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Archive for the ‘leadership training’

Boomer Feels “The Devil Wears Prada” Movie Gives Good Insight Into Millennial (aka Gen Y) Chicks

November 19, 2007 By: admin Category: career change, women's issues, career support, retaining employees, recruiting employees, female entrepreneurs, businesswomen, women leaders, women in business, leadership training, women in management, women, business No Comments →

Hey Chicks,

WIth my new book out, Millennials Incorporated, I’ve been talking a lot about this topic (Millennials entering the professional workforce and how it’s affecting corporate cultures, management styles, etc.). Plus, people are sending me tons of info and links to blogs on the topic.

Someone just sent me this blog entry written by a female Boomer, who also writes a lot about generations in her Across the Ages blog for the Harvard Business blog. She shares her thoughts about the insights she got into Millennials after watching The Devil Wears Prada.

Her comments are pretty funny and the comment “she quits” is something I talk about A LOT in my seminars targeted at Boomer and Gen X managers about retaining and managing this new generation.

What The Devil Wears Prada Can Tell You About Your Gen Y Employees
Posted by Tammy Erickson, Harvard Business School blog

I hope I’m not giving away any major secret here. I’m taking a gamble that any of you who plan to see the movie or read the book The Devil Wear Prada have already done so.

Bottom line: She doesn’t take the job.

The young woman in the movie (a Gen Y) works so very hard to pursue her dream job. She jumps into an industry with which she has little familiarity and no discernable qualifications. She rises to the most impossible challenges, tackling tasks she had no idea how to do with ingenuity and boundless energy. She relies in part on the wise coaching of a Boomer colleague and skirts the deep resentment of an X’er who feels passed over. In the end, she succeeds in meeting the extraordinarily exacting standards of her over-the-top competitive Boomer boss.

Then she quits.

Okay, so she also sacrificed true love and lasting friendships in pursuit of her professional goal, but — let me emphasize — she won!

And she quit.

Now, let’s fess up. How did you really feel about that ending? I don’t mean in the car on the way home from the theater after you’ve had a chance to reflect. I mean in the moment – what was your immediate, instinctive, knee jerk reaction? It may tie pretty closely to your generational leanings.

Most Y’s I’ve asked have really liked the ending. The heroine rose to the challenge, learned a lot, and moved on to find something that strikes a deeper chord in her soul. One of my Y friends explained: “For me, although obviously there was some suspense, I knew going in that she had to decline the job — that’s just what a Y would do — it was just a matter of how.”

Most X’ers liked it, too. The pinnacle she’d reached in the corporate world was, afterall, clearly pretty unstable. Yes, she was on top — today — but, if nothing else, the movie had made obvious how being up one day in no way guaranteed a place tomorrow. Wise to get out now. One of my X’er friends elaborated: “For X’s, the movie is about what’s wrong with organizations and why it’s a mistake to hitch your wagon to any one person or any one organization for too long or without a sense that the organization will love you back.”

Personally (okay, I’m a Boomer), I found the ending, well, ridiculous. Why would you work so hard and not take advantage of winning? If she’d stayed in the job and done something positive with the spoils, that would make sense to me. Perhaps she might have served as a more humane role model for the next trainee — changed the corporate culture for the better. Or, maybe she could have even done something more grand — targeted some of the corporation’s resources toward a charitable goal — used her new-found power to make the world a better place.

Of course, after reflection, I get and respect the happy, balanced life she chose to lead . . . really. I guess I do.
Although extreme, this movie may be more of a parable for our corporations than we would like to admit. Many of the movie’s themes are ones that our research bears out. Gen Y’s are entering the workforce with enthusiasm and confidence — and succeeding on many fronts. They are finding Boomers a bit schizophrenic — both warm mentors and off-the-wall corporate warriors. And many X’ers have not exactly welcomed them with open arms.

Many Y’s are also, at best, agnostic in their commitment to a corporate career. Maybe they’ll stay, or maybe they’ll move on to other work environments that offer some new blend of learning, challenge and life balance. The old inducements hold much less appeal.

