Teresa Daly, who helps professionals transition from one career to another, has put herself through her own transition.
Daly and her business partner, Mary Kloehn, are co-founders of two-year-old Navigate Forward, a Loring Park boutique located at the entrepreneurial intersection of Daly's professional, personal and nonprofit passions.
Daly, 54, who earned a master's degree in industrial relations from the University of Minnesota, is a onetime corporate "HR weenie" who also spent 12 years at what is now Right Management Consultants. She worked on corporate contracts for outplacement, career counseling and organizational-development work, rising to senior vice president and a compensation package that topped a quarter-million bucks for a few years.
She served four years on the City Council of Burnsville, her hometown. A moderate Democrat, she also lost a 2004 congressional election to incumbent U.S. Rep. John Kline. The next year she joined the Prouty Project, a consulting firm to midsize companies. She was president there in 2006 and 2007.
"I loved it there," Daly recalled the other day. "But as I got older, I needed to own my own work. I thought, 'How much of my life is about what's significant to me versus just generating revenue?'"
Kloehn is also a veteran consultant and human resources executive who once worked with Daly at Right Management.
In early 2008, they launched Navigate Forward, which helps professionals transition from one job to another and also focuses on helping corporate refugees find different careers, perhaps in the nonprofit sector, board work. Daly and Kloehn each invested $30,000 to develop a strategy, lease an office, buy furniture and equipment and throw a champagne reception.
"We saw a little recession coming and thought that might be a good start for us," Daly recalled. "We felt that most of our work would be about executives saying it might be time to leave. Instead it was directors and vice presidents being shown the door."