Edda Guerrero: 'Very, Very Happy' With Balance Between Personal And Professional Life
Edda
Guerrero's promotion two years ago was a perfect cap
to her seven years of experience at the company and her 17
years in the pharmaceutical business. She was named president
and general manager of Bristol-Myers Squibb Puerto Rico and
the Caribbean, giving her P&L (profit and loss) responsibility,
for, among other things, the company's projected $130
million of medicines' sales in the region. She is also
responsible for marketing, distribution and more than 100 employees.
But
the best part of the new job for Guerrero is what it means
to her personally. She was able to return to Puerto Rico
(her homeland,
after 19 years of living away), and she was able to bring her
five-year-old son, who in just two years -- including lots of
time with his grandparents
-- has become bilingual.
Guerrero
was born in Arecibo, a large town on the northwest coast of the
island. She received a bachelor's
degree in chemistry at the University of Puerto Rico and then
applied and was accepted
to a master's program at Purdue University in Indiana,
becoming the only member of her family to move away from the
island. She
meant to go back when she graduated, but instead accepted a
job as a sales representative at Warner Lambert, where she
worked
for the next 10 years.
In
1996, she joined Bristol-Myers Squibb as associate director,
Product Planning in the neurosciences
area (now known as Global
Marketing). She then went on to become a director in that
group, a senior director in the company's dermatology business,
and then area vice president, U.S. Neuroscience Sales. Guerrero
served
as region business head for a primary care region of the
U.S. before assuming her current assignment.
"All
of the opportunities I've had, they've helped me
grow in different ways, and they've all contributed
to enhancing my skills and knowledge of the company and
the product portfolio," Guerrero
says. "But the fact that this job brings me back
here and touches my personal life makes it particularly
special. I'm
a little biased toward my current role."
There
have been trade-offs. For example, her husband has had to remain
in New Jersey, but according to Guerrero,
he loves
to
fly and doesn't mind the commute to Puerto Rico
each weekend. "In
the wintertime, he's one of the few people in New
Jersey with a tan all of the time," she says. "That
helps him with his work/life balance."
For
her, the best thing about Bristol Myers Squibb is the people
and the policies the company has in place
to retain
them, including
its extensive career development capacity. "I don't
think I would have this job if the company didn't
have a clear and consistent focus on people development
and giving managers
the tools to help us continue to grow."
Recently
she has begun putting her experience as a female executive to
work as the leader of a new initiative
known as the Latin American
Women's Leadership Council (LAWLC), an effort to increase
the numbers of women in the company's Latin American ranks. "We
cannot document this, but we feel that Latin America, in terms
of women and diversity, is maybe where the U.S. was 10 years ago," Guerrero
says. "We're trying to create an environment that accelerates
the development of women by facilitating mentoring and networking,
and by sending female executives to the market to share experiences
with women in those countries so they see it can be done."
As
part of the effort, Guerrero herself has spoken to women in Brazil
about such subjects as choosing a mentor. "You have
to like the person," she says. "There has to be some
chemistry. Identify somebody who really enjoys mentoring and
someone you can learn from."
Heloisa
Simao, marketing director for Bristol-Myers Squibb Brazil and
a member of the LAWLC, says
that Guerrero is "a natural
leader. She is able to get people talking by phone, which is
not easy to do. She's a good listener. She can energize
people. She can consider different perspectives and points
of view and
she's very results-focused."
An
avid traveler, who has gone to Europe and Asia, and hopes to
go to India next,
Guerrero says she likes to eat -- "if it's
ethnic, I love it, I love to try new things" -- and
to read. Her most recent favorite books are Execution:
The Discipline of Getting Things Done, by Larry Bossidy
-- "It's
really tied to what we're trying to do in terms of
executing our new corporate strategy" -- and Letters
from Burma, by
Aung San Suu Kyi, a Burmese political leader who was placed
under house arrest after her country was taken over by a
military junta.
Guerrero
says Aung San Suu Kyi, who won the 1991
Nobel Peace Prize for her non-violent struggle for democracy
and human rights
in Burma, is the person in the world she'd most like
to have lunch with. "I think it would be really interesting
to meet a woman of such strong values and beliefs."
As
to Puerto Rico, she says it is a place of contrasts:
mountains and beaches, small towns and cities, the World
Salsa Congress
and the classical Casals Festival. "I think we
have the best of both worlds," she says.
And
what is the most important thing to know about Edda? "I'm
very proud of my accomplishments, I'm very proud
of my heritage and very, very happy with the balance
I've been able to strike
between my personal life and my business life," she
says. "It
is not easy. But it can be done and I think Bristol-Myers
Squibb provides the right environment for it to happen." |