Monique Hayward
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Twenty-Five Years, Two Worlds, One Vision
Monique Hayward’s career doesn’t fit neatly into one category. Over 25 years she held senior roles at Intel, Microsoft, Tektronix, and Enactify.ai — leading marketing, strategy, and communications across large, complex organizations. She learned how businesses operate at scale. She also learned how quickly things can change.
But corporate life was only part of the story. Earlier in her career she owned and operated Dessert Noir Cafe & Bar in Beaverton, Oregon. Later she partnered in a mobile software company. Those ventures taught her things no boardroom could — resourcefulness, financial pressure, and the reality of making decisions without a safety net.
In 2019, she co-founded DRISCOLL Cuisine & Cocktail Concepts with Chef Brian Driscoll. What started as personal chef experiences has since grown into a hospitality brand spanning retreats, culinary classes, zero-proof beverage development, and technology initiatives.
Execution Is the Strategy
Monique operates by a principle she’s carried for years: the plan is the pivot. Early in her career she believed success came from having the right strategy locked in. Over time that thinking changed. Strategy matters, but judgment matters more — the ability to read a situation, reassess quickly, and move forward without waiting for perfect conditions.
She also places significant weight on follow-through. Creativity opens doors. Execution is what keeps them open. The leaders she respects most are rarely the loudest people in a room. They’re the ones who stay dependable under pressure, especially when circumstances shift.
Relationships sit at the center of how she works. Trust and reputation accumulate slowly and matter far longer than most people expect.
From Global Boardrooms to Personal Chef Tables
Several milestones stand out across Monique’s career, though not always for the obvious reasons. Leading global initiatives at Intel and Microsoft put her in rooms with exceptional teams working on large-scale transformation. Those years shaped her instincts as a strategist.
Dessert Noir Cafe & Bar sits in a different category entirely. Running a food and beverage business was one of the harder things she’s done professionally. It was also one of the most formative.
More recently, taking DRISCOLL from a concept to a functioning hospitality brand has carried its own meaning. The expansion into non-alcoholic beverages and hospitality technology reflects shifts she saw coming in consumer behavior — and decided to move toward rather than wait on.
Beyond the business side, Monique has built a parallel body of work as a mentor, author, and speaker. That part of her career doesn’t get filed under achievements the way company milestones do, but it’s work she takes seriously.
Adaptability, Resilience, Curiosity — In That Order
When Monique talks about the traits that have carried her through a 25-year career, she names three: adaptability, resilience, and curiosity. Not as a rehearsed answer, but as an honest accounting of what the work has actually required.
Adaptability because no career or business unfolds as planned. Resilience because setbacks are not exceptional — they’re built into the work. And curiosity because it’s what kept her growing across industries, roles, and entirely different types of organizations.
That curiosity, she says, still drives most of what she does.
Hospitality as an Experience, Not a Transaction
DRISCOLL offers personal chef experiences, private gatherings, retreats, culinary and mixology classes, and hospitality consulting. But the way Monique frames what they do goes beyond a list of services.
The distinction, as outlined in The DRISCOLL Method, is in how guests feel — not just during an experience but after it. The focus is on intentionality: how a gathering is designed, how a meal is sequenced, how a space is made to feel different from the standard options people have been given.
It’s a philosophy that runs through every part of the business.
DRISCOLL Dry and a Pipeline Worth Watching
One of the more active projects right now is DRISCOLL Dry, a premium zero-proof beverage line developed in collaboration with Oregon State University’s Food Innovation Center. The goal is sophisticated non-alcoholic options that prioritize flavor and complexity — not mocktails, but craft beverages built for people who take what’s in their glass seriously.
Running parallel to that is work on AI tools designed to support restaurant and service teams — focused on training, communication, and operational consistency.
Alongside the product work, Monique has been expanding her thought leadership through writing, media features, and speaking engagements. The focus is leadership, reinvention, and navigating change — topics she’s had enough firsthand experience with to speak on without reaching.
Beyond the Table — A Brand Built for How People Live
Over the next five years, Monique sees DRISCOLL expanding across experiences, products, education, and technology. Not as separate lines of business but as parts of a single, coherent brand built around how people actually want to spend their time and money.
Consumer behavior has shifted. People want things that feel personal, considered, and real. Generic hospitality — the kind built on templates and volume — is losing ground. DRISCOLL’s positioning sits on the other side of that shift.
The thought leadership and education work will grow alongside the brand. That part of the business matters to her as much as the products do.
Launching Into a Pandemic, Emerging With Clarity
DRISCOLL launched shortly before the pandemic hit. That timing forced a level of adaptation that most new businesses don’t face in their first few years. Revenue models changed. Plans were rewritten. Some things that were supposed to work didn’t.
What Monique describes from that period isn’t a dramatic reinvention story. It’s something quieter — staying flexible when attachment to the original plan would have been easier, and moving forward with less certainty than she would have preferred.
She’s navigated similar moments before, across corporate restructures, economic shifts, and failed ventures. The capacity to keep moving without all the answers is something she’s had to build deliberately, over time.
Forget the Formula, Develop the Judgment
The advice Monique gives to professionals building careers today is straightforward: stop looking for the formula. Careers are not linear. The people who last are the ones who stay curious, keep adapting, and don’t mistake a plan for a guarantee.
Self-awareness matters more than most people give it credit for. Knowing where your judgment is solid and where it has gaps — that’s not a soft skill, it’s a professional asset. Leaders who can’t read themselves accurately tend to repeat the same mistakes in different contexts.
Invest in relationships. Not transactionally, but because how you treat people over a long period becomes part of your professional identity.
Resilience isn’t something you develop when you need it. Most meaningful careers aren’t built because everything worked — they’re built because someone kept going when it didn’t.