Women Can Have It All: My take on Slaughter’s Piece

Anne Marie Slaughter’s piece has reached over 200,000 recommendations on Facebook and an absurd amount of reactions on blogs everywhere. It is the most well read piece in The Atlantic history.

Beyond my leadership consulting and coaching work, I’m a Harvard researcher on the work-life aspirations of Gen Y women and men. I didn’t think Ms. Slaughter was saying anything we haven’t heard before, but her piece rippled and shocked millions of people, largely due to the absurdity of the title.

I believe that women can have it all…over the course of their life. Work-life balance is a unfair term in today’s age—it’s never a weighing scale between the two, it’s an ongoing process.

For those of you who skimmed or half read the piece (you know who you are), here’s a quick summary: Slaughter argues that maybe there are constraints that make women lean back (as opposed to Sandberg’s popular ‘women need to lean in’ argument). She further says that its society that needs to change, not marriage. Here’s a reader’s digest version if you need one.

Most of the critics of the piece had two main arguments.  First, women does not mean mother. Many women felt a broader set of issues could have been explored. Second, the phrase ‘having it all’ is a 1980s term. It was used back then as a perspective of what women wanted to be doing, but the negative framing has driven people crazy. It has positioned the issue as an HR work-life problem rather than a conversation on leadership.

The real challenge in my eyes is that this piece was setup as a woman’s problem, not a man’s problem. It sets up men as the norm instead of parents as the norm. Working women are not a special case—working parents are.

And most importantly, what I care about most is how this piece affects Gen Y women and men. The response I heard from some Gen Y women was one of dismay and despair, which upset me. The language and the way we frame this issue can make young women lower their aspirations, feeling like they will inevitably have to sacrifice.  I deeply hope that this piece does not become a reason for women to say ‘it’s not worth it’ or ‘I am not going invest in my career because it will ultimately come at too great of a cost to my family life.’

As 20 somethings, we are still trying it figure it all out, so we should see this piece as a guiding light, not a call for help.  At the end of the day, everyone has to define what it means for them to ‘have it all’. Having it all, for me, is to have what I want. And I believe I can have it all because I have what I want.

So ladies and gentlemen, let’s not make this piece an excuse to not continue to focus on the real barriers and hurdles that still very much exist in the workplace that prevent women from moving up the corporate and political ladder. Let’s stop being so hard on professional women and support them like we support men in our culture. I believe we can create collective change for the better in business and politics, but first we need to reframe this dominant narrative to a conversation on what women’s leadership might mean for our world.

 

Wanna go from irregular blogger to tribe leader? 10 Easy Ways to Make it Happen

In my last two posts, I've talked about how to become a writing genius and how to get organized about your writing. Yet we all know writing is only as important as its contribution to others. How can your writing have positive impact on others? How do you convert your writing into a faithful following– and build a movement around what you want to share or teach?

As a writer myself, I believe that Facebook “Likes” and Twitter retweets don’t do much for the people I am most passionate about reaching. Digital natives who understand social media know that there are much more complex and diverse strategies out there that can help any writer convert their writing into their tribe.

Here are my 10 tips to convert your writing into your tribe.

1) Answer these questions for yourself:

  • What is your brand?
  • What are your messages?
  • What do you believe in?
  • Who is your audience and what do you stand for?

These answers are the backbone of your writing strategy. They shape who you spend time writing for, the topics you share, and where you share your writing.

2) Once you decided on your brand,

start a website.

Your website houses your content. It should answer the questions:

  • Who am I?
  • How you can join me?
  • What am I doing?
  • Why am I so important?

3) Use your channels to increase the

presence of your work.

Use search engine visibility and your presence on major platforms and networks (Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, etc) to share your work.

4) Use Twitter to connect with

like-minded individuals.

Follow the content of leaders who you align with. Make twitter lists of people whose writing you like and share their work. Retweet and share your writing with those you admire.

5) Make sure to use Google Analytics!

Keep track of what people are sharing and engaging with. Sometimes a hot headline can make a big difference.

6) Use video.

Hands down? Visual communication is golden—it’s a great way for people to understand who you really are and what you’re all about. Share a video on your website about who you are and what you’re writing about. Don't worry–I'm launching some Bollywood videos soon 🙂 

7) Create an email marketing

list.

