contractor, and I lead everything really around innovation, virtual construction, technology, except IT. So really just operations improvement. And I have a 2 and 1/2 year old boy.

We'll talk about this on the panel. I'm pretty fortunate to have a partner that does really well sharing 50/50 split, but the split looks different all the time. He is an attorney, so he's never stops working, like many of us. But he also has night meetings because of the clients he has. So typically mornings he'll try to do most of the bringing our little one into daycare, who just started daycare a few months ago. And then I'm working all day, and then I'm usually literally rushing last parent out at the daycare picking up my son.

But obviously in my role being a senior leader, have a lot of also network and client and other kind of things. So I like to say I'm the one in charge in the evenings during the week, but the reality is I'm also figuring out all the logistics of babysitters and coverage so that I can prioritize all things that are important. And it changes every day.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: The business of running a family.

JENNIFER SOURETH: Yeah.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: Ruhi.

RUHI THAKUR: My name is Ruhi Thakur. I'm a project manager with Webcor Builders. I work at a biosolids plant. Basically it's a poop plant. Yeah, that always gets me a lot of laughs. So yeah, my day starts very early. I most times I think I wake up 5:45 AM. That's my alarm for every day, snooze it, 5:50, snooze it 6:00, and then run, run, run right after that.

I'm fortunate enough to have my husband, partner up with me with all the responsibilities. So it's a little different in my case. He works from home, I work in an office. So very different from how I grew up. My mom used to stay back home and my dad was in an office. And it's reverse. So interesting mix of things. And I help out on the days that I work from home. For like the daycare drop offs. And in the evenings he's generally the one picking her up during the week, and maybe it's like a Monday or a Friday I go and pick up my daughter.

So it's a little busy once she comes back from daycare, then after that both of us are just like, oh, we're doing this, we're doing this, and now we've created a plan. So slowly we're getting hang of things. My daughter is 15 months old. So we're pretty new to this.

JENNIFER SOURETH: And that's an interesting point though, because I know I didn't mention this, but obviously you're in the field working. You're also not staying home. I also am mostly in the office. My husband also mostly works at home when he's not out at client meetings. So you're right, the dynamic has kind of switched. So I thought that was a good thing to mention.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: Absolutely. So and Jen, how old is your son?

JENNIFER SOURETH: Son, yes, Ronan. He's 2 and 1/2.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: 2 and 1/2.

JENNIFER SOURETH: So also fairly new.

JENNIFER SOURETH: I've got a four, and then I've got a two-year-old as well. So why don't we just dive in with talking about returning to work. So I know it was a little sooner for us. And Savy, you've had a little bit more time. What was that like for you? Was it a struggle to come back? Was it-- were you happy to come back? Maybe somewhere in between? Talk to us about that. And why don't we start with Savy, actually.

SAVY FRANCIS: So the first time going back, I was going to take six months off. My Foreman called me in a month early. And I was fine with it. I heard stories from my other friends who are moms, like you're going to cry. You're going to miss her and everything. I was fine. I was like, oh, this is great. I'm going back to work. Like so I didn't cry.

But then the second time going back because the pandemic had hit in March, I remember we got called back in a week after Memorial Day in May. And that's when I started crying. Because I was like, oh my God, my baby's still young, and she's starting to be more vocal with things. So at that time I did cry. But once I got there and knew that my daughter was in safe hands with my dad at the time, I was relieved. So it took a little bit time, it took probably a couple of days for the reality to set in, but I blended in better with the guys knowing that there was different protocols on the job site.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: And what were you-- tell us about those protocols?

SAVY FRANCIS: We had to mask up every day. We had to do questionnaires, like there was like at the time I wouldn't even go to the supermarket because I was more scared for my child than myself. And she wasn't even a full year old yet. And I was-- we would do the Instacart just so I didn't have to go to the supermarket. We'd always wipe down our tools before and after the workday. Everybody drove in by themselves instead of like carpooling previously before that. We had to check out, they did a temperature check in and checking out. So it was a lot going on the job site.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: I think for a lot of us who have younger kids the pandemic definitely played a role in making motherhood a little more. I mean it's always difficult, right? But a little more difficult and challenging than it would have been otherwise. So Jen, how about you? How was your return to work?

JENNIFER SOURETH: Yeah, so we so at Pepper we have a very good leave policy. You get I mean essentially full pay for a few months, and then because we have private insurance there are opportunities you could extend past those three months. The precedent, though, has been people traditionally take three months. So as someone who and we'll talk about this later but somebody who was trying to move to that next level, I was very in my head kind of like, I want to come back three, 3 and 1/2 months.

You hear it same thing you hear all the stories of, oh, you're going to cry or this or that. And it kind of-- so when I was on leave and I had a very traumatic birth. So there was a lot of recovery. And then I felt like as soon as you start to feel normal, it's time to go back. But while that's short period of time I was feeling normal before I went back I was so like probably everyone in this room type A, like going through the motions, hitting milestones, doing all the different things. And I wasn't probably enjoying motherhood as much as I should have.

They say like time flies, then I feel like it was just flying because I was just like, I got to do this, I got to read x amount of books, I got to do this. I got to hit all the feedings. So when it was time to go back I also actually was really looking forward to it, because I knew for me and the type of person I am, I'm a better mom because I work, because I now when I'm with my son I just get to enjoy him and care for him. And yes, there's tons of challenges with that.

So I then felt this guilt of everyone says-- and I had tears the night before. Don't get me wrong. Like you're still a little-- but I felt guilt that I was happier than I heard most people say they were going to be going back.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: If you didn't cry, it would be OK.

JENNIFER SOURETH: Yeah, exactly. So there was that piece, then I go back and the other piece, and I still actually was one of the first times I probably vocalized publicly that I had a child. Came back to work and I didn't want anybody to think differently of me. I literally wanted to be, I have a child, that's at home. Like I'm not going to put pictures in front of you. I'm not going to talk about them, and all everybody wanted to do, because there's good people in this world, is I want to hear about them. Show me pictures.

And I didn't want people to think of me differently. But the reality is I am different. And so I struggle-- right, like?

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: Audience participation.

JENNIFER SOURETH: And so I struggled a lot in the beginning with recognizing that. And so literally last year at AU I was on a panel and I mentioned it was like my first time, and I had a son. And I feel like people that knew me were like, you have a child? Like I had no idea.

And so I've been really coming to terms with I'm like I am different, and it's all good, and we all have struggles. And so now I feel like I'm kind of figuring out who I am.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: One of the things I've done, and you bring up an excellent point. So one of the things I've purposely done is not hidden the fact that I've become a mom. Maybe it's because I'm secure in my career. I have an excellent boss who's in the audience. But especially now that I work from home as opposed to in the office, and daycare is sometimes daycare is not available. So I've always said, my sorry if you hear a toddler in the background, because he's known to push open the door and say hi, in his little toddler voice in the background, and I can't hide it.

