The sweetgreen technology chief’s entry into the invitation-only network highlights how digital transformation leaders are increasingly shaping conversations beyond their own companies.
Wouleta Ayele, chief technology officer of sweetgreen, has joined the Exceptional Women Alliance (EWA), an invitation-only peer mentorship organization for senior women executives. The move places Ayele among a cross-industry network of leaders who convene around shared challenges in governance, growth and long-term strategy.
At sweetgreen, Ayele oversees the company’s technology strategy, guiding digital platforms and infrastructure that support both customer experience and retail operations. Her career spans more than two decades, including senior roles at Starbucks, The Coca-Cola Company and Hyundai, where she worked across cloud systems, data analytics and enterprise-scale digital transformation.
Her addition to EWA underscores a broader shift in executive leadership circles. As technology increasingly underpins everything from supply chains to in-store transactions, chief technology officers are becoming central voices in shaping business strategy, not simply back-end operators. Peer networks such as EWA offer a space where leaders can exchange insight on navigating growth, risk and innovation in real time.
Ayele’s professional background reflects that intersection of technical depth and operational oversight. In addition to corporate leadership, she has served on boards including Everside Health and the University of Washington Information School, advising on emerging technologies and institutional strategy. Such roles illustrate how digital expertise now extends beyond product design into governance and long-range planning.
Organizations like Exceptional Women Alliance frame their mission around mentorship and shared accountability among senior women executives. For Ayele, participation signals engagement with a community that prioritizes principled leadership and sustained impact, themes that resonate across sectors increasingly defined by technological change.
While the announcement centers on one executive, it also reflects a larger trend: as companies rely more heavily on digital systems, technology leaders are stepping into broader leadership ecosystems. In that context, Ayele’s appointment to EWA is less about ceremony and more about the expanding influence of technology executives in shaping the future of enterprise and community alike.