A passionate champion for diversity and inclusion, Caroline was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis 20 years ago, when her son Sam was just a baby. But she refuses to let it define her or limit her professional success.
However, the former investment banker admits she didn’t have the confidence to speak openly about her health within the business initially, as she hadn’t worked on her own self-acceptance.
“MS is such an unpredictable thing and often an invisible illness and so, for a long time, I would pretend I was completely fine,” says Caroline, who started her career with Woolworths Group in 2017, working in senior store operations talent acquisition with BIG W.
“In 2020, when I started my current role, we had pivoted to remote working but on my first physical day in the office, I met with my line managers and said, ‘I would like to share something important about myself, I have MS.’
“They were like, ‘OK, great, please let us know of any support you need’, and then we moved on to focus on my exciting new role. I knew from then on that I could bring my full self to work and that my disability didn’t define or limit me to succeed in my role.”
A dynamic and passionate leader, Caroline is not only a role model for her apprentices but also her own children, Sam, 21, and daughter Carys, 18.
Watching her mother champion women in non-traditional roles – 32 percent of Woolworths refrigeration apprentices identify as female compared with an industry average of 1 per cent – and redefine diversity and inclusion has no doubt inspired Carys to pursue a career in the male-dominated field of Construction Project Management.