׉?4ׁB!בCט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://OuN22PB6C1xktHoh11RNcH_pNjvNOkMEFRgrl0ncBu8 K`׉	 7cassandra://kTrmZ__Lfk-8NgbhnlMwUE1uVUCOysgFKGNgNZnEeD8͆`s׉	 7cassandra://qKL_3LZ_zZNDxYzAA3MGAiIytcWoAeJlBjQxp5Dhr8E/` ׉	 7cassandra://r-sfk2lFhisNCNSZxpD17-njVZB7Plkvd6KlRplJ47o h͠]^,kĕט   (u׈   (QB  ׈E^,kĕ׉E EnVision
A DREAM
the inspiration
from McQuetta
Williams
GET TO
KNOW
CEO Vicki
Bowen Hewes
SUCCESS
LIVES
HERE
stories from
our women
proven success
dress for success columbus 2014
׉	 7cassandra://qKL_3LZ_zZNDxYzAA3MGAiIytcWoAeJlBjQxp5Dhr8E/` ^,kĕ^,kĕ(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://MSQEGTgO8CyarlqzTiqar0Hdu6QKH9vv2387Uk_kG30 `׉	 7cassandra://-eEnY9mN4r5BeZVkTkdhIK4kBePpvveH3N7M8-9a2UMc`s׉	 7cassandra://_wilq1MgWseeSMP_simeDeqK_iNmTA5iz1IsPOt9mq0!&` ׉	 7cassandra://y2b8t4enNd9fHHmdATcnWr4AzRwLzvVc1PG5UEKo6cU ͠]^,kĕט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://lmCrEhCy5_GBicF5bH6OCya_zxIDO0LYz5jSGG91CH4 N`׉	 7cassandra://kYfD4c3lQEk5xX-bZhtkpOQElOCvBy-ZgRiEGBRv_zM}`s׉	 7cassandra://VwjVEBqDJ2Pm5vI9Y75UJb1DDGExjWqs_I97B98Ul3c$` ׉	 7cassandra://3UCMMKZwYMpkf6HDji6Q-fw50kWfSWB3YOJWD1fLyR8 nD͠]^,kĕ׉E7MEET our TEAM
the vision
get to know CEO
Vicki Bowen Hewes
the empowerment
team
2
3
5
6
PWG leadership
past and present
Ctable of
success lives here
stories from our women
6
leaving a lasting
impression
driven to serve
notes from our volunteers
18
19
cyrus littlejohn
VIDEO PRODUCTION
anita robinson
elba Bierdeman, President
ebony edwards
DESIGN ASSISTANT PERSONAL ASSISTANT
MBOARD OF DIRECTORS
Cheryl Hooker, Past President
Amy Ashcraft
Scarlett Bouder, Vice President
Toni M. Cunningham
Alison Goldstein
Carolyn Holly, Secretary
Dress for Success Cleveland and Vocational Guidance
Service are founding partners of our local mission.
1 | TABLE OF CONTENTS
Heather Loughley, Governance Chair
Marcie Merriman
Ellie Merritt
Jennifer Peterson, Communication Chair
Angie Shifflette
Katrina Levy Zidel
linda tulley
WRITER
serbennia davis
WRITER
jehan daugherty
PHOTOGRAPHER
ONTENTS
courtney morse
WRITER
valerie brooms
WRITER
heather loughley
WRITER
nicole sillaman
melissa dilley
faith marsco
EXECUTIVE EDITOR EXECUTIVE EDITOR CREATIVE DIRECTOR
mcquetta williams
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Program / Administration
Jessica LaBarge,
Program Services Coordinator
Michelle J. King,
Contributions Coordinator
D. Malone Jones,
Director of Career Development
Emily Langhals,
Y.E.S! Columbus President
Nicole Sillaman,
W2W Mentoring
Vicki Bowen Hewes, CEO
׉	 7cassandra://_wilq1MgWseeSMP_simeDeqK_iNmTA5iz1IsPOt9mq0!&` ^,kĕ׉E@Mission of EnVision Proven Success
The Dress for Success Columbus
magazine “EnVision Proven Success”
aims to bring community awareness to
the struggle of women in the Columbus
community in obtaining, sustaining,
and advancing their careers.
Through
fundraising and corporate and individual
donations, Dress for Success Columbus
is able to serve many women in need
each year through interview suiting, work
attire donations, and career development
assistance. The mission of Dress for
Success Columbus “is to promote the
economic independence of disadvantaged
women by providing professional attire,
a network of
envision
proven
success:
a dream
Why Me, Why Now?
As chairperson of EnVision Proven Success, I am
support, and the career
development tool to help women thrive in
work and in life”. This magazine, EnVision Proven Success, is intended to
provide insight into what happens to the women we serve after they’ve
visited our suiting boutique for the first time. Our women have achieved
great accomplishments and overcome barriers unimagined by most, and
EnVision Proven Success truly demonstrates that this is just the beginning.
My dream for EnVision Proven Success
My passion for the mission of Dress for Success Columbus had led me
to follow my dream to create the first publication of EnVision Proven
Success, which ultimately will increase community awareness for all the
disadvantaged women that come through Dress for Success Columbus.
The publication of EnVision Proven Success illustrates how we, as
women going through transition adapt to only looking in the mirror at
what’s ahead, and then we can envision our perspective, progress and
proficiency, in our future careers as a proven success. As recipients, we are
motivated to continue to keep our eyes on the road ahead and not fixated
on our rearview mirror that might find our lives accidentally smashed by
objects we didn’t see just in front of us
eager to share the journey of the clients, describing
our struggles as disadvantaged women. Most women
encounter struggles throughout life, but as women
in vulnerable circumstances, our struggles are
significant. Due to the generous support of Dress for
Success Columbus contributors, we are able to access
transformative programs offered at the mission freeof-charge,
and we are moving forward with success. In
other words, we don’t look like what we’ve been through!
This is our way to show the world that we are now
succeeding! We all stumble and go through challenging
situations, and because of Dress for Success Columbus
programs, we have the confidence to stand tall.
Acknowledgements
I would first and foremost like to thank God for
the inspiration to develop EnVision Proven Success.
Additionally, I would like to thank the CEO of Dress for
Success Columbus, Vicki Bowen Hewes, who gave me
permission to follow my dreams, and all the staff and
board members. A special ‘Thanks’ is also extended to
Grange Insurance Company and Natalina Fickell for
sponsoring Dress for Success Columbus’s first edition
of EnVision Proven Success!
