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High-flying rural ambassador Courtney Davies is encouraging young women to seek a diverse range of experiences as they carve out a career path – with a top bank CEO endorsing the approach.
Dairy Flat local, Courtney, who is 28, has just finished up after four years working for an environmental leadership charity while completing her MBA.
In 2023, she completed a short stint as a guest tutor at the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology in Saudi Arabia.
Her dual Masters qualifications from Massey University – an MBA and Master of Natural Science – stood her in good stead there, putting her among nine other international tutors invited to attend.
“It was an incredible opportunity,” Courtney said. “We worked with some of Saudi Arabia’s top young people, covering areas including desert agriculture, desalination, Red Sea research and computational bioscience.”
She also recently attended a ten-day conference in Tanzania – the Africa Food System Forum - as part of her role with the Next Generation Ag Impact Network, which she leads.
Courtney spoke with ANZ New Zealand CEO Antonia Watson as part of the bank’s Watch Women Win initiative, which highlights and celebrates female success.{CF_IMAGE}
She told Antonia she is keen to explore as many different paths as possible to grow as a leader while looking for her next role – but that she had often wondered whether employers value candidates with a diverse range of experiences, over those who choose to commit to one singular field early on in their career.
“I think it can definitely be an advantage, Antonia said. “People look for a broad range of experiences now.
“Some people do have a linear career – but more often you see the people who are really successful have had other experiences.”
Antonia said just because someone went to a great school and got top marks does not mean they’ll be the right fit for a role.
“Actually, that is potentially just a sign of a privileged upbringing, and it doesn’t necessarily mean you’re going to be better at doing the job.
“So, I think it’s worth people looking for different opportunities – it’s not just about skillsets, it’s about the attributes that you have.”
Courtney said she had experienced Tall Poppy Syndrome – even doubting herself when she considered posting online about her latest experiences, projects or successes – as a result of a conversation with a previous male manager who told her to ‘reign in her ego’ as it ‘isn’t a good look’.
“I saw a quote on Instagram recently – ‘bright lights attract bugs’ - and it really resonated,” Courtney said.
“It’s this idea that people that shine brightly, or are in the spotlight, attract critique – so that’s something I’ve struggled with, always wondering where to draw the line (if there is one) between being proud of what I have worked to achieve and achieving in isolation”.
“But then I see the women that I look up to, and they are sharing their own successes, and are proud of that.”
{CF_IMAGE}
For now, Courtney is enjoying her time between jobs and is spending more time with her beloved cows.
The award-winning Ayrshire cattle she exhibits at A&P Shows are more like pets than commercial stock, she says, and her Inca Ayrshire stud is going strong.
It was her cows that gave her a first nudge towards the sciences.
“I got into science when one of my cows got mastitis,” she said. “I was really interested in the microbial side of it, the very small things we can’t see that have such a huge impact, and that led me into my first Masters degree.”
For her Master of Natural Science thesis, she developed a way of utilising special proteins from “bacteriophage” viruses – viruses that can kill bacteria – as a proof of concept approach which could aid in reducing antibiotic resistant diseases across agriculture and human health.
These bacteriophage proteins were isolated in a way where they could instantly kill pathogenic bacteria on contact, “like a needle to a balloon”, without impacting other bacterial strains.
Courtney said she thinks approaches like this, as well as the adoption of other new technology, will be increasingly embraced by the New Zealand agri community in the coming decades.
“I think in the next few years there will be changes to people’s mindset around the value of our agricultural products, and more investment into increasing efficiency rather than purely destocking,” she said.
“I can see that sustainability efforts will continue to evolve. At the end of the day, both our farmers and consumers value our land - to grow increasing amounts of nutritious food and to be able to consume New Zealand-grown produce. It cannot be one without the other.”
~ Courtney Davies
Courtney is the current Chief Ambassador of the NextGen Ag Impact Network – a global network of selected young people in agriculture which aims to empower youth in the field, and to spread best-practice agricultural knowledge around the world – ultimately leading towards the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals.
“I first applied for NGIN as a way to engage with other passionate youth and agriculture enthusiasts while getting inspired by different projects to work on at home in New Zealand,” Courtney says.
“It can sometimes feel like a bit of an echo chamber in New Zealand – we’re a growing producer of premium agriculture and horticulture products, yet so geographically isolated, and often overshadowed by the voices and personalities of larger economies.”
Since 2019, she has educated more than 35,000 people across New Zealand, Africa and the Middle East about agriculture, the environment and marine sustainability through in-person leadership programmes and online lectures.
In terms of inspiring other young women to chase their dreams, Courtney hopes that they will forge their own path, and find inspiration in diverse places, and from many different people.
“I’d like to think that my own pathway can show others what they can potentially do, just like how I have been inspired by the incredible women who I look up to both professionally and personally,” she says.
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Outstanding in her field: Rural ambassador considers next move
2024-02-19
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