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Where You Are Is Not Who You Are

A Memoir

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Where You Are Is Not Who You Are

By: Ursula Burns
Narrated by: Ursula Burns
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About this listen

The first Black female CEO of a Fortune 500 company looks back at her life and her career at Xerox, sharing unique insights on American business and corporate life, the workers she has always valued, racial and economic justice, how greed is threatening democracy, and the obstacles she’s conquered being Black and a woman.

“I am a Black woman, I do not play golf, I do not belong to or go to country clubs, I do not like NASCAR, I do not listen to country music, and I have a masters degree in engineering. I, like a typical New Yorker, speak very fast, with an accent and vernacular that is definitely New York City, definitely Black. So when someone says I’m going to introduce you to the next CEO of Xerox, and the options are lined up against a wall, I would be the first one voted off the island.”

In 2009, when she was appointed the Chief Executive Officer of the Xerox Corporation, Ursula Burns shattered the glass ceiling and made headlines. But the media missed the real story, she insists. “It should have been ‘how did this happen? How did Xerox Corporation produce the first African-American woman CEO?’ Not this spectacular story titled, “Oh, my God, a Black woman making it.”

In this smart, no-nonsense book, part memoir and part cultural critique, Burns writes movingly about her journey from tenement housing on Manhattan’s Lower East Side to the highest echelons of the corporate world. She credits her success to her poor single Panamanian mother, Olga Racquel Burns - a licensed child-care provider whose highest annual income was $4,400 - who set no limits on what her children could achieve. Ursula recounts her own dedication to education and hard work, and how she took advantage of the opportunities and social programs created by the civil rights and women’s movements to pursue engineering at Polytechnic Institute of New York.

Burns writes about overcoming the barriers she faced, as well as the challenges and realities of the corporate world. Her classmates and colleagues - almost all White males - “couldn’t comprehend how a Black girl could be as smart, and in some cases, smarter than they were. They made a developed category for me. Unique. Amazing. Spectacular. That way they could accept me”. Her 35-year career at Xerox was all about fixing things, from cutting millions to save the company from bankruptcy to a daring six-billion-dollar acquisition to secure its future. Ursula also worked closely with President Barack Obama as a lead on his STEM initiative and chair of his Export council, where she traveled with him on an official trade mission to Cuba, and became one of his greatest admirers.

Candid and outspoken, Ursula offers a remarkable look inside the c-suites of corporate America through the eyes of a Black woman - someone who puts humanity over greed and justice over power. She compares the impact of the pandemic to the financial crisis of 2007, condemns how corporate culture is destroying the spirit of democracy, and worries about the workers whose lives are being upended by technology. Empathetic and dedicated, idealistic and pragmatic, Ursula demonstrates that, no matter your circumstances, hard work, grit and a bit of help along the way can change your life - and the world.

©2021 Ursula Burns (P)2021 HarperCollins Publishers
Black & African American Business Leadership Social Sciences United States New York
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Great listen

Great listen, informative, personal and absolutely unique. Well done Ursula, truly an insight into an incredible career.

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Outstanding and Endlessly Inspiring

Impeccably written and wonderfully narrated. This was such a compelling memoir and I found the clarity and self awareness of the author so refreshing. She really comes through strongly; you get a sense of Ms Burns as being highly principled, strong willed, focused, but also heart centred, honest and wise. And naturally, her rise from poverty and struggle to hard earned success makes for her a brilliant role model for many. As a minority woman I was continually inspired by this book, and many times moved by her story.

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Incredible and inspiring story

I absolutely enjoyed listening to this. Very heartfelt and inspiring, and Ursula narrated it brilliantly as well. It was really interesting learning about her background and her rise from deep poverty to becoming the first back CEO of a Fortune 500 company. Amazing. As a black woman myself I resonated with so much of her beginnings, and that sense of being a black woman in a white space. It’s great that she used it to her advantage and didn’t let it hold her back. It was lovely to hear the many people in Xerox who helped her up, and gave her the opportunity. Wow, what an incredible story. I’m so glad she wrote this. Thank you for sharing your story.

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