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I co-founded Roots Inspire, because I want to help ethnic minority talent speed up the process I went through. Now, having that different cultural background that offers a fresh perspective, actually works in my favour. I started to find my connection with the corporate world and slowly merged the different worlds I was operating in. It gave me the confidence that I needed to do well and aim high. All it took was one manager, one team, that made me feel at home and appreciated the skills and perspectives I had to offer. Moral of my story is that I could have very well been wasted talent. But these guys never looked down on me (I am over 2 metres tall, so that is hard to do anyway). I had never really learned proper restaurant etiquette, let alone all those fancy names on the menu. Still I had strides to make: I even remember being a bit nervous when we had a team celebration dinner. The team I ended up in was a complete mixture of different skill sets, different industry backgrounds and different personal backgrounds, purposely put together to breathe creativity and come up with the smartest solutions. I was completely different from him and that’s why he hired me. A big smile on his face this guy meant it! He was interested in my story who I am and what I can bring to the table. “Finally, some colour in the room!” was the first thing he said when he entered the room, where I was waiting for my job interview. I decided I could do better and started looking for a job elsewhere. Looking back at my career now, there was a defining moment that changed things for me. I was navigating two completely different worlds and remember feeling almost ashamed of wearing a suit on my way home from work.
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Needless to say that the transition to a predominantly white corporate world was not well prepared. Meanwhile, I spent my time competing in kickboxing and trained twice a day that’s where I felt more at home. They called my the ghost student, because I never showed up for class, but my name kept popping up at the top of the exam result lists. University was more of the same: not a lot of ethnic minorities studying Econometrics and Operations Research. Nevertheless, my grades remained high, so when the school offered me to take my final exams a year early, I absolutely took it. The basketball court is where I felt at home and often, I didn’t really see the point of going to class. I chose a nearly all white high school, because they had a basketball court right on their schoolyard, but when some of the kids started greating me with “yo, yo, yo”, I sort of gave up on even trying to fit in. When we reduce the odds of wasted talent, everybody wins!”
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“Too much talent is wasted if we cannot find the connection with the corporate world. The odds were not in favor of an international banking career. I moved to the Netherlands at a young age, where I was raised by a single mom on a secretary salary. Born in Suriname to a Curacaoan mother and an Indian-Surinamese father.
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