Collect email addresses at every chance you get. Use sites like StreamSend, MyEmma, Mailchimp, or Constant Contact. My fav? Mailchimp! You'll find more about its wonders by signing up to my Generational Alchemy Library on the right hand side here. 

9) Add Google Alerts

Set up a Google Alert for hot topics you want to follow. And google alert your name! You’ll never know otherwise where it might show up.

10) Set up your own office hours

Office hours are a great way to set aside dedicated time to connect with others professionally.  Make intentional dates for on conversations with people about your writing and try ohours.com

A version of this post first appeared at Levo League.

Organize your writing like a genius

In my last piece, I wrote about the nine ways to become a writing genius. The truth is that we would all love to write more, but sometimes we just get stuck. We don’t know how to be disciplined about our writing, get to the finish line, and and it keeps us from doing our best work. Most importantly, beyond just writing, we need time to THINK about our writing and revise our writing. This isn’t about having more work, it's about being more organized around work.

Here are the top 6 tips to turn your writing into a daily practice:

1) Separate time to brainstorm. Sleep on ideas, write them down, read related material and read unrelated articles to your writing. Then go back to them when you’ve had some time to think about them.

2) Have a conversation with someone else about your idea. Exploring ideas with others can make a huge difference. If you can’t meet or talk to someone, write an email to yourself and read it in 2 days. You’ll definitely have evolved thinking within 48 hours.

3) Get ideas into a external form. Even if you don’t know what your writing yet, get it on paper. Sometimes the best ideas come out of a journaling, free flow exercise.

4) Make a writing calendar. Set up intentional time to start thinking about your assignment. Take creative projects and turn them into scheduled appointments. Don’t let them get missed!

5) Make writing social. Form a buddy group and make dates with others to share 1500 words with each other in a writing meeting. Or form a googlegroup and make your own online writing team.

6) Externalize your writing. Have a workspace devoted to writing projects where you can store notes on each projects. I have a physical inbox of index cards of my ideas and my writing. I separate the writing workflow for each piece based on the date its due, the date my draft is due, and the date I will start thinking about the piece.

In my next piece, I’ll discuss how to convert your writing into a following—the essential next step. Stay tuned.

Want more free tools on writing, leadership, and career? Hop over to my FREE Tools and Dance Moves page!

Fall Off Your Bike

I didn’t learn to ride a bike through bicyclology, I learned by failing and trying again.

Falling off a bike hurts. Falling is painful. Much like I did not learn how to ride a bike without falling, I did not learn how to lead without failing. Little did I know coming into the last few years as an entrepreneur that failing was okay, and something that would help me grow as a leader. At first, my experience as an entrepreneur on a social enterprise in India back in 2008 was like being lost in the dark abyss of a cave: I felt alone, stuck, and like a complete failure. I was exhausted and frustrated with my failed attempts.

Then I realized that it was just a process like learning to ride a bike. You can learn to ride a bike by watching youtube video instructions or you can learn to ride a bike by surrounding yourself with others who are riding theirs and practicing it with them. When my mindset shifted, I became ambitious, risk-seeking, and much more successful in my startup by learning through my failures.

Each of us have the desire to find the ‘bicyclology” of career and life development. We want a set of memorization techniques and bullet pointed lists to get started. Yet the truth is we have to re-orient our practice of learning from ‘technical’ fixes to more adaptive responses. These adaptive responses require the toleration for ambiguity, the allowance of failure, and the ability to say ‘I don’t know it all.’ From there, we start moving on our new bikes, the brakes may be slow, we may fall sometimes, yet we truly embark on a path we crave with real energy and passion.

When was the last time you fell off your bike in a way that set you on a new road to adventure?

If you want more bike riding, check out my FREE Generational Alchemy Library here for tools and scripts on writing, leadership, and careers. My goal is to give you the best toolbox to tap into your creativity and transform your life, organization, and world. 

And if you are a woman entrepreneur, check out the free Find Your True Self quest at TheGalahads.com to discover your own bike riding adventure waiting to happen. More details on The Galahads coming soon!

