The @nyse has long been an essential American institution, but women haven't always played a big role in that history. It took 175 years for the Exchange to have its first #female member, and 51 more years before Stacey Cunningham would become the first woman to be its president. "This institution means a lot to me personally, so to be the one who’s leading it and driving it into the future, and evolving our #business, that’s very important to me,” Cunningham, who became president in May, tells TIME. When she first became a member, she says there were about 1,300 men at the Exchange and roughly 30 women. "I definitely stood out as a woman on the trading floor, but I never felt singled out," she tells TIME. "There’s a certain amount of respect that you earned right out of the gate, just from being willing to work in such a male-dominated environment. I played my own game. I didn’t try to be one of them. If you’re trying too hard to be the way somebody else is, you’re probably not going to be as successful." As president, Cunningham says being the "first woman is less important to me, other than the fact that telling my story is important so #women can hear that there are opportunities available to them that they may not have realized. Or when you do feel outnumbered, that it’s okay—and you can power through. You don’t have to fit in quite the way people might expect you to." See more women who are changing the world at TIME.com/firsts. Photograph by @adriennegrunwald for TIME

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TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 9月26日 23時42分


The @nyse has long been an essential American institution, but women haven't always played a big role in that history. It took 175 years for the Exchange to have its first #female member, and 51 more years before Stacey Cunningham would become the first woman to be its president. "This institution means a lot to me personally, so to be the one who’s leading it and driving it into the future, and evolving our #business, that’s very important to me,” Cunningham, who became president in May, tells TIME. When she first became a member, she says there were about 1,300 men at the Exchange and roughly 30 women. "I definitely stood out as a woman on the trading floor, but I never felt singled out," she tells TIME. "There’s a certain amount of respect that you earned right out of the gate, just from being willing to work in such a male-dominated environment. I played my own game. I didn’t try to be one of them. If you’re trying too hard to be the way somebody else is, you’re probably not going to be as successful." As president, Cunningham says being the "first woman is less important to me, other than the fact that telling my story is important so #women can hear that there are opportunities available to them that they may not have realized. Or when you do feel outnumbered, that it’s okay—and you can power through. You don’t have to fit in quite the way people might expect you to." See more women who are changing the world at TIME.com/firsts. Photograph by @adriennegrunwald for TIME


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