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    Blessing Adesiyan: Pioneering a Care-Centered Future for Work and Society

    In an era where the intersections of work, life, and caregiving are increasingly strained, Blessing Adesiyan is redefining the conversation—and the infrastructure—surrounding caregiving and workplace equity. 

    Transitioning from chemical engineer to trailblazing social entrepreneur, Adesiyan is establishing a framework that reimagines care not as a private burden but as a crucial societal cornerstone.

    As the Founder and CEO of Mother Honestly, now rebranded as MH WorkLife, Adesiyan leads a transformative platform dedicated to strengthening care infrastructure for today’s workforce. 

    Her mission is clear: to elevate care from an overlooked personal responsibility to a collective societal investment. 

    Through MH WorkLife and its non-profit counterpart, WorkLife & Care Equity, she has cultivated an ecosystem that champions caregivers, working parents, and vulnerable populations—including women, immigrants, and hourly workers—who frequently slip through the gaps of policy and corporate support.

    Adesiyan’s career began in the high-stakes environments of global giants like PepsiCo, Cargill, DuPont, and BASF, where she excelled in operations, energy strategy, and business innovation. 

    “It was a training ground,” she recalls. “I gained deep insights into problem-solving and strategic foresight, which laid the foundation for everything I do today.”

    However, it was her personal experience—juggling motherhood with a demanding corporate career—that ignited her passion for change. 

    “I was navigating childcare while my peers were advancing in their careers,” she shares. As a young mother at DuPont, Adesiyan initiated a cultural shift by establishing one of the company’s first employee resource groups for women and caregivers at its largest manufacturing site. This early advocacy crystallized her purpose: to make care visible, valued, and viable.

    In alignment with this mission, she launched Mother Honestly. The inaugural summit attracted over 500 attendees and sparked a burgeoning movement. 

    “We weren’t just discussing the issue; we were crafting actionable, scalable solutions,” she insists. 

    Today, the platform has engaged over 25 million parents, caregivers, and employers worldwide, integrating technology, policy advocacy, and community support into a powerful engine for change.

    Adesiyan’s influence extends well beyond borders. With a heart firmly rooted in Africa, she established Caring Africa, an NGO with a visionary goal of enhancing care systems across the continent. “Africa’s care infrastructure is fractured and undervalued,” she notes. 

    “As populations grow and traditional family support systems decline, we urgently need to view care as an economic lever.” From childcare to eldercare, Caring Africa positions care as a catalyst for development, workforce participation, and national productivity.

    As the global economy grapples with post-pandemic realities, her co-founding of initiatives like CareForce and the Chamber of Mothers during COVID-19 highlights her innovation under pressure. “The pandemic made care impossible to overlook,” she states. “We built digital communities to support those who felt isolated and overwhelmed.”

    What distinguishes Adesiyan is her holistic approach. With degrees in Chemical Engineering, Energy Management, and an MBA from UNC Kenan-Flagler, she fuses technical expertise with social insight. “My engineering background taught me to build systems. Now, I’m constructing systems of care,” she affirms.

    She’s also forthright about the responsibilities of corporations: “Compensation alone isn’t sufficient. Companies must invest in their employees’ lives—through paid parental leave, mental health support, and flexible work arrangements. These aren’t mere perks; they are essentials.”

    Beneath her global influence lies a deeply personal motivation. Growing up in Lagos as the eldest of six, care was not just a concept; it was a lived reality. “The women I grew up with—mothers, aunties, teachers, market vendors—were my initial role models. Their resilience inspired me,” she reflects.

    Today, Blessing Adesiyan carries that legacy forward, advocating for a world where care is not invisible but institutionalized, prioritized, and profoundly valued.

    “Care is not a soft issue; it’s a strategic imperative,” she asserts. With leaders like Adesiyan steering the ship, the future of work—and society—may very well be built on the foundation of care.

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