A Woman in Logistics
Leading from the Ground Up
I am an immigrant and the daughter of immigrant parents. My story is rooted in sacrifice, resilience, and the unwavering belief that opportunity is earned through discipline and integrity.
My parents built their lives in a country that was not originally theirs. They navigated language barriers, cultural shifts, and uncertainty with determination and dignity. From them, I learned that hard work is a privilege, that character defines credibility, and that growth requires courage. My siblings reinforced those lessons daily. We pushed one another, supported one another, and learned early that success is shared. Accountability was not taught through lectures; it was lived in our home.
That foundation shaped how I led long before I ever stepped into logistics.
School became the next arena where those values were tested. As a child, I knew what it felt like to be the “new foreign kid” in the classroom, learning English while trying to understand expectations that everyone else seemed to absorb naturally. Existing between cultures can feel isolating.
Whenever another student arrived who did not speak English, I stepped in. I showed them where to sit, how the classroom worked, when to ask questions, and how to navigate the day. No one appointed me. I simply understood the weight of unfamiliar systems and chose to make them lighter for someone else.
At the same time, educators helped shape my confidence and intellectual discipline. Teachers who challenged me, expected excellence, and encouraged curiosity taught me that preparation creates access. They did more than educate; they empowered. Their belief, alongside my family’s example, instilled the mindset that leadership is earned through action, not position.
That understanding deepened through athletics. Basketball and softball taught me that preparation shows, effort shows, and gaps show. My coaches demanded resilience, consistency, and accountability. They reinforced that individual performance means little without team alignment. Execution, communication, and trust determine outcomes. Those principles translate seamlessly into logistics, where coordination and timing are everything.
When I entered the professional world, I carried those lessons with me. My career began in high-performance, service-centered environments where precision and consistency were nonnegotiable. I later transitioned into financial services, where structure, compliance, and fiduciary responsibility sharpened my analytical discipline and respect for process integrity.
Each chapter strengthened my operational foundation, but it was at American Intermodal Management, now FlexiVan, where my leadership identity fully crystallized.
The intermodal supply chain is complex, data-driven, and unforgiving of inefficiency. Equipment positioning, carrier coordination, billing accuracy, customer partnerships, and real-time decision-making must align seamlessly. Small breakdowns ripple quickly across networks. Success requires more than strategy; it requires operational fluency.
Because I began my career executing at the ground level, I lead with operational empathy. I believe leaders must understand how systems function before attempting to optimize them. Strategy informed by frontline insight builds credibility, alignment, and sustainable performance. Strategy without it creates distance.
Equally important has been the environment surrounding me. From my parents and siblings to my teachers, from my coaches to the mentors who invested in me professionally, I have learned that growth accelerates when you are both challenged and supported.
At FlexiVan, I found leaders who created space for ownership and accountability. Today, I have the privilege of leading a team defined by dedication, resilience, and operational excellence. Their commitment to performance and continuous improvement drives meaningful results across the network.
My responsibility is clear: create clarity, remove friction, and model the standards I expect. Accountability begins with me. Adaptability begins with me. Excellence begins with me.
In today’s landscape, being an immigrant woman in a traditionally male-dominated industry carries both responsibility and purpose. My voice is shaped by lived experience — by navigating unfamiliar systems, earning credibility in rooms where representation is limited, and understanding what it means to work relentlessly for opportunity. It is also shaped by empathy.
I know what it feels like to be unseen. That is why I ensure others are recognized.
I know what it feels like to move forward without a roadmap. That is why I prioritize clarity.
I know what it means to build from the ground up. That is why I lead that way.
Being a woman in logistics is not about occupying space. It is about elevating it. It is about proving that operational rigor and emotional intelligence are not competing strengths, but complementary ones. It is about expanding the definition of leadership in industries that quite literally move the world.
I am proud of the journey that brought me here, but I am even more focused on the responsibility ahead. Influence is not measured by title or visibility. It is measured by the systems we improve, the standards we raise, and the doors we open for those who follow.
And I will continue to use my voice to build environments where excellence is expected, opportunity is earned, and the next generation of women in logistics sees possibility where others once saw limitation.