Nancy Clark

Nancy Clark is CEO and Founder of WomensMedia, a media company focused on promoting women in the workplace, as well as the host of the "Women's Lunch Talk" blog and the weekly podcast "Working in Heels".

Starting out in aerospace engineering with NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, she moved into computer technology at the University of California, Berkeley and then became committed to helping women overcome obstacles in business. For thirty years she has been dedicated to gender equity in business. Today, as CEO of WomensMedia, Nancy Clark speaks to both women and men on gender in the workplace.For twenty-five years, she has donated her spare time and energy to nonprofit organizations reaching out to women of all ethnicities.

Nancy Clark has been a featured speaker on gender in the workplace at the Pentagon, National Science Foundation, U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, International Monetary Fund, Library of Congress, SBA Office of Women’s Business Ownership, Office of the Secretary of Defense, U.S. Army, U.S. Navy, Department of Justice, NASA, FBI, Internal Revenue Service, FEW — Federally Employed Women, FWP — Federal Women’s Program, Department of Agriculture, Department of Commerce, Department of Labor, Smithsonian Institution, University of California, as well as many women’s organizations.

Nancy is the author of the popular blog "Women's Lunch Talk" and also hosts the "Working in Heels" podcast - a weekly audio broadcast discussing issues for women in business.

WomensMedia was founded seven years ago to by Nancy Clark and Co-founders Dianne Schilling and Susanna Palomares in order to provide in-depth and trusted material for working women.

Famous quotes containing the words nancy and/or clark:

    Miss Nancy Ellicott smoked
    And danced all the modern dances;
    And her aunts were not quite sure how they felt about it,
    But they knew that it was modern.
    —T.S. (Thomas Stearns)

    It seems as though women keep growing. Eventually they can have little or nothing in common with the men they chose long ago.
    —Eugenie Clark (b. 1922)