The Path Less Traveled

What happens when we stop doubting that we belong in the spaces we inhabit? This question is at the heart of the I Belong speaker series presented by theWinston Center for Leadership and Ethics. It kicked off virtually in February with Christine Montenegro McGrath 87, H 21, senior vice president and chief impact and sustainability officer at Mondelz International (which brings us the Oreo cookie and other snack favorites). From her Chicago home office, she spoke to attendees via Zoom, and shared her story of following her passionsand silencing her inner critic.

AlthoughMcGrath is currently a senior leaderat Mondelz, she was once on a path to being a chief marketing officer. It washer choice instead to focus on the more creative, consumer-centric work thathas become a defining theme of her career. Now referring to herselftongue-in-cheek as the other CEO, the chief evangelist officer, she advocatesenthusiastically on behalf of those who might not otherwise be heard.

During her time at Boston College, McGrath held downwork-study jobs to put herself through school while pursuing majors in bothaccounting and philosophya juxtaposition of order and theoretical thinkingthat she has carried throughout her work. After graduating, she secured a jobas an auditor, but soon realized her true passion was marketing. She recallswalking past a conference room at her first post-graduate job. Seeing thecompanys marketing team examining pieces of CapN Crunch cereal, she thoughtto herself; I want to do that.

To get her foot in the door, she took a finance position atKraft while working on her masters in marketing at Northwestern UniversitysKellogg School of Business at night. Her new degree helped her move intomarketing and brand management, and in 2012, when Kraft spun off its globalsnack branch (which is now Mondelz), McGrath became part of one of the worldslargest snack food companies.

During her talk, McGrath made it clear that her I Belong story and struggles go back a long way. Her father is from Bogot獺, Colombia,
and when he married her mother, who was white, friction arose in the family over her marriage to a person of color. She compared her parents story to the dynamics of West Side Story, and although she now considers herself a proud Latina woman, the cultural tension proved valuable: it steered her toward the path of fostering belonging and community for others.

From Outlier to Change Agent
McGraths time at Boston College prepared her for theprofessional world post-graduation, but the experience didnt come withoutmoments of feeling like an outsider. At times, she felt alienated from herclassmates, in part because of her financial struggles and concerns about hernext financial aid statement. Fast forward to May 2021: shes walking thecommencement stage at Boston College once again, this time toreceive an honorarydoctoratefor exemplifying the power ofleadership to promote change in business and society.

That work has included serving as vice president of Krafts Latino Center of Excellence in 2009. While focusing specifically on Latinx-geared marketing and growth, she completed a large ethnographic research project. For a year, her team studied nearly 30 Latina women from all walks of life in Los Angeles, Chicago, and Miami. They found that it was very important for Latinx people, and in particular Latina women, to feel represented when shopping for their homes and families. McGrath was able to take that data and experience back to Kraft and expand the companys interpretation of the market.I had to help the brands to see and understand the Latinomarket and why this was a good investment, she explained. McGrath noted that she also saw some of herself reflected in the experience of those women. Inclusionis a key part of belonging, she said. People say to me, Oh, youre notreally a Latina, youre fake. I dont speak Spanish very well. But actually, Ivefound so much connection [in] my upbringing and the traits that I saw in myfamily sort of resonated in that experience.

One of her strategies for fostering self-empowerment is getting to know your inner criticthe one who questions whether you belongand knowing how to keep it in check. Nick McDonald 25, a computer science major, asked how exactly McGrath does this. She admitted that she still consciously works on this skill, but it helps to visualize her inner critic as a person she can see in her minds eye, acknowledge that critic, and put them off to the side.

McGrath continues to use her own empowerment to help others who may not have the same opportunities. Since 2012, she has been at the helm of a program calledat Mondelz, which works to implement sustainable business and farming practices for cocoa farmers while fostering a sense of womens empowerment. Its about really giving women farmers地ccess to all the tools they need to have better incomes, better confidence, a leadership voice in their families, [and] a leadership voice in their communities, she said, seeming to draw on the business as well as the philosophical and moral perspectives learned at Boston College. McGrath, who is also vice chair of the, a nonprofit organization, added that the role of women
cannot be overlooked when it comes to growing a developing economy in a sustainable way.

Michaela Brant 23 is a publications assistant in the Carroll Schools communications office.