Who We Are


williamsworks is a team of trusted social impact advisors. Our firm works with artists, athletes, Fortune 500 CEOs, families, and individuals who are committed to achieving real impact.

We are problem solvers with deep roots in philanthropy, public policy, and social entrepreneurship and we partner with our clients to turn bold ideas into breakthrough action.

Whitney Williams - CEO & Founder

Whitney Williams is a strategist, storyteller and leader at the forefront of domestic and global development and social impact. For more than three decades, she has brought together extraordinary, diverse, and influential partners to drive bold, lasting change across philanthropy, advocacy and public policy worldwide.

As founder and CEO of williamsworks, she advises individuals, foundations, and advocacy organizations, helping them to refine their goals and guiding strategic action to achieve them. Whitney’s deep expertise in strategy, government relations, social impact and grassroots advocacy informs creative, unique, and authentic solutions.

Whitney is a co-founder of Eastern Congo Initiative, the first U.S.-based advocacy and grant-making organization dedicated to supporting the people of Eastern Congo, directing millions of dollars in grants to dozens of community-based Congolese organizations and leading a broad U.S. and international advocacy agenda to advance sound public policy for the DRC.

Believing in the central role the arts play in society, Whitney founded Full Glow Creative to tell powerful stories, support artists, and drive meaningful change. Full Glow creates and invests in storytelling with community at its center, working with artists whose perspectives expand how we see the world. 

Her career began in the White House with First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton and on the senior staff of Casey Family Programs.

Dedication to public service and the common good runs in Whitney’s family. Her mother, Carol Williams, was the first woman elected as both Majority and Minority Leader of the Montana Senate, and her father, Pat Williams, served nine terms as Montana’s distinguished congressman. In 2020, Whitney was a candidate for governor in her home state of Montana. She is also the founder of the Snowbird Fund, the first-of-its-kind fund providing direct financial support to Montana Native communities conducting community searches for their missing loved ones.

Whitney is a graduate of the University of Montana. She and her English Shepherd Seamus live in Missoula, Montana, where Whitney is an active volunteer serving on the Boards of José Andrés’ Longer Tables Fund, Eastern Congo Initiative & Carol’s List.

Our Team

Mika Rao - Managing Director

Mika Rao is a public affairs and communications strategist committed to driving progress for organizations and communities. She believes in the power of words and brings two decades of elevating philanthropic goals through media engagement, storytelling, events, and other targeted strategies designed to drive awareness and action. Mika began her career as a change management consultant with Accenture and since then taken on high-impact roles at The LifeLink Foundation, Memorial Hermann Health System, Teach For America and Transcend while also continuing to support clients through her firm, Rao Communications.

Mika holds a bachelor of arts in communications from the University of Pennsylvania and a master’s degree in science from Boston University. She is active in the community and has served on the boards of community-based organizations, including the League of Women Voters and Daya Houston, a non profit that supports survivors of domestic violence. Her writing has been published in numerous outlets and was featured in Legacy: An Asian American Anthology. Mika is a resident of the greater Houston area where she lives with her terrific husband. She is the proud mom of two college students and her devoted officemate/ dog.

Aidan Williams - Associate

Aidan is a recent graduate of Santa Clara University. Compelled by his fascination with the human mind, Aidan infused disciplines of neuroscience, psychology, philosophy, and computer science to create a Cognitive Science degree; a first-of-its-kind to be offered. In addition to creating his own major, he worked as a Research Assistant in the Computational Cognitive Neuroscience Lab where he conducted research on the organization of semantic representations in the brain. Outside of academia, Aidan has worked on political campaigns, startups, and was previously an intern at williamsworks where his interest in social impact consulting was realized. His experience growing up amongst a family with generations of public servants, artists, and teachers instilled in him a passion for social justice and change making.

Aidan calls San Francisco home. On the weekends you can find him playing golf or caddying for someone who is, playing with any dog he can find, listening to live music, or spending time laughing with friends and family.

Lucy Hendrickson - Operations Manager

Lucy Hendrickson is a recent graduate of the University of Montana in Missoula. She studied English and Climate Change Studies, coupling her passions of writing and the environment to create a unique and rewarding undergrad experience. In her six years with williamsworks, Lucy’s commitment to social impact has flourished. She is energized by this work and humbled to be a part of an incredible team doing good in the world.