McQuetta Williams
Dress for Success Columbus Advocate, PWG Member
“EnVision Proven Success” Chairperson
above left: McQuetta Williams
does not look like what she has
been through.
left: McQuetta’s children,
Sterling, Tamani, and Willie,
celebrate alongside their
mother for her birthday.
THE VISION | 2
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;empowering
women
to open
closed doors
GET TO KNOW CEO VICKI BOWEN HEWES
T
he conspicuous passion
and enthusiasm of Dress
for
Success
Columbus
founder and CEO Vicki
Bowen Hewes and her ability to
reach out and touch women from
all walks of life is remarkable.
While she’s since become
synonymous with being an
advocate for women in Columbus, it was just a little
more than a decade ago that she was thriving in a maledominated
career field. In turn, she was no stranger
to dressing the part and navigating the corporate
community. It was during that time that she began
volunteering at Dress for Success in Indianapolis to
share her experience.
“I knew I wouldn’t be taken seriously in the corporate
culture if my skirt was too short or my blouse was too
low. I thought my giving time at Dress for Success
would help women understand how important
‘dressing the part’ is,” she explains.
What started out as a few hours of volunteer work
quickly transformed Vicki’s outlook and she found
herself wanting to do more.
“I realized I had no concept of the number of other
barriers women in transition faced. Transportation,
childcare, understanding the unwritten rules of the
workplace, a support network and encouragement
from peers were things I had taken for granted,”
she says. “I knew that if I had these misconceptions,
others must as well. I became impassioned to further
the cause.”
In 2007, Dress for Success Columbus opened its
doors with Vicki at its helm and its storefront windows
in the city’s chic Short North neighborhood have
invited interest from the passersby ever since
“Many people think that we are a clothing boutique
and ask to come in and shop. They are surprised to
3 | GET TO KNOW THE CEO
learn we are a social service agency. We take that as
a great compliment because we want to change the
public’s understanding of what those in need deserve
and how they should be treated. We help women who
couldn’t otherwise access personalized one-on-one
services, and these are the most special clients of all,”
she says.
“Dress for Success Columbus is a place where
women in need have the opportunity to regain their
dignity and realize their potential,” Vicki adds. “We
approach every single woman without judgment. We
aren’t concerned with yesterday. We are invested in
her feeling renewed and important today, and her
holding her shoulders high with confidence tomorrow.
“
- Serbennia Davis
above: Cheryl Hooker, McQuetta
Williams, Vicki Bowen Hewes
and Gina Schlosser celebrate the
grand opening of Dress for Success
Columbus’ new location in February
2011.
׉	 7cassandra://RtWflEIrLREXwOuAF6YG67oDFJscA04T60HZBOvqzMs(I` ^,kĕ׉EMICHELLE KING IS A FIRM BELIEVER THAT THE SUIT IS JUST A SMALL PIECE OF WHAT DRESS FOR
SUCCESS COLUMBUS MEANS TO THE WOMEN AND COMMUNITY IT SERVES . . .
Michelle says she was immediately drawn
to Dress for Success Columbus when she
learned about its impact on women, and she
didn’t hesitate to become a volunteer. She
has always been amazed by the relationship
women have with clothing and how this can
affect someone’s identity and self-esteem, so
working with clients to select their interview
and employment clothing was especially rewarding for her. She
loved the connection she made with the mission and women
served, she says.
When a position opened up for a contributions coordinator at
Dress for Success Columbus, Michelle once again jumped at the
opportunity to be involved and submitted her resume. In the job
for a year, she recruits and coordinates volunteers, coordinates
donations and works with the women that come to the boutique.
“I am honored to share the stories of our sisters with each
volunteer and donor I touch,” Michelle says.
JESSICA LABARGE COULD HAVE NEVER IMAGINED THE DIRECTION HER LIFE WOULD
GO WHEN SHE STUMBLED UPON A DRESS FOR SUCCESS COLUMBUS JOB POSTING . . .
As a Strategic Communications graduate
from The Ohio State University, she had
taken a job after college that fit her degree,
but found herself unhappy and looking for an
opportunity for change.
Jessica was immediately drawn to the
mission of the organization, and she quickly learned during
her first interview with Vicki Bowen Hewes that the executive
director’s passion and drive to uplift and empower women on
their journey was closely aligned with her own life mission.
Their connection solidified the position for Jessica and
she began working part-time as the agency’s contributions
coordinator.
Through just a year and a half on the job she has witnessed
many changes at Dress for Success Columbus, including an
increased number of volunteers and partnering agencies as well
as more overall involvement from the community.
She’s also had a change in title. Jessica now serves as program
services coordinator, which she says allows her to work closely
with clients and social service agency partners. In the process,
she has also learned about grant writing while looking for new
opportunities for the agency.
But working with volunteers, her coworkers and the women in
the Dress for Success Columbus community are the highlight of
her career, Jessica says, because they inspire her.
She is a firm believer that life is full of ups and downs and more
often than not, things don’t go the way you would like. However,
she says it’s important to pick yourself back up again because
you will find something that will work if you keep trying. For
Jessica, she has developed a greater appreciation for her own life
and journey through her work at Dress for Success Columbus.
She feels her work is personally and professionally rewarding,
and has taught her that life is dirty and messy, and even if you
“follow all the steps perfectly”, you won’t always get the perfect
outcome—and that’s ok, she says. Sometimes the unplanned path
in life can be the most rewarding and fulfilling choice.
- Courtney Morse
“I first learned of the Dress for Success
Columbus affiliate several years ago and
welcomed the opportunity to contribute
(give back). Later, I was invited by Toni
Cunningham (who currently serves as
board member) to facilitate a breakfast
club meeting through the Going Places
Network and fell in love! In 2013, I began
serving as the INNERWork Faith Based
Initiative Coordinator and one year later was appointed as
a full-time team member, serving as the Director of Career
Development. This new position is gifted from God as I am
functioning in promise, purpose and passion!”
- D Malone Jones, director of career development
To Michelle, it is amazing to see how even a small interaction
with a client can impact the woman’s day, outlook and sometimes
even their lives. She recognizes that the women that come into the
boutique have skills; they often just need a boost of confidence.
In many ways, Michelle can relate to the women in transition.
She had previously split her time between working a job in sales
and volunteering. Eventually, volunteering alone just felt like it
wasn’t enough, she says. Like many of the clients she’s worked
with, she felt intimidated to make the transition.
