Sarah Sobieski is a financial services executive, philanthropist and entrepreneur. She is known by her peers as a persuasive coach and leader, utilizing her influencing and negotiating at the highest levels and extracting maximum value from project teams and all stakeholders by building cross-organizational cohesion through positive directional leadership. Ms. Sobieski brings the wisdom to instantly quantify intellectual ideas, the foresight to measure the sweeping impact of thousands of little decisions and the acumen to innovate no-risk nexus strategies that drive Return on Equity. She is an ethical adviser with unwavering integrity and a crisis and change management expert with the business, finance, and marketing savvy to define, innovate, map, and actualize equitable solutions that generate immense wealth across operations. She has utilized these skills in her roles in banking at Fortune 500 companies, as an instrumental part of executive start-up teams for C & I organizations and is currently working in private equity and capital markets finance. Sarah Sobieski has been a partner in a private equity group since 2010.



FORMAL COMMERCIAL CREDIT TRAINING: Sarah Sobieski completed a two year corporate credit training and leadership program at Citicorp-New York City. Through Citi's formal credit training program Ms. Sobieski had an opportunity to build a global network of highly trained team members, The strength and depth of her contacts allows Ms. Sobieski to pursue investments with great flexibility, moving aggressively into attractive opportunities and capitalizing on changes in the global economic landscape.



SCHOOLS ATTENDED: University of Chicago and Columbia University through CitiCorp NYC's Formal Commercial Credit Training Program. She received an M.A. in Industrial Organizational Psychology.



INTERESTS: Sarah Sobieski is an avid reader, children's education advocate and frequently writes articles on ways to increase leadership skills. She spends time promoting women in Engineering & Math. Her interests also include watching movies (mainstream and indie), music, art, dining out, cooking and fitness.