
More Than A Crown: Joanna Lara Fabikun’s Journey of Leadership, Growth and Purpose
Joanna Lara Fabikun is rewriting the pageant playbook as a working mother and corporate executive competing for Miss Universe Great Britain. Her journey proves that ambition, motherhood, and career success can thrive together at any age.
When Joanna Lara Fabikun steps onto the Miss Universe Great Britain stage in Wales this summer, she'll carry something most contestants don't: a briefcase full of boardroom experience, years of international leadership, and the wisdom that comes from raising a six-year-old daughter. The 30-something finalist is showing women everywhere that crowns aren't reserved for a single chapter of life.
For Joanna, competing isn't about proving she can wear a sash. It's about challenging the invisible expiration dates society places on women's dreams. "I entered because I believe women should continue pursuing ambitious goals at every stage of life," she says.
Born to English, Irish, and Nigerian parents in Milton Keynes, Joanna grew up navigating multiple cultures and perspectives. That foundation shaped her into someone comfortable being many things at once: mother, model, corporate communications leader, mentor, and now national pageant finalist. She describes herself proudly as a product of modern multicultural Britain.
Her career journey started on retail floors at Barratts, New Look, and Harrods, where she learned that great communication starts with understanding people. Those early customer service roles taught her skills she'd carry into boardrooms years later. After studying Real Estate Management at Kingston University, she worked with Cushman & Wakefield supporting multinational clients.
Today, Joanna serves as Head of Corporate Communications for Eko Atlantic City in Lagos, Nigeria, one of Africa's most ambitious urban development projects. She leads communications strategy, public relations, stakeholder engagement, and digital communications for a development attracting international investment and attention. The role places her at the crossroads of business, sustainability, government relations, and infrastructure development.
Her leadership philosophy is simple but powerful: "It's about responsibility. It's about creating opportunities, solving problems, and helping other people succeed." That same mindset drives her pageant journey.
Joanna actually competed in pageants over a decade ago, but the woman returning to the stage now is fundamentally different. Between then and now, she built an international career, became a mother, relocated overseas, and developed the deep confidence that comes only from lived experience. "Back then, I was still discovering myself," she reflects. "Today, I know who I am, what I stand for, and the impact I want to have."
The Miss Universe organization has evolved too, now emphasizing leadership, personal achievement, and social impact alongside traditional pageant elements. That shift attracted Joanna back. "The competition celebrates women with different backgrounds, experiences and stories," she explains. "It's not about fitting into a single mould. It's about showing up authentically."

Her daily reality involves juggling major communications projects, professional commitments, pageant preparation, and raising her daughter Olivia. Preparation has included catwalk coaching, interview training, and fundraising, all squeezed between school runs and strategic planning sessions. Rather than viewing these responsibilities as competing priorities, Joanna sees them as complementary.
"Life isn't one-dimensional," she says. "We can be many things at once. We can be mothers, professionals, leaders, creatives and still pursue personal goals and challenges." That perspective itself challenges assumptions about what women can accomplish simultaneously.
She refuses to view age, motherhood, or career demands as obstacles. Instead, she frames them as strengths. "The experiences I've gained through motherhood, my career and life itself have given me confidence and perspective. I know who I am, and that comes with experience." It's a confidence younger competitors might still be building.
Why This Inspires
Joanna's story matters because it rewrites outdated narratives about when women should pursue bold dreams. Society often whispers that certain opportunities close after specific life milestones: after motherhood, after establishing a career, after reaching a certain age. Her journey proves those whispers wrong.
She's demonstrating that the experiences gained along the way aren't detours from ambition but preparation for it. The communication skills honed in retail roles, the strategic thinking developed in corporate leadership, the patience learned through motherhood, these aren't obstacles to overcome. They're advantages to leverage.
Her multicultural background also brings representation that matters. As someone with English, Irish, and Nigerian heritage who has built a life spanning continents, she embodies the global, multifaceted reality of modern womanhood. She's showing young girls, especially those from mixed backgrounds, that they don't need to choose one identity or limit themselves to one path.
For working mothers watching her journey, Joanna offers permission to keep dreaming. Too many women shelve personal ambitions when professional responsibilities and family commitments grow, believing they must choose. She's proving you can honor all parts of yourself: the professional, the parent, the dreamer.
The pageant stage itself becomes a platform for a bigger message. By competing as a mother and executive, Joanna challenges the industry to expand its definition of who belongs in the spotlight. Beauty pageants have historically favored youth and a narrow life experience. Her presence pushes that boundary wider.
"Growth does not have an age limit. Ambition does not have an expiry date," she says. Those words carry weight coming from someone living them. Sometimes the most powerful advocacy happens not through speeches but through simply showing up and taking space where others said you no longer belong.
As finals approach this summer in Wales, Joanna continues balancing it all: preparing her competition wardrobe while prepping stakeholder presentations, practicing interview answers while helping with homework, visualizing her stage walk while strategizing communications campaigns. She makes it look not effortless but intentional, a carefully constructed life where nothing is sacrificed because everything matters.
Whatever happens on stage in Wales, Joanna has already achieved something significant: she's expanded what's possible for women who refuse to accept that their most ambitious chapters are behind them. The crown would be wonderful, but the real win is already happening in boardrooms, living rooms, and hearts of women watching someone who looks like their full, complicated, beautiful lives finally get her moment in the spotlight.
Based on reporting by BrightWire
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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