A little over a year ago, Sarah Crouch did something many Ottawa professionals have done before – she travelled to Toronto to attend a networking event.
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A little over a year ago, Sarah Crouch did something many Ottawa professionals have done before – she travelled to Toronto to attend a networking event.
The event was hosted by the Toronto chapter of Commercial Real Estate Women, also known as CREW, an international organization that serves in excess of 14,000 members at more than 80 chapters worldwide, to support their advancement in the industry.
Crouch, who is the manager of business development for First Onsite Property Restoration in Ottawa, said the experience was eye-opening and empowering.
It was also something she’d like to offer here.
“I realized there’s pretty much a chapter in every major city in Canada except for Ottawa,” she said. “I’ve worked in Ottawa my whole life and every time I hear something like that, I’m like, ‘Come on, Ottawa, we can do better.’ I’m always rooting for Ottawa to be successful and catch up to cities like Toronto in terms of what we have available here.”
For Crouch, the solution was simple: “We didn’t have a chapter, so I was like, I’ll just start one.”
Among women in fields like commercial real estate and construction, there has been an increased interest in groups offering networking and community building opportunities, especially in the last year.
In addition to CREW, which is still in the process of registering an official Ottawa chapter, local building owners’ association BOMA has seen increased interest in its Women@BOMA program and events. And just last year, another group for women across multiple sectors, City BuildHERs, was established in the nation’s capital to help women expand their professional connections.
While these groups continue to grow, Crouch said Ottawa is still behind other major Canadian cities when it comes to supporting these kinds of efforts.
“I wanted another avenue of networking opportunity in Ottawa, where it was about women supporting women and having a different way to come in and meet people in the industry,” said Crouch. “It’s very limited, the options we have in Ottawa. A year ago, I would belong to one association and I went to all of their events, but I felt there’s always room for more.”
In addition to networking events, which could include speakers and career development opportunities, Crouch would also like to draw inspiration from other CREW chapters. In Toronto, she said the organization hosts tours of facilities and projects across the city, offering a hands-on perspective on local real estate, exposure to programs and services and inspiration for unique environmental and sustainability solutions.
Interest in these women-led initiatives didn’t come out of nowhere, said Crouch. According to her, these industries still have a long way to go before they come close to gender parity.
“It’s sort of an ‘old boys’ club’ still,” she said. “(But in recent years) I definitely see more women. A lot of these women are calling the shots. They’ve done their work and gotten to where they are in a very male-dominated industry.”
With the number of women in these positions increasing, Crouch said it’s slowly getting easier to meet other women on the job. But organizations like this can help further close the gap.
She added that getting the project off the ground isn’t the easiest process. Before she can register the group as an official CREW chapter, it needs 30 members, a target it has yet to reach.
Still, Crouch said CREW has already hosted a few events in Ottawa and has begun to establish a foothold in the city.
“The registration of this chapter is very similar to opening a business,” she said. “But we’re very close to the finish line now – I can say that confidently. A year-plus into this, I wanted to give up several times. It was hard to get momentum going at first. Now, the word has definitely gotten out there and I have so many people reach out to me daily saying, ‘Oh, you’re starting a CREW chapter? I would love to be involved.’”