Men
are men. Women are women. Right? The matter of gender is easy enough to establish,
but in Lois P. Frankel's book, "Nice Girls Don't Get the Corner Office: 101
Unconscious Mistakes Women Make That Sabotage Their Careers" we learn there
are underlying mores and premises to follow if women want to be at the top of
a company. These rules are unspoken, but Frankel demystifies the process by which
some women hurt their success by playing into the cultural roles prescribed to
them growing up.
Frankel presumes most women grew up in a home that oppresses
women from growing up into full adults. What may have been true for 1954 is not
as true today. However, her challenge is still with merit, and in 2004, it crosses
the gender barrier. e men should be taking notes from Frankel. There are plenty
of little boys among us who need to work as men.
"Rosie
the Riveter" ads during WWII encouraged women into the workplace, but often
as factory and shipyard works. There was no "Annie the Accountant" or
"Sally the CEO" campaigns. Being all you can be means being more than
you were as a child. Frankel helps show how women can be more than little girls
in the office place, and garner success as a result.
It
is important to note that as much as this is an important book for women who esteem
to be seen as professional should read, men also should read it. Not every man
has reached his potential, and some fall to the same problems, in a masculine
variation, as do some women. Fear, exhibited through the lack of initiative and
an overborne, unnecessary kindness, holds many people back.
Objective,
straightforwardness is much of what Frankel asserts.
Being
professional doesn't mean you need to convert into a stomping intimidator, but
it does mean being firm, not wincing when rejection is forthcoming, and thinking
about more than immediate relationships. It is about getting the job done well,
in concert with others, but never becoming weak while doing it all. You have expertise.
You have training. You have what it takes.
Although
Frankel is a professional coach, her book itself shows a coach is not needed.
You need to be in control of your career, without worrying about the next person.
Retain your ethics, your integrity and your aplomb, but it is your job to lead
the way through your professional life. No parents, no coach, no friends are responsible
for this.
I
fully recommend "Nice Girls Don't Get the Corner Office: 101 Unconscious
Mistakes Women Make That Sabotage Their Careers" by Lois P. Frankel. Follow
it up with the classic Dale Carnegie book, "How To Win Friends And Influence
People," to learn the other side of the professional relationship balance.
Anthony
Trendl