So have you had to compartmentalize or how have you incorporated being a mom into who you are at work?

RUHI THAKUR: Yeah, so I don't hide it at all. And to begin with I had a lot of mixed emotions when I went back to work. And so I've been with Webcor for, I think, more than six or seven years. And people have seen me grow from a young senior project engineer to an assistant project manager to a project manager. So I know a lot of people, familiar faces, but I was returning back to a new team, a new manager.

So I was a little nervous how would that go. Like will they understand my situation, will I have to explain it a little bit more. So one thing that I just said is, I love working. I want to go back. But I think I'm loving being a mom. And so let me just talk a little bit about that right on my first day, first week. And I just planned a plan how my work would progress. How I could work from home some days, work in the office.

So it was pretty much thoughtfully coming up with a plan, discussing it with multiple individuals to whom my work would impact, especially my manager. And then hearing me come up with this whole plan, and the whole idea of how I would ramp up to where I need to be. I think my manager was on board. And they're still on board and understand me. So

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: And so I take it Webcor is a particularly supportive company when it comes to parent?

RUHI THAKUR: I would say so.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: Yeah awesome. Jen, you were going to say something?

JENNIFER SOURETH: I mean, I think more people, bosses in general are more accepting than we realize. It's in our head. And I waited much later in life to have kids because of many different reasons. But one of them being in my head. And I found similarly like as soon as I just started talking about it like at work, or just saying, like not being apologetic. Like hey, sorry, not sorry. I just said it.

But hey, daycare is closing early and my husband is out of town. I got to go pick up. And people get it. My old HR person used to tell me, because I struggled when I wasn't a parent with that challenge, like wow, that person's leaving early and I'm staying. And she's like, pretend they're going to yoga. Pretend everyone's just going to yoga. You're entitled don't care about people-- like is it kids or not. And so now I'm like I'm going to say kids, but you can pretend I'm going to yoga, but I got to leave.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: I feel more entitled to because of kids than yoga.

JENNIFER SOURETH: I know, but she was like, don't, it doesn't matter good or bad. Like everyone's entitled to have a life outside of work, whether it's a kid or not. And so that helped me just be like, all right.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: What have you I'm hearing the need to draw boundaries Yes do you want to tell us a little bit about that. How do you I mean what other boundaries are you do you find yourself needing to draw for between work and career. Or work and being a mom?

JENNIFER SOURETH: Yeah I mean some of the boundaries are mainly with myself, I would say? Like when you think about it, we talked about some of us had talked about this a little bit earlier, but we are not the same person anymore.

Some days, my job wins. Some days, my kid wins. Some days, I win. Some days, everybody kind of wins, but small batches. And so I think for me, it was setting boundaries more with myself because we're all especially-- we're all in this room, right? We're working. We want to keep moving to that next level. And so the other piece is setting-- talking with my team and creating more transparency around it. So one of the things that happened right after I gave birth was I am now--

Let's see. So he's 2 and 1/2 years old. I've had three team members have babies since I've had a baby. And one is a female. And she came to me and said, look. Before I tell my own boss and this and that, I want to let you know I'm having a baby. And I just said, oh my God. Congrats. That's amazing. And I helped set boundaries for her. I was like, look. You will come back on your terms. I won't bother you for three months. Three months, I'm going to check in. If you want another month, we'll figure it out.

I said, when you come back, she was coming back to be full time on our largest project in our company. So we said, all right. We're going to figure out your schedule. And so like, setting those boundaries, and it works, and everybody's accepting. So I think-- I felt like my boundaries were more with myself. But then I became setting boundaries for others, if that makes sense.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: Absolutely.

JENNIFER SUERTH: Because people don't know what they don't know. And if you're a good worker, you're going to figure it out.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: Savy, you're in a unique position because you're in the field. Do you feel like you're in a position to be able to set boundaries? Or does you-- I know you've talked to us a little bit about the-- how supportive your manager is. Tell us more about that.

SAVY FRANCIS: So I am involved with my union. I'm involved with a pre-apprenticeship program building pathways also. I'm involved with the mass building trades. I sit on many boards. But before I decided to take on all those roles, I knew I had to talk to my husband as well because a wise man I worked for in the field told me, yourself and your family comes first. You're not married to your career. Just make sure that you make time for yourself and your family as well.

So I know I have to pick and choose what to do on certain nights. I-- we have a calendar at home. So that way, if-- because my husband could be very forgetful at times. And he'll be like, where are you? Look at the calendar. I wrote it down.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: Look at the calendar.

SAVY FRANCIS: We went through this. But other than-- I know there's times where I'm like, all right. If I get a call like, hey, can you come to this board meeting, and I know it's last second, usually I'll have to decline that because, like I said, I like to go through my team before I just make an executive decision on-- for myself. Because I'm not the only provider at my household. I also-- we also--

I do have a great support system where I can call my mother-in-law or my mother to see if they can grab my daughter from daycare for me. But usually, I will take her with me and I'll call my husband like, hey. I'm taking my daughter, our daughter, to an event. I'm just letting you know you'll have to fend for yourself for dinner at this point. So-- and usually, he's grateful for that that I'm giving him a heads up. But that's more so of the boundaries when it comes to doctor's appointments and everything.

My husband also works from home as well. He's a social worker. He has a lot of time with his career. So he's able to take her. Also, sometimes if I get asked to work on a Saturday with my job at the site, my husband, he's usually lenient, like, go ahead. Take it. Whatever. But at times, my daughter's in dance. And I'm like, I don't want to miss watching her practice for this either because they only stay so little for so long.

So sometimes, that's up in the air. And the good thing I work with-- the foreman's I work for are all married men. So and they all usually have daughters, which is hilarious about it too. So they're like, go, go. That's more important. It's more important for your child's face to have a smile than the overtime. The overtime is always going to be there. That-- they help me also decide on my decision when it comes to picking and choosing certain things to that nature.

JENNIFER SUERTH: Yeah, you-- that goes back to I was saying, setting boundaries for myself. One thing I stumbled on when I first went back to work was like, I was so used to having a really great partner that I kind of took advantage of it. And I learned really quick that I was like, oh, if someone asks me to go to this client meeting, I know it's important. But he doesn't know that. So check in. And it's-- and that-- it was very quick before I realized that. But setting-- yeah. Checking in and making sure it works for us was really important.

SAVY FRANCIS: Right.

RUHI THAKUR: We share calendars.

JENNIFER SUERTH: Yep, same. Same. We share calendars.

RUHI THAKUR: My Outlook calendar at work has everything about my personal life, I think, right now. And that's the-- I think that's the only way I can survive and remember things.

