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Gerald Chertavian
Gerald Chertavian
01:26

Gerald Chertavian

Year Up

Chicago, IL USA

"You have to believe you can do it before you can do it."

Career Roadmap

Gerald's work combines: Education, Entrepreneurship, and Teaching / Mentoring

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Day In The Life

CEO

I help run a workforce development organization with a mission of closing the opportunity divide.

My Day to Day

Half my time is external with donors, corporate partners, and other key stakeholders. The other half of my time is spent internally on culture, strategy, management, and people.

Skills & Education

Advice for getting started

People laughed at me when I said I was going to launch a non-profit that served low-income young adults. There are whole communities of strong, capable people who aren't given the opportunities they deserve and I was determined to help. It's not an easy endeavor to start a business but if you're determined to succeed, you can make it happen. For anyone facing similar noise, I recommend paying attention to the quote: "What other people think of you is none of your business."

Here's the path I took:

  • High School

  • Bachelor's Degree

    Economics, General

    Bowdoin College

  • Graduate Degree

    Business/Commerce, General

    Harvard Business School

Life & Career Milestones

My path in life has been direct

  • 1.

    I grew up in Lowell, Massachusetts, and went to one of the toughest high schools in the city, where the idea of being a good student was met with ridicule from other students.

  • 2.

    When I went to college and got good grades, I realized that there’s a whole world of people out there who will be happy for you when you do well and succeed.

  • 3.

    I started working with the Big Brothers program in college to help mentor and care for young boys who don’t have father figures.

  • 4.

    After college, I was working on Wall Street and mentoring a boy from a rough neighborhood in New York—it opened my eyes to the lack of opportunity people face based on their upbringing or skin color.

  • 5.

    I made it a personal mission to eventually start a program to help close the opportunity divide in the U.S. and give urban communities access to the training needed for secure career opportunities.

  • 6.

    I went to graduate school for my MBA and then co-founded a technology consulting and software development firm.

  • 7.

    After six years, we sold the firm and I founded Year Up, a workforce development organization that provides young adults with the skills and training needed to reach their professional potential.

  • 8.

    I’ve been running Year Up for 20 years, raised a family of my own, and still actively participate in the Big Brothers mentoring program.

Defining Moments

How I responded to discouragement

  • THE NOISE

    Messages from Family:

    Your nonprofit idea is laughable.

  • How I responded:

    People laughed at me when I said I was going to launch a non-profit that served low-income young adults. There are whole communities of strong, capable people who aren't given the opportunities they deserve and I was determined to help. It's not an easy endeavor to start a business but if you're determined to succeed, you can make it happen. For anyone facing similar noise, I recommend paying attention to the quote: "What other people think of you is none of your business."

Experiences and challenges that shaped me

Click to expand

  • Financial challenges have a way of focusing the mind. In my case, I vowed that I would get myself out of debt and was pretty focused on achieving that. Once I did that, it was a lot easier to turn my attention to fully serving others.