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Do Quotas Work on Corporate Boards?

Into the debate about women on corporate boards  Boris Groysberg has introduced a new dimension. He has found wide differences in opinion about  quotas for women on corporate boards of directors. Read the rest of this entry »


The Status of Women at the Top (of Fortune 500 Companies)

December 12th, 2012 by admin in Careers, corporate culture, management, women

Despite high-profile news about pay parity, education for women and an increasingly higher profile for some female executives, for the vast majority of women aspiring to top leadership positions in corporate America the outlook is less rosy  according to the 2012 Catalyst Census: Fortune 500 Women Board Directors and 2012 Catalyst Census: Fortune 500 Executive Officers and Top Earners. Read the rest of this entry »


An Office with No Boss

August 1st, 2012 by admin in colleagues, corporate culture, management, Uncategorized, women

For anyone who has every considered the possiblity of a boss less office, there is an interesting explanation this week from Knowledge at Wharton. Knowledge at Wharton. Read the rest of this entry »


Having It All–A Generational Saga

July 18th, 2012 by admin in Careers, employment, Uncategorized, women

With the death of screenwriter Nora Ephron  at 71 and the appointment of Marissa Mayer  the CEO of Yahoo at 37  the conversation about Having It All by Anne-Marie Slaughter, a 53 year old Princeton University professor and former State Department official took an interesting twist.

Eighteen years separated Ephron’s graduation from Wellesley College in 1962 from Slaughter’s graduation from Princeton University in 1980. Ephron headed first to the Kennedy White House and then to New York City to the Newsweek mailroom. (Newsweek didn’t hire women writers then. The Ivy League didn’t accept female student either.) While Slaughter headed to Oxford University after graduation for further study and then a degree at Harvard Law School, Mayer graduated with honors from Stanford University and then took an M.S. in Computer Science. She became the 20th employee at Google.

To what extent is each woman a product of her times? And is it possible the question of having “Having It All” is defined and interpreted anew each generation?


Women in Leadership? Maybe Next Year

The news from Catalyst a New York based non-profit that focuses on women in management, delivered gloomy news today. There is still little room for women at the top. There were no significant gains made over the last year. Read the rest of this entry »


Gender and Corporate Responsiblity

November 16th, 2011 by admin in corporate culture, ethics, management, Uncategorized

In a new study, Gender and Corporate Responsibility: It’s a Matter of Sustainability,  conducted by researchers at Catalyst, a non-profit that focuses on the achievement of women and business and the Harvard Business School  there is evidence that companies with more women in senior management positions may be better practitioners of corporate social responsibility. Previous research showed these companies, on average, financially outperform, those with fewer women in upper management. Read the rest of this entry »


Celebrity Boards, Super Star CEO’s

The New York Times Dealbook today had a story entitled Handicapping the Investment of IAC in Chelsea Clinton  by Steven M. Davidoff, former corporate lawyer who is a professor at Ohio State University. Read the rest of this entry »


Is the Job Interview Overrated?

September 22nd, 2011 by admin in employment, management, Uncategorized, women

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What kind of week is it for Women Executives?

September 7th, 2011 by admin in compensation, employment, management

What kind of week has it been so far for women executives?  It has been decidedly mixed. Read the rest of this entry »


Equal Pay

April 13th, 2011 by admin in compensation, employment, Uncategorized, women

Yesterday was Equal Pay Day which comes from the amount of time women need to work into the following year to make the equivalent men made the year before. Read the rest of this entry »


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