Take Control of Your Career: What You Need to Know About On-Ramping and Off-Ramping

November 10, 2007 By: admin Category: career support, career change, career coaching, women and money, women retiring, retirement planning for women, women's issues, female entrepreneurs, leadership training, women in business, management training, women in management, businesswomen, women, business No Comments →

Hey Chicks,

Have you been out of the workforce for an extended period of time, perhaps to raise children? Or are you sick of your current job and seeking more flexibility by (perhaps) working from home or starting your own business? If you answered yes to either of these, check-out my current Chickonomics Chat podcast episode.

Sure, you can consider this an informercial for it, but it’s FREE and it is loaded with great info that can help you with On-ramping or Off-ramping.

My interview is with Catherine Clifford, co-founder of YourOnRamp.com. I went to their launch party on Monday night in the Bay Area, and it was sold-out with 150+ fabulous women from all kinds of interesting backgrounds, with all types of personal reasons for being there. And the topic is so hot they even got coverage on the local NBC News affilitate. Not many business networking events get that!!!

I met 2 women who are attorneys but have been out of the workforce for around 10 years raising their kids and are now trying to get a feel for what’s out there in the work world for them. Both had done part time volunteer work while full-time parenting but are now looking for on-ramping into careers again. I also met a guy that off-ramped to be a stay at home Dad and is now looking to enter the workforce again. He was the only man out of the 150+ attendees…had he been single he would have been REALLY popular that night!

I also met a woman from a large, well-known high tech company that was in her early-50’s and tired of the corporate b.s. so she was there to learn about off-ramping ideas. And I met lots of chicks in their late-20s and early 30’s, with small children and working full-time, trying to find alternatives to the corporate grind but still needing to bring in a “full time” income for their families.

And the founders of YourOnRamp.com spared no expense by serving amazing appetizers like fresh sushi and great wine. And if the networking, wine and food wasn’t enough, they hired an amazing keynote speaker to educate and entertain everyone: Dr. Sylvia Ann Hewlett, author of Off-Ramps and On-Ramps.

She is an economist and the founding president of the Center for Work-Life Policy where she directs the “Hidden Brain Drain”—a task force of 35 global companies committed to fully realizing female and minority talent over their career lifespan. Can you tell I pulled that directly from her website bio?

Anyhoo, I’m sure many of you can relate to the women that I met that night, so check out the podcast interview to learn more about this great online service! Catherine even shares several success stories about some YourOnRamp.com members that are guaranteed to motivate and inspire you!

Here’s a link to the interview:

http://chickonomicschat.podomatic.com/

Cheers to Chicks!
Lisa

Some Great Info All About Women’s Leadership

October 24, 2007 By: admin Category: female entrepreneurs, women's issues, career support, recruiting employees, businesswomen, women, women leaders, leadership training, management training, women in management, business No Comments →

Hey Chicks!

I am very excited to have been asked to be a featured panelist at the 2007 Women in Leadership Summit in San Francisco, Nov. 12-14! This will be VERY cool. The panel discussion will be about how new technologies, such as online social networks, are impacting women’s leadership roles in business. I was asked to participate so that I could bring my expertise about Millennial Chicks (Gen Y) to the table. The event coordinators knew about my new book, Millennials Incorporated, and thought I’d be a good fit.

My co-panelists are 2 major figures in the world of women’s leadship: Rayona Sharpnack, Founder & President of the Institute for Women’s Leadership, and Pamela Wilhelms, who is an organizational consultant and executive coach with 20 years experience in individual and organizational development.

If you live in the Bay Area (or close by!), you should check out this amazing conference. It’s in its ninth year and gets an attendance of over 700+ women executives and leaders. Great place for networking, learning, and inspiration!

http://www.linkageinc.com/learning_events/conferences/wil/default.aspx

Also, along the lines of leadership, my recent podcast episode on Chickonomics Chat is an interview with Rayona (who I mentioned above). She has written an awesome book about taking control of your life personally and professionally and really shared some great info & tips in the interview. Her new book is called: “Trade Up: 5 Steps for Redesigning Your Leadership & Life from the Inside Out”.

