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  • Leadership, going forward, is only going to be great

  • if women are at 50%.

  • Hi, I'm Sally Helgeson.

  • I'm an author, speaker

  • and leadership development consultant

  • and I work all over the world.

  • Here I'm going to talk about five of those behaviours

  • that most commonly get in women's ways.

  • The first behaviour is a reluctance to claim your achievements.

  • Expecting others to spontaneously notice

  • and reward your contributions and your hard work.

  • When I do workshops now I often ask,

  • "How good are you at bringing attention to your work?"

  • And what I often hear is, "I'm not good at that at all."

  • And when I ask them, "Why aren't you good?"

  • I hear one of two responses.

  • The first is, "I would think that if I do good work

  • people should notice."

  • They probably should but I don't think it's gonna happen

  • in today's workplace.

  • The other thing I hear is,

  • "If I have to act like that obnoxious jerk down the hall to get noticed,

  • I'd rather not get noticed."

  • And that's problematic because it behaves an either/or way of thinking

  • that is going to get in your way.

  • If you set yourself up either you're obnoxious

  • and constantly talking about yourself,

  • or you just hang back and hope others notice.

  • You've got a kind of no win place to be.

  • For example, you might identify,

  • "You know, I think that my boss doesn't really understand

  • how well connected I am in this organisation.

  • So I think what I'm going to do

  • is once a week I'm going to shoot him a quick email

  • that just summarises

  • the main people that I've managed to talk to that week."

  • I have seen this be remarkably successful for women.

  • The second behaviour is the disease to please.

  • That is hoping and wanting everyone to think

  • you are a wonderful and always nice person.

  • Now this is a typical behaviour

  • that can be very helpful early in your career

  • but can really get in your way as you seek to rise.

  • Why is that true?

  • First of all, if you're always seeking to please

  • you're going to have a hard time holding other people accountable

  • for showing up for what they've promised

  • because you're going to be afraid that maybe they won't like you.

  • You're going to have a hard time saying no to things

  • and end up saying yes too often

  • and you're going to let people who will take advantage,

  • violate your own boundaries and waste a lot of time.

  • I'm not saying here that you don't want to be a wonderful person

  • but being invested in everyone thinking you're wonderful and nice

  • is, if you seek to rise, going to get in your way.

  • If you can start small

  • again by asserting boundaries in one way

  • say to yourself, "Right now I'm over committed

  • so that in the next month

  • when people ask me to join a new taskforce or something else

  • I'm going to think about it very deliberately before I say yes.

  • And I'm not only going to think about how would it please them,

  • but I'm going to think about, "How might it serve me?

  • Is this really in my best interests?"

  • A third behaviour that often gets in women's way is perfectionism.

  • Trying to put so much energy into doing everything right

  • that you can't see the forest for the trees

  • and you waste a lot of time trying to make improvements at the margins

  • that aren't going to necessarily position you to move higher.

  • One big problem with being a perfectionist

  • is that you'll have trouble delegating work to other people

  • because you're so invested in it being perfect

  • you're going to be afraid that they'll make mistakes.

  • So you'll end up doing, often,

  • a lot of work of other people's, yourself.

  • And I often hear perfectionists say

  • "Oh it's just easier to do everything myself."

  • Now again, you want to start small here.

  • You might just want to identify one person

  • who you're going to decide to delegate to,

  • give them an opportunity, offer them feedback

  • but don't stay on top of it and take that risk.

  • One of the things that's really interesting

  • is that studies show that

  • women in organisations tend to be more rewarded

  • for being precise and correct,

  • whereas men in organisations tend to be rewarded

  • more for risk-taking and boldness.

  • So as you seek to rise

  • you want to learn to take risks

  • and move away from being overly precise and perfectionistic.

  • The fourth behaviour is ruminating over the mistakes you've made.

  • This can really keep you stuck,

  • and it's much more common in women than men.

  • Research has shown that rumination

  • is much more likely to be a behavioural impediment for women.

  • It's a form of beating yourself up.

  • Rather than letting mistakes go and figuring you're a human being

  • and you will make mistakes like everyone else.

  • Finally, minimising.

  • Either in terms of speech or minimising in terms of

  • how you hold your physical self in the world.

  • Women can be reluctant to hold their space.

  • That is, shrinking their body at times or not really standing up

  • with authority as if they belong where they are

  • especially when they're at higher echelons

  • or trying to position themselves as a leader.

  • Women often will also use minimising phrases

  • in their speech - "Oh, do you just have one minute?"

  • "Can I only make one point?"

  • And of course, our old favourite,

  • apologising is a form of minimising yourself.

  • So what you want to do

  • if you're trying to position yourself as a leader

  • is to hold your space

  • and show up as if you know that you are worthy, whole and complete.

  • But I want to point out

  • that I've been doing a lot of interviews and a lot of events

  • and I can't tell you how many times people have said

  • - men have said to me -

  • "I really identify with some of these behaviours."

  • And that speaks to, I think, a greater commonality

  • between women and men that is one of the real forces

  • that is driving and changing the workplace.

  • Thanks for watching. Don't forget to subscribe! :)

Leadership, going forward, is only going to be great

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