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Minnesota WomenRising Spring 2026

A Half-Day MN Women's Leadership & Empowerment Conference

May 11, 2026, 2026, 12 pm - 3 pm Central   |   Live Virtual Event

Rise. Lead. Thrive.

Early-Bird $50 Discount Ends Soon!

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Join hundreds of ambitious, high-achieving businesswomen across industries for WomenRising 2026—a dynamic half-day virtual conference designed to empower, elevate, and ignite the next chapter of your leadership journey.

Whether you're aiming for the next promotion, navigating complex leadership dynamics, or simply seeking renewed purpose, this is your moment to rise.

Powerhouse Speakers

Elyse Slayton
Miranda Fulk
Managing DirectorNorthwestern Mutual
Lynn Serra
Liz Schwartz
Executive Director, US Policy & Govt RelationsMerck & Co.
Marcella Moreno-Orellana
Gabrielle Howard
DirectorProcter & Gamble
Nicole Husband
Tamara Robinson
Senior DirectorRedfin
Karen Van Every
Mona Raju
Manager of Global Learning & DevelopmentNissan
Anjali Ahuja
Elizabeth Mansfield
Senior DirectorPinterest
Laura Lemons
Kate Nowak
Head of Customer SuccessSAP
Nicole Colehamer
Britney Young
Senior Technical Product ManagerAmazon Web Services (AWS)
Anu Kharadkar
Rachel Hurley
DirectorBayer
Diana Roberts
Erin Baber-Sherwood
HR Response PartnerPaychex

🎤 Transformational Keynotes

🔥

Resist the Call to Play Small: Leading with Authenticity.

Erin Baber-Sherwood
HR Response Partner at Paychex

Discover how embracing your authentic voice can become your greatest leadership advantage. This keynote will inspire attendees to lead boldly, show up fully, and make an impact without shrinking to fit expectations.

🌟

Hacking Your Brain for Health and Happiness.

Mona Raju
Manager Global Learning & Development at Nissan.

Explore practical strategies to rewire your mindset for greater well-being, resilience, and joy. Attendees will leave with actionable tools to improve mental fitness and create healthier, happier daily habits.

Panels with Candid Truths

🧘‍♀️

When It’s Time to Pivot: Reinventing Yourself Without Starting Over

Leaders from Bayer, Nissan, Pinterest, Northwestern Mutual, and Merck.

Hear how accomplished women have navigated major career and life shifts while building on the strengths they already had. This conversation will offer fresh perspective on reinvention, growth, and making your next move with confidence.

💎

Behind Every Great Woman: The Power of Mentors & Sponsors

Leaders from Procter & Gamble, Amazon Web Services, Redfin and SAP.

Learn why mentors and sponsors are essential to career advancement and personal growth. This panel will highlight how powerful relationships can open doors, amplify potential, and help women rise together.

Why Attend WomenRising?

Top-tier women leaders sharing candid stories and actionable advice
Zero fluff—only real talk from women who've been there
Network digitally with like-minded, driven professionals
Leave recharged, refocused, and reconnected to your potential

Full Conference Agenda

12:00 PM
Keynote: Resist the Call to Play Small: Leading with Authenticity.
Laura Lemons
Erin Baber-Sherwood
HR Response Partner Paychex
12:30 PM
Panel: When It’s Time to Pivot: Reinventing Yourself Without Starting Over.
Lynn Serra
Rachel Hurley
Director, US State and Local Government Affairs Bayer
Nicole Colehamer
Mona Raju
Manager Global Learning & Development Nissan
Anjali Ahuja
Elizabeth Mansfield
Senior Director Pinterest
Marcella Moreno-Orellana
Miranda Fulk
Managing Director Northwestern Mutual
Elyse Slayton
Liz Schwartz
Executive Director Merck & Co
1:15 PM
Keynote: Hacking Your Brain for Health and Happiness.
Nicole Husband
Mona Raju
Manager Global Learning & Development Nissan
1:45 PM
Panel: When It’s Time to Pivot: Reinventing Yourself Without Starting Over.
Anu Kharadkar
Anu Kharadkar
Global Strategy Director Sherwin-Williams
Karen Van Every
Karen Van Every
Head of Product Design CNN
Diana Roberts
Diana Roberts
Sr Director Ricoh
Leslie Hefter
Leslie Hefter
Sr. Director DHL eCommerce
Vasudhara Kantroo
Vasudhara Kantroo
Senior Director Dropbox

What Past Attendees Say

★★★★★   4.9     Google Verified Business Reviews
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"Inspiring speakers who motivate us all to build our relationships with our fellow women leaders."

