Describe a leader who engaged and inspired you. How did you change as a result of that leadership?
Although our leadership styles are totally different, Dave Wheeler is a leader who inspired me. During his time at RGA, Dave had the ability to grow potential in people well outside of their current roles. He didn’t view people in terms of pre-defined career tracks. In fact, it was due in part to his guidance that I first took the leap from clinical medicine to insurance medicine, and ultimately outside of insurance medicine, which led me to my current role in underwriting.
Insurance is still a fundamentally relationship- driven business. No one exemplified this better than Dave. We jokingly referred to his network as FODs – Friends of Dave. I strive to develop these relationships, whether among the RGA workforce or across the industry. When my own career is over, I know relationships are where I will have found the greatest value.
Dave also lived and breathed RGA. When I exited clinical medicine, I never expected to enter a corporate role in which I would be so personally invested in the lives and careers of those around me. Through Dave’s example and through others at RGA, I have learned to encourage my colleagues to expand their career paths. The collective success of our teams follows naturally when individuals are encouraged to face challenges and take risks, backed by the support of their leaders and the confidence in a strategy they have had a hand in shaping.
What leadership characteristic do you possess that makes you most effective? Can you describe a situation where this characteristic helped you and your team?
I believe authenticity and approachability are important characteristics of a strong leader. I use humor frequently to make myself relatable, diffuse tense situations, and well, because it’s just who I am. I’m not afraid to ask questions, I don’t need to be the expert in every subject, and I’m certainly not the smartest person in the room. I want everyone on my team, no matter the role, to feel comfortable in approaching me and expressing their opinion. I value dissenting feedback that offers a constructive and better path forward.
How do you coach employees to help them grow in their careers?
It sounds cliché, but I truly believe it begins with understanding the vision of where employees want to be in the future. I encourage them to really be honest with themselves in their current stage – and let them know there are no wrong answers. Their vision can and should be revised frequently, but even from that initial stage, the skill and experience gaps usually surface readily. I’m very fortunate to be at a company with extensive resources and a vast internal network to fill any gaps. Sometimes the missing element is new exposures and experiences. We’ve all encountered colleagues whose career trajectories took a welcome right turn due to an unexpected project or rotation. I myself have taken on unexpected roles that stretched me in ways that I would not have anticipated when I started out in medicine and allowed me to grow into the professional I am today.