Full-Time
Posted on 2/21/2026
Wealth management and investment banking services
$110k - $125k/yr
No H1B Sponsorship
Chicago, IL, USA + 1 more
More locations: Milwaukee, WI, USA
In Person
Baird provides financial services across four main areas: Wealth Management, Capital Markets, Private Equity, and Investment Banking. Its product mix ranges from financial planning and asset management for individuals and families to advisory services, capital-raising, and advisory for businesses, plus private equity investments and operating partner support. Baird’s services are delivered through a combination of client-advisor relationships, institutional trading, research, and investment products, with a focus on aligning investment solutions to client goals. The company differentiates itself through its employee-owned structure, global reach, and a broad, integrated platform that combines wealth management with corporate finance and investment activities. Baird’s stated goal is to help clients achieve “great outcomes” and do well for them, supported by deep expertise, a strong financial foundation, and a commitment to long-term relationships.
Company Size
5,001-10,000
Company Stage
N/A
Total Funding
$872.1M
Headquarters
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Founded
1919
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Flexible Work Hours
Performance Bonus
Forbes' Top Women Wealth Advisors list. Baird's Flemma & Sheridan named to Forbes' Top Women Wealth Advisors list. Theresa Flemma, Managing Director with The Flemma Group, and Michele Sheridan, Director with The Sheridan Group, both of Baird's Utica Private Wealth Management office, were recently recognized by Shook Research on Forbes' 2026 Top Women Wealth Advisors Best-In-State list. The annual list highlights outstanding women advisors across the country who demonstrate a deep commitment to client service, professional excellence, and leadership within the financial services industry. "We are very happy to see that Theresa and Michele have been recognized as two of the top female financial advisors in our industry," said Erik Dahlberg, President of Baird's Private Wealth Management business. "Their commitment to achieving great outcomes for clients is admirable, and we are proud of everything they have done for our firm." Eric Pronovost, Branch Manager, emphasized the significance of the dual recognition. "Having two advisors from the same office earn this distinction speaks volumes about their dedication and consistency," he said. "Theresa and Michele set a high bar for excellence and collaboration, and their impact is felt not just by their clients, but throughout its branch and the broader community". Financial advisors are selected for Forbes' Top Women Wealth Advisors Best-in-State list using a rigorous methodology developed by Shook Research. The process includes qualitative and quantitative criteria such as in-person interviews, industry experience, compliance records, revenue produced, and assets under management. The 2026 list was published February 4, 2026, and is based on data as of June 30, 2025. PLATINUM INVESTORS
Coverage of the 2025 GeekWire Awards, presented by Astound Business Solutions , the PNW’s annual startup and technology awards.STEM Educator of the Year honoree Fatima Kamal tries her hand at pinball at the GeekWire Awards in Seattle Wednesday. (GeekWire Photo / Dan DeLong)There may not have been any high scores set on the vintage arcade and pinball machines at Wednesday night’s GeekWire Awards, but the name of the game at the annual event was definitely fun and celebration.Hundreds of tech community members turned out at the annual event in Seattle to honor the leading entrepreneurs and innovators across the Pacific Northwest.Showbox SoDo was packed with partygoers enjoying great food and drink, networking, trying their best at “Ms. Pac-Man” or “Frogger,” and posing in the photo booth. The night included music from jazz quartet Doughboy and the return of operatic sensation Rob “The Drunken Tenor” McPherson singing about AI and video games.Even popular “Pokémon” character Pikachu popped onstage at one point to help give away Atari game consoles.Pikachu pops onstage with David Lampkin, regional VP of business solutions at Astound Business Solutions, center, and GeekWire co-founder Todd Bishop. (GeekWire Photo / Dan DeLong)Many thanks to Astound Business Solutions, the presenting sponsor of the 2025 GeekWire Awards. Thanks also to gold sponsors JLL, Baird, BECU, Wilson Sonsini, Baker Tilly, First Tech, ALLtech, and WTIA, and supporting sponsors Washington State Department of Commerce, Seattle Chamber of Connection, Seattle Metro Chamber and Showbox Presents.Read about all the winners in our main awards story, and keep scrolling for a photographic recap of the event
