Danielle Oceguera didn’t have plans to enter Mika Brzezinski’s Grow Your Value contest. She thought there was no way she’d even be considered. But after one of her mentors insisted, the 25-year-old talent development coordinator decided to give it a shot. And it’s a good thing she did, because on Saturday night, the Oakland resident won the grand prize: a $25,000 raise, which she said she’ll put toward her education.
“I am just so amazed and grateful,” an emotional Oceguera said on stage at San Francisco’s Fairmont hotel. “I never would have thought something like this could happen to me.”
It was an exciting day for Oceguera and her fellow finalists, Jenny Nixon, 32, of Berkeley, Calif. and Jodee Brown,40, of Tracy, Calif. The trio spent the day alongside the more than 600 attendees at the Know Your Value conference, learning how women can recognize and be recognized for their personal and professional value. And at the end of the day, they took center stage in front of that audience to pitch their story to a panel of judges.
Earlier in the day, Nixon stood in the nearly-empty ballroom at the hotel watching a video roll across the big screens documenting highlights of her experience as one of three finalists in the Grow Your Value bonus competition.
“I’m so excited, I don’t even have words,” said Nixon. The MBA student at the University of California-Berkeley, who also teaches ROTC classes at the University of San Francisco, could barely contain her tremendous smile.
Know Your Value Coaching Day Segment from Know Your Value on Vimeo.
The three finalists were among dozens of women from around the U.S. who submitted short videos defining their value and pitching why they should be among the three to compete for the Grow Your Value bonus. Dia Simms of Combs Enterprises, Maria Black of competition sponsor ADP and NBC’s Natalie Morales served on the panel of judges that selected the winner.
“We received so many great submissions from women from all walks of life with one theme in common – why they have value,” said Brzezinski. “This competition was meant to drive home the message: If you don’t put yourself out there, you don’t know what will happen.”
“All my life, I’ve felt small … small in stature, small in voice,” Oceguera, who is also pursuing a master’s degree at the University of San Francisco, said during her final pitch on stage. “There was this voice inside of me that said I was destined for great things. This voice compels me to be the voice for the voiceless in the world, the underserved, and the overlooked.”
“We need a voice like yours in the world right now – someone with compassion and confidence,” Morales said during her feedback on Oceguera’s pitch. “You’re not small in stature, you’re huge. And I can’t wait to see who you become in life.”
Oceguera’s fellow finalists also delivered powerful messages. Brown, a social worker, told her story of her harrowing experience as a young alcoholic mother fleeing an abusive relationship. Brown said her teenage daughter, Jordyn, was her primary inspiration for positive change. Jordyn attended the event alongside her mother.
“I am no longer ashamed, and I pray my story grows wings today and touches everybody right when they need it most,” said Brown.
When it was Nixon’s turn, she took charge of the stage, even asking “Morning Joe” co-host Joe Scarborough to step back and give her more space, before addressing Brzezinski directly.
“I became a Blackhawk pilot not to become a badass, but because I already was one,” Nixon said. “I am the leader that you need, Mika. I’m the leader the world needs.”
“I’ve never seen three more remarkable people get up on stage,” Scarborough said. “You all have been amazing, and all three of you reduced Mika to tears. That’s not easy to do.”