Five Greatest Lessons from my Harvard education

This piece first appeared at Levo League and Huffington Post.

It’s graduation season, which year after year is filled with beauty and rituals and rites of passage.

I myself am a new graduate—I’m now the proud owner of an MPA from HKS (in other words, I’m following a service-driven kind of path—I’m dedicating my life to supporting, teaching, and encouraging young leaders to meet and exceed their potentials). For me, it’s the perfect time to take a step back, orient myself, and reflect upon what I’ve learned during the process of attaining my Master’s degree.

The main reason I decided to attend graduate school was to connect with like-minded individuals and “find my next career.” What I didn’t expect to learn, though, was this:

Going to Harvard doesn’t solve your career challenges.

In fact, it can multiply them; a major multiplier of considerations being

the inevitable epiphany of how much you just don’t know.

In this day and age, professional degrees aren’t a cure-all for your career. Non-technical (and non-lawyer or doctor) degrees carry both less weight and more flexibility as to what your next step may be.

Sheryl Sandberg spoke at a recent Harvard Business School graduation, and among other topics, brought up the issues that go along with choosing a career after graduation. “As you lead in this new world, you will not be able to rely on who you are or the degree you hold, you need to rely on what you know,” she said. I believe Ms. Sandberg is right on the money; that it’s when we do things in the world that we learn and build upon what we knowSo, without further ado,

The Five Greatest Lessons I Learned at Harvard:

1)   On Leadership: If you’re choosing between curiosity and

confidence, choose curiosity.

This lesson came my way from Professor Ron Heifetz this past January. Leadership is about living with a questioning mind, not having the confidence to have all the answers. The gift that great leaders, doers, and thinkers possess is how to harness curiosity and turn it into something worth being confident about.

2)   On Objectivity: In science, the goal is to withdraw from

emotions, but those are inextricably linked. Scientific pursuits do not exist in a vacumm. Emotions often drive the scientific engine.

This lesson came to me after a talk with professional dancer/choreographer Liz Lerman in her course “Dance Collaboration.” What we feel, hear, experience, taste personally is what greatly impacts us professionally—not just in the scientific realm, but in any profession we might choose. We can’t ignore the personal– it’s our engine.

3)   On Timing: If not now, when?

This snippet comes from Rabbi Hilllel (though it’s ringing in my ears from my HKS lecturer, Professor Marshall Ganz). It can feel like a difficult truth is that we only have one shot here in life—not to mention that who we are is determined by what we choose to do with our lives. A key takeaway for me was not to wait to be finished with school to do something in the world, to test out ventures, try new opportunities, and to put myself outside of my comfort zone.

4)  On Being Your Own Superhero:  There is something out there

that you are better at than anyone else in the world.

This came from an entrepreneurship forum I attended led by Michael Strong. It mirrors the “Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”

The idea is simple: we all have some type of creative genius. Elizabeth Gilbert phrases it well in her TED talk on genius: that instead of the rare oddball being a genius, every single person alive has a genius. A lot of this just has to do with striking a balance between confidence and curiosity (see No. 1 for more).This is something to remind every graduate out there—go find YOUR genius!

5) If you want to get anything done with a tightly organized group, then what you need is a cult.

We live in a supersocial society. Building a valuable network can make or break your career. And building social capital is about building transitive trust.

This came from a class I took with Clay Shirky. In it, we studied websites like Ushahidi, Meetup, VoteAgain2010, and Twitter—more specifically, we studied how the changing nature of new media influences public action. According to our examination, the best bets for companies today don’t come in the form of throwing endless money at an advertising campaign. The highest returns go to companies that can prove they care about their customers more than anyone else. So go ahead. Build your tribe.

For more life lessons, explore my private collection of leadership & career tools, tipsheets & scripts . . .  plus a few hot Bollywood dance moves? For free. Access to The Generational Alchemy LIBRARY is yours, when you jump on my mailing list.