JENNIFER SUERTH: Yeah.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: Is your calendar-- it's digital versus-- we have a whiteboard.

SAVY FRANCIS: We have a whiteboard too.

[INTERPOSING VOICES]

JENNIFER SUERTH: We have both. I guess, like, is it on the calendar question? He's not big on technology.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: Sunday night, we go through the calendar.

RUHI THAKUR: The food calendar is different, which is on the kitchen.

JENNIFER SUERTH: Meal calendar.

RUHI THAKUR: [INAUDIBLE]

SAVY FRANCIS: Yeah.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: So I mean, that's a great segue to our next question. What role does your partner play in your success, whether it's childcare or emotional support?

RUHI THAKUR: Yeah. It's a loaded question. I think the best thing that I can say to that is attending this conference today, here, my husband was invited to this conference. And he had everything planned months ahead of this date. And I think I got invited maybe around August, September, so which was much later than when he made his plans. And both of us, we came from India. We don't have a lot of family here. The closest family I have is my brother in San Diego. He has a sister in Phoenix. So where did we leave our daughter?

There is no one. Daycare is only during the day. We asked if they could do extended times. But they wouldn't cover overnight, or things like that. So how do we make this work? And I-- my first reaction to Ali was maybe, you know what? I'm just going to pass. I'm not going to come here. But I said, OK, let me think about it again. And so I spoke to him. He's the first person I spoke to. And he's saying, yeah, maybe we can make it work. I'm like, how? And he said, well, you go do your thing. I'm going to hang out with her in the room. And I'm like--

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: So she's here?

RUHI THAKUR: She's here. Is [INAUDIBLE] the best place to take a baby? He said, yeah. We'll take her. And so-- and then I was like, OK, let me-- I didn't have that confidence even then. Then I spoke to my manager at work. And I told her, I've been invited for this panel. And she said, it's a great opportunity. You should go. And then I started explaining my situation to her. And she's like, but yeah, yeah. You should go. I think she motivated me to the point where I felt a little more confident that I can take this step.

And so today, I am here. He is in the room with our daughter or next to the pool. I don't know. But that's how-- that's the role of the partner, how important it is. I'm-- I mean, I'm doing the flights with her, which is terrible. But at least I could make it here. And I think later on, maybe we will have role reversal. He'll have something like this come up, and I'll step up. So really thankful to have someone like this in my life where we don't have the immediate family support. But I guess we made it work. So--

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: That's exciting.

RUHI THAKUR: Yeah.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: So you actually can't be here in the room.

JENNIFER SUERTH: I know.

SAVY FRANCIS: That's so cute.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: But I have a two-year-old. So I know how that goes.

JENNIFER SUERTH: Yeah, running around. Yeah.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: Savy, how about you? You've talked a little bit about your husband. How is he-- I mean, I know he's got a busy day-- busy day.

SAVY FRANCIS: Right. So he helps out a lot. So we have in my daughter's closet the days of the week, like a shoe compartment thing, where we put her outfits in for the week. So that way, when I leave for work, he's getting her ready to bring her to daycare. And like I said, there's times where I-- he's like, are you sure you want to take her to the event? Drop her off at my mother's. I'll pick her up after I'm done working. Because he's been doing 12-hour days.

He helps out a lot. I'll do the washing for the clothes, drying. I come home, it's all folded up neatly on the bed. And I just-- I put it away. He takes-- we have pets that love-- adore him because he's the one that feeds them, and takes them out. We have a dog and two cats. So he's busy even though he's working. And then I like the point that you made about having your son during a meeting because sometimes that kind of gets him out of meetings when he has our daughter like, oh, my daughter is here or whatever. And she's in the Zoom camera like, who's that? Pointing.

But he's great. If I'm not there to take her to dance, he takes her. I just make sure everything's laid out. Sometimes, I let her help me lay out the stuff, which-- good luck when your kids are at that age where they want to wear certain things. But it's good for our daughter too because it expresses her at that age. But he's great. If he knows I'm too tired to cook, he'll ask, what do you want to eat? I'll go get it. He's not going to cook it. He'll cook breakfast. I'll give him that. He cooks breakfast every weekend.

But other than that, if he sees I'm drained sometimes, I'll doze off when I get home on the couch. And he's like, what do you want? I'll go get it now. I'll take my break from work now to go pick up something, get ready-- get ready-- go lay down. And he motivates me every day, especially the gym. I'm horrible at it. But when he says things, I'm like, you know what? I got to do it. Because you're in there with a messed up arm. Let's go do it. Whatever.

But he's just great with her. Like I said, that's her world. I'm her world when he's not around. But when she knows he's around, she could sniff him out. It's, daddy, daddy, daddy. But yeah. He-- I-- it-- I can't even describe in words how great he is. When-- we're alike, but we're not. I'm the more nice person. I'm the good cop. He's the bad cop person. He keeps me in line with things, especially when I do get the phone call for an event, he'll like, listen. This needs to be taken care at home. And then I'll sit there and think about it. I'm like, you know what? You're right. I'm coming home.

Let me decline this now while it's still early enough where they can find somebody else in my place. The communication part, we have a good communication. I think if the communication wasn't there, then, it would be upside down from there. But he's great to me, he's been there before I got into the union. He's came to events. He's actually walking around Vegas right now. He jumped on because he was like, who are you going with? I was like, I'm going to fly in myself. Whatever. He's like, I'll go. I've never been.

And then the other day, he's like, I'm never coming back to this place. He's like, even if you're not-- we're not gamblers. He's like, even if you're not gambling, somehow, Vegas is taking your money. So but he's a great-- he's a great support.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: That's awesome. Can you replicate him?

SAVY FRANCIS: Yes. I can. I'll try.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: So I mean, one of the things you said reminded me of-- I don't know if you guys remember being in the early days of the pandemic and there was a CNN reporter. He it was a expert-- he was giving an interview about, it was like international diplomacy. It was a weighty topic. And his kids toddled into the background on the little roller. And his wife ran in, like ducked behind, and tried to roll them out of the-- it was on live TV.

I feel like it was such a minor thing, but it was almost like a-- I hate this word game change-- it was a game-- everyone who's a mom, it was a game changer. It was a game-changing moment to just allow that normalized being a parent in the workplace. So it just-- it reminded me of that.

Jen, what do you think-- both of you have talked about-- I know that Savy, I remember you talked about being supportive-- supported by your managers. And Jen, you're in a leadership position. What do you-- what would you say that employers as a whole, I mean, you're a lot closer to the top, get right about being a working mom, particularly in construction? I think a lot of what we're talking about applies to working moms regardless of the industry you're in. Right? But what about-- what is a construction company, what do they get right? Start with that.