You can download this podcast episode (FREE!) at:

http://chickonomicschat.podomatic.com/

So, there you have it. Some great things to check-out (a Summit, a podcast, and a book!) all about empowering women!

Cheers to Chicks!
Lisa

Dubai Gets On Board With Supporting Chickonomics By Hosting “New Arab Woman Forum”

October 01, 2007 By: admin Category: female entrepreneurs, retaining employees, recruiting employees, businesswomen, women, women leaders, leadership training, women in business No Comments →

Hey Chicks,

Well I have been one busy chick and have fallen behind on my blog duties. Last week I moderated a panel for the Association for Technology and Women, and it was hosted by Yahoo. It was a panel about Millennial Women in Technology and the panel consisted of 5 very bright 20-somethings. We had a blast and had the audience entertained and they expressed some great opinions and insights. The panelists were from Microsoft, Yahoo, Apple, Lockheed and Affymetrix.

And now I’m preparing for a big seminar that I’m conducting tomorrow for a large public company in Silicon Valley about Millennial Chicks and Guys. It’s about how to attract, recruit and retain the new generation of young professionals. This whole topic spins from my new book on Amazon: The 2007 Chickonomics Guide to Millennial Professionals. Hot topic, cool stuff.

Okay, so that’s why I have been MIA. Lots of prepping and developing for these speaking gigs.

But how cool is it about the women’s leadership forum in Dubai?? Here’s some basic info from the article I saw today on www.bi-me.com (Business Intelligence Middle East):

“UAE. Under the patronage of HRH Princess Haya Bint Al Hussein, wife of HH Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice President and Prime Minister of UAE and Ruler of Dubai, The New Arab Woman Forum will take place on 21-22 October at the Jumeirah Emirates Towers, Dubai

The Forum is organised by Al-Iktissad Wal-Aamal Group and Al Hasnaa magazine, in cooperation with the General Secretariat of the Arab League, ESCWA, V-Day Karama, Diplomatic Ladies Association Dubai and North Emirates and media partner MBC1.

The forum emphasizes the fundamental role of the Arab woman and her various powers and abilities in leadership, management, politics, business, education, media, beauty, and the problems she encounters.

The New Arab Woman will bring together more than 500 high profile delegates and speakers from 30 Arab and foreign countries. Invitees include women government ministers and parliamentarians, NGO heads, and renowned actresses, artists and journalists, as well as businessmen and other specialists. The gathering promises to be one of the major events on the 2007 conference agenda, combining relevance, calibre, advantage, placement power and excellent presentation.”

Mazen Hayek’s quote is the foundation for my definition of Chickonomics:

“The role of Arab women is no longer limited only to building a family. She now plays a vital role in steering the change to become an effective member in facing current and future challenges,” said Mazen Hayek, MBC Group Director of Marketing, Public Relations and Commercial, representing the sponsors.

Go, Arab Chicks, go! Very exciting and very important!

Cheers to Chicks!
Lisa

It’s Time to Bail on Your (Boring) Job and Pursue a Career (and Passion)!

September 24, 2007 By: admin Category: women's issues, female entrepreneurs, career change, career support, career coaching, businesswomen, women, women in business, women leaders, leadership training, women in management, business No Comments →

Hey Chicks,

I saw an article today on Yahoo that was a great reminder that we all need to be doing something that we love for a living. Take me for instance. I have successfully owned a high-tech marketing agency in Silicon Valley for 18 years. I started it when I was just 25. But I started to become really bored with it and that burn-out was affecting me: B-I-T-C-H comes to mind.

So I knew I had to change something. That’s when I had to dig deep to determine what I wanted to do next. It came to me pretty fast: speaking and writing. Then, being the marketing/branding expert that I am, I had to “brand” it. So pretty soon afterwards hatched the term for my platform as a speaker/writer: Chickonomics.

