In this Money Matters report, Time Warner Cable News' Tara Lynn Wagner looks at a company that's helping women with kids re-enter the workforce on their own terms.

After her son Lucas was born, Ana Villa left her job to be a stay at home mom. By his first birthday, she wanted to re-enter the workforce on a flexible basis but found the options were few.

"All the exciting jobs that I would filter through were full time," explains Ana Paula Villa, a finance director at Propeller Airports. "Every time I pressed part time, it would becoming like two or three."

Her situation isn't unique. Allison Robinson says many women, particularly millennials, have seen moms who work full time and moms who stay at home.

"And we are looking for a hybrid," Robinson says. "We're looking for meaningful, challenging work that allows us to stay professionally engaged, earning income, but also more time to spend at home focusing on our family."

Which is why she created The Mom Project - a website that matches highly skilled women with companies looking to fill part time positions.  That is how Brett Smith of Propeller Airports found Villa and brought her on board two days a week as their finance director.

"I don't need somebody to sit there at their desk for eight hours a day or what have you if they can do it in two hours," Smith says. "It works better for her and it does work better for us."

In addition to part time and project based work, the company also helps fill something they call Maternityships, essentially covering for another new mom in the weeks after she gives birth.

"So when you have someone on your marketing team going out for 16 weeks, we can send in one of our professionals who has very complimentary skill sets to cover for that gap," Robinson says.

Villa says finding work through the Mom Project took away the awkwardness of having to ask for flexibility because of child care needs.  That's understood.  And while she says having part time work helps keep her skills sharp for possible full time work in the future, for now she's happy having a foot in both worlds.

"I'm a better mom having this kind of intellectual stimulation two to three times a week," Villa says.