JENNIFER SUERTH: Yeah, so obviously, being more male dominated, they surprisingly relate to moms more than you realize. I think I had more male colleagues coming to me and asking how I'm doing than even females, probably because a lot of the females were struggling figuring out their own journey in life. So I'll give you the story of a little bit of what I thought was going to happen when I was announcing I was having a baby.

So I talked to my boss. I waited exactly to the moment where the doctor says, all right. You should tell people. It's safe. And I was so nervous to tell my boss, who has the Pepper last name at the time-- well, he still does. But I have a different boss now. And I called him. And being a leader in the company, the-- I'm in my head like, how is he going to react? And so when I mentioned to him, he right away just says, congrats. That's so exciting. How are you feeling?

I didn't hear a second of panic, which was so refreshing. And even when we started talking about my leave, he's like, all right. When are you due? Let's back it up. He goes, because, Jen, when you go on leave, that's it. We're not calling you. You could be in the middle of a meeting-- You're somewhere else. He's had three kids of his own. So he gets it. And I was like, wow. This was way easier than I thought.

And I know that not everybody is that way, but I do feel like it's kind of like how we've talking a lot more about mental health in the industry. I think things are becoming more normalized. And I think if someone isn't talking about it, they just don't know how to. It's not-- yes, there's still always going to be those jerks. But in general, people just-- they're good. So I had that experience. Then fast forward to, I'm coming back from leave. And it's right around our comp time. So it's when you're finding out about your salaries, and your bonuses, and all that.

And I find out that I got my full bonus. And I literally said to him, which is stupid, but I said, wow. I-- because I was gone for 3 and 1/2 months, I really thought I wasn't going to get my full bonus. And he looked me dead in the eye and said, Jen, the fact your team did so well while you were gone is an even bigger reason why you deserve this bonus. What you're doing-- he's like, I can't even believe that thought went through your head.

And I was just like, well, glad I have the letters. You can't take it back. Stupid me. But it was just really nice to hear that he was like shocked I even thought that, and probably also said it out loud. And then fast forward, I'm back figuring out being a mom. And I was a VP at the time, and was having very great conversations with the c-suite and my boss about moving to that next level. And I, in my head of course, was, man. Are they-- is this going to delay anything?

And I still-- there were no promises. There never is until that thing is in front of you. But I was very concerned that, oh, are they going to now want to delay this because, let's see how Jen is as a mom? So I was very in my head, which probably caused me to also shut down more, and not talk about my son, and just be fully work Jen, work Jen. And I ended up getting promoted in January. So I've been now a senior VP since January of this year.

The timing all worked out exactly, whether I had left to have a kid or not, would have-- did not change. And I actually feel like I'm a better leader and contributor to the company now that I am a mom because I've learned different skills that-- or and things that I think I took for granted that I didn't realize before like time. I probably get a little more frustrated at work because every second counts.

And it should. It really should at work. But when you're working and, oh, I don't know, chit chatted by the coffee pot, now I'm going to stay an extra half hour. Not a big deal. It is a big deal now.

And so every second counts. And I'm just always in work mode, which means I need to balance also finding that time to say, by the way, you want to see a picture of Ronan? Because I'm just like, every second counts. So there's a balance. But yeah, it-- yeah. I mean, it's been a really positive thing. And to hear my team now who are younger having kids and I'm like, hey, I know what you're thinking. I bet you're feeling this. And like, we had a-- sorry. We had one more thing.

We had a female at work, not on my team, had a baby. She was in a almost completely-male group. I didn't know her. I came back-- or she came back from maternity leave. And I made a meeting with her in a conference room. I went to that office that day and said, I had an agenda for work. But really, my main reason was to sit with her and say, hey, how are you doing? Because you've been back a few weeks. I've been in your shoes recently. She broke down in tears and said, that means the world to me because nobody else had done that.

And so those little moments, even if it's small, just a couple of people, have made things-- and I'm hearing my male counterparts starting to do that when they hear these stories. So we're all good people. And the construction industry is full of good people. And so these moments just need to keep happening. And they'll get comfortable.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: You said so much that resonates with me.

JENNIFER SUERTH: Yeah, one of the things-- I have a close friend of mine who has four kids. And she talks a lot about the mom tax. One of our questions we had was, how has being a mom, has it helped your career, or stalled your career? Do any of you feel like you've-- your career stalled a little bit, or you've paid the mom tax? Because-- and I will say, one of the things that I'm very cognizant of as we're having this conversation is it's a very US-based conversation. Right? And in that we feel a certain level of obligation, or guilt, to come back to work after three months, five months. If we're lucky, it's five months, right?

Where our counterparts around the globe, nothing made me feel like the US is like-- I don't know. I'll save the expletives. But like sucks at maternal health care and parental leave policy is having a child. You're like three months, I eked out five months, and it still didn't feel like enough. So--

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: Even parental males. A dad getting two weeks--

RUHI THAKUR: Yeah.

JENNIFER SUERTH: Right. Huge, like, three weeks. You're like, whoa.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: But even three months.

JENNIFER SUERTH: Yeah.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: We rush back. There was an episode of Succession. It was like the last episode. I don't know how many people watch Succession. And she's like, oh, I'll start work right from the labor and delivery room. It's so-- so one, we're having a fairly US-based conversation where other countries get-- I think it's Canada gets nine months, or a year-- Europe gets a year. And I'm not sure they quite feel the rush to get back.

But also, similarly, to back to the mom tax comment, or feeling stalled, because you figure we've taken-- for us, it's only three months but for my friend who's had four kids, that's equivalent of a year. So how does that-- any of you have any thoughts about it even if you haven't experienced it?

RUHI THAKUR: Yeah. I think for me, I took more than three months, almost close to six. So that's a lot of time, staying away from work. Yeah. And I think a lot of credit goes to, I guess, San Francisco policy and California leave.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: It's great. It's generally great.

RUHI THAKUR: Yeah, that's what I hear. Then I was a little worried about, what does this mean in terms of getting promoted, going to the next level? And I mean, it bothered me a lot. And I might have stayed awake nights thinking about it. But then I also started thinking, a career is a lifespan. And it's not this one year will define my career, or just two years. And I was telling myself, if I need to take this one year and dedicate it towards a different goal, it's not that I'm not building anything in that process. I'm still building a skill set, just like you said.

A skill set of maybe managing my time better, learning how to be more productive. These are things that I'm still building. And maybe I have different goals for this one year. It's not extremely professional-level goals, but I will get there in some time. So yes. An impact by a year or two. But in this 30-year span of a career that I will have, hopefully I have, I hope I have opportunities where I can make up for the time that I have lost maybe one year not concentrating on a professional goal.