- Jolene Vos-Camy, Calvin University

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"I highly recommend this community for all women."

- Giselle Sandy-Phillips, Constellation

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"Great webinar topics and speakers! Looking forward to more ..."

- Dolly Greenhalgh, Playworks

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"The meetings are always valuable to me."

- Julie Mobley, Cullman Internal Medicine

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"The speakers are really great. They offer practical advice and inspiration for women in the workplace."

- Krista Bednorz, Wayne & Roberts

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"Came through again with meaningful content that was a valuable use of my time."

- Maria McWilliams, Vanderlande

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"Really enjoy the speakers and the connection to other women leaders. Valuable group."

- Shannon McVeigh, RSM Enterprises

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"Great thought provoking presentations."

- Tamaki Stratman, The Historical Society

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Buyer's Guide: How To Choose the Right Women's Leadership Conference or Summit.

1. Criteria in Choosing a Women's Leadership Conference or Summit.

A women's leadership conference is only partly about the stage. The real value is not in trying to absorb every slide, every panel, and every keynote; it is in using the event as a live map of what serious leaders are thinking about right now. The most effective attendees arrive with a point of view and a short list of questions they want answered: Which leadership challenge am I trying to solve? Which assumptions do I need to pressure-test? Who in this room sees the future earlier than I do? That shift matters. Once you stop treating the conference like a fire hose of content and start treating it like a focused leadership lab, your decisions get better. You choose sessions more deliberately, listen for recurring themes, and use hallway conversations to test ideas in real time. A strong conference outcome is not “I attended everything.” It is “I left with one sharper strategic idea, a handful of meaningful relationships, and a clearer sense of what to do next.”

That kind of outcome begins before you ever put on your badge. Effective attendees do their homework. They study the agenda, identify the sessions most likely to challenge their thinking, and make a priority list of people they genuinely want to meet. Then they reach out early. A short note before the event can do more than a dozen awkward introductions onsite: it lets you pre-introduce yourself, suggest a coffee, or simply tell someone you plan to attend their session. Just as important, do not overschedule every minute. Leave room for serendipity, because leadership conferences often become most valuable in the spaces between formal sessions. Build in white space for a conversation that runs long, a speaker you want to approach, or an impromptu lunch with someone who sees your industry from a different angle. The best attendees are prepared, but they are not rigid; they create structure so they can take advantage of surprise.

Once you are there, your most important tool is not your business card. It is your ability to explain who you are in a way that is clear, memorable, and relevant. Too many attendees answer “What do you do?” with a job title and a dead end. A better answer is a short “movie trailer” of your work: what you lead, what problem you are trying to solve, and why it matters now. Pair that with a small repertoire of questions that invite real conversation rather than polite noise. Asking what brought someone to this conference, what issue is taking more leadership time than it should, or what they are seeing change in their organization quickly moves the exchange from small talk to substance. Even for introverts, this approach works because it replaces performance with curiosity. You do not have to impress the room. You have to help one person at a time feel that the conversation with you was worth having.

That is why the smartest conference attendees work the room humanly, not theatrically. They do not try to become the loudest networker in the ballroom. They focus on a series of thoughtful, one-to-one exchanges, and they use good business etiquette to make those exchanges easy for everyone else. They know how to enter a group without hijacking it, introduce people to one another, shift conversations gracefully, and exit without awkwardness. They pay attention to small details because small details signal leadership maturity. They listen more than they speak. They notice who asks the sharpest questions from the audience. They treat coffee lines, post-session clusters, and shared tables as openings rather than inconveniences. And when they meet someone interesting, they capture a quick note afterward so the conversation does not dissolve into the blur of the day. A leadership conference rewards energy, yes, but it rewards composure, attentiveness, and generosity even more.

