Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility

TAMMY NEALE | CEO, Virginia Housing

Tammy Neale, who in 2024 was named CEO of the self-supporting state organization helping Virginians attain affordable housing, has overseen the investment of $730 million in financing that has created over 4,000 housing units. Virginia Housing has also supported more than 4,500 single-family mortgage loans totaling over $1.4 billion, with 96% of borrowers receiving financial backing from the organization, previously known as the Virginia Housing Development Authority.

Though she’s newish in the top role, Neale has been at Virginia Housing for four decades. Starting out as a paralegal, Neale steadily climbed the ranks, serving as managing director of human resources and then managing director of organizational development and learning, followed by chief of staff and chief of programs.

“Having been in multiple and very diverse roles at the organization, Tammy has a unique vantage point of Virginia Housing that makes her an effective and robust leader,” her nominator says.

Despite her many years of experience, Neale knew there was more to learn. After being named CEO, she went on a statewide listening tour, meeting with associates and partners across the commonwealth.

“Tammy understood the importance [of hearing] directly from the stakeholders who have [an] impact on the success of the organization and could potentially challenge her current perceptions of the company,” Neale’s nominator says. “She welcomes feedback, input and open dialogue.”

Return to the full list of this year’s recipients

NICOLE NEWSOME | Chief strategy and growth officer, Qantm Creative

In 2023, Five Hill Capital, a Norfolk-based investment firm and the parent company of WB Marketing, a Norfolk marketing and communications firm, acquired Meridian Group, a Virginia Beach agency. The next year the two shops were combined to create Qantm Creative.

A sales and marketing veteran, Nicole Newsome was director of digital marketing for WB Marketing at the time of the acquisition. Newsome, according to her nominator, “played an integral role” in the merger.

Now, as chief strategy and growth officer at Qantm, Newsome serves as the main liaison between the agency’s directors and its CEO and president. She’s also the point person for many of its largest accounts.
“Known for setting a high bar in customer service, Nicole brings a strong training skill set and a results-driven approach to digital strategy, consistently delivering measurable outcomes for her clients,” Newsome’s nominator says.

A native of Hampton Roads, Newsome is also active in the community. For the past 14 years, she has served as a co-leader for two Girl Scout troops, and she mentors students at the Entrepreneurship and Business Academy at Kempsville High School in Virginia Beach. In 2024, a group of students she worked with invented a tool called SheClasp, which helps users put on jewelry easily, and later won $2,000 in a national pitch competition held in Chicago.

“I am incredibly proud of this all-female team,” Newsome says.

Return to the full list of this year’s recipients

SHANNON O. PIERCE | President and CEO, Virginia Natural Gas; Senior vice president, Southern Company Gas

A Surry County native, Shannon Pierce succeeded Robert Duvall in April as leader of Virginia Natural Gas, the utility serving more than 310,000 residential, commercial and industrial customers in Southeastern Virginia. She also serves as an executive for Southern Company Gas, VNG’s parent.

Although Pierce has spent her entire career in energy, mere chance delivered her to the industry. Fresh out of the University of Virginia School of Law, Pierce took a job at McGuireWoods in the energy and utilities practice group. From there, she moved to Georgia to work as counsel at AGL Resources, which was purchased in 2016 by Southern Company Gas. Over the years, Pierce has held leadership positions in legal, regulatory affairs, external affairs and utility operations.

Pierce credits her Virginia roots with fueling her passion for leveraging Virginia Natural Gas’ resources to support the communities the utility serves. In July, VNG announced a $175,000 donation to the Peake Childhood Center, a Hampton Roads nonprofit dedicated to preparing children for kindergarten.

“Peake’s motto, ‘growing promising futures,’ resonates deeply with us,” Pierce said in a statement about the gift. “Workforce development transcends job creation — it’s about understanding and meeting the broader needs of our families and communities.”

Pierce sits on boards for the Virginia Chamber of Commerce, the Elizabeth River Project and the Hampton Roads Executive Roundtable. In June, Gov. Glenn Youngkin appointed Pierce to Christopher Newport University’s board of visitors.

Return to the full list of this year’s recipients

SUSAN PILATO | Owner and principal, PC&A Business Environments; CEO, Mantra Inspired Furniture

At the age of 5, Susan Pilato knew she wanted to own her own business. She realized that goal at the age of 25, when she and Donna Counts launched what is now known as PC&A Business Environments, a commercial furniture dealership and interior design business based in Norfolk.

A new opportunity presented itself with a business client that insisted on its office desks being made of wood. When the desk manufacturer they had used closed, Pilato couldn’t find another option.