And sometimes, I feel it's not going to come to me easily. That opportunity is not going to come to me. I may have to take an extra step, work towards it, just like how I'm making an extra effort to work towards my daughter and enjoy motherhood. The same thing will happen to me professionally at some point. So that's the way I've been dealing with it. I know there is an impact in the short term. But what does it mean in the long term? And what do I want to focus more on, a sprint or a marathon? So that's how I'm thinking about it right now. We'll see what happens.

JENNIFER SUERTH: We're rooting for you.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: And so I think-- I'm actually keeping an eye on time. We've got about 20 minutes left. And so I figured we'd open up to the audience for questions, or just open conversation. Does-- I mean, does-- do the points resonate with anyone? I mean, we've made a lot of points, whether it's the-- I would say, let's do this. Before I open it up, let's ask one last question. What do you wish leaders knew about being a working mom, in particular in the construction industry?

We've talked-- I asked a little bit about what they've done right. We didn't really get into what they've done wrong. But what do you wish they knew?

RUHI THAKUR: One thing right away that I want to say is I wish-- I see a lot of tech companies, other industries, have a ramp-up program. And I feel I created my own program. But maybe we should formalize that a little bit more and come up with a plan to support a woman to get where she wants to become-- where she wants to go. So that's something I would like to see in most companies.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: That's excellent. Savy, how about you?

SAVY FRANCIS: The leadership with my company, I don't think there's anything wrong with them. The guy that owns the company is a father of two young sons. And even when I was pregnant, he'd always ask how I'm doing, how I'm feeling, and everything. A lot of the higher ups in the company would text me to see if I needed anything.

Because I worked up until I was 8 and 1/2 months pregnant. So from the time they found out I was pregnant up until the day I left for-- to have my daughter, they made sure that I wasn't on a ladder, I wasn't doing any work that would harm myself or my child, they made sure that, listen. Whatever day you need off, we will not penalize you for it, for ultrasounds--

So I made sure I did it in the afternoon after work just so I didn't have an excuse to not come into work or leave work extra early to go to my doctor's appointment. And they-- like I said, they've always taken care of me, even till now. I still get phone calls from the outside super and from the owner of the company asking about my daughter. They'll ask on a first-name basis. They'll ask about my son and my other child as well too. They keep asking me when my son's going to join the trades because he's home from the Air Force right now.

So it's little things. It's a family-oriented company. It's passed on for like, I want to say three generations. So they know. They had their daughters working in the shop, they've actually had family members working in the field for them as well for the company. Because the company I work for, it's three different trades under it, the plumbers, the pipe fitters, and the sprinkler fitters. So each of them have had family members work for one of those particular trades.

Yeah, I remember they threw a baby shower for me the last day. So it's-- I couldn't say-- they have leadership in the marketing for women. Different roles. The company is so big. So it's like-- I can go on about them.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: Sure. Sure.

SAVY FRANCIS: So yeah. I can't say there's anything that they would-- but I can say about the union, the UA way they call it, United Association, last year, I was actually here in Vegas when the president of the UA announced that they finally put a maternity leave in for members for the pipefitters, sprinkler fitters, and the plumbers. So I was like, jeez, can it get backdated to 2019? Right? But I'm happy they're able to do that. So now, more and more women actually in my trades are actually having babies because of the maternity leave being put in place. And we have the--

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: For staying in the trades.

SAVY FRANCIS: Yes. Yes. Exactly. And the guys I know I've worked with, we get locks on our bathroom doors. And they're like, you know what? If they see the lock not there, they'll actually give me the heads, up my foreman, go somewhere else. Go find a restaurant that you're friendly with that will let you use the bathroom because we trust you coming right back, especially being pregnant. Because the men are gross, I'm sorry, using the bathroom. But it's-- the leadership's-- they've always been great to me.

And like I said, I'm happy that the United Nations-- the United Association finally put that into play so women don't have to try to hide their pregnancy on the job site, and they're comfortable being pregnant now. For me, I didn't have to hide my pregnancy. My foreman, he's a great guy who found out I was pregnant-- just ended up, it spread like wildfire on the job site. So guys were like, no. Don't pick that up. I'll pick it up. I'm like, it's a 2 gallon bucket with my hand tools. I can pick it up.

But it's always-- the leadership for both on the job site and in the office, they've always supported me.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: That's such a fine line, though, right, between, I can still do it. I'm not-- I'm just pregnant. Right?

RUHI THAKUR: Right.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: And someone told me yesterday, I can't remember who, they might be in this room, but it doesn't matter, that when they returned to work, they were pumping in a closet with concrete dust falling on them on the job site. So I think we've painted a pretty good, a nice, picture up on this stage. But and I'm certainly don't want to turn it into a negative conversation. But I think there's still, we're very much on the cusp--

JENNIFER SUERTH: Yeah.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: Of being both supportive and still having that-- and I think that what I'm hearing from this group is we've still internalized that in that we don't give ourselves much grace, and we push ourselves because there was still-- we're still making a case for to-- the right to be there, to a certain extent. Right? So in any event, why don't we open it up to any thoughts from the audience? Questions? Thoughts? Are we-- does this resonate with you? What are your own experiences? Ali, there's someone in the back. Why don't we start with her?

AUDIENCE: Coming-- is this working?

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: It's working. Yep.

AUDIENCE: Hi. So I guess my question, I guess, for everybody, how do we handle the mom guilt? I have a 10-month-old. I'm obviously-- I work from home. My husband works from home. So we're both with him all the time. We're looking into daycare and a nanny. I'm struggling. Do I want to stay at home and put my career on pause to be with him because he's still so little? Or do I come back into work full fledge and try to keep growing my career? So how do you handle that mom guilt?

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: How do you handle mom guilt? How do you handle the mom guilt of choosing your career first is what I hear you saying.

AUDIENCE: Yeah.

JENNIFER SUERTH: Yeah, I mean, I can start. So the mom guilt is real. And the short answer is that your journey and answer is not the same as anyone else's. So my biggest piece of advice is whatever is right for you is the right answer. And you're going to hear, it's like constant comment section in life. You're going to hear all sorts of things. And there are pros and cons to 100% of the things that we do. I think I have really forced myself-- because I get it.

I had a nanny when I started. I eventually switched to daycare. There are pros and cons. I hear all the gamuts of things. And I just have to know that what I'm doing is right for me and my family. And it might look different than someone else. I also recognize while there are some benefits of staying home, for me, my son is benefiting from me working because of my mental health. And that is so much more important-- it's quality versus quantity.

But that's not the same for any two people. And I think just try to know that whatever decision you make is the right decision, and that might change in a year or three months. And that is OK. And I guarantee for as many people that are judging, there's just as many people saying, I feel the exact same way. So just use your network, use your people. Even just prepping for this panel, it's just reassuring. You're going to make the right choice because that's what's right.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: Ignore the peanut gallery.