There’s much more that goes into this story, but suffice to say my first book was just published and now available on Amazon (you can see the cover and read about it on the left hand side of this page), and I have started to secure sizable speaking gigs with large corporations. It has taken me almost 2 years to “get here” because I continued to run my marketing agency full-time while all of this stuff was created: My brand, my book, my blog, my website, my podcast, my seminar offerings, my keynotes, etc. BUT…it’s here, it’s going, and so far, it’s working.

Anyway, that’s my personal example of following your passion and (trying) to make a living from it, but here are a few others from the article I read this morning:

“When Offbeat Dreams Become Careers” By Ysolt Usigan, ClassesUSA

- Stephanie Adams is now the owner of Flow, Yoga, Spa & Wellness in Hood River, Oregon. Adams jumped full force into a law career before having children, but later found she didn’t have the time to adequately balance parenthood and her law profession. So she quit her job and started taking yoga classes.

Soon enough, her hobby developed into a career. After acquiring certifications in yoga and fitness, Adams opened her own yoga studio, where she teaches and leads teacher-training programs for aspiring yoga instructors.

- Though most of her friends were pre-med, Christe S. Bruderlin-Nelson pursued a peace and conflict studies (PACS) degree at University of California, Berkeley. She’s now a freelance writer and consultant on topics related to her passion.

Beyond learning from a mentor, Bruderlin-Nelson sought out meetings with professionals with similar interests. She now takes part in an international think tank that led her to work on education initiatives for youth in West Kenya. Such involvement only solidifies her passion for peace.

- For Michael Rogers, the decision to become a seasonal park ranger at Ken Caryl Ranch in Littleton, Colorado, and leaving the corporate world of cubicles ended up being music to his ears.

Rogers is a professionally trained opera singer with a degree in vocal performance from University of Puget Sound. When he moved to Colorado recently with his wife, he discovered his love of nature. So when he’s got downtime between auditions and performances, he earns a living working outdoors.

So, as we enter Autumn, take some time to determine what it is you REALLY want to do as a career, and make a goal to have it figured out by the first of the year. That way you can hit the ground running at the beginning of 2008 and get the wheels in motion.

Use Q4 for THINKING and 2008 for ACTING!

Cheers to Chicks!

Lisa

Are Women Really Making a Difference in Leadership Positions in Corporate America? This may surprise you…

September 19, 2007 By: admin Category: management training, women in management, leadership training, women leaders, women in business, business No Comments →

Hey Chicks,

Are we breaking the glass ceiling? Are we overcoming stereotypes that men really wield the power regardless of a female co-worker’s title? Are minority women making headway in leadership positions in the business world?

Well, there’s some good news and bad news around all of this. I came across this article on WomensPress.com and thought you’d find it as intersting as I did:

TITLE: “Still Lonely At The Top” by Kendall Anderson

How are women changing corporate culture? We asked women in corporate positions and business experts if women are impacting corporate culture … and got the scoop on perception vs. reality.

She had impressed corporate brass by successfully growing key product lines. Her name was respected in the boardroom and she was due for a promotion.

But none of that seemed to matter when Best Buy’s Julie Gilbert visited company stores with her corporate counterpart, who was male. “The eye contact and conversation went to him-not me,” she recalled. “I would stand there trying to say, ‘Hey, I’m Julie, I’m here.’ He and I were both senior corporate but culturally, they thought he was the power player.”

Experts can point to evidence supporting Gilbert’s discovery: Despite big gains, women don’t always fit into corporate America. Even as women have been promoted in greater numbers to management and graduated from business and law schools at higher rates than men, the dominant corporate culture often excludes them-subtly and overtly. “Are organizations changing? Yes. Are men still perceived as better leaders even though women are effective leaders? Yes,” said Anne Cummings, PhD, an associate professor of management at the University of Minnesota Duluth who has studied organizational behavior and leadership style.

