Not a Smooth Road for Women Re-entering Work

UBS and Wharton have designed a program to support women who are planning on re-entering the work force, being held from Mar. 3 to Mar. 5 in Philadelphia this could be your opportunity to learn from the leaders and counselors if you are around the area.
See details here.

According to their studies:
Recent studies seem to suggest that there are a number of obstacles that women face when returning to the workforce, including a diminished network and challenging family policies. They must contend with a changing business environment — including technological advancements, regulatory changes, and the effects of mergers/acquisitions. These challenges, as well as personal and family issues, are hurdles that can be overcome with the right preparation and support.

The challenges and obstacles may be out there but it is possible to navigate through them with the right planning and skills set analysis. Seek advice from professionals and also read the many articles around if you feel stuck in your job search. The 21st century must see a paradigm shift for working mothers towards work-life balance issues. More and more women are demanding it now. You get what you ask for and this is true for anything and everything (exceptions apart), when you know what you want that could make you feel fulfilled in your life and career, you can find your way to it.

But stop and analyze what you do today and what you want in future is / will be making you happy or more flustered with more things on your plate than you can handle?

Knowing your priorities is the key to being satisfied.
Something’s gotta give. Even if you make less money than you did before in a full-time job, weigh out making lesser dough to being able to spend more time with your family and kids, what are your priorities? If less work and more time with kids are a priority right now, then perhaps a part-time job could be ideal for you.
If money is the major concern, then search for an option that lets you lead a balanced life as well, yes it is tough – but not impossible.

Know your priorities, be patient and ready to spend some time looking around and researching for jobs/ careers that best suit you – and you shall find them.

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Mentoring for Women

It’s great to have support from another woman in the industry; a professional friend, a person who guides, listens and supports to enable you to get where you want to be.”

A strong mentor/mentee relationship is the basis for forging tomorrow’s leaders.”
-Jack Welch, Chairman, General Electric(1982-2002)

 

 

 

Why do Women need Mentoring?

An article on MSNBC cites the importance of mentors for women who wish to progress effectively in their careers – Mentors can help women shatter glass ceiling

I can’t stress enough how important mentoring is to achieving success in one’s career,” says Sharon Allen, Chairman of Deloitte & Touche USA LLP. She credits the mentors she’s had in her career with helping her enter the small club of high-ranking women executives.

A key mentor for her was the managing partner in Deloitte’s Boise, Idaho, office where she worked early on in her career. “He would give me a little bit of additional confidence by standing by me and giving me that nudge to assure me I was doing the right thing,” she explains. “As I developed in my career and moved along up the ladder, I established new connections with people I felt were looking out for me.”

The lack of female role models, she adds, continues to hinder advancement for women, so women find themselves “establishing their own way and styles that work for them, and as a result, the additional reinforcement from a mentor is useful.”

One study of more than 500 executives in the health care industry found that mentors can lead to money and power.

“We discovered that women with mentors received more promotions than men,” says Anne M. Walsh, associate professor in the management department at Philadelphia’s La Salle University.

“In our study, the mentors provided access to promotional opportunities, which ultimately affected compensation,” she explains. “Mentors raised the visibility of these women in the organization, and helped them to develop the skills for these promotions. Mentors are also instrumental in providing feedback about job performance (e.g. act as a coach) and help women develop the skills that are required to compete in the job market.”

Mentoring is an effective means that helps women get the much needed promotions and to break through the glass ceiling. Women usually find it hard to compete with men especially when on the higher rungs of the corporate ladder, the upper management in most industries being male dominated at present. Through effective mentoring and support, it is possible to help raise their visibility and also learn from those women leaders who have moved beyond the glass ceiling.

How to Seek Mentoring?

The first step towards seeking mentoring is questioning yourself to your requirements and matching to the best available mentoring resource.

  1. Know what you Seek – Identify your Goals and Expectations
  2. Matching Personality Traits between you and your Mentor
  3. Identify the Mentor’s Experience and Strengths
  4. Learn to be Receptive – to New Ideas, to Criticism, to Feedback, and more

Where to look for Mentors?

