BUS INE S S ,   C A PI TA L   ONE   –   ADV ERT I S EMENT 
  
 BRONX TIMES REPORTER, SEPTEMBER 2 BTR 7-OCTOBER 3, 2019 21  
  
 In 2012, Sherman Reid was  
 working  in  sales  when  his  office  
 was visited by iMentor, a program  
 that matches high school students  
 in New York City with professional  
 mentors 
 It  caused  him  to  reflect  on  his  
 background, a Bronx childhood  
 that  had  its  share  of  tribulations  
 -- especially in high school. “There  
 were times when I really struggled  
 and  basically  was  in  jeopardy  of  
 not graduating,” he said. 
   By  focusing  on  his  education,  
 he endured, went to Mercy College  
 and got a business management  
 degree. He decided he’d do all he  
 could to help someone in a similar  
 situation,  so  he  became  a  mentor  
 and was matched with Jeffry.  
 Sherman and Jeffry were immediately  
 compatible. The pair  
 emailed every week and met  
 monthly,  and  Jeffry  quickly  confided  
 in  Sherman his  struggles  in  
 math  class.  He  was  getting  a  75,  
 and  they  both knew  that  could  be  
 improved. Sherman proposed a  
 short-term  goal,  to  get  the  grade  
 from 75 to 80. “I wanted to give him  
 stepping points; gradual steps to do  
 better,” said Sherman.   
   “Anytime I had a question,  
 Sherman was there to answer it,”  
 Jeffry said. “Especially when I was  
 graduating high school and looking  
 at colleges. I didn’t know anything  
 about financial aid.” 
  “We know the good, the bad  
 and the ugly about each other,”  
 said Sherman, who confided to  
 Jeffry  about  his  own  struggles  in  
 high school, how he could have  
 forged  another  path  like  many  of  
 his peers “who didn’t finish high  
 school and never went to college,”  
 said Sherman.  
 Capital  One  started  working  
 with iMentor two years ago and  
 now has dozens of mentors in the  
 program. Brielle Nalence, a Capital  
 One associate on the Community  
 Affairs  team,  is  focused  on  community  
 impact. She works directly  
 with local organizations and nonprofits  
 harnessing the resources of  
 Capital One to support the community. 
  “As a former first generation  
 college student, I’m especially passionate  
 about our partnership with  
 iMentor, which advances young  
 people on their journeys to college,  
 careers and beyond.”  
 Capital One’s commitment to  
 community goes beyond traditional  
 monetary  philanthropy  
 and focuses on leveraging its most  
 critical asset: its people. In 2018,  
 one out of every five Capital One  
 associates engaged in pro-bono or  
 skills-based  volunteerism,  totaling  
 nearly 90,000 hours. Associates  
 also volunteered more than 422,000  
 hours serving individuals in need.  
   “We  were  thrilled  when  we  
 started doing  recruitment, dozens  
 of  volunteers  raised  their hand to  
 apply to be mentors. That really  
 speaks to the work of iMentor and  
 how its mission resonates with so  
 many people,” said Brielle. 
  
 Karina Fin, a Capital One mentor, 
  was matched with mentee Giselle  
 in 2015, a sophomore in high  
 school. The first time they met, Giselle  
 let Karina know she was very  
 goal oriented and eager to get good  
 grades, so she could be the first in  
 her family to go to college. Karina  
 remembers resonating with Giselle  
 since  she  also  was  the  first  
 in her family to attend a four-year  
 university. The two exchanged  
 parents’ immigrant stories and  
 shared  strong  family  values,  especially  
 their  close  relationships  
 with their mothers. 
   Fast  forward  to  senior  year,  
 Karina remembers when Giselle  
 told  her  she  started  to  get  college  
 acceptances, one after another.  
 When  a  full  scholarship  offer  arrived  
 from Syracuse, Karina was  
 so proud that her mentee had  
 achieved her goal in being accepted  
 to a top engineering school  
 while being able to afford living on  
 campus, since she had 100 percent  
 paid scholarships. 
  Today, Giselle is a sophomore,  
 just having completed an engineering  
 summer internship in the city.  
 She continues to have a full stack  
 of classes while fully committed to  
 extracurriculars and work study.  
 Her  ambition  and  drive  inspire  
 Karina,  and despite  their  iMentor  
 program being complete, they plan  
 to stay in touch and have a weekly  
 call to exchange all that is life.   
  For her part, Brielle Nalence  
 knew that Capital One had made  
 the right choice after she went to  
 one of the iMentor mentor-mentee  
 nights. She stood in awe as she saw  
 the entire school chatting away  
 with mentees. “It’s one-to-one and  
 they’re working on everything,  
 talking  about college, having conversations  
 that you might have  
 with a guidance counselor, or you  
 might have with a trusted adult,  
 and they’re just there, after hours  
 at night time, having in depth conversations.” 
   She  said  it’s  a  special  thing  to  
 see, and when she talked to some  
 of the students, they remarked how  
 they  felt  like  the  mentee  matches  
 were designed just for them. “And  
 some  of  them  said  they  know  now  
 who  they  wanted  to  be  when  they  
 grow up.” 
 Seven years into the mentor-mentee  
 relationship, Jeffry is thriving  
 as  a  junior  at  Stony  Brook  University  
 majoring  in  computer  science.  
 “He shares practically everything  
 about his academics with me,” said  
 Reid. “When he was considering  
 switching to a college with a weaker  
 computer science program because  
 his financial aid package wasn’t  
 enough, I connected him with resources  
 that ultimately enabled him  
 to stay in his program.” 
 As time went on, Reid began to  
 realize that the mentoring program  
 was much bigger than his relationship  
 with Jeffry -- that its real currency  
 is  the  future,  an  investment,  
 with dividends paid by Jeffry and  
 mentees like him. “For Jeffry, my  
 hope is that one day he’ll establish  
 himself, get a nice job, start his own  
 family and then give back and become  
 a mentor as well.” 
   It’s an  idea  that  resonates with  
 Jeffry, “I imagine that, like me,  
 there’s someone out there who might  
 have  trouble  with  college,  or  with  
 high school. So, definitely, yeah, I  
 would love to be a mentor, and like  
 me running to Sherman asking for  
 help, someone will run to me.” 
   If  you  are  interested  in  becoming  
 a mentor this fall, visit www. 
 imentor.org.  
 Learn more about Capital One,  
 visit  https://www.capitalone.com/ 
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