The statistics speak for themselves: About 5 percent of CEOs in medium to large companies are women. In 2005, just 17 percent of corporate officers (a company’s top positions) in Fortune 500 companies were women and more than half of the Fortune 500 companies had fewer than three female corporate officers, according to a recent study by Catalyst, a research organization that tracks workplace diversity. Of the corporate officers in 2005, only 2 percent were women of color. And at the current rate, Fortune 500 companies could take 40 years for women to achieve parity with men in corporate officer ranks, the study said. “The continuing gender gap in senior leadership, especially among women of color, demonstrates a persistent uneven playing field,” said Ilene H. Lang, Catalyst president.

According to a 2004 study by the University of Maine’s Business School, the “good ol’ boy network” helps keep the playing field uneven. The same study pointed to women’s differing leadership, socialization and communication styles as reasons they don’t often make it to the top.

Making an impact
Despite the lack of women in the most coveted corporate positions, the sheer numbers of women in the workplace and their presence in overall management has changed corporate America in key areas. Flex-time policies, originally proposed to help mothers balance family and career, are now popular with both genders. The demand for cafeteria plans within health-care plans also is attributed to women’s influence in the workplace. As more women raised the issue of creating time for family and work-life balance, it became a norm for company policies.

“More and more companies are offering cafeteria benefits that are family-friendly and work-hour flexibility is very big for many women,” said Elsa Batica, cross-cultural health development and training manager at Children’s Hospitals and Clinics of Minnesota. Besides helping women raise families and care for elderly parents, such flexibility also “has helped men,” Batica added. “We see more fathers who are better parents than their fathers.”

Since 1973 when the first U.S. company introduced flex time, the option has become very popular: In 2004, 28 percent of all full-time workers in the U.S. had flexible work schedules and 43 percent of U.S. workers had access to flex time, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics and a report by the Families and Work Institute.

A stigma?
Despite the excitement over flex time and related family friendly policies, there is some evidence of a stigma attached to women who take advantage of flex time and time off for caregiving for children or other relatives, research shows.

Studies show women can lose professional opportunities and be considered less effective or productive by the corporate culture when they take advantage of flex time and family leave. “We have to change the norms and expectations around those policies to make it OK for everyone to take part in them,” said Professor Teresa Glomb, University of Minnesota Carlson School of Management Professor of Human Resources and Industrial Relations.

Perception vs. reality
Cummings has found that although employees rank traditionally feminine qualities of being relationship-oriented, democratic and good at communication as being important in leaders, they consistently perceive female leaders to be less effective than their male counterparts. “Men are still perceived as better leaders,” she said. “It has to do with what is deemed desirable in a man and in a woman.”

Batica has personally experienced this. She remembers years ago when her employees expected her to forgive instead of follow through on terminating someone for consistently not doing his or her job. “They would never have expected a man to do that. But I was female so was supposed to forgive,” she said. Instead, Batica documented her decision meticulously in case she was challenged. She remembers the emotional cost of doing her job in the context of expected gender roles. “I think women do get exhausted because of this,” she said.

Those expectations and perceptions about gender can rule everything from conversation at the water cooler to the way a meeting is run. At Best Buy, it once meant corporate talk laced with sports analogies, advertising and other campaigns with little to no female input and overt signs of valuing men more than women, said those who set out to change that company’s culture-and succeeded.

Change from within
Gilbert’s gender-related experiences were underscored by the experiences of other women in the company. “One employee said, ‘Julie, we don’t fit in,’ and then she gave me example after example. And I understood.” On the same store visits where male managers all but ignored Gilbert because her male counterpart was there, she got hugs from female employees. “‘We hug you because we’re so excited that there is a woman like you with corporate-we are so proud that you’re there,’ they told me,” Gilbert recalled.

That marked the beginning of WOLF (Women’s Leadership Forum).

Gilbert won the support of senior leadership for the program, which aims to increase support and networking for female employees (including support among each other and from male employees) and reduce turnover as well as increase hiring of female employees. The results have been positive, Gilbert said, adding that 15,000 employees participate in WOLF Packs-groups of about two-dozen people who innovate change within departments. The packs include two or so men but not many more, in part to help men understand what it’s like to be in the minority in a group.

