From having a dream of starting her own PR consultancy and Media Company to now having the ambition and motivation of being the first female President of the Republic of Botswana in order to make women’s voices heard, Marcia shows that she is a person who is driven by vision. A principled person who believes that the formula for achievement lies in certain values embraced by himself or herself, Marcia is willing to share some of these values with others.
“When the going gets tough, you keep going,” Marcia said, “Passion, belief, humility, integrity, respect and confidence will keep you going, because if you believe that you can, eventually you will.”
“There are no goals that are too high if you climb with care and confidence. You have to have passion in what you do, and you will do it well” she said, as she adds that she is working on doubling the number of intakes and adopting a charity organisation for the Lesotho campus.
Looking back on her days as a student at Limkokwing University, she believes that her experience in Cyberjaya had given her an experience of a lifetime that cannot be measured with words. Her years as a student have been important as it granted her the learning and experience needed for her to emerge as a mover and shaker of the industry.
“I became more confident and competent as well as a more open-minded person who is sensitive to all cultures and characters.”
Marcia, who sees the world ‘FAIL’ as an acronym for “First Action in Learning”, intends to take up International Relations and Diplomacy for her postgraduate studies. Viewing success not as how much money one can make in a lifetime, Marcia believes that success is measured by the number of lives that one can touch in a lifetime.
She is certainly touching many lives and making a great difference in her line of work. “Education is someone’s future and the only tool to best empower the younger generation,” she said.
“If we all see it that way as education providers, then we would all want the best for the next generation. Once we see everyone the way we see ourselves, then we would want for them what we want for ourselves.”