Lucy has found home in Missoula, where mountains and rivers bring her peace and inspiration. She feels a great privilege to be able to explore the lands of Western Montana.

Keelan Williams - Director (Full Glow)

Keelan, is the Director of williamsworks’ sister company Full Glow Creative. He is an LA-based filmmaker with roots in the San Francisco Bay Area who specializes in directing, producing, and editing humanist documentaries. His films have garnered acclaim worldwide, screening at prestigious festivals such as San Francisco, DOXA, and Newport Beach. His debut feature-length documentary, "Tell Them We Were Here," was exhibited at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) and won best Documentary Feature at the Nevada City Film Festival. Keelan brings his expertise and passion for storytelling to this innovative and collaborative creative company.

Bryanna Nimmons - Fellow

Bryanna (she/her) is a rising senior at the University of Houston, studying Public Policy with a minor in Public Relations. As a proud Houston native, she is deeply engaged with both her university and the surrounding community. On campus, Bryanna serves as a student representative on the Hobby School of Public Affairs’ Undergraduate Student Advisory Committee, where she helps shape the academic experience for incoming students. She also acts as the Community Service Chair for Women of Gold, a women empowerment organization, and is a member of the Next Generation Leadership Academy, where she previously served as an ambassador.

Carol Williams - Advisor to CEO

Carol Williams is a longtime activist, educator, and public servant whose four-decade career has focused on environmental protection, peace, and advocacy for women and children in Montana. She served more than a decade in the Montana Legislature, including in the State Senate from 2004 to 2012, where she became the first woman to hold both Minority and Majority Leader positions. During her tenure, she advanced key legislation expanding access to full-day kindergarten, supporting Native American education, and strengthening healthcare and family rights. Earlier in her career, she worked as a Head Start teacher and co-founded Peace Links, an international organization promoting cross-cultural understanding among women, and she continues to be active in community and political initiatives in Missoula.

Remembering Pat Williams

John Patrick “Pat” Williams | October 30, 1937 - June 25, 2025

Pat Williams once said, “If you want to know who someone really is, give them power and see what they do with it.” What our father did with his life was defend the underdog, protect our wild lands, defend the working poor, Arts and culture, Native people, and children with disabilities. He served 18 years in Congress, more consecutive terms in the U.S. House than anyone in Montana history. Over his lifetime, he remained devoted to serving the people of Montana and making it a better place for future generations.

Williams was proudly from Butte, Montana, he taught in the public schools, served as a state legislator, and became Montana’s longest-serving Congressman in the state's history. Throughout his career, he was known to Montanans simply as “Pat”. For many years, Montanan’s were on a first-name basis with their elected officials, Jeanette, Lee, Mike, Max and Pat. After retiring from Congress, he returned home to serve as a faculty member at the University of Montana.

He was born in Butte in 1937, during the Great Depression. His colorful Irish family included his mother Libby Williams, his cousin Evel Knievel, and Sister Toni Harris, Prioress of the Dominican nuns. His working parents owned the American Candy Shop in Butte. Because of their round-the-clock schedule, he was raised primarily by his cherished Irish grandmother Lizzy Keough. In 1965, he married Carol Griffith Williams. Theirs was a 60 year relationship that stood beyond description. Carol has been a life-long advocate for peace and justice, mother to their three children. She was also Pat’s ‘Senior Advisor’, campaign insider, policy director, poll manager, strategy leader—and the first woman to serve as both Montana Senate Majority and Minority Leader. 

Williams was first elected to the Montana House of Representatives from Silver Bow County in 1966. After serving two terms in the Montana Legislature, he worked as an Executive Assistant to Montana Congressman John Melcher. Montanans elected Williams to the House of Representatives for nine terms, serving from 1979 to 1997. His year-and-a-half-long “Door to Door” campaign set the standard for grassroots campaigns. Williams, himself, knocked on 51,000 doors across western Montana, alongside a dedicated staff who he respected and loved. Many of these staff stayed with Pat for years, becoming a part of the family.