 

Business Schools Need to Focus on Unlearning

Image courtesy of  iosphere / FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Image courtesy of iosphere / FreeDigitalPhotos.net

This post first appeared at Forbes.com

After consuming $200,000 worth of business education in Wharton’s undergraduate program and MIT Sloan’s MBA program, I found a new mantra: Unlearn it all.   Each year, thousands of MBAs funnel through institutes like Wharton, MIT Sloan, and Harvard Business School ready to storm the corporate boardrooms .…. Yet, these MBAs are trained to focus on what they learn rather than how or why they learn. I believe the most important thing business leaders can do is reflect on their learning processes to unlearn the old patterns that stand in the way of authentic leadership.  

I research and consult on generational gaps in today’s companies and I believe this gap also exists in business schools. MBAs are being taught by adults who have lived in a different era of business. Some of these adults are now at the cutting edge of the future such as in places like Stanford’s Design School or the MIT Media Lab, while others are leaving students with memorization techniques. Most of the time: there is not a real dialogue across generations. It’s a transfer of “old” data, that doesn’t relate or apply in the same way to today’s future.

This is because business schools often stick with a more familiar terrain. In order to meet the new conversation about leadership, business schools must view the classroom as not the place where content is delivered, but rather as the place where the content is analyzed and discussed.  Business schools must learn to value process over programs, questions over answers, and influence over control.

There are obviously some business basics to be delivered in business school. Yet, as I watch more and more of my colleagues from MIT Sloan and Wharton, the most successful have bucked the norm of traditional business. They are joining new small organizations or building their own. So let’s teach the basics in business school, and then lets teach how to unlearn when we need to.

What does it mean to unlearn?  Unlearning is not exactly letting go of our knowledge or perceptions, but rather stepping outside our perceptions to stand apart from our world views and open up new lenses to interpret and learn about the world.

For example, a challenge in business school environments is that the same standardized core curriculum is prescribed for every student. These curricula—packed with classes like operations, accounting, statistics, and management– fail to account for students’ individual needs. While we need to have learning of business education before we have unlearning, we must understand the underlying theories we make about finance and economics in these courses to see what applies today. Unlearning occurs when we shift our understanding of the assumptions we use when learning theories in business schools. We must continue to adapt our own theories about how to operate and work together rather than hold defined truths in the workplace that may no longer apply.

This was particularly true for me entering the world of entrepreneurship when I worked on an agricultural business venture targeted to India during my first year at MIT Sloan back in 2009. My business education training made me risk-averse and structure-obsessed — both of which were assets in my prior banking career, but detriments in my startup business in the agriculture space that demanded quick decisions and high productivity.

For example, one of my first entrepreneurial tasks while at MIT Sloan was to build a business plan to raise funding. Our team spent literally days on grant proposals and the fundraising plan outlining the market opportunity, making it to the MIT 100K competition. We should have been focused on prototyping the concept, but instead kept focusing on correcting typos and inserting new paragraphs in our proposal. While the business plan seemed perfect to me, it was all for show and later that month I realized we had wasted time that we could have spent prototyping the product rather than writing a fancy plan. If I had unlearned my habits of perfection, I may have been able to drive greater success in this endeavor.

Luckily there is some support for unlearning in business school settings, but it is still the exception rather than the norm.  “When we unlearn, we generate anew rather than reformulate the same old stuff,” writes Indian School of Business Professor Prasad Kaipa on his blog. “Creativity and innovation bubble up during the process of unlearning.” Professor Kaipa emphasizes that creativity is facilitated when we suspend judgment from our past ways of working.

We need to embrace ambiguity and uncertainty more in business school. So I’m calling on business school deans, faculty, administration, and students to start the process of unlearning. In order to prepare the next generation of leaders, how about we design courses on new age communities? How do we build content (like The Huffington Post) converse (like Facebook) and curate in business (like Pinterest)? How about we understand culture and co-create (like Thread less) compete ( like Zynga) and buy (like Groupon)? How about we focus on who is my constituency rather than customer since we know that the best businesses build like movements now?

So, how can MBAs unlearn?  Unlearning takes a fundamentally different kind of awareness and attention than a statistics exam. We need to begin to map time and spaces for students to explore our narratives, histories, failures and successes. Perhaps the business school of the future isn’t so much about technical knowledge but rather about educating ourselves on the process of learning. To build a new generation of innovative business leaders, unlearning curriculum is a business imperative.

Welcome to the 21st century

‘Nuff said.

