On the first Tuesday of every month, we’ll announce a new Fearless Female, including a video interview of them sharing their business story. Want to be featured as a Fearless Female?
Contact Memberships for more details. The Fearless Female Program would not be possible without our Title Sponsor, Scotiabank.
To learn a little more about the Scotiabank Women Initiative, and why they’ve chosen to sponsor this program, see the video below.
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The very first Fearless Female we’re featuring is Faune Lang, Executive Director at Food4Kids Waterloo Region.
Faune is the Executive Director of Food4Kids Waterloo Region. With an extensive background in non-profit and financial services, Faune was able to align her love for children and drive for change in a career that she is incredibly excited about. It’s been one of Faune’s strongest desires to continue to serve her community. She is passionate and understands the importance of donors and fundraising to expand the organization’s mission to help more children living with chronic hunger. She couldn’t imagine doing more meaningful work. Her sunny disposition and unstoppable drive for change will create further awareness of protecting our most vulnerable.
In her free time, Faune enjoys spending quality time with her four children, going to the beach, watching hockey, and diving into a really good book.
To learn more about Faune’s journey as a Fearless Female, watch the interview below (or read the written format).
Tell us about your organization
Food4Kids Waterloo Region is a non-profit organization that feeds severely food insecure children and youth ages 1 through 14 and we bring security to their doorsteps to their lives to ensure that they have the food that they need to thrive outside of the classroom. So that’s 170 days of the year when a child cannot access in classroom supports and we ensure that they have what they need to thrive.
What inspired you to pursue this career path?
Great question. My inspiration has come through my children. So I found myself on my fourth maternity leave with my youngest daughter and I was battling cervical cancer and I was in a position where now I was a single mom, had to be the sole breadwinner and I thought to myself if I need to go out in order to provide to ensure that my children are kept for, I need to make sure I’m doing something that I genuinely care about and that I’m extremely passionate about and for me that’s children.
So non-profit spoke to me in many ways that I needed to be able to give back in a way that was meaningful, that had purpose alongside ensuring that my children were taken care of.
What’s your educational background?
My educational background, my roots are insurance specific to individual and group. So corporately I have spent most of my life helping other people in avenues of efficiencies, helping them better understand, writing job aids and kind of understanding what that life cycle looks like from an insurance space and to provide that financial security for others.
A lot from where I have come from, I think has made me the person that I am today. So, life experience has truly brought me into the position that I am at. Everything that I have learned good or bad, experience has just enabled me to grow and to be able to serve the community in ways that I would have never dreamed of before.
Did you ever consider any other career path?
So, after high school I was really inspired to be a pastry chef. So, it was my dream to go through in the culinary aspect of things. So I apprenticed at a prestigious golf course where I’d learned from a lot of different people, a high skill set but then I found myself wanting a family, wanting more and because of the hours and the nature of what was you know asked of me I thought this probably is not the avenue in order for me to have that family with the hours and then I kind of switched gears and thought well what could provide financial security and at the same time use a skill set, the people skills and just really help someone and that’s where I went through that insurance avenue where I was able to contribute for quite a few years before I switched to the non-profit sector.
What have been some of the highlights of your career so far?
Milestones along the way I always make sure that the smallest of wins I celebrate. So, I have had so many, and I think most of them have just beaten because I’ve been able to help. So whether that’s learning a new process and sharing that knowledge, whether that is providing security to vulnerable children through food, whether that is uplifting or giving someone else something that maybe they wouldn’t have had before or an experience and making them just feel better after leaving my presence, I would say those are all wins.
My greatest accomplishment I think to date workwise would be the fact that we are feeding 1,350 children every single week in our region. To me that is just phenomenal. There’s so much more work to be done in that aspect but for right now to say a number that high it is sad that we exist, but I’m truly inspired and grateful that I can contribute to that many children in our region.
What is causing the hunger problem in our Region?
So, I do think that it is a vicious cycle. You have poverty, you have housing, you have food insecurity and all those pieces combined is a recipe for disaster for these children. They are a product of their circumstance so they’re unable to access food banks, they’re unable to transport themselves in order to receive food in a different way.
They are really at the mercy of whomever is at home or not at home. So, for those pieces we need to make sure that as a community we’re doing everything that it takes in order to support those children to ensure that they can become our future leaders and that they have what they need to thrive.
What have been some of the challenges that you faced in your career so far?
So many challenges.
I would say that a lot of people like to say no. A lot of people may have their own strong opinions that might outweigh what you’re trying to accomplish together. I have experienced in my career a lot of nos.
I’ve experienced in my career well maybe stay in this pathway. You’ve kind of hit the ceiling on where you should be right now. Have you thought of a different direction? Fortunately, I have a very positive outlook, so I take those no’s or those redirections as an answer to itself of if the door is closed it’s not for me.
But with no’s where I have conviction, I ensure that I pursue that in a creative or more unique way to ensure that that person you know the vulnerable at the other end of things is able to receive what they deserve through those no’s.