Coverage of the 2025 GeekWire Awards, presented by Astound Business Solutions , the PNW’s annual startup and technology awards.Fatima Kamal, an education program supervisor at the Pacific Science Center, works on digital content. (PacSci Photo)The COVID pandemic in 2020 shuttered school classrooms and extracurricular activities, but kids’ brains were plenty active, leaving teachers and parents scrambling to find educational resources.Fatima Kamal, an education program supervisor at Seattle’s Pacific Science Center, quickly stepped up to help fill the void.“The response was trying to think about what we could do to continue serving our community,” Kamal recalled. That included launching PacSci’s digital learning programming, she said, “which at the time, didn’t have a name, didn’t have a department. We didn’t really have any structure … it was a lot of just testing and trying out ideas.”For her STEM education leadership and impact, Kamal is one of two instructors being celebrated at this year’s GeekWire Awards as STEM Educator of the Year. The second honoree is Scott McComb, an instructor at Raisbeck High School, who was separately featured on GeekWire.First Tech is sponsoring the award, and Kamal and McComb will be recognized at the GeekWire Awards event April 30 at Seattle’s Showbox SoDo.The nonprofit PacSci, which welcomes about 400,000 in-person guests annually, rapidly created online content during COVID for desperate families and educators while also navigating big layoffs. It launched the Curiosity at Home site that includes videos on topics including the science behind baking chocolate chip cookies and an explosive demo with liquid nitrogen.PacSci’s “digital learning really came out of that closure and that need to innovate,” Kamal said.In addition to helping create PacSci’s online educational content, Kamal supervises the Digital Learning Studio, which offers interactive, remote workshops for more than 10,000 students each year, and she helped establish a permanent, professional AV studio for PacSci
Coverage of the 2025 GeekWire Awards, presented by Astound Business Solutions , the PNW’s annual startup and technology awards.Science teacher Scott McComb with students at Raisbeck Aviation High School. (Raisbeck Aviation Photo)Of all their inquiries, there’s one question the students at Raisbeck Aviation High School never ask science teacher Scott McComb. And that is, “When am I going to use this in real life?”“It’s been 20 years since someone’s asked me that question,” McComb said.That’s because McComb’s project-based program is focused on real-world applications where students do experiments and interact with industry experts.“The idea is, how do we connect the work that’s happening inside the classroom with work that’s happening outside the classroom?” he said. “And so we blur the line.”For his trailblazing approach, McComb is one of two instructors being celebrated at this year’s GeekWire Awards as a STEM Educator of the Year. The second honoree is Fatima Kamal, an education program supervisor at Seattle’s Pacific Science Center, who will be separately featured on GeekWire.First Tech is sponsoring the award, and Kamal and McComb will be recognized at the GeekWire Awards event on April 30 at Seattle’s Showbox SoDo.Back in the classroom, McComb’s ninth-grade students are asked to design and build a heat shield to protect a chocolate bunny from the super hot temperatures produced when a spacecraft reenters the Earth’s atmosphere. The project culminates in presentations to thermodynamicists from companies such as Boeing, Blue Origin and Space X.“Instead of just turning in a piece of paper at the end, or a worksheet, they have a design file, and they present it to practicing engineers who say, ‘So, tell me a little about that,” McComb said
The 2025 GeekWire Awards Geeks Give Back honorees, from left: Chaitra Vedullapalli, Aviel Ginzburg and Emer Dooley.Being part of a community is what the GeekWire Awards are all about — the chance to come together to celebrate Pacific Northwest tech innovators and entrepreneurs and their successes over the past year.The honorees in the Geeks Give Back category are part of the reason there is a community, especially one that helps to make space for more people in tech, to help turn ideas into startups, and to continually work to strengthen the ecosystem that makes everything thrive.The recipients this year are Aviel Ginzburg, the entrepreneur and investor who is a general partner at VC firm Founder’s Co-Op and who helped create Foundations, a new community for tech founders in Seattle; Chaitra Vedullapalli, founder and president of Women in Cloud, which helps women-led businesses get resources to succeed in cloud computing; and Emer Dooley, site lead for the Creative Destruction Lab at the University of Washington, a nonprofit that runs startup accelerators across the world.The Geeks Give Back category is presented by BECU.The GeekWire Awards will recognize nearly 50 finalists and honorees across a dozen categories, from Startup of the Year to Next Tech Titan. Winners will receive their coveted robot trophies live onstage on April 30 at Showbox SoDO in Seattle. Individual tickets are now on sale. Grab a seat here!Keep reading to hear from this year’s Geeks Give Back honorees in their own words about how to build and sustain successful communities. Responses edited for brevity and clarity.FoundationsAviel Ginzburg. (Founders’ Co-op Photo). “From my perspective, you don’t build community, you nurture it