JENNIFER SUERTH: Yeah.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: Ignore the peanut gallery. And know that it's OK to love your career.

JENNIFER SUERTH: Yes.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: I think that's the thing--

JENNIFER SUERTH: You're a human.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: Yeah. It's the thing we struggle with, right? I didn't-- I actually felt guilt for not feeling guilty. And I was like, well, I couldn't wait to get back. And I did have my moments of breakdown, as some of the women in this room can attest. But also, for me, it was finding other women who were just as career driven.

JENNIFER SUERTH: Yeah. Well, and also, so I dated my husband for 10 years before we got married, then we were married for 10 years and had a kid. I chose to have a child later in life. I wasn't sure if I wanted one or not. And then when I-- part of it was in my head like, timing, all of that. And I just-- yeah, you're making choices. And it's what's right for you.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: Well, and I would also say, what, Jen, you said, is, is your child happy?

AUDIENCE: Oh yeah.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: Yeah. Of course.

JENNIFER SUERTH: Exactly. And to add to my journey of 20 years with my significant other, I am a human. I have a life. And I think one of the things I got in my head when I was young was, you have a kid, your life's over. And what I realized is my life might be different, but I am still entitled to feelings, and being productive in the world, and having happiness. And i hope and think my son is thriving because of that. So just know, you are entitled to-- you're entitled to have a bad day.

You want to just go to-- we talked about Target, running to Target--

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: Target run.

JENNIFER SUERTH: Just walking around by yourself. You're entitled.

AUDIENCE: Yeah, my husband said-- yesterday, we were talking. He came too. This is my first trip away from our son. So we felt it was fair that we came together. So--

JENNIFER SUERTH: Aw, that's so wonderful.

AUDIENCE: He said to me, and I was like, I don't know if I want to be a mom, or if I want to go back to work, like really focus on my career. And he was like, OK, one, stop. You're always going to be a mom. That's just-- that never that never goes away. You can stay at home and be a mom, or you can have your career. So he's like, don't think that you're not a mom. And I think I have been separating the two. If I fully go back to work, am I losing out on the opportunity to be a full-time mom? So--

JENNIFER SUERTH: You'll figure it out. Trust me.

AUDIENCE: Well, it's like that work-life integration that Jen was talking about, right? Like showing up as both yourself, and a mom, and a working person. You're all connected now.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: I feel like-- I feel strongly about not needing to compartmentalize.

JENNIFER SUERTH: Yeah, I learned that the hard way.

ALI: Anybody else?

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: There was a-- yeah, there's a question right here, the third row, Ali.

ALI: Coming around.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: And then up front. But she just had her hand up first.

SAVY FRANCIS: I'm surprised you can see.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: I know. The lights are very bright.

AUDIENCE: Thank you. My name is Anne. I'm a high school teacher, but I used to work in the field of architecture. So once I had my kid, I wasn't able to do full-time work anymore. And including I'm a divorcee, so I don't have the support that you ladies have. So and not only that, working in the teaching field for in California for ROP, I don't get the same support with my agency. So I was wondering, what can I do to create a platform for stronger women in the workforce, like in general?

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: That's like-- that's a big question.

AUDIENCE: I know. I know. It goes down to a lot of things like salary pay to just across the board.

RUHI THAKUR: Yeah, I think something that we've started at work, these are some colleagues of mine, who actually had babies recently, recently meaning during the pandemic. And looking at them, I was motivated to have my baby. But then what she started was a program called Build Hers. And that program is it's slowly, it's in its infancy. They're basically just gathering everyone at work, men, women, whoever is interested in the topic, and have the conversations.

This is happening quarterly right now. It started really small. But the last time I attended, I actually saw close to a hundred people-- we have 400 people working on our site on a daily basis. And a lot of them are women. Last one that I attended, she was able to gather close to a hundred women in that discussion. The first one probably started with 15 people in that group. And we've been talking about topics like child care. How-- what do we do with childcare? Someone-- the people who work on the site, they have to come there by 7:00 AM, 6:00 AM to start their work.

If it's a concrete pour, they're doing it at 4:00 AM. So what does childcare look like with those early times? I mean, I work in an office and I still struggle with drop offs. So that was a very close topic for me. Then we've been, I think, talking about just respect and ability for women to have that right to be there, and not feel guilty of leaving work early or things like that.

So I think just starting a platform like that where you are getting more people join over time has helped us because what we do right now in our teams is where that's a topic in our weekly trade contractor meeting is, hey, this week, we have the Build Her event.

And all you subcontractors, any gals, and men if interested, please go attend that. So it's something that we are personally motivating a foreman who's coming to a meeting, or a superintendent, and we're telling them, please go participate in them. And a lot of times, just listening and hearing to what's being discussed just at least helps start with the solution of the problem.

That's what I've seen at my job site. And I think we're a very community-based project because it's a wastewater treatment in a community. It's for the community. So these are some very, very important topics for us. So I think starting small, for sure. But having that platform will help.

SAVY FRANCIS: For us in Boston, we have a pilot program called Care That Works where it's targeted daycares, in-home daycares, where they'll open at 5:00 AM for construction workers, hotel workers, first responders that have to be there. My daycare actually just signed on to it for myself because I start work at 5:00 AM, but my husband would be the one to drop her off because he actually has to start work at 7:00.

And most daycares in the Boston area open at 7:00 AM. So that's one thing. And then I sit on our women's committee group as well. So there's the support there where we listen for a sister who's having issues, whether it's childcare wise, or just needs a support system to lean on, and we'll try to collect the donation for that, especially for the single mothers to help with a certain bill or anything.

And then we have a Facebook group, Boston Union Trade Sisters, where we do meetups every once in a while, where we work with the community also trying to put together information. Like we've helped out with the Boston Teachers Union at one point getting supplies donated from other union trades as well.

But we do have a lot of single mothers that work in the field who do feel like they want to give up. But then there's always some-- another sister, and actually some brothers, that will step in like, hey, if you need time to yourself, and if you trust me, we'll watch your kid. Because a lot of times, you're actually working alongside some of these people. I've worked-- the guys I'm on the job site, I've known for 10 years since I've got in. I've gone on other job sites where I worked with other people, but the foreman I'm working for now, I worked for him when I was a second-year apprentice.

I've been in for 10 years. And I hear it where there's support. You get to know their families as well. Not everybody is going to have that support with their own family, but we have it within the union. If somebody gets hurt on the job site, there's donations from every trade person. With the-- like I said, with the single mothers, we try to come together by doing the school supplies, and we try to do it discreet, so that way, that particular mom, or even that single father, is not embarrassed to receive those donations.

