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Orthodox Union invests in early career professionals with skills-building summit

Professional development opportunities highlight the OU’s commitment to nurture future community leaders.

At the OU’s early career professionals skill-building summit are executive fellows Rena Rush and Yael Lovett. Credit: Courtesy of the Orthodox Union.
At the OU’s early career professionals skill-building summit are executive fellows Rena Rush and Yael Lovett. Credit: Courtesy of the Orthodox Union.

Approximately 50 early career professionals from across the Orthodox Union’s departments recently united at American Dream Meadowlands Mall in East Rutherford, N.J., for the OU’s inaugural Early Career Professionals Skill-Building Summit, a professional development day.

“Early career professionals are employees in the first few years of their careers who are growing their skills and beginning to advance within their roles,” says OU executive fellowship director Ruthie Hollander, who organized the summit with OU assistant director of talent development Shai Kopitnikoff. “As tomorrow’s future community leaders, we want to contribute to their development and help them acquire the skills needed to advance their careers.”

Hollander adds that calling the event a “summit” was intentional.

“We employed that metaphor because we recognize the extent to which one’s career is a climb,” she says. “For early career professionals, there are going to be moments of doubt. The goal of the program was for participants to feel that they had reached a peak by the day’s end through their growth and strengthening of collegial relationships.”

A recent analysis of the OU workforce, led by Leah Weinberg of the OU human-resources data team, revealed that 53% of current employees joined the organization within the last three years. A selection was nominated by their departments to attend the summit, which presented an opportunity to develop valuable professional skills and network with OU leaders, including executive vice president Rabbi Dr. Josh Joseph and chief of staff Yoni Cohen; along with human-resources team members and OU department heads.

Orthodox Union’s executive vice president and chief operating officer Rabbi Dr. Josh Joseph led an interactive session on happiness and collaboration in the workplace. Credit: Courtesy.

“The energy of our young talent was palpable throughout the day, and it invigorated me and my fellow senior leaders,” says Joseph. “As studies highlight that companies are increasingly reporting an urgent need to identify employees with leadership potential, we have begun to identify our talent within the OU and are taking advantage of this time to develop our young and future leaders.”

Koptinikoff says the department heads’ participation at the summit underscored the degree to which the OU is deeply investing in early career professionals.

“Employees had the unique chance to engage with them over lunch, which is not typically possible at work,” he says. “We deliberately kept attendance small and intimate in order to ensure that every employee could personally engage with department heads in a meaningful way.”

Kopitnikoff emphasizes that the OU is committed to investing in every employee and that there will be numerous similar professional development opportunities for those who were not nominated to attend this particular summit.

Planned with the assistance of the OU’s eight executive fellows, the summit featured renowned speakers, including Rabbi J.J. Schacter, professor of Jewish history and Jewish thought and senior scholar at the Center for the Jewish Future at Yeshiva University, who brought the day’s messages home with his address “At the Summit,” and NCSY director of education and 18Forty podcast host Rabbi Dovid Bashevkin, who explored creativity and content creation. The OU’s Joseph discussed happiness at work, Kopitnikoff presented on time management at work, and Hollander shared tips on how to write more and also less when considering ChatGPT.

Participants engaged in dynamic team-building activities, including a dynamic survival game led by OU chief human-resources officer Josh Gottesman, and were treated to professional headshots, lunch and company swag.

“Although this initiative is new, we are committed to continuing our efforts in developing these early career professionals,” says Gottesman. “It’s one thing to express a desire to invest in the future and another to actually make that investment. Through these programs, we are actively investing in the future leaders of the nonprofit sector.”

Six months ago, Hana Adler landed her first job out of college as a junior videographer in the OU’s marketing and communications department, where she films and edits promotional organizational videos for social media and the web. The 23-year-old says the skill-building summit was meaningful from beginning to end.

“As someone new to the employment and nonprofit worlds, the OU’s investment in my learning and growth makes me feel empowered to continue to work hard,” says Adler. “I’m so thankful that the OU is giving me the tools to continue to build a career that is meaningful to me, and that I was invited to participate in this uplifting day.”

From left: OU executive fellows Ezra Emerson, Jesse Felder and Avi Hoffman; OU human-resources assistant director Lenny Bessler; NCSY Central East city director Ben Sadik; and NCSY Southwest TJJ Root One educator Ben Spanjer. Credit: Courtesy of Orthodox Union.

Adler said he greatly appreciated the chance to connect with and learn from the OU leadership and her colleagues at dynamic team-building activities and stimulating sessions, including the one led by Bashevkin.

“Rabbi Bashevkin offered practical steps on how to be a good and growth-oriented early career professional, both at the OU and in the broader nonprofit world,” she says. “He also highlighted the importance of expressing gratitude to those who assist you in your career trajectory. I’ve been trying to put his lessons into practice because I believe that being grateful is critical, especially in a professional work environment.”

Adler also enjoyed the collaborative nature of Activate, a fast-paced team-building activity that included lights, lasers, mazes and various games, which summit participants tackled in teams of five.

Twenty-six-year-old Khanan Abayev began working at the OU almost a year ago as a donor communications project manager responsible for the execution and logistics of the OU’s direct mail and telemarketing campaigns. Like Adler, he is tremendously grateful to the OU for investing in its employees.

“It’s a genuine breath of fresh air to be working at an organization that not only says they’re invested in their employees’ future, but actually means it,” he says. “The psychological piece of mind in knowing that there are resources and people willing to help you in your career is beyond description. I appreciate it more than anything.”

Kopitnikoff says training like the career summit enables employees to take a break, recharge, learn and connect more with the OU’s mission.

“Knowing that your employer cares for you breeds employee satisfaction,” he says. “We’re investing in our employees today to communicate that they are genuinely appreciated. Tomorrow, they will come to work with a smile. That makes a difference in the work culture and makes our community stronger as a whole.”

Contact: Shai Kopitnikoff, OU assistant director of talent development, (212) 613-8119, kopitnikoffs@ou.org.

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Founded in 1898, the Orthodox Union (OU), or Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America, serves as the voice of American Orthodox Jewry, with over 400 congregations in its synagogue network. As the umbrella organization for American Orthodox Jewry, the OU is at the forefront of advocacy work on both state and federal levels, outreach to Jewish teens and young professionals through NCSY, Israel Free Spirit Birthright, Yachad and OU Press, among many other divisions and programs.
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