If you could go back in time, is there anything you’d do differently?
I would have to say that I’m a person who just believes that everything truly happens for a reason and you’re in the exact moment or place in which you are called to be at that time. So, I don’t believe that I would change anything.
Not to say I haven’t gone through some very rough patches or pieces in time, but they’ve shaped me, and they’ve prepared me for where I am today. So, I’m grateful for any of those losses or hard times because they really have made me who I am to give back to my community.
What strategies and methods have you used to grow your business?
Always listen.
Keep an open mind and hear everyone around you. Whether it is something I agree with or not I always find value in listening to someone else. So doing that more than speaking I would say has really helped.
Looking toward other leaders and successful individuals to see what they’ve done or what they have learned along the way and just ensuring that your heart is in the right place. So, it’s one of those things like whatever you do it with your entire heart. That’s how I like to look at things and that has you know put me in that position that I am in today.
Always making sure that other people are at the heart of what you do and at that high point of what you do to ensure that you’re doing the right thing even when someone isn’t looking. Just having that type of integrity.
How do you define success?
Through the pulse of everyone around me.
So, if a child is able to thrive, if they have been inspired or receive hope knowing someone cares about them, that’s success. If I have left an interaction with someone and they feel maybe a little better than when we started, that’s success. So anywhere where I can leave a mark in a positive way or have someone think about something in a different way, to me that’s success.
What is your leadership style?
So, the type of leader that I am, I’m very hands-on. So even though parts of my position will call me to do strategic planning and be behind a desk or meet with donors and other individuals, I make it a point to be on the ground running to meet with these children, delivering food to their doorsteps, meeting families, picking up the phone and seeing how I can help have someone join our program. That is so meaningful and it is so important because sometimes we get really busy, and we tend to kind of step back a little too far and we lose sight of what’s happening.
And for myself, I always want to be connected to the mission, connected to my audience, and ensure that I know what they need and to better understand where we need to go as a society.
Does your organization also work with local schools?
We do work at the household and with the children, but the school is our liaison. So, we have a weekend program and a break program, that is the 170 days a year our child’s outside of school.
So, during our weekend program, the schools we’re involved with, the secretaries, the social workers, the principals, everyone ensures that they are on board with the program. So, when we deliver on Fridays to the schools and they are discreetly put in knapsacks to further remove stigma for those children and not be further bullied if that’s happening. And that’s how we’ll partner with the schools in that way.
We’ll also have schoolteachers, social workers, other members in the community or being able to self-identify to enroll in our program as well. So, the school plays a big part, but they’re a piece to that component in which we’re delivering the food. So then when we look at our break programs, which is your holiday time, March break and your nine long weeks of summer, we’re delivering right to the doorsteps.
So even though it’s specific just to the children outside of school, the school will liaison during our weekend program to ensure that these kids have what they need.
Why did you decide to join our Board of Directors?
So primarily, I’m very honoured to be a part of the Chamber coming October 1st. And secondary to that, I feel that it’s just so important because the Chamber exemplifies what it means to bring community together, looking at different businesses and opportunities, entrepreneurship, and ensuring they have the tools that they need in order to be out in the region and to make connections and community.
And for myself, that is who I am. I am community. And I want to make sure that my skillset corporately, my skillset philanthropy wise and who I am as a person can just give more and do more with maybe some other individuals that I can support in unique ways.
What is your process of funding and grants?
The funding and the grants that we’ll get through like request that’s for our specific business because we fundraise every single dollar to operate because we’re not funded by the government. But it is very key for us to have unique partnerships and look toward other people in the community who are doing like work. So, food security, you have food banks, you have Nutrition for Learning, and you have Food4Kids Waterloo Region. So, we work closely together in the sense that we are all here to ensure that someone has the food security that they need. But we all have our niche area.
So, food banks will support families. And then you will have Nutrition for Learning that will support children when they’re in school for a snack program. And then you have Food4Kids Waterloo Region who’s supporting meals and snacks outside of the classroom.
So, we all play a different role. And even together with the three of us, we are not solving. So, we have so many days and times in between that that full cycle is not taking place.
But working together to find those avenues in which well, if we know of this family, and you know of this family, and I know of this family, what can we do better to serve them? That is so important. Like we need to look at unique ways of solving that because that and recipient of what they are receiving, it shouldn’t be hard to ask for help, it should not be hard to receive what you need. And it should not be hard to thrive in KW.
But there is a lot of barriers. And I think together is the only way because we need to break them down. But we need to make sure that again, we are still respecting the areas in which we operate and within our own constraints, that we find unique ways to solve for this.
What are some of your core values?
So first, God is number one in my life. Secondary to that would be integrity, so always ensuring that you are doing the right thing with purpose.
And then third is honesty. You need to be authentic and honest in what you do. Whether or not someone else may not want to hear the truth or that messaging, it is all in the way you, you know, explain that piece.
But those three things just always keep me on track and in alignment with who I am as a person.