And I know it's still-- we're still in the early part of the Care That Works program. But that's been a big help for a lot of the trades people that have gotten in to get their children in daycare so they can get to work on time. Because it's-- showing up on the job site is 90% of your work there. And they don't want to keep-- the foreman's don't want to hear, my kid's daycare doesn't open till 7:00 and you're showing up at 7:30 getting a speeding ticket or any-- then you have school buses out. So you're stuck in traffic all the time too.

So that's something-- I would try to look into a program within your district or the state you live in if they have something particular to that for child care opening early, or even if you need like an after-school program as well for your child. So that way, you're not being hit on with fees for picking up your child late from that particular daycare.

JENNIFER SUERTH: I think the big thing is, look and see what's out there. But don't be afraid to create something. And start small. Going to stuff, listening to this, now you know-- I'm sure if you reached out to any of us-- you have great contacts. Get new ideas. Start small. You can create from within. You can build that community. And I get it. I feel fortunate having a spouse here. But I don't have parents that are healthy enough to help.

So I had to find creative ways to fill some of those gaps in times like this event. So just start building connections, and stuff's going to start to flow organically. And then there's a power in numbers. And we have an issue with getting people in this industry. Maybe the unions should offer childcare. And maybe we'd get a ton of people in construction. But it's just-- our voice, we just got to keep being out there. And you'll be surprised what you can find, or simple things you can do, with just a few other people to keep building that.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: I would say, keep speaking up. It's your voice, right? DEI is a huge issue. It's a widely-accepted issue. It's accepted as an issue now. Being a working mom is a DEI issue.

JENNIFER SUERTH: Yeah.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: So you make it an imperative to be part of the conversation. You'll find other people that are out there. And it's not-- it's not easy. I think, like I said earlier, there's a little bit of a rosy picture up here. But it's not-- being a working mom is hard. I'm newly separated and I'm figuring out what that looks like for me without that solid support. And so, but you have to-- find your voice. Keep speaking up, saying, I'm a working mom. Are you thinking about us? And you get people, you force people, to pay attention.

So we're at time. I know there was one more question. I don't know if our recording cuts off. Do we want to ask that one question or-- go ahead.

AUDIENCE: No, I just wanted to applaud Ruhi, right? It was the name? Yes, for bringing your kid to the conference because it's going to be setting a perfect example for them watching you speak here and succeed. I mean, I myself spoke yesterday. And I also brought my daughter who's seven. And--

[APPLAUSE]

Thank you. And I want her to see that because it's an example that you're setting for them. Yes, the-- I don't have family nearby either. So I would be traveling, bringing her over, staying in the hotel the whole day. But she gets to go out a little bit. But even yesterday when she called me right before my session and she goes, mommy, mommy. And that invigorates you. So your kid will eventually be doing the same for you and cheering for you. The other thing--

JENNIFER SUERTH: Way to give me mom guilt because my child doesn't--

AUDIENCE: No.

JENNIFER SUERTH: No, no. This is super inspiring.

AUDIENCE: Yes.

JENNIFER SUERTH: I'm going to bring my son to a future conference.

AUDIENCE: Yes. Yes. You should.

RUHI THAKUR: I think Meredith asked me right at the beginning, are you going to bring her? I'm like, oh, maybe. And then that's where I think everything started. So--

AUDIENCE: Yeah, and then later you get with the--

JENNIFER SUERTH: [INAUDIBLE] babysitters.

AUDIENCE: With the school, and missing school, but I talked to the school and I said, I'm going to be speaking at a conference. In a way, you're teaching them something else outside of school. She still has her packet of homework, but it's important for them to see that.

RUHI THAKUR: Yeah.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: Awesome. Awesome. Thank you. One more?

RUHI THAKUR: Thanks for sharing that.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: One more.

AUDIENCE: One more thought.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: Awesome.

AUDIENCE: Yeah, so going back to the mom guilt, and this is a great segue to what you're just saying, I was trying to find the article that my manager sent me my last two managers ago because I used to travel a lot for work. And I found it. And it says, why work-- why working moms raise great kids. And it was based on a Harvard study. And basically, the study shows that having a working mom helped the daughters to be more successful in the workplace, and they had more supervisory roles.

And sons were generally more empathetic and had fewer problems in adapting to nontraditional gender roles when raising their own families. And just setting that example is what made me feel not guilty when I had to travel.

JENNIFER SUERTH: My mom guilt.

AUDIENCE: Yeah.

JENNIFER SUERTH: Yeah, it's such a good one.

AUDIENCE: So yeah. It was great to have this and also have that support from my manager. That was the last person that I expected to send me that article, which was great.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: We're raising the next--

RUHI THAKUR: I think there's so much motivation in the world. The lady who won the Nobel Prize this year, Katalin Kariko, I think that's her name, for medicine. And then she was asked a question, you're just a 13th out of the 200 women. We don't have a lot of women winning the Nobel Prize Award. And then she-- and then she's like, yeah, we give birth, we go through these things, and there's so many things in life. So women are held back.

But then she was basically talking about her story where, yeah, we got through it. And my daughter just grew up fine. She watched her mom and dad really work hard. And now she's-- she set some achievements that her daughter has done. So--

JENNIFER SUERTH: Yeah.

RUHI THAKUR: Yeah, people are doing things everywhere in the world. And some have support, some don't have. But we're all figuring it out. And I think that's the motive-- when I see people like her speak, I think I just get fired up. I need to-- Yeah, we'll figure it out.

JENNIFER SUERTH: Yeah, that is a great article. And I'm glad you brought that up. So definitely, I encourage you all to read that and look into that Harvard study because that helped me a lot with the mom guilt.

MEREDITH OBENDORFER: Harvard-- Google, Harvard study working mom. Well, with that, we're at time. Thank you so much. This has been a lovely conversation. Thanks for coming.

[APPLAUSE]

And I guess that's a close. That's a wrap.

______
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我们通过 Google Optimize 测试站点上的新功能并自定义您对这些功能的体验。为此,我们将收集与您在站点中的活动相关的数据。此数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID、您的 Autodesk ID 等。根据功能测试,您可能会体验不同版本的站点;或者,根据访问者属性,您可能会查看个性化内容。. Google Optimize 隐私政策
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Clearbit
Clearbit 允许实时数据扩充,为客户提供个性化且相关的体验。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。Clearbit 隐私政策
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YouTube 是一个视频共享平台,允许用户在我们的网站上查看和共享嵌入视频。YouTube 提供关于视频性能的观看指标。 YouTube 隐私政策