“You have the strength to transition,” she says, “You just need
the determination to get there—I won’t lie, it’s tough but I am
happy I stuck with it.”
Michelle believes it is vital for women to network and support
one another to reach their goals – something that being part of
the Dress for Success sisterhood is all about.
- Courtney Morse
THE EMPOWERMENT TEAM | 4
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aribeth Burton has a passion
for Dress for Success Columbus
and the women it serves. As the
2013 Professional Women’s Group (PWG)
Coordinator, she knows a thing or two
about arranging meaningful meetings and
influential speakers to introduce the PWG
members to the vast array of possibilities
that are in their future. She explains that, “Through serving the
PWG ladies, I wanted to share some of my life with them to see if
some of my experiences would resonate and maybe allow them to
recognize anyone can achieve in their life if they put their mind
to it and put forth the effort and work it requires.”
Her hope as the past PWG coordinator was to create a more
professional environment that would introduce challenges each
month, where the PWG members would learn something new
to help them find personal and financial freedom. Maribeth
wanted each woman to embark on her own personal journey to
independence.
Through her work with Dress for Success Columbus, Maribeth
also gained personal insight that strengthened her resolve to
continue to find ways to serve others in need. This personal selfdiscovery
was achieved by witnessing the strength and courage
in the continued effort put forth by the women of PWG.
While her term has passed as the PWG Coordinator, she is
reflective of the role she played in the lives of the PWG members
and is satisfied with the growth in personal discovery many
women have accomplished. She is excited to watch the PWG
women continue to reach new heights in 2014.
PWG LEADERSHIP past & present
H
eather Loughley is a wife, a campus
director, a board member - and
the list doesn’t stop there. But
regardless of her busy schedule, she is
always willing to donate her time to share
and introduce newcomers to the mission of
Dress for Success Columbus. Her passion to
help women succeed at changing their lives
is emanated in her work with Dress for Success Columbus.
Heather’s career started out much differently in comparison to
where she is now. She majored in journalism at The Ohio State
University and was initially a newspaper reporter. Heather says
she always knew she wanted to make a difference in the world – to
do something important, with the idea: ”I’m going to change the
world.” So fast forward to today, where, whether she knows it or
not, Heather is making a difference in the world.
It started when she became an enrollment counselor at
University of Phoenix. She said when she started she immediately
knew it was the right place for her because they were helping people
that were trying to help themselves. In 2008 she became Campus
Director. She always wanted the school to be more involved with
community affairs, and this position gave her the influence she
needed to see that hope become a reality. Heather later met Vicki
5 | PWG LEADERSHIP
Bowen Hewes, CEO of Dress for Success Columbus who she says
is so driven and passionate to help women that once you meet
her, you can’t help but want to get involved. That’s when the
university staff started volunteering and doing sponsorships.
In 2011 Heather was asked to sit on the board of directors of
Dress for Success Columbus, and a few months ago she was
asked to be the interim Professional Women’s Group (PWG)
Coordinator. “PWG is a vehicle to help ladies break out of
their comfort zone and try things that they’ve never tried and
to stretch themselves in ways they’ve never thought about
before,” Heather says. PWG enriches the ladies’ lives, using a
broad spectrum of opportunities. In February, they were given
the opportunity to learn ballroom dancing, which is just one
example of how Heather has infused creative approaches to help
the women push beyond what they think they are capable of
achieving.
Heather says that while PWG is not a new sector of the agency,
she believes it has become a more serious endeavor and a more
effective and dynamic group that is moving to the next level. “It’s
a complete blessing to be a part of Dress for Success Columbus
- It’s an incredible organization if you want to help women and
families,” she says.
- Valerie Brooms
׉	 7cassandra://DUFFoQZ-eUJVmZlz4bEOEPi-5Z0x7439N74re2pK5W8*` ^,kĕ׉ESUCCESS
LIVES HERE
stories from our women
To passersby, the women featured on the upcoming pages
appear to be typical employees, mothers and neighbors.
They wear professional work attire, make last-minute
trips to the grocery store before dinner, support
their children at school events and spend weekends
doing chores and yard work. But, they’re also a part
of a network of women who can say there was a time
when they struggled to keep their lives together in the
wake of abusive relationships, dangerous addictions,
unexpected job losses or
poor health. With a
hand from Dress for Success Columbus, these five
women don’t look like what they’ve been through.
e
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her
ecky Jo
Tatum wasn’t
ready to leave
prison. She’d
served all
five years of
sentence, and in
that
time, she’d found a sense of
clarity and purpose that she
doubted could be replicated
outside of those walls.
“I didn’t know if I’d be able
to find that when I got out,”
she says, recalling the sense of fulfillment that teaching
GED classes and tutoring other inmates had given her. “I
thought, ‘what am I going to do? No one wants to hire me.’”
She hadn’t always fit in there, either, though. When
Becky Jo arrived at the Ohio Reformatory for Women, she
says she spent a good year and a half in a daze before she
realized being locked up was her chance to kick a 22-yearlong
drug addiction and an equally long habit of trading
herself for cash that were spurred by an abuse-filled
childhood.
When she finally “came to” she signed up for any and
all prison programs that offered therapy and education,
including Dress for Success Columbus’ Pathways Program.
As the holder of a home appraisal license and a former
Columbus State instructor on the topic, Becky Jo pursued
the program’s Green Energy Technology track hoping
she’d be able to put the new knowledge to use to renovate
properties for sale.
She was placed in a six-week tech company internship
that started immediately after her release, and while she
was grateful for the assistance of the program that focuses
on successful re-entry into society and the workforce,
right: Becky Jo beams in the
ensemble she chose from the Dress
for Success Columbus boutique.
Her suiting appointment was the
first step in building a professional
wardrobe for her new job.
7 | SUCCESS LIVES HERE
׉	 7cassandra://H4z12gwru9tUhCUWKPPwsMec1XHMleArjE2vhz25EFA!` ^,kĕ׉EBecky Jo admits she was relieved and excited when
Dress for Success Columbus CEO Vicki Bowen Hewes
asked her to instead finish her internship in the
organization’s suiting boutique.
It was there that she brushed up her resume and
interview skills and picked out one of her favorite
yellow tops that she says she can’t stop wearing.
“Doing the internship when I got home proved it
even further,” Becky Jo says. “It affirmed, yes, yes you
can do this. It just kind of redeveloped my sense of
security.”
