By Pragati Verma
iStock_000017139688XSmall
Having educated
25 of the current Fortune 500 CEOs, Harvard Business School (HBS) is a breeding ground for successful business leaders, albeit it’s so far, male alumni. Will the deep structural effort to create more gender parity at its campus, which is certainly commendable and brave, actually change how work gets done in the corporations that these students may eventually lead?

The New York Times article exploring this issue raises a very important question — “Are we trying to change the world 900 students at a time, or are we preparing students for the world in which they are about to go?” Will gender parity experiments in business schools like HBS change the balance, or rather lack of it, in every day work environments and consequently, will we see more women progress into leadership roles?

To understand the impact of HBS’s gender experiment in creating future female leaders, we obviously require time to measure the results and even then, it would be almost impossible to attribute success solely to HBS’s experiment.

Hopefully, this initiative will create a bigger pipeline of enlightened leaders of both genders. Assuming we do see more female leaders, will these new leaders do anything differently or are we going to see more of the same management style we have seen in the past?

Will Women change how work is done?

According to research conducted by David Matsa, assistant professor of finance at the Kellogg School of Management and Amalia Miller, an associate professor at the University of Virginia, female leaders may show traits that differ from male leaders, but not necessarily because of innate gender differences.

Instead of assessing the gender differences in corporate leadership on a granular level, Matsa and Miller chose to gather information on a grander scale by observing the performance of publicly listed Norwegian companies after the board quota legislation was passed in 2006, which required companies to ensure that women made up 40 percent of the board of directors within two years of the quota being adopted.

Interestingly enough, Matsa and Miller found that among the companies affected by the board quotas, there was no significant difference in the companies’ financial performance correlating with an increase in female leaders. What they did find, however, was that companies affected by the board quota retained more employees than companies not affected, resulting in higher labor costs.

According to Matsa and Miller, it is difficult to tell whether or not this means that women leaders value the relationships with their employees and their employees’ needs more than men, or if it simply reflects a gender difference in the approach toward long term business strategy. Even though the results of this one piece of research do not provide conclusive evidence that women lead differently than men, it provides some insight into the possibility that gender can influence business strategy.

However, from a pure observational viewpoint of female CEOs in the past decade, women leaders at big corporate houses seem no different from their male counterparts.

Hewlett Packard CEO Meg Whitman and Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer, for instance, took the heat for forcing work-from-home employees to join their colleagues in the office instead. Neither one of these top female leaders is showing any signs of redefining corporate principles that currently define workplace practices.

Susan Chipman, in a recent HBS discussion where James Heskett, Baker Foundation Professor, Emeritus at HBS asks, “How important is leadership gender in influencing the way We work?” provides some interesting food for thought on why the women who are making it to the top are seemingly keen to not make radical changes to how work is done

Chipman offers, “It is extremely naive to expect that stereotypical ideas about what women in general are like will have any meaning for the behavior of women in senior management positions. Women who arrive in such positions will be very atypical.”

Heskett himself opines that this could be the case and mentions how HBS alumni Sheryl Sandberg in her book does not suggest systemic change but “largely assumes that work will not be rethought. Instead, women will have to ‘lean in’ and face the long hours and judgments regarding the quantity of work as well as the quality of work they are able to do.”

Harvard professor Robin J Ely and Stanford professor Debra E Meyerson give some insight into why this reluctance to change the way we work could be occurring among business leaders.

They stated in an interview with Mallory Stark for the HBS newsletter, Working Knowledge: The Thinking That Leads, “The notion that the basic organizing principles that govern workplace practice, including many of the implicit rules for success, are closely aligned with idealized masculine interests, attributes, and life situations is a hard sell, especially to those who have become successful within this system—whether men or women, rich or poor, white or minority.”

Ely and Meyerson point out that the people who have successfully made a career in the current system could be resistant to changing it and are yet expected to be “influential change agents in the workplace” since they hold powerful positions. “Most people in organizations, including women, do not view their work practices—how work is defined and how work gets done—as having anything to do with race or gender. It’s just the way things are, like water to a fish or the air we breathe. What’s to notice? What’s to change?” they add.

What will the future hold?

Arguments that suggest that a critical mass of women in C- level positions alone will create cultural change are not true if the women themselves cannot acknowledge the inequity of the system that empowered them.

With that said, it is not mutually exclusive to lack progress and change while increasing the number of women in charge. Just don’t expect people because of their gender to automatically induce organizational change.

