Anne Marie Kirby started laying the foundations for entrepreneurship soon after becoming disillusioned with small-town ideas of achievement.
āI grew up in northern B.C., where people didnāt really go on to post secondary school. The most ambitious thing you could do was work at the local bank, because then you could get promotions and leave town later,ā Kirby explained.
āSo, after high school I worked at the bank for a few years, but I was working for a manager who didnāt want to promote me until I had six years of experienceāso I went back to school for computer programming.ā
Kirby soon practiced her programming skills in the health industry, working on hospital information systems. But she quickly found that health prevention and promotion was a more appealing niche.
āIād rather deal with healthy people,ā Kirby said. āBut the market wasnāt there yet, so I watched it for a few years before starting my business.ā
Kirby co-founded CoreHealth Technologies with Jeff Van Dyk in 2004. The company now provides businesses with a corporate wellness platform that supports two million employees all over the world.
For Kirby, the next major development in health technology will involve a more personalized and more fun way to maintain active lifestyles and engage in healthy behaviour.
āWeāre looking at using notifications to bring information to people, rather than having people search out information. Technology can be a lot smarter about presenting the right information at the right timeāso in heath tech, weāre moving from a āpullā Internet to a āpushā Internet.ā
Kirby also says that incorporating deliberate design into wellness programs will be critical in the future. Wellness is a complex problem, she says, and engineering-style thinking that involves multiple iterations of a solution will be a necessary approach.
One key area where Kirby wants to focus her effort is on making health technology accessible and fun for users.
āIām a huge fan of PokĆ©mon Go,ā she said. āItās the best thing that has ever happened to health and wellness technology. Nintendo has motivated a group of people who wouldnāt normally leave their computers to get out and get activeāthatās a huge lesson for the world. I want our industry to start thinking about how people can get healthier by doing things they already want to do.ā
Kirby says that the best corporate wellness programs incorporate a strong motivational aspect that promotes healthy habits in a new and exciting way.
āIf you go to some of the industry websites, they all talk about the same process. So itās well documented what has to happen in order to make a wellness program successful, but almost nobody actually does it.ā
Kirby says that one of the best examples of making a wellness program fun and motivational comes from a CoreHealth client, employment benefits consultancy Morneau Shepell.
āMorneau Shepell is an Olympic sponsor, so they have contact with Canadian Olympic athletesāand they launched a program that brings athletes into the company to talk to employees about wellness programs. I donāt think you can get more motivational than working with Olympic athletes. Again, it goes back to finding a creative way to get people involved in something relevant and enjoyable.ā
Kirbyās philosophy of getting healthy through fun activities extends into her personal life, where she strives to help children and young adults develop healthy habits. She serves as the Rotary Club Youth Exchange Officer for Āé¶¹AV, which gives her a prime opportunity to help youth get involved in the community. Sheās also an avid skier and sailing enthusiast.
And while Kirby is now managing a successful and respected business, her path hasnāt been without its challenges. One of the biggest challenges she faces in her field is convincing people that they need a wellness solution.
āPeople donāt value their own health. Itās very illogical, which is a real struggle for me as a (logically-minded) computer person. Thatās the hardest thingāemployers try to help people, but they donāt want to do anything for their own good.ā
Still, Kirbyās passion for health and wellness continues to drive her to promote healthy
behaviours in the workplaceāin part because of a wise yet simple lesson she learned from her son.
āWhen my son was two years old, we were in a restaurant and we had a waitress who was saying that she wanted to go to school, but she couldnāt stop waitressing. My son said, ānever, ever give upāāand the waitress said, āthatās the wisest thing Iāve ever heard.āā
Kirby says that stubborn resilience is what kept her going in spite of industry criticism. During one early investor meeting, she was taken aback when a potential investor told her to get a haircut.
Kirby says that she could have chosen to quit, but decided instead to continue growing CoreHealth out of her love for the industry.
āWellness is one of the few things that, the more you sell, the better off everyone is. You can be successful and proud at the same time.ā
Crowe MacKayās Women to Watch program is a weekly feature that profiles remarkable women in our community, concluding Oct. 16. After terrific response, the nomination period for 2015 is now closed. Watch this space each week to see our remaining Women to Watch.