When Doing It All Won't Do: A Self-Coaching Guide for Career Women
By John
()
About this ebook
The concept for the book came about because of the very real, very important needs that the authors' female coaching clients repeatedly expressed. Year-after-year, the authors have heard women's frustrations as they struggle with the countless roles and duties that are routinely placed upon them.
It is hardly news that, despite the feminine "revolution" that began in the 1970's, the majority of women have not found the enjoyment, lifestyle or satisfaction they once imagined. The reason they attribute to their problem is that they have taken on too much!
But, that is just the tip of the iceberg. Career women, in particular, have come to believe it is their lot in life to be running on 8-cylinders day in and day out.
Women are dancing to a frenzied beat, believing just because they can, they think they should. They have been taught if they are capable of doing something it shouldn't be necessary to look for help. This has led women to become frustrated by experiencing long days and nightmarish schedules. Women are exhausted.
In this inspiring book you'll discover why gender continues to be an issue and how the multitude of expectations placed upon women have created a generation of exhausted and weary women who are not getting the life they want.
This book deserves to be read by all women who strive to achieve fulfillment in both their personal and professional lives. In the book, the authors deftly examine the reasons behind why so many articulate and well-educated women today feel overwhelmed and underappreciated.
Highly effective people know that the most important and intimidating work we do is "inner work". Knowing who you are, what you want and why you want it are all important steps in your personal and professional journey. The book provides numerous easy-to-relate-to examples with actionable recommendations.
This self-coaching guide helps you explore your natural talents, focus on what you do best and how to manage your stress and default behaviors. You can benefit from getting a better understanding of how your personality impacts others and how, too often, we "get what we tolerate." There is no longer need for you to self-sabotage or embrace limiting behaviors. You can also challenge yourself to change some of your outdated beliefs. It is not all that difficult.
Let's be clear, this book isn't just for the dissatisfied. It is a prescription for identifying the aspects of your life that make you unique, without which, you may never be able to understand why you behave or react the way you do.
As you embrace the concepts in the book and become a more effective leader, you'll learn how you can negotiate what you want and fine tune your time management skills.
Since each of us has been given the gift of choice and the power to act, you are encouraged to take the time to determine your passions, purpose, and priorities in order to achieve the fulfilling life you want.
John
John G. Agno is a seasoned corporate executive, entrepreneur, management consultant and executive coach who is dedicated to providing insightful self-coaching insights to help you achieve your life goals. Coach Agno shares his decades of professional coaching and consulting knowledge to create a better life for many through proprietary self-coaching guides; delivered to your smartphone, tablet, eReader, and computer or via low-cost paperback books. Today, Agno coaches senior executives and business owners to reach decision-making clarity by exploring unintended consequences of their future actions in a safe and confidential environment. John helps you see things you are missing, affirms whatever progress you have made, tests your perceptions and lets you know how you are doing. His developmental coaching is personal training that helps you focus your natural abilities in the right direction. The coaching allows your inner-potential to erupt outward through effective leadership; to develop commitment within organizations and in a world of "free agents" and "volunteer" talent.
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When Doing It All Won't Do - John
Life is a succession of lessons which must be lived to be understood.
Helen Keller
1. Why Gender Matters
2. Different Expectations
3. Feeling You Have To
4. Weary Women Don’t Get the Life They Want
5. Why Women Get Angry
Back to TOC
CHAPTER 1: WHY GENDER MATTERS
You don't have to act like a man to succeed in business, for you will always be judged as a woman.
Pat Heim
Is gender really an issue that we should be discussing in the 21st century? Are men and women really that different? Didn’t the feminist movement that began in the 70’s answer that question?
The modern reader will agree that men and women are different anatomically, but we still stumble around when asked if men and women are different in other ways as well.
Professor Steven Goldberg in his book with the provocative title, Why Men Rule – A Theory of Male Dominance, maintains that men and women are different in their genetic and hormonally driven behavior.
We would stress that this does not mean that one sex is superior or inferior to another but rather that each has different strengths and at the same time different weaknesses. He believes that the high level of testosterone in males drives them toward dominant behaviors, while high estrogen levels in women creates a natural, biological push in the direction of less dominance and more nurturing roles.
To say that men and women are the same is to deny the physical reality. Science makes it plain that males and females are different from the moment of conception. These differences are evident in the chromosomes that carry inherited traits from both the father and the mother. We humans have 23 pairs of chromosomes within each cell. Twenty-two of these are alike in both males and females, however, when it comes to the twenty-third pair, the sexes are just not the same. Every woman has in her cells two of what we call the X chromosome. But man has just one X chromosome. Its mate, being the Y chromosome is much smaller.