Becky Jo had learned sign language in prison and
she was already fluent in Spanish. She also had at her
disposal a bachelor’s degree in journalism from The
Ohio State University and a history in home rental
and sales, but Becky Jo admits she hadn’t put those
talents to use as much as she had others that could
earn her thousands per night to fund her previously
lavish lifestyle.
She knew she was going to need help if she was
going to make it through not just a transition to the
outside world, but to a whole new life coming out —
one that doesn’t include her high-scale neighborhood
or her son and daughter who she can’t see without
violating her parole.
“Everything I ever acquired as a mother and a spouse
in my home life was gone out of my own mistakes,”
Becky Jo says. “It was just nice to feel like I could
have that added support” of the Dress for Success
sisterhood.
Following Becky Jo’s internship, Vicki connected
her with another non-profit organization that was
looking for a bi-lingual bookkeeper who could set up
appointments for Spanish-speaking clients.
Becky Jo planned to drop off her resume in person,
but not before stopping by the Dress for Success
Columbus boutique for a personal styling session.
Wearing her new grey, two-piece suit, she walked
into the organization’s office, and after she met the
small staff, she found herself in a familiar situation —
she wasn’t ready to leave.
“I just got it in my heart, I’m not leaving this building
without this job,” Becky Jo says. And so she didn’t.
She’s been working part time there ever since and is
currently training to take over a full-time position.
She’s also developing night classes where she’ll
teach sign language and working to pull enough
grant money together to get back to teaching a GED
class that will put to use all the homework assignment
samples that she acquired in prison and can’t seem to
let go of.
“It is never too late to reinvent yourself,” she says. “If
I didn’t believe that, I couldn’t keep going.”
Before prison, Becky Jo says she never would have
considered that she’d be capable of leading the type
of accomplished life that’s she’s working toward now.
“I see every little thing differently now,” she says. “It
feels good to be home.”
- Melissa Dilley
going places network
A Dress for Success Worldwide initiative, The Going
Places Network presented by Walmart was created in
2009 to help unemployed and underemployed women gain
professional skills and confidence to accelerate their job
searches. All this is done through weekly training sessions,
one-on-one career coaching and networking opportunities.
In 2013, Dress for Success Columbus brought the
transformational curriculum to the Ohio Reformatory
for Women in an attempt to reach out to women who are
attempting to rebuild their lives during a vulnerable time.
All the women in the program were able to take part
in a graduation ceremony and upon their release they’re
welcomed into the suiting boutique to prepare for interviews
and jobs. In previous years, Dress for Success Columbus
offered Going Places Network at St. Stephen’s Community
House and OSU Carepoint East.
SUCCESS LIVES HERE | 8
׉	 7cassandra://YwaQgypXP-rC8kzbs83sbi7CNy3xhRkt0zvT2V8L_3s&` ^,kĕ^,kĕ(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://v5ZTFfR8aUUehbfF_Qc7vEyIuVWrs1D7fMEoE7NW068 `׉	 7cassandra://7l0NIfT-ch4ytXaWVMvUVi3KgZlXdEAJH3D7Pnn43rY͟e`s׉	 7cassandra://hG51C-AHfBKywYqI2z507KBKn96sO0Q3Dpuc_ozPcxE+c` ׉	 7cassandra://dQ2RZFuUb5Fu9FaKyviXXsgoFvo483OigTBDn21AYo4 N_T͠]^,kĕט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://JqqfGTDXrS7CgEk87IvkN-MP1okohqPou1CAfeca1Kg S`׉	 7cassandra://RCfrcsq2EVGm9ub-PdTldXwACrOWGfLQpvqt4EuAA2Ḯ `s׉	 7cassandra://4TMq7B3qMRWZsxv28H-vuD_1CEb-dO184vL9k3YQs2c)` ׉	 7cassandra://NMb4eyobzb68Ktq7b3SzkAltQDGcUg2Nswf4y8aRp9w t͠]^,kĕ׉ET
he owner of
the daycare
center was
doubtful when
the candidate
showed up.
How could a visually-impaired
woman teach a daycare class
of 2-year-olds? This situation
is the kind of challenge
Stephanie Claytor has met
head-on all of her life. All she
needed was the chance to
demonstrate her abilities, and the job was hers. Stephanie has
never been one to back down from a challenge just because
she couldn’t physically see it. That’s no more evident than in
her love for sports - she’s competed in ice skating, track and
field, and snow skiing, and she enjoys whitewater rafting and
rollerblading.
But what really stirs Stephanie’s passion is showing people
what the visually impaired can achieve.
It all starts with
giving people a chance, she says.
The smallest baby born at The Ohio State University
Hospitals in 1983 at just 1 pound, 3 ounces, Stephanie didn’t
come home for four months. Her prematurity led to retina
damage, but she could still see out of both eyes. Then at age
12, glaucoma stole the rest of her vision, leaving her able to
detect only light and shadows. “It was a big adjustment,” she
says. “I had to learn to read and write again.”
Stephanie attended and graduated from the Ohio State
School for the Blind, but she says the education she received
wasn’t rigorous enough. “They babied us,” she says, which
led to her struggling when she tried unsuccessfully to attend
Ohio State University.
Although she has worked since her first job as a camp leader
at age 15, maintaining steady, full-time employment has been
a challenge, despite her continued efforts to show employers
her capabilities. It was during a break in employment that
Stephanie came to Dress for Success Columbus for help and
eventually joined Professional Women’s Group, where she has
enjoyed a sisterhood of support at the monthly meetings.
“It’s nice to meet a lot of different people from different
backgrounds,” Stephanie says. “I like having the support of
other women to stay strong and stay positive. Things can
change, but you still have to keep pushing.”
She finds time to volunteer at Dress for Success Columbus
as well, making thank-you calls to donors and assembling
personal care packages. She also served as the 2013 PWG
9 | SUCCESS LIVES HERE
liaison to the Leadership Council, which
supports the direction and programming of
PWG.
Stephanie’s determination and drive
eventually led her to find success in the
academic world. She found a tutor and
then earned her associate’s degree in early
childhood education from Ashford University,
completing the degree online. She took two
classes at a time, each 10 weeks long, with no
breaks for an entire two years. She started her
bachelor’s program in August.
She continues to work as a daycare teacher
part-time, but she says she would love to secure
a full-time position working with children.
Just as she has had to switch paths in the past,
though, she is considering changing fields
and pursuing customer service positions in
call centers.