It also rewards people who understand that networking is not a numbers game. The point is not to collect the most contacts; it is to strengthen the right mix of relationships. Some of the most valuable people you meet will not be the headline speakers or the obvious power players. They may be peers wrestling with the same management problem, operators from adjacent industries, rising leaders with fresh pattern recognition, or connectors who know worlds you do not. So go broad enough to avoid an echo chamber, and generous enough to be useful. Offer a relevant introduction. Share an article, a framework, or a data point. Ask, “How can I help?” with sincerity, not theater. Authenticity matters because people can feel the difference between someone building a relationship and someone merely working a room. Leadership conferences create a rare temporary community; the attendees who benefit most are the ones who contribute to that community while they are in it.

The final test of conference effectiveness comes after the flight home. If you do not process the event quickly, even excellent conversations decay into vague good intentions. Block time within a day or two to review your notes, organize the contacts you made, and decide what each relationship actually needs next. Some people deserve an immediate follow-up tied to a specific opportunity. Some belong in a smaller group of relationships worth deepening over time. Others may only call for a brief note of appreciation and a connection request with context. The follow-up itself should be short, specific, and personal: remind them what you discussed, deliver any resource you promised, and suggest a natural next step. That simple discipline is where conference value compounds. The real return on attending a leadership conference is not measured by how busy you felt while you were there. It is measured by which ideas you acted on, which relationships continued, and how much better you lead because you went.

2. Key Questions to Answer Before Selecting a Women's Leadership Conference and Summit.

Is this women's leadership conference aligned with my goals?
Yes--clearly define your primary objective (e.g., networking, skill-building, advancement) and ensure the agenda emphasizes practical outcomes, not just inspiration; the strongest conferences explicitly map sessions to real career use cases and future growth paths.

Who is the audience--and do I belong there?
You should see a strong match between your career stage and the attendee profile, with a mix of peers (for shared learning), senior leaders (for mentorship), and diverse industries if cross-pollination is valuable to you.

How strong and relevant are the speakers?
Prioritize conferences featuring accomplished practitioners with real leadership experience, not just recognizable names--look for speakers known for actionable insights and a range of perspectives that reflect different paths to leadership.

What is the quality of networking opportunities?
The best events intentionally design networking through structured formats (roundtables, small groups), making it easy to build meaningful connections rather than leaving interactions to chance in large, impersonal settings.

Is the content practical and actionable?
High-quality conferences balance inspiration with execution, offering workshops, frameworks, and tools you can immediately apply, rather than relying solely on panels or keynote speeches.
v Who is organizing it--and what’s their reputation?
Choose conferences hosted by well-known publishers, universities, or respected associations with a track record of consistent, well-reviewed events and strong attendee satisfaction.
v What is the format and experience like?
Select a format (in-person, virtual, hybrid) that fits your goals, and consider event size and pacing--smaller or well-structured events often provide deeper engagement and better opportunities to connect.

What’s the ROI (return on investment)?
Evaluate whether the cost aligns with tangible benefits like skills gained, quality of connections, and career impact--and ensure you can clearly articulate this value if seeking employer support.

Are there opportunities for visibility or participation?
Look for events that allow you to actively contribute--through speaking, mentoring, or facilitated sessions--which can significantly increase your visibility and long-term value from attending.

What happens after the conference?
The strongest conferences extend beyond the event itself, offering ongoing communities, resources, and follow-up opportunities that help you sustain relationships and continue learning.

