Spotlight on Marlene Hyde CCE
Marlene HydeOf the AACE International women that I have met, they have certain personality traits in common. These women are daring, fearless, and they enjoy a good challenge. They are risk takers and pioneers.

Marlene Hyde is no exception. She has been flying hot air balloons for over 30 years, and she and her husband have given over 8,000 balloon rides. Imagine attempting to navigate a balloon while at the mercy of the winds, with only the other balloons as your guide to the ever changing air currents, doing the best that you can to avoid obstacles such as high voltage power lines and shotgun-toting farmers. Balloonists always carry a bottle of champagne to mollify the landowners wherever they land and they say the Irish balloonists' prayer upon landing: “May the winds welcome you with softness. The sun has blessed you with his warm hands. You have flown so high and so well that God has joined you in your laughter and has set you gently back again into the loving arms of Mother Earth.”

Marlene has successfully blazed a trail in her profession, charting a course for the next generation of women in project controls. She attended the University of New Mexico, where she received her bachelor's degree in architecture and planning. She went on to win a scholarship from AGC and complete her master's degree in construction engineering and management in 1976, the first woman at the University of New Mexico to do so. The University was caught off guard by her achievement, and at first failed to invite Marlene to graduation and issue her master's degree because they were certain that there had been some mistake. They soon rectified their error.

She applied for many construction jobs, and became the construction manager for a 9-month long project at Presbyterian Hospital in Albuquerque. At that time, she and her husband decided that this was a good time to start a family. Testament to her perseverance is the fact that Marlene attended a bid opening while in labor with her daughter, and was ready to come back to work at the hospital three months later when the bid had been negotiated. The nine month long project turned into a career at the hospital that lasted for the next seven years.

In the early 1980's, an interesting and challenging opportunity came available at Sandia National Laboratories. Marlene joined the labs as the long-range facilities planner. She worked long hours, and was proud to have developed the first-ever long range site development plan. She also handled all the NEPA environmental work and the land permit negotiations. Having accomplished all that, she was lured away to Intel, where she helped construct the world's largest cleanroom and several other buildings. However, the long hours (frequently 12-15 hours/day) led her to decide that there was more to life. She left Intel to start her own company, and spent the next two years running an employment agency.

At that time, the environmental engineering field was high profile, and the industry was booming. Marlene took a number of courses in environmental engineering, ultimately receiving a certificate in hazardous waste management, and was wooed back to working at a consulting firm. At that time, she joined AACE International and served as a board member for the Rio Grande Section. She achieved her CCE certification in 1993.

Marlene spent the next six years growing the company, with Sandia and Los Alamos as clients, working on environmental projects and performing cost and schedule control on those projects. When that company was bought out, she started her own consulting firm. Hyde Consulting LLC was born, an effort which Marlene says was largely because of invaluable contacts at AACE International and the skills that she had honed within the organization.

She landed several five-year contracts, providing services such as lifecycle costing, scheduling, environmental assessments, energy conservation program management, cost estimating and budgeting, along with other consulting. She had many top-name clients, including Indian Health Services; Motorola Headquarters in Schaumberg, Illinois; the University of New Mexico; and the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant in Carlsbad.

Five years later, a new opportunity was identified—the DOE was requiring all projects over $20 million to have earned value reporting project controls. Marlene assembled a team and approached Sandia National Laboratories to perform this work, winning the job (through ORION International Technologies). She initiated the project controls system for Sandia National Laboratories' Corporate Projects Department, including scheduling for over $400 million in projects. They also developed the project performance management program, which enabled Sandia to be the first DOE facility to have its earned value management system certified by the Defense Contract Management Agency. This program recently received the NOVA award, a national recognition by Lockheed Martin. Marlene has most recently been instrumental in developing the cost estimating system for facilities projects at Sandia.

As one would expect from such a high achiever, Marlene is a very active and committed member of AACE International, her community, and her church. She and her husband of 36 years have helped to raise several foster children, friends' children, and foreign exchange students from Norway, Colombia, and Australia. She reactivated the AACE International Albuquerque/Rio Grande Section in early 2003, and served as president of the Section for one and a half years. She presented a paper at the AACE International Annual Meeting in Orlando in 2003, on Avoiding Project Controls Pitfalls, and participated in the team that developed the PSP (Planning and Scheduling Professional) Certification. She was recently appointed to the AACE International Certification Board and is also currently serving on the AACE International Women in Project Controls Committee.

Marlene is an inspiration to others, both at home and in her chosen profession. Her fearlessness is contagious, and seems to have been passed down to her daughter, who is married, and has been a combat flight medic with the US Army National Guard in Afghanistan, a paragliding pilot, an ambulance driver, and is currently serving in Iraq. Marlene's husband of 36 years is a corporate attorney who loves to balloon, fly airplanes, ski, and travel to many interesting places, including Peru, Costa Rica, Brazil, Norway, Australia, Thailand, Singapore, etc. They have led mission trips and participated in many exciting experiences, including zipping through the rainforest canopy, riding elephants, whitewater rafting on the Sarapaqui River, riding horseback along the seashore, climbing the steps of the Temple of Dawn in Bangkok, wearing boa constrictors around their necks, snorkeling with sharks and manta rays, and swimming with dolphins, among other experiences.

In looking back at her career, Marlene testifies that she had to work very hard in order to be taken seriously as a woman in the male-dominated field of construction. From the outset, she believed that she needed to set a good example for other women —and, to Marlene, that meant that giving anything less than 110 percent of her best was not an option.

She also says that, as her career has changed dynamically over the years, “AACE International has been a tremendous asset in my career. The certification program has allowed me to demonstrate a level of professional accomplishment that gives me and my employer credibility. By attending local section meetings, I've kept current with issues and trends in our local market and met people from a variety of industries who are excellent resources when questions come up. Through the Cost Engineering journal and attending the Annual Meeting, I've learned what direction the rest of the US and the world is heading and what the standards of the industry are. Most importantly for me, as my career has changed over the years from scheduling, to project controls, to earned value, to estimating, the resources of AACE International—people, seminars, books and other materials—have been there to provide guidance. And now, after more than 30 years of experience, I'm able to provide mentoring and encouragement to others coming into the profession.”

So, the next time you see hot air balloons in the sky, or a skier flying down the ski slopes, be sure to wave. Marlene Hyde might just wave back to you.


Article by Alexia Nalewaik, CCE


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