Stop Comparing

It’s not worth your time. Yes, you know what I mean. Ever sit and feel like you are not as good as [fill in the blank]? Ever feel like you ‘should’ do more? Here’s some news: We live in a world of leaders, stop comparing yourself.

Each person has their gifts, and their gifts shine in different ways and at different times.  When you compare yourself to others, you don’t win, you hurt your own brightness and stop focusing on developing your strengths.

This rings especially true in today’s world of experts and entrepreneurs. “The truth is that we don’t help each other and move our industry forward,” says Brendon Burchard in The Millionaire Messenger. If you are an expert, well, can others be experts as well? And how do you compare yourselves to them? Our system isn’t set up to help people share their own voices, rather it is set up to fear one another and hold our information so close because it could be ‘copied.’

There is room for everyone and comparison just drains our creative potential. We should not worry because as long as our focus remains on our talents, we will be able to successfully make them our own.  While life may seem like a treadmill where we always want more, just relax and own yourself, and I promise you’ll be a happier and satisfied leader.

So instead of comparing, give. Give to the world in new ways. Give more help to a friend. Give to a social cause or your business. Give lots more to the world and you’ll SHINE. Because that’s what we really need AND it will end up serving you.

Who is going to play your music if you don’t play yourself?

I recently met Michael Jones, a famous pianist and leadership educator who has spent a lifetime at the intersection of music and leadership. He told a story from years ago of a stranger who came up to him and said: who is going to play your music if you don’t play yourself? It was at a time when he was planning a more traditional life as an organizational consultant. This single question re-directed his lifetime career as a pianist.

Whether we are social activists, business leaders, writers, entrepreneurs, consultants, each of us has our own music. The challenge is society gives us immediate rewards to tell someone else’s story, not our own.

I recently was honored to be interviewed by No Country for Young Women  on my work in next generation leadership for companies and individuals. What resonated with readers most was my sense that young leaders need to stop idolizing certain power players like Sheryl Sandberg or Oprah and putting them on a pedestal. Rather we need to do our OWN unique work in the world. As Nilofer Merchant said to me, “Until we own our onlyness, we can never own the agency to create change / innovate.”

For each of us, we were put in this world to do our own work. The beauty is that sometimes unexpected life experiences, such as a question from a stranger, leave us with the real question. The key to showing our gifts is our own aliveness, to feel most engaged into what we are doing. It’s when we feel, this is who I am, this is why I am here. Living life is about the sense of aliveness. When we are most alive, we are most in our gift. The analytical world promotes how we do it, and what we choose to do needs to come from a deeper intuition. When we are following our own aliveness, what guides us is a thread more than a plan.

So, who is going to play your music if you don’t play it yourself?

To start playing, here’s an exercise for you from the Domino Project: When did you feel most alive recently? Where were you? What did you smell? What sights and sounds did you experience? Capture that moment on paper and recall that feeling. Then, when it’s time to create something, read your own words to reclaim a sense of being to motivate you to complete a task at hand.

Stop networking and build real relationships

When we network with individuals to get a new job or business deal, we often ask: what sector have you worked in? What was your rank / title? What skills to do you have to offer based on your prior experience? All of this thinking is based on past patterns, and influenced by systems that encourage each of us to take a certain type of “role”. Getting a business card or becoming a Linkedin contact does not build trust or a real relationship.

Its all simply because we often do not ask the right questions when we network. We don’t tap into what the other person really wants to do, when you let go of and fade out the way our system encourages us to network for Facebook friends and business cards rather than to build trust. What about asking: When have you had your greatest accomplishments and why? What does success look like for you? What work environments do you thrive in? What type of people do you want to be around? Why did you choose certain roles? What challenges did you face? What do your challenges call you to do now?

There is a complete shift in thinking when we ask different questions. Many MBA students talk to me about how networking provides the ground to meet a lot of people, yet networking does not delve to the core with someone else, nor does it inspire. It may be conducive to getting a referral and it will rarely get you a commitment. In order to build relationships, we need ask difficult questions, and be willing to truly listen.

So the next time you are networking, while you may have a specific goal in mind let the relationship drive what the partnership might stand for. Explore one another’s interests first, instead of telling someone what you want and letting them decide if they want to join up.