Behaviors from some female leaders may continue to resemble those of their male predecessors but at the very least, critical mass may reduce the stereotype of CEO’s being automatically male, white, and interestingly enough, taller than the average man.

businesspeople talking in meeting room and woman smilingBy Natalie Sabia (New York City)

“Game Changers” was the theme of the night. The chicly decorated ballroom, which held approximately 2,000 women and a small handful of men, had a distinct theme of blue. This invitation-only is one of the largest and longest run women events on Wall Street. Deutsche Bank has held the Women on Wall Street (WOWS) conference since 1995. Over the years, the attendance has grown from 200 to more than 2,000 women of all ages representing all the major international Wall Street firms as well as female executives in asset management, accounting, investment banking, media, politics and academia.

While acknowledging the long history of challenging times for women on Wall Street and also preaching the continuous need to promote woman within the corporate world, Jacques Brand, CEO of Deutsche Bank North America, kicked off the evening.

A Conversation with former Senator, Olympia Snowe

Frank Kelly, Global Coordinator, Public Affairs and Head of Government Relations in the Americas as Deutsche Bank, led a one-on-one discussion between former Senator Olympia Snowe. He started by turning everyone’s attention to a newspaper article that referenced the chaos in Washington and its title read “Senate women lead an effort to find an accord.”

Snowe advised the audience about her “game changing” decision not to pursue re-election. She expressed her beliefs that she can make a more significant impact without actually being on the “inside.” It wasn’t an immediate decision she described; in fact it was one that evolved over time as she traveled around the country. She came to realize what the Senate was evolving into, which seemed dysfunctional on top of their willingness not to work together. “I would be best served to work on the outside, contribute my knowledge, my experience and to help people understand that it doesn’t have to be this way. It wasn’t that way in the past and it doesn’t have to be that way currently,” said Snowe. “I could give voice to that.”

Snowe’s message was more than just her desire to start a new journey; it was a powerful message about how she envisions change in our Government. Through her travels, she realized how unhappy and frustrated American people are with certain legislations that pass or don’t pass, but Snowe’s belief is that the American public needs to communicate their opinions, thoughts and questions to the Government. “Dysfunction is the number one concern among American people,” said Snowe. “There’s no doubt that people are frustrated and angry, the questions now is how do they weigh in; they have to communicate through emails, through social media, through phone calls,” said Snowe.

When asked whether it matters to have women in public office, Snowe replied, “Absolutely, there’s no doubt.” We worked night and day on the issues that were so important to women and we drove it. Set aside all of our other differences; didn’t speak as Republicans or Democrats, but as women, so it had a major impact.”

“I am a can-do person and this is a can-do country and I know this is a can-do audience and the fact of the matter is we can change it and that’s the message that I want to convey to all of you here tonight. It’s the message I am conveying all across this country, you can do something about it,” said Snowe.

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By Terry Selucky (Los Angeles)

Last week, Germany’s Angela Merkel became the only European leader to secure a second re-election since the financial crisis of 2008. Viewed as a skilled diplomat and nicknamed the “Iron Chancellor”, Germany’s incumbent is, according to The Economist among others, the “de facto leader of the European Union.”

So what can we learn from the woman who is currently named #2 in Forbes’ “Most Powerful People” list, just after President Obama? The components of Merkel’s career can be translated to any career, at any time.

1. It may sound trite, but willingness is an overlooked and underrated component to leadership. Merkel wasn’t from a political family and she wasn’t pre-ordained to climb the ranks of German political leadership. It wasn’t until 1989, when she was 35 and working as a researcher, that she was elected into parliament from her position as spokesperson for her minority political party. Part of Merkel’s success is that she put herself in the position to mingle, debate, discuss, learn, and be discovered. Translation: Be vocal about what your interests are. Volunteer to help on a project, or read up on the kind of work you want to be involved in.

2. Being mentored. From Business Insider to the Wall Street Journal to this blog, all signs point to the evidence that having a mentor can have a lasting, positive effect on your career. Sheryl Sandberg credits Larry Summers with why she was able to rise in her field. It’s simple: Mentors provide guidance, advice, and connections to help you get to the next step. The links above provide solid steps on how to choose a mentor. When you cultivate these mentor relationships and establish sponsors who will advocate for you, then you will really feel the impact on your career advancement.

3. Great timing is perhaps one of the most hard-to-pinpoint qualities, but a good leader has to be in the right place at the right time. Synced with Merkel’s rise to power was the fact that the EU was poised for change. Merkel is a leader whose passionate opinions and strong leadership have earned her the moniker “the decider,” and with a shaky economy, Europe demands heavy guidance. Her commitment to austerity, though at times controversial, seems to be delivering the region toward stability. For women in business, this simply means responding to your current environment. Know what your company’s needs are, and act accordingly. Read more about good timing here.