3. Directory of Women's Leadership Conferences and Summits Near Me.

StateEvent CityWomen's Leadership and Empowerment Conference NamePlanning OrganizationFormatReview
MinnesotaAlexandriaMN Farmers Union Women's Conference 2026Minnesota Farmers UnionIn-personThis conference looks especially useful for women who want agriculture-specific insight, practical business learning, and connections with other women in the field.
MinnesotaApple Valley2026 Women's Networking Summit, featuring the Women Who Inspire AwardsElevate Her NetworkIn-personThis event looks motivating for women who enjoy celebrating achievement, meeting inspiring leaders, and leaving with a stronger sense of possibility.
MinnesotaChaska2026 Women's Agricultural Leadership ConferenceWomen's Agricultural Leadership ConferenceIn-personThis conference looks especially valuable for women in agriculture who want networking, practical leadership insight, and conversations tailored to a fast-changing industry.
MinnesotaMinneapolis20th Annual University of Minnesota Women's Health Research ConferenceUMN Center for Women's Health ResearchIn-personThis conference looks appealing for women who want wellbeing-focused learning, supportive conversation, and practical ideas for healthier leadership and living.
MinnesotaMinneapolisEmpowered Women Twin Cities Connect. Collaborate. Conquer.MeetupBothThis group looks energizing for women who want collaboration, encouragement, and a network focused on helping one another move forward with the flexibility to join in person or online.
MinnesotaMinneapolisEnergetic Women Conference 2026Energetic Women / MEA Energy AssociationIn-personThis specialty conference looks great for women in the energy industry who want both technical learning and leadership development in the same supportive setting.
MinnesotaMinneapolisFREE Women's Collective LabIn-personThis workshop looks useful for women who want hands-on learning, practical takeaways, and a smaller setting that makes it easier to ask questions and apply ideas.
MinnesotaMinneapolisMinneapolis/St. Paul Business Journal 2025 Women in BusinessMinneapolis/St. Paul Business JournalIn-personThis honors influential Twin Cities leaders for professional success and community involvement, which gives women a motivating view of leadership that blends achievement with service.
MinnesotaMinneapolisQuit Lit Book Club: Empowering Reads for Bold WomenBothThis group looks refreshing for women who want culture-rich experiences, meaningful conversation, and friendships that go beyond ordinary networking with the flexibility to join in person or online.
MinnesotaMinneapolisShe Talks Data Minneapolis: Featured guest TBAIn-personThis group appears helpful for women seeking ongoing encouragement, familiar faces, and more chances to build real relationships instead of one-off contacts.
MinnesotaMinneapolisTeamWomen 15th Annual Women's Leadership ConferenceTeamWomenIn-personThis conference looks strong for women who want a big Twin Cities network, inspiring trailblazers, and a full day centered on growth, connection, and advancement.
MinnesotaMinneapolisTwin Cities Women's Social CommunityMeetupBothThis group looks appealing for women who want low-pressure social connection, new friendships, and a steady sense of community in the Twin Cities with the flexibility to join in person or online.
MinnesotaMinneapolisWomen Empowered Community Business Fair & Resource ExpoIn-personThis expo looks valuable for women who want sponsor and vendor access, quick networking, and a lively space to discover new products, services, and opportunities.
MinnesotaMinneapolisWomen of the Twin CitiesMeetupBothThis group looks useful for women who want an easy way to meet new people, build friendships, and stay connected to a broader Twin Cities women's community with the flexibility to join in person or online.
MinnesotaMinneapolisWomenRising 2026 - Minnesota Women Leaders AssociationMinnesota Women Leaders AssociationVirtualThis conference looks strong for women who want focused leadership momentum, practical career guidance, and easy access to an ambitious multistate network with the convenience of joining online.
MinnesotaMortonMinnesota Women of Today Annual Convention 2026Minnesota Women of TodayIn-personThis event looks appealing for women who want positive energy, meaningful connection, and a chance to leave feeling more supported and inspired.
MinnesotaOnlineEvolving Potential: Dismantling Patriarchal Patterns to Awaken FreedomVirtualThis group appears helpful for women seeking ongoing encouragement, familiar faces, and more chances to build real relationships instead of one-off contacts with the convenience of joining online.
MinnesotaOnlineLiberating the Goddess: Restoring the Divine Feminine BlueprintVirtualThis group looks valuable for women who want recurring connection, approachable networking, and a community they can keep learning from over time with the convenience of joining online.
MinnesotaPlymouth2026 WeMN Conference: Ignite ideas. Spark connections. Fuel your next moveWomen Entrepreneurs of MinnesotaIn-personThis conference looks especially useful for women entrepreneurs who want actionable business ideas, founder-to-founder networking, and fresh momentum to grow their ventures.

4. Locations Served by The Women Leaders Association Conference.

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5. Useful Articles & Resources.

Women's Leadership News and Reports
US Directory of Women's Leadership Conferences and Summits
How to Get the Most Out of a Conference
3 Conference Networking Secrets
8 ways you can get more out of online conferences
How To Tap Into The Power Of Conference Networking"

Key Pages on this Site:
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News & Reports
Why Join and Benefits
Women's Business Networking
Questions About Us
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Glass Ceiling Scores
SuccessTeams
Top 50 Women Leaders
Women's Leadership Conferences Directory
Women's Business Networking Groups Directory