The WOLF effort was strategically connected to a big push by the company to better serve female customers. This helped Gilbert win support for it. Today, besides reduced turnover among female employees and more female job applicants, Gilbert said there is a distinct change in culture.

It’s now unusual for leadership to insist that every meeting include a balance of women and men, said Gilbert. When the WOLF Packs learned of an ad campaign that had had no female input and they weighed in, they prompted a change in the ads that made them more appealing to women. Gilbert says the company uses less sports analogy and other “guy talk” that excludes women (”before this, everything was a ‘let’s have a huddle,’” she said). And the program has led to a new job-share program that helps employees balance their work and family lives.

“Now we have men saying ‘Hey I want to participate in the job share program,’” Gilbert said.

Mentors and manipulators
Women in corporate America often have female mentors and supporters, as well as women who have sabotaged or otherwise hurt them professionally. Gilbert found this challenging. “I had women who were very resistant,” she said. “So I said ‘I challenge you, as a leader, to support this employee in a meeting instead of watching her struggle or huddling with your girlfriends at work and tearing her down.’”

Batica has strong female supporters in her current job, in the past she’s dealt with “the politics of scarcity” by relying on women outside of her immediate work environment for support. “Women in the workplace and even more so in management are new and few. So women are protective of their territory,” she said, adding that it is worse for women of color.

Prescription for change
A Dartmouth College study cited a small female talent pool from which to draw for top company positions.

“Getting more qualified women into the executive hierarchy is critical,” the study said. “Companies achieved greater representation of women in the top executive ranks through aggressive promotion and hiring, policies that companies lacking women executives could emulate.”

The study concluded, “Unless firms find ways to move women into line positions and retain them, the route to the top will remain much more difficult for women.”

And while national statistics might be alarming, they don’t dictate individual company behavior. Retaining women as well as ensuring they are happy, productive-and promoted-employees depends on individual companies, Cummings said. Like Best Buy’s welcoming of WOLF, an individual company can choose to have a woman-supportive culture.

“A lot of this depends on the organization and its leadership,” she said. “Corporate cultures are sets of values.”

Women of color: ‘double minorities’
While women of color have had increases in promotions and salaries in the last five years, a recent study by Arizona State University found African-American and Hispanic women are leaving corporate jobs at higher rates than black men and white men and women combined. The study’s author, Dr. Peter Hom, concluded, “[Corporations] should systematically monitor the retention of women of color who may suffer disadvantages exacerbated by being double minorities … [and] pinpoint their unique disadvantages, such as inaccessibility to high visibility assignments and powerful mentors during initial employment when they are most susceptible to leaving.”

Catalyst reports that minority women in lower to middle management have a big disadvantage in not having access to networks of influential colleagues-connections that are key to moving into top management.

Women we spoke with said that women of color rarely make it into the top positions. “I have seen women of color go to a certain level and they are taken out and have to start over,” said Elsa Batica, who is Filipina; she has seen women of color made irrelevant and unwelcome at the upper levels of management-much more so, she said, than white women.

Jane Jackson, a middle manager with a Fortune 500 company in the Twin Cities, said it’s very lonely to be a woman of color. “I don’t fit in at all. I have felt this way my entire career,” said Jackson, who asked that her real name and company not be identified for fear of retaliation. “Men don’t see me … and women are often threatened by me.”

“Corporate America by definition is about getting ahead and if you build up someone else too much there is the fear that they will be promoted and not you,” Jackson said.

She believes her experience is very different from that of a white woman’s. Adding to her “differentness” here in the Twin Cities is her accent and her petite stature. Many people have expectations of a petite, foreign-born, woman of color, she said. When she turns those expectations upside down by cogently grasping issues, having strong ideas and asserting herself, “some people can’t handle it. They can’t get past the fact that their perception was wrong.”

So why has she succeeded? Some people, she said, have had the ability to look beyond stereotypes. Her personal attributes have helped them do so. “I have found that being who I am-being reliable and treating people well-has earned me respect and helped me succeed.”