It is the Y chromosome who Amram Scheinfield notes in Your Heredity and Environment that sets sex development in motion and results in all the genetic differences there are between a man and a woman.
Right down to the cellular level males and females are different. The sex hormones estrogen in women and testosterone in men have a significant impact on behavior.
Men and women are not only markedly different in the hormones that drive them, but they are also different in the way they think. The brains of men and women are actually wired differently.
In recent years, scientists have discovered that differences between the sexes are more profound than anyone previously guessed. Here is what Dr. Leonard Sax, MD, PhD, says:
The female brain develops differently.
In women, the language areas of the brain develop before the areas used for spatial relations and for geometry. In men, it's the other way around.
The female brain is wired differently.
Women process emotions in the same area of the brain that processes language. So, it's easy for most women to talk about their emotions. In men, the brain regions involved in talking are separate from the regions involved with feeling. Knowing this, it’s not hard to understand why men have such difficult time hearing or expressing feelings.
Men and women respond to stress differently.
This is true not only for our species, but also in every mammal scientists have studied. Stress enhances learning in males. The same stress factors impair learning in females.
Not only are men and women fundamentally different in the way their brains are wired, they are also vastly different in their physical strength and endurance. Women, on average, will only have 55 to 58 percent of the upper body strength of men and are only 80 percent as strong as a man of identical weight.
When we add to this our unique personalities, our cultural upbringing, and the environment in which we live and work, we come to appreciate why the sexes view the world differently.
It is these differences that create interpersonal problems when we have the irrational belief all men, or all women, respond in a similar manner. The truth is that both men and women routinely approach a broad range of personal and business issues quite differently.
Enter the Problem of Stereotyping
In 2005, Catalyst, an organization that conducts research in three areas: Women in Leadership, Organizational Change & Effectiveness and Diverse Women & Inclusion, explored how gender-based stereotypes in business continue to endure and limit opportunities for women to advance in the workplace or achieve their potential.
Normally, gender stereotypes are generalizations we make to differentiate groups of people and in the case of men and women it is about how we differ. The purpose of stereotyping is to anticipate and respond to these differences without taking into consideration each person and each interaction. We rely on stereotyping because it saves us time and energy when we lump groups into categories!
Despite the time saving benefits, stereotyping can also spell trouble. People are extremely complex and their behavior is often highly variable from one situation to situation to another. Therefore, when stereotypes are used to make judgments about people – especially their traits and abilities – there is a high probability that those judgments will be wrong.
As Catalyst discovered, we unintentionally respond to people in ways that elicit from them the very behaviors that confirm our stereotypes. One of the reasons is that what we look for we find. If I have a bias about engineers being black and white thinkers, then I will look for evidence to support my theory. I will likely ignore evidence to the contrary but pick up on those things that back up my bias.
Imagine this situation:
Ruby came home from work to find that the electricity in the house had been off due to a power outage. To her dismay a significant amount of the frozen food had spoiled. Just days earlier she had prepared a number of special dishes for her parent’s upcoming anniversary party and now all she could see was that her hard work was for nothing. When her husband came home she wanted to talk about this unfortunate situation, to express her frustration and receive some understanding for the loss of all her hard work. Instead what she received from her husband was his exasperation that she hadn’t already thought of a solution. Right away he suggested that she immediately get on the phone and hire a caterer!
He assumed it was a great suggestion particularly since he expressed his willingness to pay for the caterer. As it turned out, Ruby became angry and her husband became upset because his idea wasn’t readily embraced.
We were told that there was some stereotyping at work here. Ruby confessed that she believed most men look for an easy way out and lack empathy for all the effort women go through. His stereotyping of women was that they are overly emotional (maybe it was a bad time of the month!) and instead of brooding about their problems they just need to move on to fix the problem. As you can imagine, the result was not satisfactory for either of them.
In the end, Ruby did more preparations with some catering help, mainly because she wanted to prepare a couple of special dishes she knew would mean a lot to her parents. He never did understand why it meant so much to her.
Stereotyping in Business
In business, gender-based stereotyping can be especially damaging if stereotypes portray women as lacking in the very qualities commonly associated with effective leadership.
Consider, for example, how a male co-worker expects a women to convey competence, face competition, present ideas, get involved in corporate politics, and determine their role on a team. If a woman unwittingly perpetuates a stereotypical bias it will undermine her credibility.
Why? Because of gender expectations and misconceptions.
Men in business will expect women to behave like them, while women will expect a female counterpart to behave in a more feminine manner. It is a fine pink line that women in leadership roles walk.
Men and women tend to respond differently—not better or worse, just differently. Yet women continue to be faulted for their feminine attributes.
As you can imagine, this gender gap can create all sorts of problems when neither side feels valued, inappropriately judged or misunderstood.
