For Celeste Warren, a former Fortune 100 executive and global DEI chief, this wasn't just an economic case study—it was her backyard. It was also the backdrop for her father’s career as the first Black teacher and principal in the region. Every evening at the dinner table, Warren received a masterclass in systemic friction. She listened to her father describe the daily exhaustion of being a pioneer in a system not built for him. These stories became the catalyst for a radical leadership philosophy: Equity is not a "nice-to-have" moral outreach project. It is a pragmatic leadership discipline—the corporate equivalent of Pittsburgh’s reinvention—required for survival in a global, multi-generational market.