“We discovered that no other commercial manufacturer produced genuine solid wood furniture,” Pilato says. “Our only alternatives were wood veneer over particle board or medium-density fiberboard.”

In 2018, Mantra Inspired Furniture was born. The company sells sustainable, solid wood furniture that is made in America.

Pilato sits on the advisory council of NeoCon, the leading annual event for the commercial design industry. This summer, Pilato joined the board of Business + Institutional Furniture Manufacturers Association, the governing body for North America’s commercial furniture industry.

Pilato is also active in the community. Among other work, she is vice chair for the Norfolk Airport Authority. She sits on the board of Envision Lead Grow, a Norfolk-based nonprofit that encourages women to be entrepreneurs, and co-hosted a podcast with the nonprofit’s founder, Angela Reddix.

Return to the full list of this year’s recipients

AMBER PRICE | Senior vice president and chief nursing officer, Sentara Health

In February, Amber Price stepped into a new position at Sentara Health, overseeing nursing practice and care across the Hampton Roads health system. She also serves as executive sponsor for Sentara’s women’s health team and the women’s employee resource group.

A certified nurse-midwife, Price has delivered more than 1,000 babies. She has numerous degrees including a doctorate in nursing practice from Johns Hopkins University.

Price joined Sentara Health in 2022 as president of the Sentara Williamsburg Regional Medical Center. Among her accomplishments in this position,

Price designed spaces for people with sensory needs, a group that includes people with autism, PTSD, early onset dementia and other conditions. This led to the hospital becoming first in the state to earn KultureCity’s Sensory Inclusive Certification.

Prior to joining Sentara, Price was a vice president with HCA Healthcare and chief operating officer of TriStar Centennial Medical Center in Tennessee. Before that, she was the administrator at The Women’s Hospital at Henrico Doctors’ Hospital in Henrico County.

Price also stays busy with efforts in the community, including serving as a board member of the Greater Williamsburg Chamber of Commerce. She was the keynote guest at the chamber’s Power of Women event in March.

“More than just a speaker, she personally sponsored multiple tables so that young professionals and women with limited financial means could attend,” Price’s nominator says. “This is who Amber is — she invests in others.”

Return to the full list of this year’s recipients

LINDA RABBITT | Founder and executive chairman, Rand Construction

Today Rand Construction reports an annual revenue of more than $600 million and has regional offices across Texas, Atlanta, Denver and Salt Lake City, in addition to its Alexandria headquarters.

But back in 1989, when Linda Rabbitt founded the company, Rand didn’t seem destined to be a success. She was one of few female in the construction industry, and Rabbitt hadn’t expected to be an entrepreneur.

Instead, she’d followed her mom’s advice and worked as a teacher until she got married to someone who could provide for her. But when Rabbitt later decided to leave an abusive marriage, she needed a way to support her two daughters.

Rabbitt took a job as a secretary at KPMG, the professional service firm. With a ferocious work ethic, Rabbitt moved up to become director of marketing. She was approached by another woman who wanted to launch the first female-owned construction company in the Washington, D.C., area.

By the time Rabbitt started Rand Construction, she’d parted ways with her co-founder. Today it’s the largest woman-founded, woman-owned commercial general contractor in the United States. The company specializes in high-end commercial interiors, building renovations, and restaurant and retail construction.

Rabbitt serves on the boards of the Economic Club of Washington, D.C., and HEROES, a nonprofit supporting the families of law enforcement officers, firefighters and federal agents who gave their lives in the line of duty in the greater Washington, D.C., community.

Return to the full list of this year’s recipients

ANGELA REDDIX | Founder, president and CEO, ARDX

Angela Reddix has so many titles you couldn’t possibly squeeze them onto a business card.

In 2006, Reddix, who has a doctorate in business administration, launched ARDX, a Norfolk health care management and IT consulting firm. With clients that include government agencies, small businesses and nonprofits, the business specializes in health and policy regulation, big data analytics, technology solutions and cybersecurity risk management.

“Dr. Reddix has been a trailblazer,” her nominator says, “in transforming health care and human services for vulnerable populations through federal government contracting.”

When not running ARDX, Reddix works to improve the lives of women and girls.

In 2016, she created Envision Lead Grow, a nonprofit that teaches women and girls about financial literacy, entrepreneurship and leadership. Reddix also runs ELG Management, an initiative that provides guidance to women on how to find success as federal government contractors.