4. Others’ acceptance. Of course, you can never control what other people think of you, but certain strategies and tactics can help you gain acceptance. This is not to say that your goal should be to please others; do that and you’ll find yourself pulled in all directions until you feel like a rubber octopus. The time-tested way to gain others’ acceptance is simply to earn it. Cultivate trust. Think of your best relationships—most likely, they took time to develop and have evolved through give and take: asking, listening and compromise. From 1990 until 2005, Merkel advocated for change in labor laws, in fiscal reform, and in energy policy, earning her way to Chancellorship.

5. Prove your character again and again. Have you noticed that our most successful, admired leaders seem to rise above circumstances? That they operate on a plane of self-possession, embodying the values people refer to as “leadership qualities?” Even though she has a specific point of view, Merkel has been praised worldwide for her diplomacy skills. Her constituency, in interviews, celebrates that “she persevere[s] in spite of all the West German men in high positions. You can see she is knowledgeable in all kinds of areas.” To be a good leader, you must continually demonstrate your values and your commitment.

Certainly, there are as many formulas for successful leadership as there are leaders in the world. Christine Lagarde, Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund, gives this advice to young women leaders: “Grit your teeth and smile. And in the face of adversity, go. They don’t deserve you.” Raised by a single mother, she was inspired by her family, held numerous posts in the French government (securing mentorship, gaining acceptance) and stepped up to announce her candidacy (willingness) immediately following Dominique Strauss-Kahn’s resignation as Managing Director of the IMF (timing).

In Lagarde’s words, the ups and downs of her job are “…an extraordinary adventure every day…Success is never complete. Each morning, one must put one’s capacities to the test once again.”

Though these two women hold many opposing beliefs about how to fix the economy, they keep a close and mutually respectful relationship—yet another practice of which US leaders should make a habit. Let’s hope they continue to inspire women around the world.

janet_yellenBy Pragati Verma (New York City)

All summer long there has been a debate, heated at times, about who is the best candidate to succeed Ben Bernanke as the Federal Reserve chairperson. These discussions have included talk about gender politics and glass ceilings in addition to the usual banter about monetary policy and inflation. Why? Because for the first time in the history of the Federal Reserve, a woman is among the leading candidates poised to take the reins.

If selected, Janet Yellen will be the first woman to head the world’s most powerful bank in its 100-year history. She will regulate thousands of banks around the country and control the supply of money in the US economy. Conversations around Yellen’s fiscal policies and gender increased in volume last week when her main opponent, Larry Summers, dropped out of the race, significantly increasing the likelihood that Yellen will become the next Fed chair.

Yellen must be used to sparking debates by now. When she joined the board of Federal Reserve governors in 1994, she broke the rules of hierarchy by eating in the cafeteria. Two years later, she dealt the Fed chairman, Alan Greenspan, his first and only defeat in a vote. Yellen talked Greenspan to a standstill, arguing that a little inflation was a good thing, when he was trying to drive annual inflation down to zero. She was also one of the first Fed officials to foresee problems in subprime mortgages.

A monetary economist with significant experience in the Fed, Yellen holds a Ph.D. in Economics from Yale and has taught at Berkeley, Harvard and London School of Economics. She enjoys support from liberal Democrats because of her focus on bringing down unemployment and could face opposition from Senate Republicans who are worried that her policies could accelerate inflation.

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female leaderDo you need to be collaborative, innovative and decisive, above all else, to become a leader? These are the traits attributed to current leaders according to almost 300 women surveyed by us in a recent research report [PDF].

This is what over 200 women in technology wanted to know at The Glass Hammer’s 4th Annual Women in Technology career event sponsored by Goldman Sachs, Thomson Reuters, American Express and SunGard last Wednesday.

Do successful women in technology have all of these qualities to ensure a path to the top?

The keynote, delivered by Nicki Gilmour, CEO of The Glass Hammer, set the stage for the evening’s intriguing conversation by revealing highlights from our research stating that women in technology have above average ambition levels. Also, women who want senior management jobs tend to have role models, sponsors, be in a network and actively attend leadership or career development sessions.

Determine Your Leadership Style

“You can learn traits,” said Jane Moran, CIO of Thomson Reuters, “You can do little things to challenge yourself.”

In response to the finding that women in technology identify more strongly with being honest and goal-orientated, rather than decisive, according to the survey, our panelists provided the audience with their insights and interpretations of the results.