Catalyst tells us that senior managers continue to perpetuate the same old stereotypes that women take care
and men take charge.
Indeed they discovered that male respondents considered male leaders to be more effective than women on all of the masculine leadership behaviors they value – delegation, problem solving, and influencing upward. Perceptions of where women leaders excel also tended to match their gender stereotypes; they excelled in all those behaviors classified as feminine, i.e. support and rewarding subordinates. Problem solving was the only masculine behavior which women were perceived as superior by other women.
It is clear that both men and women have polarized perceptions of each other’s leadership capabilities. This polarization is especially evident with respect to masculine take charge
traits and feminine take care
traits.
This situation continues to be problematic for women particularly because men so far continue to outnumber women in leadership positions.
Raising this issue is not about blaming; it is about understanding gender differences and our perceptions whether they are due to genetics, cultural patterns or stereotyping. Once we understand a situation, we can then choose either to change or adapt to it.
Secondly, you will want to be careful in making broad generalizations about other people. Experience tells us that often these judgments are incorrect.
Be Aware of Gender Gaps
The key to success will be to recognize that some ingrained behaviors can create natural gender gaps.
We know that the corporate world has vast room for improvement when it comes to incorporating women into top professional positions. Unfortunately, the subtleties of the Old Boys Club continue to flourish. So, what can women do about this?
As you know, the culture at most companies has been shaped over centuries by male executives. You also know that the natural outcome of a male-dominated business is that it has the tendency to be conducted like a team sport. Today more and more women are playing competitive sports, but it is only recently that they have begun to recognize the need to adapt some of these same skills to the workplace. Even then, women can find the rules of the game elusive; they don’t completely understand its approach to power, money, control, and status. Sometimes the elements are more subtle than that.
Most of us have heard big business described as a game,
but there are still those who really don’t want to believe that’s the way it works. Interestingly, the younger the worker, the more resistant they are to the belief that inequality and stereotyping continues to exist. They have grown up believing that they can do anything they want to do and accomplish anything they desire. They don’t believe they’ll experience inequality until they decide to climb the corporate ladder. Then they begin to experience the subtleties firsthand.
Perhaps they don’t get copied on important memos, they are spoken to without the appropriate respect, they watch less experienced males receive promotions ahead of them, peers cut them off in mid-sentence, or others try to take credit for their ideas. Women will also notice that they are routinely left out of casual social gatherings where insider information is routinely shared, or they are not given the type of assignments that will heighten their profile.
Sports analogies are rampant in business: Go into a huddle,
Go the nine yards,
Hit a home run,
Get the touchdown,
Knock it out of the park,
Take the ball and run with it,
Don’t strike out on this one,
Make the cut,
and It’s time to play hardball
are just several of the multitude of phrases heard in hallways and boardrooms every day. This men-at-work/men-at-play mentality serves a number of purposes, and the women who lack a suitable tutor/mentor to introduce them to the game will suffer. They will either misjudge the players or misunderstand the rules they are expected to follow. We can’t become a valuable player if we are forced to guess or bluff our way along because we really don’t understand the game.
You know, and we know, that you are skilled and brighter than average. You work hard, you stay late, and yet others who are less dedicated are too often the ones who get recognized and rewarded.
This fact is sad but true: it will be exceptionally difficult to move ahead if you don’t appreciate the unwritten rules of the game. Keep in mind the truism: Star players don’t become star players on the field. They are merely recognized there.
If you want to understand how someone succeeds, don’t just watch them accept the award. You have to observe their daily preparations closely.
To bridge gender gaps, successful women key into the rules of the game and actively study the culture of their organization. For starters, women must understand what is considered a win, what behaviors and goals will be rewarded, and what qualities are characteristic of a strong team player.
Sound impossible?
It isn’t. Women are relational creatures. We can learn from each other. Finding a seasoned mentor, male or female, who is a well-regarded professional is guaranteed to be a great asset. This mentor doesn’t need to be in the same organization, but it would be invaluable if he or she were in the same industry or profession.
Where Do We Start?
First, we need to gain personal insight into our own gender-based behaviors. Only then can we begin to bridge this gender gap. If, for example, we realize that we become overly charged when given feedback, we’ll want to develop methods for handling feedback positively. If we are frequently cut off in mid-sentence when presenting our point, we’ll want to learn how to speak more authoritatively. There may be times when we will need to hold up our hand, and, if necessary, politely but firmly indicate that we are not finished. If we are not given plum assignments, we need to develop the courage to express our interest. You get the point—and we’ll discuss these and other scenarios further along.
What we need to understand now, however, is that we will be responsible for bridging the gender-gap. We cannot rely on anyone else to do it for us.
Why does it have to be me?
We