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IBM CEO Ginni Rometty explains why her mom is her hero

IBM chairman and CEO Ginni Rometty is a sucessful role model to many people —especially when they learn that her childhood was somewhat difficult. 

Rometty openly talks about growing up and says her mother is her "hero." Her parents divorced when she was 15. She doesn't talk about her father much.

In a recent interview with Charlie Rose, Rometty was asked about her parents. She zeroed in on her mother, a homemaker who initially didn't have a college education. But she figured out how to provide for her family anyhow.

Ginni Rometty commencement
IBM CEO Ginni Rometty received an honorary Doctorate of Engineering degree at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute AP/Hans Pennink/Feature Photo Service for IBM

"She did raise my brothers and sisters and myself," Rometty told Rose. "And she found herself one day with nothing. She didn’t have a college degree. She didn’t have a job. She had been raising us. Her job was in the home. She hadn’t worked outside. And we never saw my mom blink, we never saw her cry. She did everything she had to do."

Rometty (who's maiden name is Virginia Nicosia) is the oldest of four and grew up in “a very middle class, average background” in Chicago, she explained in an earlier interview this year.

After her parents split up, her mom worked multiple jobs to support her family and went to night school to get a college degree. Rometty babysat her younger siblings at night.

"She got an education. She got a great job. She was determined that we would succeed," Rometty says of her mom. "What I always learned from my mom was never let anything or someone define who are you."

We may hear more about her personal journey when she addresses the 2015 class from her alma mater, Northwestern, in June. Rometty told Rose her speech would focus on these key lessons learned from her mom.

Her mom's work ethic clearly filtered to Rometty. She attended Northwestern on a scholarship from GM, getting a degree in computer science and electrical engineering.

After a short two-year stint working for GM (long enough to meet her husband), she landed at IBM in an entry-level, systems engineer role and spent the next 31 years working her way to the top.

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