Mogul moms
People
By Joanne Rae M. RamirezFor someone who is at the forefront of one of the country’s leading
review and tutorial centers, Rossana Llenado, 34, remembers a time
when she would have wanted to be anything but a teacher. But almost
two decades later, ironically, Llenado finds herself at the helm of
a headstrong education company, the highly acclaimed Ahead Review
and Tutorial Center.
In less than two years after it was established in 1997, Ahead
easily became an industry leader, thanks to Llenado’s sensitivity to
the needs of the market, and promotional smarts that helped change
public perception towards review and tutorial services. The venture
has also produced a preschool in Loyola Heights, WorldPrep Learning
Center, and Ahead Books and Things, a successful publishing venture
that markets and produces review books and student guides.
To cap it all off, 2003 became the year when accolades poured in:
Rossana received the Gold Quill award for Ahead’s successful
marketing communications project, thus placing it in the company of
corporate giants like Avon Cosmetics, Coca-Cola Bottlers and Caltex
Philippines. Recently, Entrepreneur 10 hall of fame, an elite list
of businessmen and women recognized for pushing their small ventures
into the big league.
On top of being a CEO and an entrepreneur, Rossana is a devoted
wife, a doting mother of four young children (the youngest of whom
she is still breast feeding), an M.A. student, and an active member
and officer of several prestigious organizations. How does she do
this?
She holds office at WorldPrep Learning Center, a school-in-a-park
that is just around the corner from her own home. Meetings are
conducted quickly and to the point, as there are new ones scheduled
every hour. “Matataranta ka sa schedule ko.” she smiles. At the
window next to her desk, yaya shows up with adorable baby Megan, who
is peering at her mom from outside. Once, at a meeting of Zonta
International, fellow members were surprised at finding her breast
feeding her child in the middle of a discussion.
Despite her busy schedule, she is proud that her children – twin
boys Paolo and Nicolo, daughter Darla Angela and baby Megan – are
not “neglected kids.”
This is how this mogul mom works hard to make the best out of both
worlds: She takes personal charge over her children’s development,
and uses this same talent to assist other students who may need
tutorial services.
Rossana has always shown a talent for entrepreneurship and a strong
sense of leadership. She sold paper fans and candies to her
classmates when she was eight years old. When she was a young lady,
she went into businesses that included catering, T-shirt printing,
mushroom growing and sub-leasing units. “I managed to make the most
out of a tight situation, because my family did not have much.” She
was active in the Student Council and the Writers’ Club while at UP
Los Baños.
A speech that she drafted for then Sen. Alberto Romulo, changed her
perspective about teaching. In the course of researching for the
speech she appreciated more the role of education in uplifting one’s
quality of life.
With her newfound insight, her compassion for students and her
respect for teachers, Rossana vowed she would one day put up a
foundation that would subsidize the education and needs of bright
young individuals who want to be teachers. She is determined to make
this dream a reality when she hits 40.
For now, Ahead is like her fifth baby. Under her care, it is the
only center that publishes an official list of students who pass
their entrance tests, which roughly constitute an 85 percent passing
rate in college entrance exams. Through their test-based programs,
Rossana believes that she is contributing to the nation’s growth by
increasing her students’ chances of entering the top universities in
the country.
“I know women who are well-educated and who are not allowed to have
careers or to work outside the home. It’s a pity because I believe
women can have fulfilling careers without necessarily neglecting
their families.” She is on the verge of making her ultimate
contribution, through the foundation that she intends to put up six
years from now. So far, things are going right on schedule. In fact,
she’s quite nearly there.
Matilde “Diding” Robles, Ma. Carmina “Peanuts” Sotto, and Ma.
Melinda “Mayleen” Bernardino found out 10 years ago that three, is
indeed, company. The three now head one of the most progressive real
estate firms in the country – Royale Homes.
How did the three come together? Diding Robles, president of the
Royale Homes and wife of Sta. Lucia Realty president Exequiel “Excy”
Robles, recalls: “Earlier on, Peanuts and Mayleen, who are sisters
and close family friends, were already making major inroads in
marketing. I broached the idea of joining forces for a more
productive partnership. Before I knew it, a new synergy came upon
us.”
“We only used to occupy a one-room office. Thank God, our efforts
have paid off. Now, we occupy an entire floor,” reminisces Diding. A
nurse by profession, and a mother of five, Diding’s decision to
align with her husband’s enterprise was very strategic.
In the early years, Diding’s husband Excy was the proverbial eagle
upon whose sturdy wings they relied on. The hitches and glitches
that got in the way were no match to the dogged persistence and
chemistry of the three friends.
Capitalizing on the flexibility and dynamism of a young company,
Royale Homes was able to develop a unique image of its own. “We
envisioned our company to be a leading real estate marketing
organization in the Philippines where unique Filipino values are
shared: where trust and sincere aspiration, and honest labor are
cherished,” reveals Peanuts, the company’s executive vice president
for sales and marketing, a mother of three and a graduate of AB
Economics from the University of the Philippines.
Peanuts says
their strategy was to “go slowly, but surely.”
Today, Royale Homes has more than 1,000 sales force members with
branches in Davao, Subic, Urdaneta, Cabanatuan, Bulacan and Cavite.
Its projects include Club Morocco and Alta Vista in Subic, Zambales;
Saddle and Club Leisure Park in Cavite; Sun City Davao; Pine Woods
in Baguio City; Vermont Royale Executive Village in Antipolo City;
Vista Verde Country Homes in Cainta, Rizal; and the Rizal Techpark
2000 in Taytay, Rizal.
Mayleen Bernardino, the firm’s executive vice president for finance
and administration, says their target clientele is the segmented
upper middle bracket whose demands are varying and dynamic.
“As a general rule, we don’t ride on the trend. We are only mostly
concentrating on the demands of the segmented upper middle bracket.
This is why we have not ventured into low-cost housing projects,”
adds Mayleen, a mother of four, and a Hotel and Restaurant
Management graduate from the University of the Philippines.
Diding, Peanuts and Mayleen have shown that mothers can not only
hold good jobs, they can also generate jobs. |
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