Stephanie credits her very strong family
support system with giving her the courage
to meet life’s challenges. Her parents,
grandparents, brother and cousin have been
there for her.
“I learned the value of what’s
important,” she says, adding with a giggle,
“I’m the favorite though. I’m the baby.”
She still has many other dreams to fulfill-Waterskiing,
kayaking and ballroom dancing
are at the top of her list. She wants to start
a non-profit organization for children and
adults who need tutoring in math, writing and
science.
׉	 7cassandra://hG51C-AHfBKywYqI2z507KBKn96sO0Q3Dpuc_ozPcxE+c` ^,kĕ׉E
e“As a partner in empowerment, I have witnessed first-hand the power of
The DFS Professional Women’s Group to help support women in making
successful life choices whether it is in Financial Wellness, Health and
Wellness or in Interpersonal Skills Development. PWG Women are
empowered to envision the possibilities and supported by a terrific
team of advocates as well as each other along their incredible journey.”
- Joanne Wolfe, PWG Leadership Council member
Helping the blind in other countries is also a dream.
She’d like to organize donations of equipment such as
canes, Braille writers and other adaptive equipment
for those people. Or, she could open a daycare
center for children with disabilities. Promoting job
opportunities for the disabled is always on the list, too.
“I would love to put together employment seminars
to show how people who are blind can work and give
people the opportunity to have jobs,” she says. “They
are missing out on some big assets for their company
because they are afraid to take that chance.”
Stephanie is talking about that same chance to
show her talents that the daycare owner gave her. She
believes taking that chance is a step toward making
the world a better place.
“Everyone should have the opportunity to be who
they want to be,” she says.
- Heather Loughley
left: Stephanie and her
classmates Nicole and Anthony
celebrate their graduation from
Ohio State School for the Blind in
2013.
below left: An eight-year-old
Stephanie poses with her mother,
Edna Claytor.
professional women’s group
All women in the Dress for Success Columbus family
who become employed are invited to join the Professional
Women’s Group where they can come together with other
women to learn from professionals about finances, health
and wellness and professional development.
More than 60 Dress for Success affiliates offer the
program and there are currently more than 11,000 PWG
members worldwide.
In Columbus, PWG members meet
with a career
counselor to discuss their 5-year career plans and career
development options. They also attend monthly seminars
on a variety of career and personal development topics
including budget planning, conflict resolution and nutrition.
Additionally, members receive opportunities for career
coaching, mentoring, and quarterly styling events and have
the opportunity to become the representative at the annual
Dress for Success Worldwide Success Summit.
A survey of members has shown that 76% of women who
take part in PWG activities remained employed and more
than 70% say they have definite career and personal goals
that they would like to achieve.
SUCCESS LIVES HERE | 10
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B
orn in Williamson,
West Virginia, in
the
shadow of
two mountains,
Beverly Wright has
held many titles -
daughter, mother, widow, clerical
expert, cancer survivor. She was
referred to Dress
for Success
Columbus in 2007 by AARP and
once she earned employment, she
joined the Professional Women’s
Group.
She’s known as the shy one of the group, but that hasn’t
stopped her from being a strong advocate for the organization
or from being recognized as a two time scholarship winner
for the WELD conference and a member of PWG’s leadership
advisory committee.
Life Before Dress for Success Columbus
Beverly’s struggles with her personal health began during her
time as a caretaker for her late husband, who died from black
lung disease.
In 2007, at the age of 55, she faced her toughest battle when
she was diagnosed with thyroid cancer. The diagnosis was
devastating. When the doctor talked with her regarding
treatment plans, all Beverly could think of was her mother - she
died of the same disease when she was 55.
Beverly explained that at one time, she wasn’t proud of her
lifestyle and thought of herself as ugly and overweight. She
struggled with being alienated by friends and family members
after her husband’s death.
“It was awful,” she said. “They thought they would catch this
disease, but it’s not contagious.”
So she was alone, and living off only her own income. She had
to muster up enough strength to support herself through her
treatments. The battle left her homeless and unemployed.
Through this struggle, Beverly was only able to obtain $10 in
assistance through Jobs and Family Services. She resorted to
drinking water to fill her up. One day she tucked away her pride
and asked a friend if he would treat her to a chicken dinner. She
saved the bones from that meal in her freezer and would suck
on them to help quell her hunger.
‘I have a big sister - Dress for Success’
When Beverly was referred to Dress for Success Columbus, she
discovered volunteers that worked diligently to help her choose
an outfit for interviewing. They were unaware of her illness, and
even though there were limited plus-sized selections, Beverly
came out of the experience feeling and looking beautiful.
11 | SUCCESS LIVES HERE
While there, she discovered techniques
that allowed her to mix and match her
clothing to help expand her wardrobe. Dress
for Success Columbus lifted her self-esteem
and finally, she felt good about herself - both
internally and externally.
Beverly became employed shortly after. At
her new job, she received many compliments
about how she dressed. When she was asked
where she got her great style, she would
always say: “I have a big sister called Dress
for Success.”
During one of the Professional Women’s
Group meetings Beverly attended,
׉	 7cassandra://34NcPGseTKse0q9TWF3qn7cgpCCPqriN0E83DTx9qcs$"` ^,kĕ׉Esomething inside of her clicked. She realized that she
was embarking on a new lifestyle after reaching a low
in her physical health.
“Lifestyle changes for me weren’t easy, and
occasionally I have moments of weakness,” she says.
“Slowly but surely, I am learning how to make my new
lifestyle change a permanent one.”
“I learned to be more positive and to give more
to others in need. I learned that when you give, you
receive.” She continues, “The most difficult part
of my journey has been not being able to work fulltime.
Sometimes I feel as though it’s taken away my
desire to live, to a degree. I had just turned 55 and was
considered disabled. I no longer have cancer, but I do
have other health issues. But you know what? It means
a lot to me every day just to wake up.”
EnVisioning the Future
Beverly’s future goals are to start a home-based
business in billing and coding, and to establish a
resource center to assist the elderly to get their
medications.
Beverly admits that she is still shy - but is using
the skills she’s learned through Dress for Success
Columbus programs to help break the ice so she can
advocate for the program. She often finds herself
going out of her way to introduce herself to other
disadvantaged women in hopes of sharing her story
and how she was empowered.
She tells them that each Dress for Success does more
than give clients clothes. While there, women also
receive tools to envision their success and accomplish
their goals.
