So how about we get to know our rock stars today in this column? I will try to talk about as many as I know, but of course there might be many I’m unaware of.
The first name that comes to mind is Kalsoom Lakhani, the founder and CEO of Invest2Innovate – a social venture that provides support to seed-stage social enterprises and provides them access to capital in new markets.
She received her bachelor’s from University of Virginia, and master’s degree from George Washington University.
Apart from being a member of the World Economic Forum’s Global Shapers, the George Washington alumnus is also a co-ambassador for Sandbox, a global network of innovators under 30. If you are working on a strong social startup and require seed funding, she is definitely your go-to person.
Then we have this multi-talented Stanford grad, Sheba Najmi – once a Pakistani television news anchor, now an extremely versatile user experience designer and product strategist. She was a Code for America Fellow (2012) and has previously worked at Yahoo! as a lead designer for Yahoo! Mail – a product that caters to 260 million users worldwide.
Sheba is currently the founder of Tech for Pakistan. She is also on the Go-Fig Solutions Board of Advisers and a User Experience Design Instructor (in both San Francisco and Pakistan).
Then we have two women entrepreneurs whom I met last year at the Innovation Punjab program in Lahore, where all three of us were featured as innovation heroes by Google Pakistan and the Punjab government for its upcoming IT innovation policy.
Maria Umar, the founder of Women’s Digital League, was one of the two. She comes from the terrorism-stricken province of Khyber Pakhtunkhua, yet takes this double adversity to positive effect while she runs a one-of-a-kind venture that empowers women from all over the country to work from home while she provides them with online work such as application development, graphic design, content creation, data entry, social media and community management, and much more on similar lines.
The other innovative lady who I met is Sidra Qasim, the co-founder of Home Town Shoes – an extraordinarily unique e-commerce portal that sells beautifully handcrafted shoes made by Pakistani craftsmen, and sells it to the rest of the world, with a major buyers belonging to countries in Europe.
Then comes a name from aerospace engineering – a field that you’d least expect to hatch out a female entrepreneurs– Nida R Farid is an MIT graduate who is currently working on a project which she’s named “Karachi Energy Conservation Awareness – Small Tricks for Large Savings”.
The name of the venture being self-explanatory, her goal is to cut down the energy consumption from Karachi’s upper class neighborhoods, which she states, accounts for 70% of the entire city’s energy consumption, through awareness campaigns. The next time you come across a tea-seminar that creates awareness about how to use home appliances in line with the acute energy resources, there’s a good chance Nida’s the one behind it.
Then there’s Salma Jafri, who founded her own content marketing firm WordPL.net in 2008 and now works with Fortune 100 companies as a service provider. She work from home managing a remote team, apart from engaging into great new ventures such as her upcoming tech product, a content repurposing tool for marketers, which has made it to the quarter-final round of an international startup competition organised by the GIST Initiative, a partnership led by the US Department of State and CRDF Global.
She’s also the go-to person for Elance training in Pakistan, apart from being a columnist for leading industry publications such as Search Engine Watch.
Last but not least is a lady from Karachi, Arjumand Younus, who recently became Google’s Anita Borg Memorial Scholar for Europe, Middle East and Africa region. Google awards this scholarship to women who excel in computing and technology, who become active role models and leaders. She’s currently doing her PhD at the National University or Ireland, who also happens to be a part of the Faculty at IBA, Karachi.
The writer runs a software company in Dubai.
Published in The Express Tribune, September 9th, 2013.
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COMMENTS (16)
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Thanks, Farrukh, for such a glowing article. Just a minor correction here, the domestic sector uses 45% of all electricity produced, with the richest 20% of Pakistan consuming a large chunk of that. However, in their roles as management and owners of all commercial and industrial activities, they make the decisions for more than 70% of all electricity used in Pakistan.
Thanks for the love, Mrs. Kapadia. Sheba and I could have never reached so far without all that you and the other teachers at SJC taught us.
May Almighty Allah bless all these
Met Kalsoom Lakhani in Washington DC in January, when I was visiting USA on IVLP. She is Just amazing. Felt proud after meeting her. Green Blood, no doubt the talented most.
@Blunt: ahhh.. plz stop praising that miraculous kid whose brain surgery leaves no mark on her face lolzzzzz
My appreciation to the writer to bring to our knowledge the existance of such ideals and hats off to all the womens for their contributions and making the difference. Regards
Where's MALALA. Without her Pakistan is so incomplete.
I am extremely proud of our young talented women in the tech industry. I particularly feel very happy about reading of two of the brilliant names given. Sheba Najmi and Nida Farid both St Josephines. Congratulaions to both my students. Keep it up
Positive, encouraging info article.
Why such emphasis on US universities catalog?
Bus only these?
Really proud of Pakistani women who are doing really great work in technology sector.
Thanks so much for the mention! So many women like Jehan Ara, Sabeen Mahmud, Rabia Garib also deserve major recognition - they're my superheroes!
You should also add names of Jehan Ara/Samina Rizwan/Rabia Garib amongst a few if you are going to talk about women in IT industry...
great!
So proud of all you! Keep it up. You make us proud!