Carol Fishman Cohen is the CEO and co-founder of iRelaunch, an author, a speaker and a consultant to employers, universities, non-profits and individuals on the subject of career re-entry.
In 2001, after 11 years out of the full time workforce, raising four children,[3] Cohen relaunched her career in a financial analysis role with Sankaty Advisors, a division of Bain Capital.[4] Subsequently, in 2003, Harvard Business School professors published a case study titled "Carol Fishman Cohen: Professional Career Reentry,” documenting her return to work after 11 years out of the full-time workforce.[4][5]
Return-to-work initiatives
Cohen began assisting other women with the perceived challenge of returning to work after time out of the workforce.[6] With Vivian Steir Rabin, Cohen co-authored Back on the Career Track on the subject. A review from Booklist described the book as 'helpful' to Cohen's intended audience.[7] To research the book, Cohen and Rabin interviewed more than 100 women who had returned to work after a career break. They also interviewed Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor in person about returning to work after five years at home raising her sons[3] and talked with employers, academics, work-life experts, recruiters, and family members of those making the return to work.[8]
In 2007, Cohen and Rabin co-founded iRelaunch as a career reentry programming company.[3] The following year, Cohen began studying the subject globally. By 2010 she saw internships as a means of returning to work,[9] and as a result of this study wrote 'The 40-Year-Old Intern' for Harvard Business Review.[10][11] Cohen became an advocate for formal career re-entry programs in the form of internships.[12][13]
Speaking and appearances
Cohen gained attention as a career reentry advocate when the TED platform posted her TEDxBeaconStreet talk[14] called "How to get back to work after a career break" which has garnered more than 3.5 million views and has been translated into 30 languages.[15]
↑Cohen, Carol Fishman (November 2012). "The 40-Year-Old Intern". Harvard Business Review. Retrieved 8 December 2016.
↑Cohen, Carol Fishman (November 2012). "The 40-Year-Old Intern". Harvard Business Review. Archived from the original on 7 February 2017. Retrieved 29 December 2016.
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