Monday, May 18, 2020
How to Shift Your Organizations Culture to Become More #Equal -
How to Shift Your Organizationâs Culture to Become More #Equal - There is more uncertainty for womenâs equality now than ever before. But this doesnât mean we are helpless, it means we urgently need to participate in shaping our own work culture. At the individual level, there is so much we can do to create an equal workplace. While I feel your pain, you are not alone and you are not helpless. Men are receiving maternity leave with increasing demand. Because they are demanding it. What can we learn from this? As a female executive and long-time feminist, and in my work in designing corporate cultures, Iâve spotted a few trends that will help you to create a more gender-equal work culture, by demand. Change your rhetoric and context to change your culture. âWhat is necessary to change a person is to change his awareness of himself.â Abraham Maslow Iâm quite sure that if Maslow had outlived the 1970s he would be a workplace feminist. Instead, heâs stuck with an un-diverse quote on the internet. Donât make the same mistake. Heighten the awareness of your communication, and then strengthen your communication. From an equality stance, I mean. If you are vying for your seat at the power-table, itâs time to speak your power. If you arenât comfortable putting on a manâs suit and becoming a different person tomorrow (like most of us), the sneaky way of changing your language is by increasing your gender neutrality. As yogis say, awareness is the key to solving all human problems. Pay special attention. Donât refer to anything in gender context of âas womenâ. Use words like âsheâ when discussing predominately menâs roles in your casual conversations. Mis-define cultural norms whenever possible. It may not feel like an overt change, yes. Itâs not. Itâs a behavioral trigger to signal a heuristic misnomer, setting your targets cognitive thinking into action. In laymanâs terms: you are planting seeds for change. Reset culturally normative expectations. âGivers need to set limits because takers rarely do.â Rachel Wolchin Yes, women are nurturers. Yes, women are more likely to say yes. But your time management is yours. If men at your organization say no; watch, learn, adapt. You may not have a ton of empirical data on this, but you intuitively know whether your work culture has biased expectations split between the genders. If men are getting faster promotions and expected to work longer hours, itâs time to roll up your sleeves and adapt the same hours. Then speak up when you do. If men hang out at the country club, invite everyone to a less-boring (I mean more gender neutral) activity. No seriously, if you play golf then kudos to you, but we all know the girls tees are positioned differently so we ladies miss out on much of the informal conversations. On the other hand, in many organizations the cultural norms have become harder on women thanks to evolutionary nurturer-by-nature behaviors. A key to short-circuit this with language is to begin saying no more when your boundaries are questioned, and counter it with questioning the boundaries of a male cohort. Hereâs sample language if you need extra help: âIâve worked the past three weekends and it would be great to have one to myself. Iâm sure that ____ will fill in the time as heâs had plenty of weekends.â Passive aggressive? Maybe. Effective? Definitely. But this is where equal begins. With the mindset and the language that acknowledges both men and women are responsible for ourselves, our time and our reality. Learn to keep your head up (higher!). âUntil the lion learns how to write, every story will glorify the hunter.â African Proverb Donât get noticed, donât get fired. Donât ruffle feathers. This will also lead you down the path of: donât get promoted, and donât get thanked. Sounds like itâs time to get recognized. Now a word of precaution before you head downâ this approach. If it feels uncomfortable for you, attend an improv class, a toastmasters, or other training to practice and craft your approach. However, if you were specifically instructed to keep your head down and ride out your career until you receive your gold watch for service, the contextual environment may just not be one for you to thrive regardless of what you do. Three years ago, Peter Diamandis predicted that all of our top companies of today will be out of business in the next 10 years. Since culture is the key tool to competitive success in the near and long term, I predict that there will be a strong correlation between those companies who donât innovate, and the companies who donât embrace inclusiveness. Itâs all about a fear to change; a death sentence. If you find yourself on a sinking ship, build yourself a raft. For example, Microsoft trains every employee in inclusiveness. A culture like this wonât just give you a better work life balance; youâll have more meaning and purpose in your life. This guest post was authored by Jessica Higgins Jessica Higgins is a marketing and culture expert whose research and publications help leaders and everyday people understand emerging trends. She was named a Breakthrough Female Founder in 2017 by Huffington Post and her work has been published in Entrepreneur, Thrive Global, Huffington Post, Forbes, CBS, Newsweek, and thousands of other publications, on behalf of herself and the clients she markets under her agency, Digital Unicorns. Prior to creating her marketing agency, she designed the first end-to-end culture design firm, utilizing her marketing and management science experience to develop a new approach to organizational design that includes behavior change. She is a Black Belt in the field of Lean Six Sigma with specialty in systems design (DMADV), a certification in Behavior Design, a Juris Doctor of law, a Masters of Business Management, and Bachelors Degrees in Behavioral Psychology and Political Science.
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