澳门六合彩开奖接口

Meet the 澳门六合彩开奖接口 Management alumna empowering innovative, purposeful networking tech

Elina Chow sitting against a mantelpiece
For 澳门六合彩开奖接口 graduate Elina Chow (BBA 2004), founder and CEO of , the key to effective networking not only involves cultivating positive and enduring relationships, but also developing and exercising self-confidence.

 

鈥淚鈥檓 naturally a very shy person鈥攊n fact, I was devastatingly shy growing up鈥攂ut I understood early on that investing in your network and allowing partnerships to flourish is linked to your credibility, and credibility is good for business,鈥 said Chow.

鈥淢y career path has had its share of surprising twists and turns, but to me it comes down to knowing who you are, knowing your purpose, and enabling others to find and advance theirs, too.鈥

Upon graduating from 澳门六合彩开奖接口, Chow took on various roles including account executive at an ad agency, in-house marketing coordinator at a law firm, and as an event planner producing corporate events and fashion shows for Canada Fashion Week.

In 2007, Chow became a mother. She had just accepted a marketing role at another law firm when she unexpectedly received an offer for an investor relations (IR) position at a publicly traded gold exploration company.

鈥淚R is the perfect marriage between marketing and finance, and for the first time, I felt the right balance of what I was looking for in a job. The industry and the various mentors I have found in it were what ignited the entrepreneur in me,鈥 said Chow.

She ran and operated a boutique marketing and IR agency in Toronto from 2010 to 2020, servicing private and publicly traded companies in mining, tech, healthcare, and apparel. Chow also began investing in tech start-ups as an angel investor.

Through her burgeoning IR consultancy, Chow鈥檚 portfolio overflowed with investor conferences every year.

鈥淲e had 30+ clients. Honestly, it became chaotic to compile, track, and continually update my networking contacts. I always returned from networking events with stacks and stacks of business cards, notes written on napkins and random surfaces, you name it. I would spend hours scanning business cards into my computer and collating notes into my own rudimentary spreadsheet or CRM鈥攊t wasn鈥檛 efficient,鈥 she said.

鈥淚 found that key contextual information鈥攖he essence of maintaining these relationships鈥攚ere often recorded but kept on my desktop, which I couldn't access while I was on the road.鈥

 

Notable connections everywhere

Seeking an innovative solution to organize a sprawling database, Chow channeled her frustration into inventing : the social-enabled, user-friendly mobile CRM and contact manager designed for professionals who value meaningful networking connections. Jot is driven by annotations and live updates that provide users with deep context into their unique relationships with networking contacts.

A live Jot profile on a phone

鈥淲hether you鈥檙e an emerging professional or a seasoned business leader, the beauty of Jot is that you can pick up with your connections right where you left off. Where you met, what you chatted about, your shared networks and interests, interesting or memorable anecdotes. it鈥檚 all here in the app,鈥 Chow said.

鈥淪o rather than digging through your files or inbox or a complicated CRM to refresh your memory before a meeting鈥攐r struggling to recall important details about a person during a chance networking encounter鈥擩ot gives you the contextual history at your fingertips through annotations and tags that are meaningful and useful to you on the go,鈥 Chow said.

Since launching the app in late 2021, Chow and her team have also partnered with Management faculty, students, and The BRIDGE鈥敯拿帕喜士苯涌阝檚 signature accelerator within the ecosystem鈥攂y embedding content in fall 2022 courses to advance student learning in product and business development, data collection, and market research.

Chow hopes the Jot platform will not only help young professionals become more effective networkers but also support their personal and professional growth by enabling better communication that buoys their sense of confidence.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a whole thing around impostor syndrome. Whether you鈥檙e fresh out of school, or even a fully established professional, I think we all have tendencies to feel impostor syndrome in different situations,鈥 Chow said.

鈥淲hat we have to recognize is that the feeling might actually be positive. It means that there鈥檚 room to grow, to aspire. The reality is that imposter syndrome disproportionately affects high-achieving people. It is my hope that Jot becomes the secret (but not so secret) weapon that helps professionals approach connections鈥攏ew or old鈥攚ith confidence, and realize the full potential of their connections.鈥

To learn more, visit and find Jot on , , and . Connect with Elina Chow on and .

Authored by Kendal Egli

Crossposted from