A civic think thank for women
Foundation
Knowledge has always been my first form of independence.
I studied Economics and Literature at La Sorbonne to understand how systems are constructed — who defines them, who benefits from them, and who remains outside of them.
I later pursued Luxury Marketing at MODART Paris to explore another layer of influence: how value is engineered, how perception is shaped, and how power circulates quietly through culture.
Education, for me, was never accumulation.
It was architecture.
Business World
My early career developed in the private sector.
At EUROPRO, I contributed to projects built with Chanel, L’Oréal, and Lady Gaga, distributed across 40 countries. Working at that scale revealed something essential: growth is strategic, visibility is structured, and leadership operates behind design.
The business world taught me precision.
It also taught me how decisions travel.
Institutional World
I later moved into institutional environments.
At AFNOR and the European Commission, I represented France in international negotiations and participated in shaping standards that govern an entire continent.
There, policy became tangible.
It defines economic frameworks.
It determines protections.
It shapes opportunity.
Institutions may appear distant, but their impact is intimate.
Community
For eleven years, I served Miss Ghana France — first as Communications Director, then as CEO.
This chapter was about transmission. About positioning young women to navigate visibility, leadership, and public space with structure and confidence.
I also advised organisations and campaigns, notably during the Paris municipal elections and the Paris 2024 Olympic Games.
Across corporate, institutional, and political spheres, one observation remained constant:
Power is rarely loud.
But it is always present.
My first direct political engagement began with NPP Loyal Ladies Europe. It marked the moment I chose to move from analysis to participation.
Why Girl, Let’s Learn
Over time, a pattern became clear.
The systems that shape income, rights, and representation were not designed with everyone in mind. Particularly not women. Particularly not women from minority backgrounds.
This is not a question of talent.
It is a question of access, literacy, and preparation.
Girl, Let’s Learn was created to close that gap.
To decode power structures.
To expand access to institutional knowledge.
To ensure that competence is matched with understanding.
Because the room exists.
And preparation changes how you enter it.
