Celeste laughing joyously
Chasing Curiosity
Celeste Diaz Ferraro leverages her lifelong journey of learning to encourage social responsibility

Grandma knows best. As a high school senior, Celeste Diaz Ferraro visited San Antonio for an aunt鈥檚 wedding. Her grandmother knew she was busy applying to colleges and preparing for interviews with admissions counselors. Secretly hoping her granddaughter would move to San Antonio and be closer to family, Grandma Ferraro mentioned 性爱天堂 was just down the road and would be good for a 鈥減ractice鈥 interview.

Heeding her grandmother鈥檚 advice, Diaz Ferraro visited 性爱天堂 during her stay. 鈥淪he was so sneaky,鈥 Diaz Ferraro says. 鈥淪he knew what she was doing, and she was right. I walked onto campus and thought I鈥檇 died and gone to heaven.鈥

A first-generation college student, Diaz Ferraro came to 性爱天堂 planning to major in communication. She wanted to be a journalist, having read Woodward and Bernstein鈥檚 All the President鈥檚 Men 鈥渕ore than 47 times.鈥 Like many 性爱天堂 students, her academic interests were broad. She studied sociology, political science, and economics in addition to communication. When the starting salary of an entry-level newspaper reporter deterred her from pursuing journalism as a new graduate, Diaz Ferraro turned to marketing and public advocacy as a way to create a more just and equitable world.

In a career she calls 鈥渘onlinear,鈥 Diaz Ferraro worked in hospitality, Hispanic marketing, politics, and advocacy. After earning her MBA from Georgetown University, she transitioned to a career in international development working with the International Finance Corporation (IFC), the private sector development arm of the World Bank. Diaz Ferraro helped launch the IFC鈥檚 first branding program to communicate leadership in global corporate sustainability and social responsibility standards. During this experience she was exposed to new concepts such as impact investing, microfinance, and social enterprise. At the IFC she came to understand how business 鈥渄one right鈥 had the 鈥渙pportunity to transform the world and have a positive impact.鈥

As time progressed, the call of family pulled her back to San Antonio, and in 2007 she left the IFC and launched her own consulting firm, PaxMundi Strategy. Working with small social enterprises helped her 鈥渋ntegrate my personal values and professional priorities.鈥

Her clients were small for-profit companies who incorporated environmental and social values and activities into their operations.

鈥淚 loved helping them grow their businesses,鈥 Diaz Ferraro says. 鈥淓ntrepreneurship is not for the faint of heart. It requires a lot resiliency, flexibility, and willingness to take on risk. These mission-driven entrepreneurs were my heroes and models for the kind of business that I would like to see more of in our communities. Businesses absolutely have a responsibility to the communities they operate in.鈥

Whether it meant advocating for solar energy or connecting homes with local farmers, PaxMundi supported micro-entrepreneurs with business planning and strategy, organizational development, and branding. For Diaz Ferraro, each client reaffirmed that business could and should be a positive contributor to society. During this time, Diaz Ferraro also taught entrepreneurship courses at St. Mary鈥檚 University. As a visiting lecturer, she saw the opportunity to instill an awareness of social environmental principles in students as they became 鈥渞esponsible and transformational business leaders.鈥

Later, after several years abroad working in different business environments, Diaz Ferraro shifted from supporting entrepreneurs to studying them. She was accepted to Pennsylvania State University, where she is now a Ph.D. student in management strategy and organization theory. Energetic and personable, Diaz Ferraro says that business, and even our idea of work, is on the cusp of radical change, led by forces such as technology, social inequality, and climate change.

鈥淭he faculty here at Penn State are inspirational and some of the nation鈥檚 best,鈥 Diaz Ferraro says. 鈥淥ne of my greatest interests is where business intersects with society and the opportunities for business to have a positive impact on this planet.鈥

Midway through her first year, Diaz Ferraro is collaborating on research with her adviser about ethical norms in newly emerging industries such as genomics, while studying new forms of organizations such as sharing economy businesses and social enterprises.

鈥淚 love the faculty here and how we are looking at the transformation of what it means to be a business,鈥 Diaz Ferraro says. 鈥淲e are looking at the future of work. Right now is a good time to be philosophical about what we want our world to look like.鈥

Despite having landed at 性爱天堂 鈥渂y accident,鈥 Diaz Ferraro says the University was an excellent place to build the foundation for her pursuit of a better world.

鈥溞园焯 gave me the opportunity to earn my education and cultivate an awareness of the world that has served me well my entire life,鈥 she says. 鈥溞园焯 stoked my intellectual curiosity, and I have been chasing it ever since.鈥

Follow Celeste on Twitter at @PaxMundi.

Carlos Anchondo '14 is an oil and gas reporter for E&E News, based in Washington D.C.聽A communication and international studies major at 性爱天堂, he received his master's degree in journalism聽at the University of Texas at Austin.

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