Within your Organization

Not only outside of an organization – when looking to start a new career or starting a new business, mentoring must be encouraged within the company. I strongly suggest all companies to formulate internal programs which encourage and allocate mentors to entry level and even mid-level employees. We can learn so much from those who have “already been there”, so why can’t the VPs and CEOs and other managers who have had more global exposure be mentors to those who aspire to be in their position some day? Knowledge always increases when you spread it around – so let there be mentors everywhere, in every field so that we all can learn from their stumbles and struggles which might help us to rise further and then give back to the society by being a mentor ourselves!

A Professional Mentor or Career Coach

Seek professional mentoring through a mentor coach or a career coach. Coaches and mentors help in accelerating your career growth and assist and guide you through the phases of your career development and in helping build leadership skills and in developing more self-confidence.

National Organizations

National organizations such as MentorNet, which offers women an online mentoring network in the science and engineering fields. MENTTIUM Corp. provides mentoring services for companies and individuals.

Some good articles on Mentoring:

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Flexible Work Schedule for Women

When the top 100 list comes out every year for the best companies to work with for women (Refer post: Best Companies for Working Mothers… ), the flexible time offers and the incentives for child-care / daycare features as the top 5 for what a working mother would want the most.

First let’s clarify the definitions for flexible working hours. According to the US Department of Labor :
A flexible work schedule is an alternative to the traditional 9 to 5, 40-hour work week. It allows employees to vary their arrival and/or departure times. Under some policies, employees must work a prescribed number of hours a pay period and be present during a daily “core time.” The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) does not address flexible work schedules. Alternative work arrangements such as flexible work schedules are a matter of agreement between the employer and the employee (or the employee’s representative).

See the website of The Department of Labor for information and statistics on numerous surveys, published articles and reports on the subject.

According to the definition of Handbook on Alternative Work Schedules:
Flexible hours (also referred to as “flexible time bands”) means the times during the workday, workweek, or pay period within the tour of duty during which an employee covered by a flexible work schedule may choose to vary his or her times of arrival to and departure from the work site consistent with the duties and requirements of the position. (See 5 U.S.C. 6122(a)(2).)

Flexible work schedule (FWS) means a work schedule established under 5 U.S.C. 6122, that –

(1) in the case of a full-time employee, has an 80-hour biweekly basic work requirement that allows an employee to determine his or her own schedule within the limits set by the agency; and

(2) in the case of a part-time employee, has a biweekly basic work requirement of less than 80 hours that allows an employee to determine his or her own schedule within the limits set by the agency.

Flexible working hours for women proves as a blessing for most working mothers, but how many of the companies around have written policies on the same?

To help curtail the future labor shortage it would be an attractive proposal to the different IT and other non-IT companies to attract working mothers who would be more productive at work with flexible working hours and maintaining a healthy life-work balance.

Would we see more and more companies in future offering flex-time schedules in their benefit packages? It certainly could be predicted, but large scale implementation of policies and a shift in the future working styles might still face a few hurdles.

I feel it is more for the woman to present herself in a light of an efficient worker when demanding or requesting a flex time schedule at work. Present your case that highlights your ability to work better and more efficiently when working in a balanced environment which provides enrichment and clearly divides your time between family and work.

A survey conducted by the Simmons School of Management (http://www.simmons.edu/som) in collaboration with HP, a lead conference sponsor, to examine what extent women were leaving the work force, why they make their career decisions, and how they manage work/life balance, reports the following:

 

The women reported negotiating flexible work arrangements such as telecommuting, flexible hours, and a limitation on traveling or evening work at various points in their careers, as their primary ways to continue working while managing busy lives outside of work.

And unlike earlier reports that warned that women who ask for flexible work arrangements will experience decreased earning power, the women surveyed who used flexible work arrangements reported financial success: their incomes were no different than those of women who did not employ flexible work arrangements.

Source of the above (italicized) information is from an article in American Digital Networks.

