Long before
the COVID-19 pandemic focused attention on the need for internet access,
incoming United States Hispanic Chamber of Commerce (USHCC) Chair Jackie Puente
was focused on digital equity and using technology to empower underserved
communities.
“I was
working on how to bring different communities, low-income communities and
diverse communities online and get them upskilled to be a part of our digital
economy,” she said.
That talent
and passion for using technology to build coalitions while creating equity and
opportunities for grassroots advocacy are skills Puente hopes to bring to her
new role as the incoming chair of the USHCC board of directors.
She began
her career focused on economic policy before moving into fundraising and public
affairs. Her professional experience includes developing strategic alliances
with the public affairs firm DCI Group LLC, serving as director of development
and corporate relations at the Congressional Hispanic Leadership Institute and
leading corporate communications and external affairs at Dell Inc. In 2012,
Puente joined Comcast NBCUniversal, where she is now the vice president of
external affairs responsible for cultivating partnerships with diverse
stakeholders on policy issues in the media and technology industries.
A
commitment to diversity
As a
Spanish American, diversity has always been part of Puente’s experience.
“The
Northeast is super diverse, especially in terms of population density,” she
said. “You have lots of different communities living really close to each
other. Growing up in a diverse community, I never saw myself as anything
different.”
As she
began her career, however, she became more aware of issues related to equity
and inclusion.
“Living in
Washington D.C., I started to realize that fewer and fewer people in various
circles share some of my world view,” she said. “As a woman in corporate
America, there’s no better way to get involved in equity and inclusion than to
want to see yourself and people like you succeeding.”
Shortly
after joining Comcast NBCUniversal, Puente participated in the National
Association for Minorities in Communications Executive Leadership Development
Program at the University of Darden School of Business.
“One of the
most important takeaways from that experience was understanding identity in the
workplace,” she said. “It’s about learning the importance of sharing who you
are and using that to build relationships with people who do not look like you,
may not have your background, and may not understand your perspective in
different situations that come up in the course of business as usual.”
Puente
believes that corporations and organizations such as the USHCC can showcase the
benefits of diversity within the business world and that growing minority
markets make it increasingly important that businesses do not turn their back
on programs to develop leaders and new markets.
“I’m more
of a somebody who wants to rage within the machine,” she said. “It hasn’t
always been easy and it’s not always perfect, but it’s been important to see
how corporate America has shifted over the last five years. For companies that
have done the hard work, expanding opportunity and creating systems for
inclusion is a superpower. Frankly, it is important to be able to understand
the customers of our future. There’s no product or service that is not marketed
to the Hispanic community as both an upmarket community as well as a value
community.”
Reconnect
and reinvigorate
One of
Puente’s top goals for the USHCC is a modernization project that will find new
ways to use technology to meet the needs of the next generation of chamber
members. As a technology executive and the first millennial to lead the
chamber, Puente is keenly aware of the ways technology is increasingly
integrated into all aspects of people’s lives.
“The pace
of change for our entire society is getting faster and faster,” she said. “We
need to improve not just access to technology but how we are using technology
in our day-to-day lives. For people of my generation, how we have started
businesses, how we interact with the workplace, even how we run our families
and households is a lot more technology-centric than previously. This is a huge
opportunity for the Hispanic Chamber to reconnect and reinvigorate our
relationship with the next generation of entrepreneurs.”
She also
hopes to focus on growing both membership and engagement in the USHCC.
“My goal is
that we welcome new faces, new businesses and, quite literally, the next
generation of business leaders and that we turn them into Chamber advocates and
business champions,” she said. “We’re living in a time when people do not see
themselves as belonging to one community exclusively. Nobody says, ‘Oh, I’m a
Hispanic business so I’m going to join this Hispanic chamber of commerce.’ Our
society is more dynamic, so we can use our platform to strengthen and build
coalitions across community identities. We need to listen to our members and
provide them with the programs and services that will help them get ahead and
connect to the opportunities out there for them.”
Puente
wants to see the Chamber enhance data collection, so it can have more
information about members and their needs to plan programming and services that
are most useful to participants. She also wants to continue to build strong
coalitions with state and local member affiliate chambers and other groups
advocating for Hispanic business interests.
“We have tremendous people involved on the
board level, at the staff level and across the affiliate network all around the
country,” she said. “We want to give the platform and opportunity for real
people in real communities to talk about the challenges they are facing,
whether that’s access to capital or whether it’s technology or health care so
we can help our members take advantage of the opportunities that are out
there.”
To learn
more about USHCC, visit ushcc.com.