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我们通过 Adobe Analytics 收集与您在我们站点中的活动相关的数据。这可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID、您的 Autodesk ID。我们使用此数据来衡量我们站点的性能并评估联机体验的难易程度,以便我们改进相关功能。此外,我们还将使用高级分析方法来优化电子邮件体验、客户支持体验和销售体验。. Adobe Analytics 隐私政策
Google Analytics (Web Analytics)
我们通过 Google Analytics (Web Analytics) 收集与您在我们站点中的活动相关的数据。这可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。我们使用此数据来衡量我们站点的性能并评估联机体验的难易程度,以便我们改进相关功能。此外,我们还将使用高级分析方法来优化电子邮件体验、客户支持体验和销售体验。. Google Analytics (Web Analytics) 隐私政策
AdWords
我们通过 AdWords 在 AdWords 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 AdWords 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 AdWords 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 AdWords 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. AdWords 隐私政策
Marketo
我们通过 Marketo 更及时地向您发送相关电子邮件内容。为此,我们收集与以下各项相关的数据:您的网络活动,您对我们所发送电子邮件的响应。收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID、电子邮件打开率、单击的链接等。我们可能会将此数据与从其他信息源收集的数据相整合,以根据高级分析处理方法向您提供改进的销售体验或客户服务体验以及更相关的内容。. Marketo 隐私政策
Doubleclick
我们通过 Doubleclick 在 Doubleclick 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 Doubleclick 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 Doubleclick 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 Doubleclick 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. Doubleclick 隐私政策
HubSpot
我们通过 HubSpot 更及时地向您发送相关电子邮件内容。为此,我们收集与以下各项相关的数据:您的网络活动,您对我们所发送电子邮件的响应。收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID、电子邮件打开率、单击的链接等。. HubSpot 隐私政策
Twitter
我们通过 Twitter 在 Twitter 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 Twitter 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 Twitter 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 Twitter 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. Twitter 隐私政策
Facebook
我们通过 Facebook 在 Facebook 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 Facebook 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 Facebook 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 Facebook 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. Facebook 隐私政策
LinkedIn
我们通过 LinkedIn 在 LinkedIn 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 LinkedIn 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 LinkedIn 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 LinkedIn 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. LinkedIn 隐私政策
Yahoo! Japan
我们通过 Yahoo! Japan 在 Yahoo! Japan 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 Yahoo! Japan 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 Yahoo! Japan 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 Yahoo! Japan 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. Yahoo! Japan 隐私政策
Naver
我们通过 Naver 在 Naver 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 Naver 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 Naver 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 Naver 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. Naver 隐私政策
Quantcast
我们通过 Quantcast 在 Quantcast 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 Quantcast 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 Quantcast 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 Quantcast 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. Quantcast 隐私政策
Call Tracking
我们通过 Call Tracking 为推广活动提供专属的电话号码。从而,使您可以更快地联系我们的支持人员并帮助我们更精确地评估我们的表现。我们可能会通过提供的电话号码收集与您在站点中的活动相关的数据。. Call Tracking 隐私政策
Wunderkind
我们通过 Wunderkind 在 Wunderkind 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 Wunderkind 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 Wunderkind 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 Wunderkind 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. Wunderkind 隐私政策
ADC Media
我们通过 ADC Media 在 ADC Media 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 ADC Media 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 ADC Media 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 ADC Media 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. ADC Media 隐私政策
AgrantSEM
我们通过 AgrantSEM 在 AgrantSEM 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 AgrantSEM 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 AgrantSEM 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 AgrantSEM 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. AgrantSEM 隐私政策
Bidtellect
我们通过 Bidtellect 在 Bidtellect 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 Bidtellect 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 Bidtellect 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 Bidtellect 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. Bidtellect 隐私政策
Bing
我们通过 Bing 在 Bing 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 Bing 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 Bing 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 Bing 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. Bing 隐私政策
G2Crowd
我们通过 G2Crowd 在 G2Crowd 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 G2Crowd 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 G2Crowd 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 G2Crowd 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. G2Crowd 隐私政策
NMPI Display
我们通过 NMPI Display 在 NMPI Display 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 NMPI Display 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 NMPI Display 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 NMPI Display 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. NMPI Display 隐私政策
VK
我们通过 VK 在 VK 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 VK 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 VK 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 VK 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. VK 隐私政策
Adobe Target
我们通过 Adobe Target 测试站点上的新功能并自定义您对这些功能的体验。为此,我们将收集与您在站点中的活动相关的数据。此数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID、您的 Autodesk ID 等。根据功能测试,您可能会体验不同版本的站点;或者,根据访问者属性,您可能会查看个性化内容。. Adobe Target 隐私政策
Google Analytics (Advertising)
我们通过 Google Analytics (Advertising) 在 Google Analytics (Advertising) 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 Google Analytics (Advertising) 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 Google Analytics (Advertising) 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 Google Analytics (Advertising) 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. Google Analytics (Advertising) 隐私政策
Trendkite
我们通过 Trendkite 在 Trendkite 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 Trendkite 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 Trendkite 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 Trendkite 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. Trendkite 隐私政策
Hotjar
我们通过 Hotjar 在 Hotjar 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 Hotjar 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 Hotjar 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 Hotjar 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. Hotjar 隐私政策
6 Sense
我们通过 6 Sense 在 6 Sense 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 6 Sense 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 6 Sense 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 6 Sense 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. 6 Sense 隐私政策
Terminus
我们通过 Terminus 在 Terminus 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 Terminus 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 Terminus 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 Terminus 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. Terminus 隐私政策
StackAdapt
我们通过 StackAdapt 在 StackAdapt 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 StackAdapt 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 StackAdapt 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 StackAdapt 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. StackAdapt 隐私政策
The Trade Desk
我们通过 The Trade Desk 在 The Trade Desk 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 The Trade Desk 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 The Trade Desk 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 The Trade Desk 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. The Trade Desk 隐私政策
RollWorks
We use RollWorks to deploy digital advertising on sites supported by RollWorks. Ads are based on both RollWorks data and behavioral data that we collect while you’re on our sites. The data we collect may include pages you’ve visited, trials you’ve initiated, videos you’ve played, purchases you’ve made, and your IP address or device ID. This information may be combined with data that RollWorks has collected from you. We use the data that we provide to RollWorks to better customize your digital advertising experience and present you with more relevant ads. RollWorks Privacy Policy

是否确定要简化联机体验?

我们希望您能够从我们这里获得良好体验。对于上一屏幕中的类别,如果选择“是”,我们将收集并使用您的数据以自定义您的体验并为您构建更好的应用程序。您可以访问我们的“隐私声明”,根据需要更改您的设置。

个性化您的体验,选择由您来做。

我们重视隐私权。我们收集的数据可以帮助我们了解您对我们产品的使用情况、您可能感兴趣的信息以及我们可以在哪些方面做出改善以使您与 Autodesk 的沟通更为顺畅。

我们是否可以收集并使用您的数据,从而为您打造个性化的体验?

通过管理您在此站点的隐私设置来了解个性化体验的好处,或访问我们的隐私声明详细了解您的可用选项。