Beverly can truly tell others that we all fall, but we
can get back up and she says the sponsors, donors
and volunteers at Dress for Success Columbus have
provided the motivation for her to realize that she can
make it.
“God put this organization and these sisters in my
life and now I feel loved. Although my struggle is not
your struggle, we are equal as women. A baby needs
hugs to be successful - at Dress for Success Columbus
you will be successful because you are hugged.”
- McQuetta Williams
far left: Beverly shows off the
outfit she and her personal shopper
selected from the Dress for Success
Columbus boutique. She wore it to
a first interview for her job.
left:
getting in the door
Dress for Success Columbus collaborates with more
than 60 local social service agencies and programs to bring
women into the network.
After an agency refers a woman, she can make an
appointment to visit the boutique where she and a personal
shopper will work together to find the perfect interview
outfit. A woman must receive a referral from a partnering
agency, but once she joins the Dress for Success family, she
is free to stop by the boutique any time to use the career
center and to take advantage of the many programs offered
to clients.
The career center is open during business hours and
provides women a place to search and apply for jobs
and polish resumes. Every Friday, the Dress for Success
Columbus hosts Rouge & Resumes in the center. Those
who sign up for the weekly program meet one-on-one with
human resources professionals to discuss cover letters,
resumes and interview tips and they also get glammed
up by a local stylist who shares pointers on work-friendly
make-up application.
SUCCESS LIVES HERE | 12
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W
aiting for
something to
happen just
isn’t Charity
J ustm an’ s
style. The college student,
entrepreneur and mother has
more of a make-things-happen
attitude. But, then again, it’s not
like she ever really had another
choice. When her parents turned
her over to foster care in high
school, she worked full-time to
save enough money for her own apartment — all while earning
her diploma.
When she was 20 years old and living out of her car, she
found out she was pregnant with her daughter so she worked
until the day she gave birth to save enough money to provide.
When she was let go from her job late last year, she drove
straight to Columbus State and signed up for classes.
And when her resilience was tested by her daughter’s father
who would do anything to feed his drug addiction, including
stalk Charity and physically abuse her and steal from her, she
worked with local police to make a plan that put him behind
bars. “My mind is always refocusing” Charity says. “I’m always
thinking, ‘how am I going to make it?’”
So, when CHOICES, a domestic violence agency, referred
her to Dress for Success Columbus last year, she wasted no
time getting involved with the Professional Women’s Group
and advocating for the organization. Her dedication even
earned her the 2013 Woman of Power award. “What it did for
me was create a new identity,” she says, describing how Dress
for Success Columbus helped her get out of a cycle of being
underemployed. “After so many years of trying your hardest
and doing well, but it still isn’t good enough, you start to think
of yourself as less of an individual.”
Charity said Dress for Success serves as a constant reminder
that she is capable of more than she thinks - something that
wasn’t easy to admit to herself for years thanks to her abusive
ex-boyfriend. But, he’s not an important part of the story, she
says. “I feel like he gets to be the focal point a lot of the time,
but, in general, what I’m really overcoming is
just trying to get to a different socio-economic
status.”
Charity says she’s seen firsthand that
unemployment
and underemployment
perpetuate an environment for women that
makes them more likely to live in unsafe
neighborhoods, keep questionable company
and make poor choices.
“No matter how hard I worked, I couldn’t
get ahead,” she says, recalling her own
struggles. But recently, for the first time in
her adult life, Charity got a taste of living
independently of social services. She credits
the accomplishment, in part, to Dress for
Success Columbus.
Having become astute in navigating social
services over the years, Charity says she
had always known about Dress for Success
Columbus, and she even worked to get others
she knew referred to the boutique.
13 | SUCCESS LIVES HERE
׉	 7cassandra://oYg5k9YA2BwVyXeBw7rbLL1TmV5tRYZgWxkl3kAv0qo(` ^,kĕ׉E[left: Charity poses with fashion
mogul Lori Goldstein, her
mother LuAnn Justman, Dress
for Success Columbus CEO
Vicki Bowen Hewes and Vicki’s
mother at the 2013 Beyond the
Suit Luncheon. Charity was
honored with the Woman of
Power award at the event.
below: Charity and her
daughter, Cherish, show
off their desire to empower
the world by dressing up as
Wonder Women for Halloween.
She never considered she would be a good candidate, too. After all,
she had started profitable bartending and coupon businesses in the
past and she never had trouble getting a job and working hard enough
to take over a management role in no time.
But as Charity quickly learned, Dress for Success “was not a hand
out. It was a hand up,” she says.
“There’s a common theme of being perseverant, dedicated and
determined even though all these bad things have happened to them,”
she says in admiration of the women she’s joined in the sisterhood.
Charity is currently working toward her bachelor’s degree in social
work in hopes of expanding the options available for women and
young people in Central Ohio.
She often describes Dress for Success as a bridge that helps women
get from one place in their life to another, and she’d like to apply that
theory to a transitional living program for teens who age out of the
foster care but are still in school and not ready to take on the adult
responsibility of working full time.
getting dressed for success
Volunteers who act as personal shoppers at Dress for
Success Columbus make it their mission to ensure that
every woman leaves feeling confident.
At their first appointment, clients preparing for
interviews receive one outfit, which includes accessories
such as shoes, a purse and jewelry. They also receive
personal care products.
Once women are employed, they receive a week’s worth
of clothing and accessories – which typically translates
into much more than that once all the items are mixed and
matched.
Being
a
student
again
has
occasionally led Charity to get caught
up in self-pity and doubt, she says,
especially when seeing her peers go
on spring break trips, drive brand
new cars and forgo work to focus on
classes, but her Dress for Success
Columbus support system keeps her
grounded.
“They empower you,” she says.
“They help you see yourself for who
you are.”
- Melissa Dilley
Thanks to personal donations, corporate donations and
apparel drives throughout the year, women can come into
the boutique and be assured that they’ll find something
that makes them feel beautiful and ready to jump start their
career journey.
However, Dress for Success Columbus does have a wish
list of items that tend to run low because of high demand or
low availability.
The boutique is always in need of black pants and skirts,
stretch-knit tops, open-style jackets and neutral-shade
dresses in women’s size 20 and higher.
SUCCESS LIVES HERE | 14
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im Brown is
the first to
admit that
she is the
product of a
functioning dysfunctional
family. One of three
children, her mother died
when she was two years
old and her grandparents
took to raising her as their
own along with several
cousins who she refers to as siblings.
