Friday, August 30, 2019
Women Are Better Manger
Women are Better Managers? Yes The New York Times set off a minor tempest in the blogosphere with an interview a week ago with Carol Smith, senior vice president and chief brand officer for the Elle Group, publisher of the fashion magazine Elle. The headline: No Doubts: Women Are Better Managers. You can imagine the reaction. The article was part of a regular Sunday feature, The Corner Office, in which some exec spills the secrets to their success in a question and answer format. Author Adam Bryant at one point asks Smith to share her observations on men vs women as managers. Her response:In my experience, female bosses tend to be better managers, better advisers, mentors, rational thinkers. Men love to hear themselves talk. Iââ¬â¢m so generalizing. I know I am. But in a couple of places Iââ¬â¢ve worked, I would often say, ââ¬Å"Call me 15 minutes after the meeting starts and then Iââ¬â¢ll come,â⬠because I will have missed all the football. I will have missed all the ââ¬Å"what I did on the golf course. â⬠I will miss the four jokes, and I can get into the meeting when itââ¬â¢s starting. Have to admit, loved the part about coming into the meeting 15 minutes late so she can miss the sports talk and the four jokes.The interview was on the Times web siteââ¬â¢s most-read list for over a week, and garnered more than 300 comments. The paper revisited the issue this past Sunday in its Room For Debate blog, asking several experts about the differences between men and women as managers. Alice Eagly, chairman of the department of social psychology at Northwestern University, warned about overgeneralizing based on gender, but then made this observation: Women are less ââ¬Å"bossy,â⬠probably because people dislike bossy women even more than bossy men. As a result, female managers are more collaborative and democratic than male managers.Second, compared with men, women use a more positive approach by encouraging and urging others rather th an a negative approach of scolding and reprimanding them. Third, women attend more to the individuals they work with, by mentoring them and taking their particular situations into account. Finally, there is the matter of getting the job done efficiently. Most managers, male and female, get their work done in a timely way, but some do not. When you find one of those barely functioning managers ââ¬â that is, someone who avoids solving problems and just doesnââ¬â¢t get the job done, that person is more likely to be a man than a woman.Why? Perhaps because a woman would be fired or demoted more quickly for poor managing. Over at the web site for Workforce Management, editor John Hollon laments the whole subject, saying In my long career, Iââ¬â¢ve discovered only one clear truth about men and women as managers. Itââ¬â¢s this: You simply canââ¬â¢t make a blanket judgment about the quality of managers by their gender. Anyone who tries to do so is foolish and shortsighted, an d perhaps hasnââ¬â¢t worked for enough different kinds of managersââ¬âmale or femaleââ¬âto figure that out. So what do you think? Do women make better managers? Or are some of them just too outspoken?
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