Nina Godiwalla | |
Birth Name: | Nina Adil Godiwalla |
Birth Date: | 16 April 1975[1] |
Birth Place: | Houston, Texas, US |
Children: | Zubin Siperstein |
Spouse: | Boris Siperstein |
Alma Mater: | University of Texas at Austin
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Occupation: | CEO of MindWorks, public speaker, author |
Honours: | Texas Women's Hall of Fame Business Inductee, 2012 Duke University Trailblazer Award, 2012 Wharton School of Business Distinguished Alumna Award, 2015 |
Website: | http://mindworkscorp.com/ |
Nina Adil Godiwalla (born April 16, 1975) is an American author and businesswoman. She is CEO of MindWorks Leadership and the author of Suits: A Woman on Wall Street.
Godiwalla, the third of four daughters of Adil and Arnavaz Bharucha Godiwalla, was born and raised in Houston, Texas.[2] She is an Indian-American of Parsi background.[3] Godiwalla attended the University of Texas at Austin (UT) where she acquired a Bachelor of Business Administration in 1997. She later went on to Dartmouth College where she earned a Master of Arts in Liberal Studies degree. She also earned a Master of Business Administration in 2006 from the Wharton School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania.[4]
Godiwalla began her career in investment banking with an internship at J.P. Morgan. Upon graduation from UT, she worked at Morgan Stanley from 1997 to 1999 in the corporate finance group.[5] After Morgan Stanley, Godiwalla continued her career at corporate institutions including Johnson & Johnson and Oxygen Media.
Godiwalla is now the CEO of MindWorks Leadership, which provides training in leadership, diversity, and stress management.[6]
Godiwalla is on The Wall Street Journal Executive Task Force for Women in the Economy, a leadership instructor for The University of Texas MBA Program, and a writer for Wharton Magazine.[7]
In 2012 she accepted an invitation by the White House, Office of the President, to serve on their Leadership Roundtable.[8] She also served on Texas Governor Rick Perry's Business Council.
Godiwalla's immigrant upbringing, her two years as an analyst at Morgan Stanley, and the issues she faced as a woman on Wall Street are the major subjects of her first book, Suits: A Woman on Wall Street.[9] The book reflects an insider's perspective on women working on Wall Street from the outsider’s point of view of a second-generation Parsi Indian immigrant.[10]
Godiwalla has spoken internationally at venues including The White House, NASA, The World Affairs Council, Smithsonian, Harvard, and TEDxHouston Conference. Her speaking topics include Women and Minorities in Corporate America, Leadership, Diversity, and Stress Management. In 2014, she was the keynote speaker at the Evelyn Rubenstein Jewish Community Center of Houston's annual event celebrating Women's History Month.[6]
Texas Women's Hall of Fame Business Inductee, 2012[11]
Duke University Trailblazer Award, 2012
Wharton School of Business Kathleen McDonald Distinguished Alumna Award, 2015 [4]