During his time in Congress, he was a tireless champion for working people. He led trailblazing legislation that assisted middle-class families and ensured educational opportunities for every child. Williams sat on congressional committees for the Budget, Natural Resources, Education, Labor, and Agriculture. He was the Chairman of the committees on Post-Secondary Education and Labor Management, and he created the College Middle Income Assistance Act. He sponsored the Family and Medical Leave Act, which protects workers from losing their jobs while taking maternity leave or caring for a sick family member. It was the first piece of legislation signed into law by President Bill Clinton. Williams was also responsible for the legislation that created the American Conservation Corps, providing thousands of America’s young people with an opportunity to serve their country and pursue higher education. Every state now has a Conservation Corps. In 1985, Williams was appointed Majority Whip under House leadership by Speaker Thomas “Tip” O’Neill.

Among his many legislative accomplishments were the Children with Disabilities Act of 1987, which he named after his god-daughter Keough Duffy. His legislation protected the Lee Metcalf Wilderness Area, located north of Yellowstone National Park, as well as the Rattlesnake Wilderness Area, north of Missoula, Montana. He led the successful effort to save the Bob Marshall Wilderness from oil and gas exploration and banned geothermal energy drilling near Yellowstone. In a 1987 floor speech supporting wilderness protection, he famously warned, “We’re not proposing wilderness for wilderness’ sake—we’re holding back the concrete tide that already threatens our birthright.”

Williams was a famously vocal champion for federal arts funding and has been credited with saving the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA). His staunch advocacy of the NEA garnered him national attention during the Culture Wars of the 1980s and 1990s. It was a remarkable undertaking during a very trying time for the NEA, which he called “America’s Little Badge of Courage”. Williams said the opportunity to defend freedom of expression was one of the things for which he was most proud. When asked about President Donald Trump defunding the agency once again. Williams responded, “Art can flourish without politics. The reverse is not true. Arts reflect the diversity and pluralism of our society, which is free, and freedom is our bulwark against tyranny. You can burn a generation’s imagination by teaching them that art is something to fear.”

Pat worked tirelessly with Tribal Leaders to build Montana’s seven Tribal Colleges. Working together, they also established the High School on the Northern Cheyenne Reservation and the Two River Eagle School on the Flathead Reservation. 

Upon his retirement from Congress in 1997, Williams immediately returned to Montana, where he resumed his role as a teacher and professor at the University of Montana. He taught courses in environmental studies, history, and political science. He was a Senior Fellow at the Center for the Rocky Mountain West and a Trustee for the National Association of Governing Boards of Universities and Colleges, the National Association of Job Corps, and The President’s Advisory Commission for Tribal Colleges. He was appointed to the Board of Directors of the Student Loan Marketing Association. He led the development of Western Progress. Pat was responsible for the legislative creation of the Rural Disabilities National Research Lab and the Leopold Wilderness Research Institute, both at the University of Montana. In 2012, Governor Brian Schweitzer appointed Williams to the Board of Regents of the Montana University System.

In 2023, Williams was honored by the Confederated Salish & Kootenai Tribes with an Indian name, cikʷsšn or Shining Stone. The name was chosen “as a reflection of his public service and how he shines as a leader, storyteller, and through the charismatic way he inspires, shares wisdom and makes people laugh. Shining Stone is a reflection of the strong foundation he provides his family, Butte and all of Montana. He is the statesman many go to for wise advice from a true elder.” 

He believed government could be a force for good, and that culture, wilderness, and education were not luxuries—but rights. He never gave up on the American experiment, nor on the rugged promise of his home state. In his later years, Pat said he still heard the call of the mountains walking with his dogs. He said “Out here, we measure a man by how well he listens when there’s no one else talking.”

Williams is survived by his wife Carol, son Griff Williams, daughters Erin Williams and Whitney Williams, his daughter-in-law Christine Treadway, son-in-law Joe Easton, and his deeply loved grandchildren: Keelan Williams, Aidan Williams and Fiona Easton. May his life inspire us to work for the public good, take care of each other and remember we have much more in common than that which divides us. Memorials can be made to the Pat Williams Scholarship for Artists at the University of Montana or The Williams Family Fund at the Montana Community Foundation.