Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Many of us are already Leaning In



Sheryl Sandberg notes that young women come up to her and ask her about home life issues while men ask her business questions.  I find it interesting that her conclusion is that because young women ask her these questions they are not as serious about business as men.  I would guess these same women would ask a man business questions and never think about asking about home/life issues.  Nor would these young women ask Carly Fiorina, Meg Whitman, Ginni Rometty, Hillary Clinton, or Nancy Pelosi about home/life issues. These high profile women either don’t have children or their children are grown.  The young women asking Sheryl Sandberg are trying to understand what it takes to be high profile and balance work/ life issues.

The new class of young, high profile, C level women, with children have a great deal of support available to them as a professional and a parent; Support that is not available to the overriding majority of women.  Sheryl Sandberg talks about leaving work at 5:30 so she can have dinner with her family. In almost every situation  I know of, an individual contributor or middle management women (or man) who leaves the office at 5:30 every day to have dinner with their family has excluded themselves from promotion (we call that mommy track).  Mellisa Mayer has famously stated that her baby is easy.  Any baby is easy when you have 24 x 7 nanny care, someone who cleans your house, does your laundry, grocery shopping, makes your meals, and your company builds a nursery next to your office. 

The real answer to work/life is that there are very few women who can have it all, if it all is a C level job and being an active parent.  If a woman really wants to be a C level executive and have time for her children she has to become a star first; since she will need to dedicate 60 to 70 hours a week to her job before becoming a star.  Once a star she can negotiate leaving early or having a nursery next to her office.  As a star she will have a salary that covers two to three nanny’s at a cost of $50K a nanny.  The rest of us intelligent, educated, career focused women who are already leaning in, need to make choices and set priorities.  Choices on who to marry – will he truly partner in raising the kids; Choices on how we run our households – do you have the money to outsource all the homemaking and child rearing tasks; Choices on raising your children – are you OK missing school events, eating a family dinner, reading to your child, making sure they have completed their homework. 

Many women get off the “C” train because after having a child the sacrifices to a job are just not worth the sacrifices necessary for their family.  Yes, of course as the children get older it is much easier to manage a family from a cell phone.  But, then again that is why you see so few C level mothers with young children and most C level women with older children, grown children, or no children at all.

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Feminism Today



This is the best time and we are living in the best place to be women.  Women have more opportunities, more choices today then any time leading up to today.  That said; there still changes we need to make in our culture so that women have equal protection and equal access.  I relate with Melisa Mayer when she says she is not a feminist.  Women in the 1960 did not relate to being a suffragette.  The issues of the 1910’s -- 50 years prior -- were not relevant to the women of the 1960.  Today’s women does not relate to the label “feminist” because the issues of 50 years ago do not relate to their life today.   When I think of feminism I think of burn the bra, anger, and driving for access and having a voice; Access to education, access to women’s health care, and access to jobs.  Today’s issues are different.  The feminism of 50 years ago gave women access to education, child care, medical care, and job availability.  Feminism of 50 years ago changed men.  Today’s man has a very different attitude compared to men of the 1960’s.  Most workplaces today have women at many levels within the organization.  Married men today are much more involved with their children and take on many more chores then the men of the 1960.  This doesn’t mean that for many women and men their work and home life is equal.  The bar has moved, it still needs to move farther. What we need today, is to come out with a new label that helps us to better describe today’s women’s issues without the baggage of the old label feminism.