Former Google manager Holly Stephens is one of a growing number of Australian entrepreneurs who are building global platforms to encourage more talented women around the world to pursue side hustles and entrepreneurship.
Through the Triangles platform and mobile app, Stephens says women will have a place they can always go to for advice and connections with like-minded people.
โIt forms this network where people can help each other out,โ Stephens tells StartupSmart.
Triangles is among an emerging number of tech-driven platforms and communities aiming to connect and empower entrepreneurial women Down Under and beyond.
In recent years, Australia has seen the launch of groups like Sheryl Thaiโs League of Extraordinary Women, Jane Lu and Gen Georgeโs Like Minded Bitches Drinking Wine, Francesca Thorneโs Australian Womenโs Network and Marisa Warrenโs ELEVACAO Foundation.
The groups bring together thousands of women from the corporate sector, startups and other industries.
Triangles had 100 women sign up to the platform within four days of its launch this month and Stephens will be hosting a blindfolded dinner to celebrate.
Stephens hopes the blindfolds will allow the guests to spark fearless and powerful conversations about ambitions and entrepreneurial goals.
โThereโs a lot of power that can come from that and the conversations that may come out of it,โ she says.
Over the next year, Stephens will work on growing the Triangles community and hopes to partner with other organisations to drive it further.
โAt the moment, within the community we have 15 founding members,โ she says.
โThese are women that joined the community and were actively commenting on posts and looking for events.
โThe power is in the founding members who want to build this out from the bottom up โฆ I want to see whatโs working and what people want.โ
From corporate world to startup life
Stephens says Triangles was inspired by her own journey from corporate world to entrepreneurship.
โIโm completely bootstrapping it and Iโm doing it on the side,โ she says.
While working for major tech companies like Google and Xerox, Stephens says she always had a burning desire to build something on her own but didnโt really know what exactly that would beย at the time.
โI thought there must be more women that feel this way that are in a corporate role but donโt know what they really want to do,โ she says.
Stephens says her time at Google, which she believes is โone of the best companies to work forโ, equipped her with critical mentoring, training and experience with skills like building partnerships.
โThe main thing that Google really gave me is that it still operates like a little entrepreneur group where you kind of own your own projects,โ she says.
Think big, start small
Making the leap from corporate life to building a startup may seem daunting but all it takes is a little bit of action on the side to get the balls rolling, says Stephens.
โStart with baby steps, no matter how small it is โฆ and it will work itself out,โ she says.
And commit to ongoing learning, whether thatโs listening to a podcast on the commute to work or spending five minutes a day reading, she says.
โAlways dedicate 10 percent of your time towards learning,โ she says.
Stephens also believes that new founders should not be discouraged when doubt seeps in and the prospect of failure intensifies.
โJust focus on the end goal โฆ Youโll have really down times when you wonโt be able to see how itโs going to come through,โ she says.
โ[Always] go back to the baby steps.โ
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