On weekends, she would visit her father. It was at his
encouragement when she was five years old that she
have her first drink. He bet her $20 she couldn’t finish a
large portion of Johnny Walker Red in a glass fittingly
labeled: “I bet you can’t.” So she did.
While her home with her grandparents was structured
and loving, weekends at her father’s home became an
ongoing party. Drinking and drugs were the standard
as was verbal and physical abuse. Those weekends
gave her a desire “to take care of someone who would
care back,” she says, which led to a decision to have her
first baby shortly after graduating from high school.
Kim later married and had a second child, but the
recreational drug and alcohol use that had started so
early in her life continued and were commonplace.
And, when she took an exam to join the police
academy, she was denied entrance because she
admitted on her application that she used to smoke
marijuana.
After the birth of her third child, Kim’s marriage
ended. What followed was a series of monumental
hurdles, ranging from learning to be a single parent,
mourning the death of her beloved grandfather
and dealing with her daughter’s health issues. With
everything hitting at once, Kim was propelled into a
daily routine of drug use and drug dealing.
Kim spent the years from 1991 to 2008 either in
prison or on the street while her grandmother, sister
and mother-in-law took care of her children. In 2006,
her three children staged an intervention. Kim was
tired, so she promised her children she would stay in
the Engagement Center, a.k.a the drunk tank, until
she could be evaluated.
She wasn’t surprised to learn the results of
the evaluation. She was diagnosed with Bipolar
Disorder, depression, Attention Deficit Disorder,
and Personality Disorder No. 16 – all of which played
right:
15 | SUCCESS LIVES HERE
׉	 7cassandra://LNnaLyKwU1-kR3Ljhl989dwriXzm3EGJdpYbJ46T1p0"` ^,kĕ׉E a part in her inability to control her addictions.
Kim was referred to Dress for Success in Cincinnati
in 2002 and reconnected with the Columbus chapter
upon completion of her last prison term in 2008.
She says Dress for Success provided her with part
of her foundation and network and the Professional
Women’s Group has been an influence as have the
weekly meetings through the Women to Women
program.
She also credits the Center of Vocational
Alternatives and the Bureau of Vocational
Rehabilitation Services for their help in providing
her with a foundation of people and services that
supported her while she was assimilating.
Initially, she attended Alcoholics Anonymous and
Narcotics Anonymous meetings a couple of times
a day, but now, she attends meetings two to three
times a week. The rest of the time, she’s at her fulltime
job and is developing a stronger relationship
with her family.
Kim says she is winning her family and her life
back by admitting to her mistakes and taking full
responsibility for them. She wants others to know
that it is okay to make mistakes. “Just make sure
you learn from them and don’t do them again,” she
cautions.
Kim feels the biggest issue facing women who have
recently been released from prison is not the drug and
alcohol addictions, but rather, the struggles that occur
after moving out of the half-way house. Finding a job,
taking back the role of caregiver to children, finding
a home and dealing with day-to-day stresses are the
issues that tempt these women and are the hardest to
overcome, she says.
It’s because of that realization, her goal is to bring
to life a vision to provide a place that extends beyond
the half-way house and that is fashioned around a
community. She would like to offer a store, child care,
and a school that would establish a strong network of
support that mimics what she has found in Dress for
Success and other organizations. She would like to call
her venture The Hughes House of Hope and Healing.
Kim says swallowing her pride and asking for help
were very difficult; but she considers her ability to
do that one of her biggest accomplishments. She
doesn’t think anyone can overcome the hurdles she
has encountered without doing so, saying, “It takes a
village; a network; a community.”
- Linda Tulley
women2women mentoring program
Launched in the fall of 2013, the Women2Women
Mentoring Program at Dress for Success Columbus
connects established, professional women in the Columbus
community with clients of the organization. Dress for
Success Columbus understands that a woman’s career
development is an ongoing process. Mentoring addresses
the need for additional support during this time by
connecting women with professional role models who
provide one-on-one guidance to help women shape, pursue,
and attain their career goals. Mentoring pairs work together
in collaborative, group meetings to learn about various
professional and self-discovery topics that will further
solidify their own career growth, in addition to deepening
their networking skills.
The first group of Women2Women mentors and mentees
was composed of 8 members, who participated in the yearlong
mentoring program. These women deepened their
relationships between not only their individual mentor and
mentee pairing, but with all other mentors and mentees
participating in the program.
This collaboration of all
mentoring pairs truly epitomized the importance of having
a strong, professional network.
Participation in Women2Women provides the clients
of Dress for Success Columbus with programming that
will ultimately teach them learned behaviors to help them
succeed in the current work environment.
Through this
curriculum, mentees are able to witness first-hand how to
navigate challenging career issues by learning from the
pros. By having access to these women and by acquiring a
deeper understanding of the professional behaviors needed
today, the clients of Dress for Success Columbus can break
down barriers that would once hinder them from reaching
the next step in their career.
SUCCESS LIVES HERE | 16
׉	 7cassandra://DfQUsT1Nb7LJsBYgxBhh4VggAg0qMxZgDr5ysE_Elk0%` ^,kĕ^,kĕ(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://5bJFAyWN6r35aRAt-SgvvFzYRmKsf10_1pHDpqFlDBU ?` ׉	 7cassandra://nuSO0DFCtMGzqHLExpTG3tKviQHpyzhhT7JceF4LRus͋`s׉	 7cassandra://CTWKjhXJ-XMqgYiaaZ3SPP4aqfZO7NHl-Em4HjEInrI$u` ׉	 7cassandra://EATJg9qJw7d9qZ_bhvy-aDS04B2Ryv-PJAAm8qiaY78Ld͠]^,kĕט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://LJkYUPqabMyr3TLA5kbereD8sFU4sOTvKbmrxX9nASM `׉	 7cassandra://gpmZKbFpycsD9blZerQbL39cXRIoHEH75kGpQOhjmss{O`s׉	 7cassandra://2GqrECnAfdjI7lP_82gX77kNRu3Ay4OAqDiONWjgV9A!` ׉	 7cassandra://oLZFWiIzzVBKhPMmGnUSUBdKkoK4jV8B0GzaTG5ck7MVZ͠]^	,kĕ׉Eleaving a lasting impression
A
lthough success has not been
a straight shot for Melba
Bierdman, she prefers the
twists and turns that have made her
journey meaningful and fulfilling.
