Skip to main content

Aspiring to be a unicorn in the era of AI

Identifying and rapidly filling unique gaps allowed Camille Chandra (MBA’17) to ascend in her career with IBM Canada. This former aspiring dentist keeps adapting and evolving, much the same way her industry — big tech — does.
A woman in a red dress walks across a stage with a very wide screen as the backdrop.

Posted: September 17, 2025

By: Emily MacKinnon

A quarter-life crisis ledCamille Chandra (MBA’17) to pivot from her science background to business, which landed her the opportunity of a lifetime at IBM Canada — a role she didn’t even apply for.

Today, Chandra is a technology sales leader at IBM, supporting IBM’s clients in the financial services industry. But her original plan was to become a dentist.

After graduating with a health sciences degree from Mount Allison University, British Columbia nativeChandra took a gap year with plans to reapply to dental school. She ended up also applying to Dal’s MBA program.

In the end, the decision was made for her when she was accepted into the MBA program, but not dental school. “You know what they say,” she says with a smile, “rejection is actually redirection.”

Within months of beginning her MBA, Chandra knew she was exactly where she needed to be.

Unicorn training

Chandra’s career progression at IBM is impressive. It began two years after graduating, when Chandra landed a sales gig at IBM, selling enterprise technology solutions. Three years later she was the chief of staff to the general manager of IBM Canada. She has since become a technology sales leader.

The key to success in all those roles, she says, is adaptability.

“Being a chameleon in business and technology is so important,” she observes. “There are moments when you realize, ‘I need to quickly read the personalities in this room and adjust accordingly.’ I’m still myself, but which strength am I leaning into?”

As chief of staff, Chandra observed many high-stakes conversations between senior leaders. Her mentors encouraged her to use this 18-month assignment to take stock of which traits she should aspire to embody, and which behaviours to avoid.

“You have some people who are laser focused on executing against business objectives, and they are just as important as those who focus on development by giving their reports the confidence and independence to thrive,” she says. “It's so rare to find a unicorn who can do both.”

Chandra says whenever she comes across a leader like this, she tries to maximize their time together to learn as much as she possibly can. The goal is to one day become one of these rare leaders herself.

The AI of it all

But even a unicorn is not immune to the changes wrought by artificial intelligence.