What strategies do you use for building teams?
So first and foremost, I have the most amazing team. So, I may be biased because I am right there. But the women that I work with are remarkable. We would not be able to do what we do without each of us having a different set of skill set. So, I always think it’s important to ensure that you complement the pieces that you’re not as good at or complement the pieces that you need to work on with another team member.
So, everyone holds value at different skill set. And when you leverage those for good, you find yourselves having a complete team where you’re able to look upon someone else and grow from that person too. So, it’s very important that not as a leader that I am dictating, but we are leading together, and I can embrace everyone’s skill sets and unique qualities in a way that serves our mission to serve those deserving children and youth.
What are some of the benefits of establishing a business in Waterloo Region?
Waterloo Region is amazing. I would have to say I’ve grown up here my entire life. I haven’t seen outside of what this community is like in the sense of living.
And I think the advantage to that piece is when you start to understand or see patterns or culturally see different things that happen at different times, you gain a better understanding, you gain different insights, and it helps you grow as a person. It gives more purpose to serve your community in which you’ve come from and wanting to give back in a way of where I’ve had supports in KW that have helped me and helped my family grow and prosper. And it’s a great time for me to give back and continue to help and inspire others as well.
What inspires you?
Again, it is always children for me, and I think because you have someone so innocent and vulnerable, and the potential for so much, they’re always listening, they’re always looking, and they need someone to believe in them. So, when I look at my own life and my own four beautiful children, I have two boys and two girls, 17-year-old son, 15-year-old daughter, seven-year-old boy, and almost five-year-old daughter. And I look at all their potential, and the stars in their eyes of where they want to go.
And I think, how fortunate am I to have this blessing of all these children? And then all the children that I and my team can serve, I look at that as the greatest opportunity to give back is to children. So, when I look at inspiration for me, usually it is always the most vulnerable because we can learn so much from them. And it’s like that circle of life, when you’re young and then to when you’re old, you need help when you’re small, and then you need that same help when you become old.
And all of that in between is where myself at this age has so much that I can do to serve everyone on this end and on this end.
What advice would you give to other upcoming business owners?
Be true to yourself. Look within yourself to see what’s really important to you, what you value, and then play in on your natural abilities.
And you will always be successful within that because you’re not going to have to think twice about it. You’re not going to have to question it and you’re not going to have to rehearse it. It’s just going to come naturally to you.
And if you can align yourself with a career that enables you to authentically be yourself and be inspired, you’re going to change the world.
What future personal and professional goals do you have?
So, they go hand in hand. My biggest, most ambitious goal is to work myself out of a job, to be quite honest.
There should be no need for food security with children within our region, let alone anywhere in the world. So, my goal is to ensure that the 4,000 children who need food security, that they are going to receive it. So, I am going to work as hard as I can.
I know my team is going to work as hard as they can. And even if we do not see it today or tomorrow or in 10 years, I’m going to put in my best every single day because my grandchildren might see it, their grandchildren might see it. And that is something where we can’t just stop or pause because we think we’re not moving that needle.
We need to keep going because someone is going to see that needle push and one day we’re going to solve it.
What are some of your upcoming initiatives?
Well, we’re moving. So that’s really exciting. To meet our strategic plan objectives for the next three years, we’re going to reach 2,250 children by the end of the fiscal of June 2028. So, to do that, we needed to expand. So, it is not as simple as receiving funding or going out and writing grants to be able to say, we’re going to now buy food and feed children.
There are so many things to consider. So where are we procuring the food from? When we procure it, where is it going to be stored? How are we going to support our volunteers in unique ways and enable them to grow as well? So, for us, that was a new space. So, we’re very excited for that.
October 6th, we move into our new home, which is just down the road from where we are now into Trillium Drive. And we will be having an open house on Monday, November 3rd. So, I would really encourage anyone between the hours of 12PM and 7PM who knows about us or does not know and wants to learn a little bit more, or maybe your child or your family needs food security, and we are here to help.
So, it’s a great opportunity to come out and meet the community and just do something that means something, you know, something good for the lives of the children who are a part of KW Region.
Where can people learn more about your organization and contact you directly?
So, you can connect with me directly through my email at executivedirector@foodforkidswr.ca. You can also go to our website, foodforkidswr.ca, and you can learn more through social media. So, we try and be as out as much as possible, speaking engagements, different social platforms, just as a unique way to be able to reach our audience.
So as many ways as we can advocate, that’s what we like to do. You can also come in and visit us, you can volunteer, you can see what resonates with you. So sometimes it’s one thing to hear about what we do.
But when you get to place food in your hand and put it in a bag and interact with someone, see a child’s face, it puts more meaning and purpose into your life, and it just grows your heart. And I feel like that is the whole point of this all, right? We all need to get into that healthy way of giving back and doing something bigger than ourselves.
This text has been condensed for clarity and spacing.
The post Fearless Female (October): Faune Lang appeared first on Greater KW Chamber of Commerce.