Wednesday, February 24th, 2021

2:00 AM – 2:45 PM – Eastern Time Zone

All-Digital & Online

Hiring is Hard but It Doesn’t Have to Be

Well-known Silicon Valley recruiter Chris Miller knows how to find the best tech talent without breaking your budget. In this session, she leads a panel of experts to help you find the best tech talent – and not overpay. From CTO to Python coder tech talent salaries have been skyrocketing for years. Find out what the Pandemic has meant for: 1) the supply and demand of tech talent, 2) salaries, 3) the tactics you should use today to find the best people. Chris will also talk about creating, and leaning into internship programs, like Black Girls that Code. Chris has a specialty in immigration and has helped scores of talented, diverse tech talent deliver solutions for U.S. businesses.

Chris Miller, Founder and CEO, Execrecruiter CA

Kevin Nichols, Founder and CEO, The Social Engineering Project

Leah Pimentel, Assistant Director of Community Relations, University of California (UCSF)


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    Jason Waskey

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Kevin Nichols, Founder and CEO, The Social Engineering Project: Kevin L. Nichols has worked in multifaceted capacities in some of the most prolific international law firms in the country, such as Morrison & Foerster, Paul Hastings, Heller Ehrman, and Holland & Knight. His interest in diversity and technology began while he was a mechanical engineering/diversity intern at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. Later, he became the Executive Director of the California Diversity Council and the African American Wellness Project. Kevin has become a social networking expert and full-time consultant specializing in litigation technology (eDiscovery), diversity, and social media marketing for the legal industry. Nichols has been featured on LinkedIn’s Hall of Fame, Yahoo’s Blog, in the Examiner, CNN Money, Reuters, MarketWatch and the Wall Street Journal. He is now the Founder of The Social Engineering Project, Inc., an Oakland based, Google and Microsoft funded, social impact venture with Stanford University designed to address the lack of diversity in the tech industry. Kevin attended the University of California, Berkeley and recently completed an Executive Program for Social Entrepreneurship at Stanford's Graduate School of Business.


Leah Pimentel, Assistant Director of Community Relations, University of California (UCSF): Leah Pimentel serves as the Assistant Director of Community Relations for the University of California (UCSF), playing a lead role in developing and managing the University's relationships with community stakeholders in San Francisco. Ms. Pimentel’s in-dept understanding of issues, such as the impact of construction, and then designs an outreach strategy for the affected area. Projects range from issue spotting, to constituent services, to writing and research on a broad range of topics, management of events, coordination and outreach about University priorities, and acting as a resource to explain UCSF’s service outreach in the Bay. Governor Gavin Newsom appointed Leah in 2019 to the 1a District Agricultural Association, Grand National Rodeo, Cow Palace Fair Board of Directors. On the board, Leah is a new progressive voice working to expand programming and increase inclusion. 2016, Leah was appointed by Mayor Lee to serve on the Commission on Community Investment and Infrastructure to oversee land use, development and design approval authority for the Major Approved Development Projects including Mission Bay, Transbay and Hunters Point Shipyard/Candlestick. During her tenure, she created 5,000+ housing units with one third of those units as permanently affordable and hosting commission meetings in the Bayview to provide accessibility for the community. A third-generation San Franciscan from Bayview, Leah has worked extensively to advance policies that help women and children thrive in the city. She has received numerous awards for her work in these areas including Good Morning America’s “Hero Award” and KPIX’s “Jefferson Award for Public Service”. In 2013, Leah joined San Francisco Board of Supervisors President David Chiu and an extraordinary coalition of parents, advocates for working families, and community organizations to enact the Family Workplace Ordinance. This is one of the most visionary policies in the country for parents and caregivers. It ensures that every employee has a “right to request” a flexible work arrangement when caregiving responsibility arise for a child, family member or parent. As a working parent, Leah knows that we need to do more to help families stay in San Francisco and believes that this groundbreaking legislation is great start.

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