Melba has served on the Dress
for Success Columbus Board for a
number of years, and has recently
become the President of the Board.
She currently works as a successful corporate executive
but her journey was not an easy one.
Melba began the first stage of her career following her
passion and working in the non-profit arena. Although
she loved the work, it was tough to make ends meet and
support her two young children so she eventually changed
careers. Job opportunities were skim, and Melba quickly
found herself at temporary agencies looking for work. She
remained resilient during this time and told herself, “You
have to get up, even if you don’t want to.” Her perseverance
was the key. The hard work paid off, and she soon found
full-time work in the corporate world.
As Melba advanced her career, she always sought
meaningful ways she could give back. Her daughter
introduced her to Vicki Bowen Hewes, and after hearing
the story of Dress for Success Columbus she immediately
got involved. The Professional Women’s Group thrilled
Melba, since it aligned with her passion of helping women
advance their lives and careers. Seeing women bloom in
the program was exciting, and Melba loved the idea that
once you became a member of Dress for Success you were
a member for life.
The sense of sisterhood at Dress for Success
Columbus was refreshing, and Melba loves seeing
the women support each other through struggles
and celebrate successes. PWG also provides
opportunities for the women to network and invest
in relationships with the other women. Watching
and helping the women really consider their lives,
careers and future and create goals in the “Vision
Board” activity is one of her favorite PWG sessions.
While leading the board, Melba hopes to create
more opportunities to help women achieve their
goals and succeed through new initiatives that
are in the works at Dress for Success Columbus.
She feels that the relationship she has formed with
the women is very enriching, and she has learned
a lot in her experience there. Her motto is, “I’m
my happiest when I am giving back and helping
others.” Melba also encourages her office and
colleagues to help volunteer at different events.
She hopes to leave a legacy of helping women
achieve their goals and to be strong through the
struggles and heartaches of life.
When Melba thinks about the future, she’s very
excited for the next stage in her life. She envisions
herself working with Dress for Success Columbus
and PWG for years to come, doing great things for
women in Columbus. Entrepreneurial ventures are
also in her vision of the future. When she reflects
on her life, Melba feels nothing but gratitude. The
sky is the limit as her next stage in life unfolds.
- Courtney Morse
Melba’s Career Strategies
• Manage your own career, and invest in yourself. No one will manage your career for you.
• If you have a job, learn to do it and do it well.
• Be resilient.
• Keep growing your brand, even if you are talented.
• When times get tough, remember that this will pass.
• Be true to your dreams, and work hard to make them happen.
17 | SUCCESS LIVES HERE
׉	 7cassandra://CTWKjhXJ-XMqgYiaaZ3SPP4aqfZO7NHl-Em4HjEInrI$u` ^,kĕ׉E/J
eremy Tankovich is a Business Development
Leader and Vice President with The
Huntington National Bank and has had the
pleasure of working with the Professional Women's
Group, an outreach program of Dress for Success.
Not being familiar with the organization, his
initial experience was happenstance when a
colleague asked him to fill in. Jeremy, a devout
Christian working on his Masters of Divinity as
well as his MBA, says that he is driven to serve and
gladly accepted the request.
driven to
serve
His first presentation to the group was on the basics of financial independence,
borrowing, saving, and establishing credit, credit scores and personal finance. Jeremy
gave a second talk that focused on helping the women to get themselves out of debt,
budgeting and forecasting, and creating savings plans. He provided materials to each
attendee and has made himself available for follow up phone calls and meetings.
Jeremy has been surprised and impressed with the attendees’ receptiveness and
willingness to be open and transparent with their personal journeys and struggles.
He estimates that 70-75% of the women who attended his first presentation were back
for the second. He is convinced that these women who have developed confidences
through the services of Dress for Success Columbus are more motivated than most to
develop themselves personally and professionally.
His personal philosophy is that for a program like PWG to expand its outreach to
the community there must be specific and tangible goals established with each woman
individually. With his desire to serve, his goal is to meet with the women monthly to
ensure they are on track to reach their respective goals.
- Linda Tulley
thank you to our sponsers
Noni McMillian, The Diva Movement
Samara Tillman, E.L.I.T.E. Performace Academy
Linda Tulley, Jewell Senior Representative
Janice Carter, Girlfriends Talk Magazine
Serbennia Davis, Serbennia Photography
Anita Robinson, Nita Management Solution
Cyrus Littlejohn, The Movie Aimless
Maiadi Cunningham Sr., Ahead of Time Beauty and Barber
Miranda Boyle & Sara Guice, Thread on High
“All the Best to EnVision Proven Success from
VOICEcorps reading service!”
“Dress for Success Columbus not only
made me feel beautiful and confident
through my suiting appointment, but they
are providing me with the opportunity to
be employed helping other strong women
feel the same.”
- Amy Carlisle, program services assistant
“Dress For Success Columbus provides
women with the support they need to
look good on the outside, but more
importantly, to feel great about
themselves on the inside. Empowering
women to be all they can be, to focus on
the future, and to let go of their selfdoubt
and self-limitations allows them
to soar as businesswomen, entrepreneurs,
artists, sisters, mothers, and as people.
I’m proud to support Dress For Success
Columbus and its work.”
- Commissioner Marilyn Epstein Brown
“I was drawn to Dress for Success
Columbus because it has both immediate
results and a long-term ripple effect in
the lives of those I am lucky enough to
serve. That ongoing journey on which the
client embarks is what keeps me coming
back.”
- Ralph Fredericks, Volunteer
“My
experience
at DFS Columbus
enlightened me to the struggles and
hardships so many women face to
become independent and successful.
Working with all the women and helping
them spread their wings, is the most
inspiring Place I’ve ever been!”
- Denise Loftus
“I love supporting Dress for Success
Columbus. And especially anything
you’re doing!”
- Debbie Phillips, Founder of Women on Fire
SUCCESS LIVES HERE | 18
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what’s important to you
Grange Insurance is proud to
support Dress for Success.
grangeinsurance.com
׉	 7cassandra://p3kNdVx3ofQ9LIZyl6RgLVecehohZrmvKHtmYE4FU-g"` ^,kĕ׈E^,kĕ^,kĕ(, !Envision Proven Success "A Dream"6The publication of EnVision Proven Success shares the stories of women who have regained their dignity and moved forward in a way they previously thought impossible.  Their candor allows readers to understand the challenges women from adverse circumstances face, and how they overcame obstacles in their lives.^bb\