No matter what happened, Denise always focused on expanding her knowledge and expertise. While providing technical support to overseas field project personnel engaged in commissioning and maintenance of turbomachinery for the oil and gas industry, she also learned how to manage large projects, such as facilitating an open plan for her office with her additional responsibilities for Facilities and IT. After work, she took courses in information technology and earned a diploma in computers for engineers, further increasing her skills in computer programming. In the mid-1990s, these abilities helped earn her next job working at Henkel – this time as the first female mechanical engineer hired at Henkel Ireland.
Denise with her LEAN facilitator colleagues, Paul Priestley, John O’Brien and Alan Blake
“I only became aware after I started the job that I was actually the first female engineer to join here. For the first few months, I felt I had to prove myself and show that I deserved the respect of my male peers, being in the minority.”
Once she became a mother, balancing her work and home life became even harder. “Being a mother, I sometimes needed a bit more flexibility – which placed me in the spotlight,” she says. However, she was able to find flexible working hours that fit her needs and set a precedent for other working parents at Henkel. “I have the best of both worlds,” she explains, “I am able to follow my dream of being an engineer, and I am able to spend time at home with my children.”
One of her three children has even shown an interest in technology and has the option to take classes in technology and technical graphics – something that has definitely improved since Denise was in school. Laughingly, she says, “There’s no escaping engineering in our family.”
In her free time, Denise encourages other girls to follow their passions. She is pictured with two Brownies with grass heads they made to get closer to earning their Green Fingers badge.
During her free time, she participates in the Irish Girl Guides – a group dedicated to teaching girls how to be confident and face their fears – as she was taught from a young age to do. In the group, the girls take part in different outings and earn various badges, including environmental awareness and science investigator. There is even an engineering badge that the girls can earn. “It’s a great way for young girls to learn how to have a positive self-esteem and gain great confidence and be resilient in today’s world,” she says. This type of assurance and determination brought Denise success, even when she struggled. What she learned and what she hopes to teach other young girls who want to work in male-dominated fields is a lesson from Henry Ford: “Whether you think you can, or you think you can’t – you’re right.”