Photo courtesy of Dr. Kerry Mitchell Brown
By drawing on cultural intelligence, resilience, and community-centered values, Caribbean American women offer a powerful leadership model for this moment.
In 2025, as many U.S. organizations recalibrate their diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) efforts under public and political pressure, Dr. Kerry Mitchell Brown believes a valuable leadership perspective is being overlooked. A nationally recognized organizational theorist, leadership strategist, and founder of kmb Consultancy, Dr. Brown has spent over two decades advising Fortune 100 companies, higher education institutions, and nonprofit organizations on how to lead change at the intersection of identity, strategy, and systems transformation.
Her focus includes equipping Black women—especially those of Caribbean descent—with the tools to lead authentically and effectively in environments that often undervalue their lived experiences and cultural insights.
“Caribbean women navigate multiple worlds with grace and power,” Dr. Brown says. “That’s not just personal strength—it’s leadership capacity.”
According to Dr. Brown, Caribbean American women are well-positioned to contribute meaningfully to today’s business landscape. Their approach to leadership—shaped by migration, cultural legacy, and a deep sense of collective responsibility—offers organizations a critical and timely perspective as they navigate uncertainty and change.
Here are five reasons their leadership approach matters now more than ever.
1. Cultural Intelligence is a Leadership Asset
Caribbean American women often grow up balancing American workplace norms with the values and traditions of Caribbean culture. This dual perspective fosters what Dr. Brown calls cultural intelligence—the ability to interpret, respond to, and lead across diverse social and organizational contexts.
“It’s not something to minimize,” she notes. “Cultural intelligence helps build bridges others might not even see.”
In a business environment where inclusive leadership and cross-cultural understanding are tied to performance and engagement, this kind of adaptability and insight becomes a distinct advantage.
2. A Collective Vision Strengthens Teams and Strategy
Where traditional corporate structures may emphasize individualism, many Caribbean cultures place strong value on community and shared progress. Dr. Brown sees this as a key leadership strength.
“Embrace your vision for the community,” she encourages. “That orientation shapes how you lead and influences how others thrive around you.”
Caribbean American women often bring a team-first mentality and long-term thinking grounded in interdependence. This can foster trust, collaboration, and a sense of shared purpose—especially valuable in today’s evolving workplace cultures.
3. Resourcefulness Fuels Innovation
From education and healthcare to corporate spaces, Dr. Brown observes that Caribbean American women have learned to lead despite systemic constraints. This ability to do more with less—born from personal and communal experience—translates into effective, creative leadership.
“In every system we move through, there are barriers,” she says. “But we know how to turn challenge into opportunity.”
In a moment when many companies are operating with reduced resources and greater uncertainty, leaders who bring resilience, adaptability, and innovative thinking are key contributors to progress.
Listen to Redefining Leadership: The Power of Caribbean American Women with Dr. Kerry Mitchell Brown
4. Storytelling Inspires, Connects, and Leads Change
In Caribbean cultures, storytelling is more than a tradition—it’s a way to teach, inspire, and pass on values. For Dr. Brown, this practice has a vital role in leadership, especially for women navigating corporate systems.
“Bring the Caribbean tradition of storytelling to your leadership role,” she says. “It builds emotional connection and helps people understand your vision.”
By using stories to frame purpose, share lived experiences, and drive engagement, leaders create a more human-centered approach to influence and motivation—something increasingly important in today’s data-driven, AI-accelerated environment.
5. Radical Self-Care is a Sustainable Leadership Practice
Dr. Brown openly discusses her own experience with burnout and how it reshaped her leadership. She emphasizes that self-care is not a break from leadership—it’s part of it.
“Radical self-care is not a luxury,” she says. “It’s a leadership strategy.”
For many Caribbean American women, who are often expected to over-deliver in silence, this reframing is essential. Modeling boundaries, wellness, and balance supports not only personal sustainability but also team health and workplace culture.
A Leadership Approach for the Times
Dr. Brown’s RISE Framework—Redefine Success, Innovate Disruption, Synergize Roles, Evolve Continuously—reflects the kind of leadership she sees already emerging among Caribbean American women. Their approach doesn’t seek to replicate traditional leadership norms but offers something different: a model grounded in identity, community, and cultural depth.
At a time when organizations are questioning what kind of leadership the future requires, Dr. Brown offers a compelling answer: one that integrates both strategy and soul.
“Lead as you are,” she advises. “Not as others expect you to be. That’s how we move from surviving to shaping what’s next.”
_________
Dr. Kerry Mitchell Brown, Ph.D. in Organizations and Management, M.B.A., and Gestalt OSD Certified Practitioner, is the founder of kmb Consultancy, which provides culturally grounded leadership development for Black and Caribbean women across industries.