March 13, 2020
Future Alumni Network: Build leadership skills, meet top alumni and create campus traditions
It鈥檚 tough to say who was the biggest fan. Rooting for Mayor Naheed Nenshi, BComm鈥93, was voice-over queen Allison Smith, BFA鈥86, while cheering from the other corner was Nenshi 鈥 for Smith. The pom-poms were certainly out when both alumni popped by 草莓污视频导航聽over lunch聽to speak to an intimate group of students about a topic that鈥檚 close to both their hearts: Using your voice.
Nenshi admitted it was while he was president of 草莓污视频导航鈥檚 student union, back in the early 鈥90s, that he found his voice. 鈥淚t was here, on this campus,鈥 he said, 鈥渢hat I began speaking for change and speaking up for people who hadn鈥檛 found their voice . . . without stealing their voice. That鈥檚 important.鈥
Decades later, Nenshi says that he still uses his voice, every day, to answer thorny questions such as: 鈥淗ow do we live together; how do we share a common space?鈥
Vision: to build united community
It鈥檚 precisely topics like this that the Future Alumni Network (FAN) 鈥 草莓污视频导航鈥檚 first Student Alumni Association 鈥 is interested in exploring. Kicking off the new program聽last spring聽was a lively pizza party for its 40 fresh members. Following that was a meeting with university President Ed McCauley,聽to share the vision of FAN.
Some of FAN鈥檚 regular programming includes something they鈥檝e dubbed Ask Alumni Anything. So far they鈥檝e had a lunch-hour Skype date with Rhodes Scholar Bogdan Knezevic, BSc鈥15, who now works in artifical intelligence in Toronto for the Creative Destruction Lab, and Stefam Hoerzer, PhD鈥18 from adidas in Germany.
Aside from programs such as Ask Alumni Anything and Pizza Party PD events is another called 9 to 5 Hustle, which is what Nenshi and Smith headlined as speakers.
Emphasis on connecting students, alumni
Future Alumni Network is open to current undergraduate and graduate students and its vision is to build a united community of students and alumni.聽What makes Future Alumni Network unique is its emphasis on connecting students with alumni experts, leaders and innovators. The three programming areas of focus are: building leadership skills, meeting exceptional alumni, and creating campus traditions.
The event featuring Smith and Nenshi was a mashup of two of these: leadership skills and meeting exceptional alumni. With聽no tidy blueprint for her future, Smith used her own career trajectory 鈥 from studying drama to voicing radio commercials to running her own home-based voice-over company 鈥 as a springboard to illustrate lessons on how best to modify goals, be open to pivot, and how to develop your authentic voice.
Authentic voice is key
Whether your voice and presence is public such as Nenshi鈥檚 or anonymous such as Smith鈥檚, being authentic is key. Although Smith has, very rarely, been asked to 鈥渁dd a little vocal fry鈥 or speak in a foreign accent, most often it鈥檚 her warm and conversational style that clients, from Victoria鈥檚 Secret to Samsung, employ her to use.
鈥淚 may be recording something for Amazon鈥檚 Alexa聽or speaking at a telephony conference or coaching local yoga teachers how not to sound like Valley Girls,鈥 explains Smith, 鈥渂ut my voice is mine and I developed it right here as a drama student at the 草莓污视频导航.
"If I had met you 30 years ago, I would never have thought I鈥檇 use my degree for so many different and rewarding channels. I think it鈥檚聽 critical that we pay attention to marketplace needs and shifts and move with them.鈥
If you鈥檙e interested in learning more about FAN or are an undergrad or graduate student who would like to join the Future Alumni Network, .
草莓污视频导航 Alumni is proud to support the programming of the Future Alumni Network.