In 2024, Reddix opened Mustard Seed Place in Portsmouth, a “modern-day girls’ club” where women can network and attend events about careers, personal finance and wellness. Mustard Seed Place is also home to several “women-centric businesses,” including the recently opened YWCA South Hampton Roads’ Equity and Justice Center and YWomen Prosper Empowerment Academy.

In December, Reddix plans to unveil another project at Mustard Seed Place — The Museum of Black Women Innovators, which will feature immersive exhibits, interactive experiences and programming.

Reddix is also the author of business books, including “Envision Lead Grow: Release the Boss Within.”

Return to the full list of this year’s recipients

REBECCA RIORDAN | Chief people and culture officer, Chartway Federal Credit Union

After joining Chartway in 2020, Rebecca Riordan championed an effort to refresh the federal credit union’s competency model.

“We have eight competencies — grounded in agility, accountability, inclusion and innovation — that serve as a blueprint for how we lead and grow,” Riordan explains. “From hiring and coaching to performance development, they help our team members connect what they do with why it matters.”

Riordan also led the charge at Chartway to create resource groups for women, Black, Latino, Asian, Pacific Islander and LGBTQ+ employees, as well as a group for working parents. More than half of Chartway’s employees participate in a resource group. During Riordan’s tenure, the credit union received the Juntos Avanzamos designation, which recognizes credit unions committed to serving and empowering Latinos and immigrant communities.

“Rebecca has led transformative initiatives that reflect her forward-thinking vision and her deep commitment to empowering people at every level of the credit union,” Riordan’s nominator says.

Early in her career, Riordan worked as a regional training manager for the Jordan Marsh department store chain. She later joined Steinbach, another department store, as senior human resources manager.

For close to two decades, Riordan was vice president of Country Curtains, a multichannel direct-to-consumer company, followed by her tenure as senior vice president of HR at Massachusetts-based Greylock Federal Credit Union.

Riordan earned a degree in business administration from State University of New York at New Paltz.

Return to the full list of this year’s recipients

KELLY SCHLAGETER | Chief people officer, Acentra Health

Kelly Schlageter joined CNSI, a McLean-based health care tech company, as chief marketing and communications officer in 2019, and helped steer its merger with Kepro in 2022 that created Acentra Health.

Throughout the integration process, Schlageter helped unify employees.

Now, in her role as chief people officer, Schlageter oversees human resources and communications. She’s also the executive sponsor for Acentra Health’s corporate social responsibility program and leads Acentra Health Cares, the company’s employee-led corporate social responsibility program. In 2024, Acentra employees gave more than 3,000 volunteer hours and $332,000 in contributions to support charities globally.

“It’s inspiring to see employees at every level embrace our values and lead the way in giving back to the communities where we live and work,” Schlageter said in a February statement about the effort.

In addition to her other responsibilities, Schlageter sets aside time each week to mentor others. “I see mentoring as part of my job,” she says.

Earlier in her career, Schlageter led marketing and communications at Inova Health System. She also worked for 14 years for Sprint.

A longtime advocate for the LGBTQ+ community, Schlageter founded Equality Fairfax, a gay advocacy organization, in the early 2000s. She also sits on the Northern Virginia Chamber of Commerce board.

Schlageter has a master’s degree in German from Bowling Green State University.

Return to the full list of this year’s recipients

MONICA SCHMUDE | Virginia president, Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield

Monica Schmude grew up in a small town in the Midwest. Her mom ran a small business, while her dad juggled farming and a factory job, where he was known for a decades-long record of not taking a sick day.

“The values in our home were simple but enduring: Work hard, stay grounded and show up for others,” Schmude says.

Schmude earned a degree in industrial/organizational psychology from the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh. As a first-generation college graduate, she felt like she didn’t have a blueprint for her future. However, given her prestigious 30-year health care career, Schmude clearly figured it out.

Since 2023, she has led Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield in Virginia, which has about 8,000 employees and serves more than 3 million members. In her role, Schmude is responsible for the strategic direction, performance and growth of Anthem’s commercial business in the commonwealth.

What drives Schmude, even on the long days, is a desire to make things better: “I’m fueled by purpose — the purpose of advancing Anthem’s mission to improve the health of humanity by addressing the physical, behavioral and social drivers of health,” she says.

Previously, Schmude spent almost 13 years at Cigna Healthcare in different leadership positions, including serving as president of its mid-Atlantic market.

Schmude is chairman of the Virginia Association of Health Plans board and is a member of the Virginia Chamber of Commerce and the Northern Virginia Chamber boards.

Return to the full list of this year’s recipients