Mary Byron, Head of Technology for the Federation at Goldman Sachs, commented, “I think women value honesty in the workplace and want to see integrity in their workplace.”

Debra Danielson, SVP of M&A Strategy and Distinguished Engineer at CA Technologies, added, “I have taken many psychometric tests in my career and being trustworthy has always been a prevalent trait for me. People want to trust their leaders.”

When discussing different leadership traits that garner success, all of the panelists agreed that each leader can effectively portray their unique skills in their own fashion. “You may never have all the leadership traits you admire,” said Susan Lawson, Vice President at American Express Digital Technologies, “but you can build your own team with people who have complementary traits, you don’t have to do it all.”

“There are different types of leaders,” added Danielson. She continued, “It has to be in your style for it to be effective. The women surveyed for the study did not say that they believed the identified leadership traits to be optimal.”

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The Glass Hammer will resume publishing Tuesday, September 3rd. In the meantime, check out some of our recent articles and profiles:

Tips for Developing Your Soft Skills: Learn How Raising Your EQ Can Boost Your Career

Voice of Experience: Celine Herweijer, Partner, Sustainability, PwC UK

At Work, Giving is the New Getting

Recognition and Respect are Key Issues for Women Professionals

Summer is here and we are taking a publishing break this week to work on our editorial calendar for the rest of the year and to have a few days off for the 4th July!

Next week, we will return with more great career articles, as we continue to follow our mantra of “Inform, Inspire and Empower” professional women. We also some amazing career events lined up for the early Fall starting with our 4th annual women in technology event sponsored by Goldman Sachs, Thomson Reuters, American Express and Sungard – registration is now open for this event!

Also, if you have not had a chance to read our recent women in tech research, you can check it out here.

We also have an announcement to make — after four years of excellent editorial and marketing expertise, Melissa Anderson is moving on. She has done an amazing job and has been entirely foundational to the growth and success of the site and I personally want to thank her for being such a great Editor and team member.

Melissa is one to watch and we are honored to see her continue her career journey and still write for us from time to time!

A big welcome to Michelle Hendelman who is our new editor and content manager. Michelle has been writing for us for several months now and is ready to take on a bigger role with theglasshammer.com. You can contact Michelle at michelle@theglasshammer.com.

We look forward to the next chapter of theglasshammer.com’s history and thank you for being a part of the community!

Yours Sincerely,

Nicki Gilmour

Publisher and Founder

www.theglasshammer.com – smart women in numbers

 

michelleleeBy Melissa J. Anderson (New York City)

“We have an obligation to mentor young people in our industry,” began Michelle Y. Lee, Wells Fargo‘s Northeast Regional President. “Be very deliberate about sharing your knowledge with young people who are making their way and figuring out their career. Your legacy is defined by how many people you’ve prepared to take your place when you’re ready to move on.”

Reflecting on her 29-year career in the industry, Lee says she didn’t always understand the importance of seeking out mentors early on. “I don’t think when I first started out that I knew the value of having a mentor and an advocate. I really admire the young people I see today who seek out mentors deliberately. I didn’t know the importance of building those relationships.”

That’s not to say she didn’t have guidance, though. “Certainly, when I look back I see unofficial mentors and people who took me under their wing.”

She encouraged young women to seek out mentoring relationships early and to be deliberate about it. “It probably would save them some of those embarrassing mistakes we all make along the way – or at least guide them on how to recover when they do make them,” she said with a laugh. “And make sure to look for diversity in your mentors – both men and women can provide different and important viewpoints.”

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By Melissa J. Anderson (New York City)

In honor of Black History Month, this week and next week, every day The Glass Hammer will feature interviews with notable African American women on their career experiences, aspirations, and advice for other women in their field.

The women span industries like financial services, law, accounting, and technology and have reached various levels of seniority. In fact, each career path is different, and while some have been shaped by similar factors – like participating in diversity programs at the university level or having had valuable mentors and sponsors along the way – the interviews show that today, there are many paths to the top for women of color.

Check back all week long to read about African American women who are making a difference at work and in their communities.

By Melissa J. Anderson (New York City)

As the end of the year approaches, The Glass Hammer will be taking an editorial break for the holidays. We will return Wednesday, January 2 with new articles to inform, empower, and inspire you for the year ahead.

In the meantime, we hope that you will also take brief pause to reflect on the year gone by. What did you hope to achieve in 2012? What did you successfully accomplish? What new strategies did you learn for career advancement this year that you hope to leverage or amplify in 2013?

Please share your successes and challenges in the comments space below – we would love to catalogue how you have advanced in 2012!

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