Growing up, I always had the passion to be a music teacher - it was always something that I was very passionate about, it's something that my dad really made me respect, was music. Playing bass guitar in the school band and having a really awesome music teacher, I really thought that was the way that I could be able to pursue the rest of my life and my career. And I guess, fast forward to now being the co-CEO of AIM, it's a completely different pathway but, you know what, it's still making the difference I feel like I would've been able to make if I was a teacher. (Text on screen reads: How Bianca's family inspired her to achieve her goals) My name's Bianca Hunt, and I'm a proud Kamilaroi and Barkindji woman on my dad's side, and a Ballardong and Whadjuk woman on my mother's side. But I was born and raised in Brisbane, even though they were from two different sides of the country. Here at AIM, I've come on board as the 2018 co-CEO. A week in the life of a co-CEO at AIM is very hard to actually put into words. I could be out forward-facing and having a chat to different people or I could be purely just checking emails and doing those sort of comms, so every single day is completely different. Life growing up, for me, was all I knew was my parents, my mum and my dad, and my older sister who's about seven years older than me, and my younger brother who's about nineteen months younger. My mum was a very young mother, she never allowed other people to make her feel bad. My mum, she became the first in her family to go to university as well, and that pathway's always been quite strong and predominant in my family. Having such a small family, its kind of hard not to follow the leader, I guess. She's a Noongar woman, they're very strong women so I think I've definitely gotten that side of her. If I didn't see that growing up I don't think I would be able to be as strong in who I am without it. To be able to be in an environment where not only my mum and my sister were really inspiring and allowed me to become the person and the woman that I am today, that my father and my brother were able to foster that as well. What I believe I am as a role model is to purely just teach people or hopefully show people that they can be proud of who they are, so if I can lead someone else to be very strong and proud in who they are, I feel like I've done my job right.