Tangela Q. Parker is an Atlanta-based marketing and corporate affairs executive with more than two decades of experience working at the intersection of healthcare, public policy, and institutional reputation.
Her career has focused on helping large organisations communicate clearly during complex and highly scrutinised moments.
Parker grew up in Brandon, Mississippi, in a family that valued discipline, service, and education. Her father balanced federal work with running a small business, while her mother was both an educator and a daycare owner. Those early influences shaped Parker’s sense of responsibility and her interest in leadership.
She graduated with honours from Brandon High School and earned a full scholarship to Alcorn State University, where she studied political science. Later in her career, she continued her leadership development through executive education at Harvard Business School.
Over the past twenty years, Parker has held senior leadership roles with several major healthcare organisations, including CVS Health, Centene Corporation, WellCare, UnitedHealthcare, and Humana. Her work has focused on enterprise communications, crisis management, marketing strategy, and stakeholder engagement in highly regulated environments.
Most recently, Parker served as Senior Vice President of External Affairs at Planned Parenthood Southeast, where she oversaw marketing, communications, development, advocacy, and community engagement across multiple states.
Known for her calm and disciplined leadership style, Parker specialises in helping institutions navigate moments where credibility and public trust are at stake.
She often describes leadership in simple terms.
“Credibility is the currency,” Parker has said. “Once it’s compromised, everything else becomes harder.”
Today, Parker remains active in civic and professional organisations in Atlanta while continuing to contribute to conversations about healthcare, leadership, and institutional trust.
Tangela Q. Parker on Leadership, Trust, and Healthcare Communications
Q: Let’s start at the beginning. What was your early life like growing up in Mississippi?
I grew up in Brandon, Mississippi, in a family that valued discipline and service. My father worked for the federal government and also ran an HVAC business. My mother was an educator who later owned childcare facilities. Watching them manage responsibility from two different directions shaped how I think about work.
Our home emphasised education, accountability, and showing up for people. Church and community life were also part of that environment. Those experiences gave me an early understanding that leadership is really about responsibility.
Q: How did those early experiences influence your career path?
They made me pay attention to institutions. I saw how systems work and how people depend on them. That curiosity eventually led me to study political science at Alcorn State University.
I graduated with a full scholarship, which was an important opportunity for me. College helped me understand how public policy, healthcare, and communications interact. That combination later shaped my career.
Q: Your career has spanned several large healthcare organisations. How did you enter that field?
Healthcare communications sits at the centre of policy, regulation, and public trust. I found that intersection fascinating.
Over time, I worked with organisations such as CVS Health, Centene Corporation, WellCare Health Plans, UnitedHealthcare, and Humana. My roles focused on enterprise communications, marketing strategy, crisis response, community engagement, and stakeholder engagement.
Healthcare is one of the most regulated industries in the country. Communication decisions can have real consequences. That environment teaches you to move carefully and think several steps ahead.
Q: You’ve spoken about the importance of judgment in leadership. Why does that matter so much?
You can teach tactics. You can hire people with technical skills. What you cannot easily teach is judgment.
Good judgment means understanding when to move and when to pause. It also means recognising the long-term consequences of a decision.
“In healthcare and corporate affairs, credibility is the currency,” I often say. Once credibility is damaged, rebuilding it takes a long time.
Q: Earlier in your career, was there a moment that changed how you approached leadership?
Yes. I once lost control of a major initiative because I relied on verbal agreement in a meeting.
Everyone supported the plan at first. But when outside pressure appeared, that support disappeared. I found myself defending a decision that the group had originally shared.
That experience taught me something important. Alignment is not what people say in a meeting. Alignment is what people are willing to stand behind when things become uncomfortable.
After that, I began documenting governance more clearly. Decision rights, ownership, and accountability were written down before work began.
Q: You later served as Senior Vice President of External Affairs at a large non profit. What did that role involve?
The role involved overseeing marketing, communications, governmental affairs, advocacy, and community engagement across several states.
It required balancing organisational priorities with public expectations. Healthcare organisations operate under intense scrutiny, so leadership has to remain disciplined and measured.
My responsibility was often to help executives navigate complex situations involving reputation and trust.
Q: Leadership positions often involve high pressure. How do you manage that environment?
Pressure is part of senior leadership. The key is separating urgency from importance.
When doubt appears, I don’t treat it as a weakness. I treat it as a signal to get sharper. I focus on facts, context, and consequences.
Emotion can distort judgement quickly. Discipline helps prevent that.
Q: Outside of work, what keeps you grounded?
Community and service are important to me. I remain involved in organisations such as the Junior League of Atlanta and Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority.Additionally, I am a member of several philanthropic boards that give back to the community.
Family has also shaped how I approach leadership. My grandmother, Willette Carter, was a major influence in my life. She showed up for every milestone in our family. That consistency left a strong impression on me.
She taught me that you can lead with clarity and still lead with empathy.
Q: How do you personally measure success today?
I measure success by durability.
Did the decision strengthen the institution? Did it protect trust when pressure increased?
Outcomes matter, but they only matter if they hold up over time.
Leadership is not just about what works today. It’s about what still works five years from now.
Read more:
Tangela Q. Parker Reflects on Career Lessons from Healthcare Leadership