With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.
Issue link: http://digital.canadawide.com/i/1518504
W I N N E R 36 B C B U S I N E S S . C A M AY 2 0 24 RISING STARS WOTY A uroara Leigh was raised on a hunting and fishing lodge on the outskirts of Fort St. James. "By the time I was seven, I had a rifle and I would hunt and drive boats and fish. It was really a special place to be," she recalls. But when she first moved into the adjacent town, she couldn't understand the hardship around her: addictions, suicide, conflicts between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people, violence. What helped, she says, was a bachelor's degree in anthropology and Indigenous studies from UBCO, where she focused on health studies, psychology and cultural and medical anthropology. But there was a clear dissonance between what she learned in class and what she saw in the real world. "There's so much knowledge in the scholarly world, so my burning question after my undergrad—which is why I conceived Simply Sacred Solutions—was: Why is that knowl- edge not becoming part of solutions woven into communities? Why are people still suffering?" W I N N E R After graduating in 2017, Leigh completed a master's of education in adult learning and global change from UBC Vancouver with a focus on creating safe spaces. She built her consulting business, Simply Sacred Solutions, in tandem and officially launched it in 2019. Her first contract was consulting on forest product company Canfor's corporate-wide leadership training on the social determinants of health and barriers for Indigenous employees. As a wellness anthropologist, Leigh now runs a podcast through her company and offers keynote speaking as well as workshop and program design and facilitation. She has worked on trauma healing in rural communities and produced an album of psycho-educational songs called Feel It to Heal It. Revenue, she adds, has grown 300 percent since the company earned $25,000 in 2020. "So many times, people in academia, they end up just being scholars to one another and they stay in dialogue to one another," says Leigh. "But it needs to get to the ground level."–R.R. AUROARA LEIGH OWNER, SIMPLY SACRED SOLUTIONS CAITLYN VANDERHAEGHE PRESIDENT AND CEO, KIDSTAR NUTRIENTS W hen Caitlyn Vanderhaeghe learned that her two-year-old daughter was iron- deficient, she went on the hunt for a clean supplement. "I came up empty-handed," she says. "Everything either had alcohol in it or a sugar base, it tasted horrible, and it caused constipation and black teeth." The solution turned out to be a formulation of her own: chewable iron tablets. Entrepreneurial knowhow has been a part of Vanderhaege's life since grade school: growing up in Burnaby, she would pick her mom's flowers and sell them as bou- quets. After graduating with a bachelor's degree in geography from SFU followed by a bachelor's of education from UBC, she started working with her mom on a women's supplement company: Lorna Vanderhaeghe Health Solutions. That business was eventually acquired by Jamieson Wellness in 2014, but during her decade