 

 

More and more of the Fortune 100 companies are implementing flexible work schedules in their work culture.
According to a report:
Widespread improvements among FORTUNE’s “100 Best Companies to Work For” include more flexible schedules and telecommuting.
The most dramatic policy changes over the last decade concern improved work-family benefits:
- 72 offer job sharing programs today, compared with only 18 a decade ago.
- 79 now offer compressed work weeks on a year-round, regular basis, compared with 25 companies 10 years ago.
- 82 provide telecommuting opportunities today, compared with only 18 in 1998.

 

A survey by Flexible Resources of more than 500 women seeking flexible work arrangements found that 64 percent of them either quit or were planning to quit because of lack of work hour flexibility. What was alarming was 59 percent of these women never asked their employers to modify their work schedules because they assumed they would be denied or lose stature.

Younger women are more assertive in seeking flexible work arrangements than older women; 72 percent of women between the age of 25 and 35 were willing to request an FWA compared to only 30% of the respondents of women aged 36 to 45.

Among those who requested a flexible work arrangement and were told “no,” reasons for the refusal ran the gamut in the following priority:

  • We can’t give it to you and not the others (52%)
  • You will not be available to others (48%)
  • We have never done it before (24%)
  • You won’t be as productive as when you worked full time (8%)
  • Your job is not conducive to flexible hours (5%)
  • There is too much work to do (5%)
  • It wouldn’t fit into a team atmosphere (5%)

 

Question: What are your priorities as a working woman?
Flexible work hours / Telecommuting / Part-time work / or all of these?

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3 Best Articles on Job Search in 2006

These are what I judge were one of the best that went around last year, note no competition was held and no judges were involved, just the personal preference. I learnt a lot from these here and hope you do as well.

The 7 Bad Habits of Ineffective Job Seekers
What are the bad habits of online job search? With a nod to Dr. Covey, I think there are seven. I call them The 7 Bad Habits of Ineffective Job Seekers. They are:

  • Habit #1: Limiting the time and effort you invest in your job search
  • Habit #2: Limiting the research you do to plan your search campaign
  • Habit #3: Limiting your search to a handful of the same job boards
  • Habit #4: Limiting your application to clicking on the Submit button
  • Habit #5: Limiting your use of the Internet to reading job postings
  • Habit #6: Limiting the care you take with your communications
  • Habit #7: Limiting the preparation you do for employer interactions

Read the complete article @ >Weddles’s Job Seeker’s Newsletter

The Internet and Your Job Search
Using the Internet in your job search is not necessarily easy. It crosses a variety of services and information resources. No single list, network, or resource will contain everything you need for a fully effective online job search.

What Makes Up The Complete Job Search?
Many people believe they are hard at work looking for work when they religiously scan the Sunday Classifieds. Unfortunately, what they are really doing is expending 100% of their effort on only 25% of the possibilities.

A Real Job Search has 4 Main Activities:

  • Reviewing job leads
  • Researching and contacting employers about possible opportunities
  • Networking
  • Having a resume ready to hand out as opportunities present themselves.

Read the complete article @ >The Riley Guide: How to Job Search

And now some facts: the numbers and statistics grab our attention much quicker than words and words of wisdom at times, right?

Weddle’s Research Factoid
We recently asked the visitors to the WEDDLE’s Web-site to tell us how they found their last job. A total of 708 people participated in our survey. Here’s what they told us were the top ten sources of hire:

  • 31.2% Answered an ad on a job board
  • 10.6% Sent their resume to the company
  • 9.3% Answered an ad in the newspaper
  • 8.5% Responded to a tip from a friend
  • 6.8% Were referred by an employee of the company
  • 6.6% Received a call from a headhunter
  • 5.1% Answered an ad posted on the company’s Web-site
  • 4.9% Attended a career fair
  • 4.8% Used networking at a business event
  • 2.7% Received a call from a staffing firm
  • 2.7% Responded to a tip from a family member

In addition just 0.04%—four-tenths of one percent—found a job by using a social networking site.

Read the complete article @ >Weddle’s Research Factoid

Please do forward any links that you found helpful – share and more will come to you. Please add them to the comments below.

Best wishes for a successful New Year and Always

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