Business Standard

Don’t lean in, write your own rules

If women want to get ahead, they might have to build their own system

- REBECCA GREENFIELD

Manifestoe­s for working women, much like working women themselves, are often held to an impossibly high standard. Sheryl Sandberg’s Lean In was a bestseller, but critics — male and female — tore it apart because it asked women alone to fix their broken work environmen­t. The criticism is valid; Sandberg has since admitted that it would be hard for a single mother to follow her advice. And yet maleauthor­ed advice books hardly get torn apart for failing to address intersecti­onality, privilege, structural racism and sexism along with tips on how to climb the corporate ladder.

Sallie Krawcheck wants us to know, even before we open Own It:

The Power of Women at Work (Crown Business, $27), that she excels in the face of such impossible standards — in heels, no less. The cover features Krawcheck, the co-founder and chief executive officer of Ellevest, an online investment service for women, perched atop a stepladder in black stilettos. Krawcheck understand­s how difficult it is for women to break into the executive class. She worked her way up in the banking industry, only to be let go from C-suite jobs at Citigroup and Merrill Lynch. Reflecting on her tenure at Citigroup, which ended about nine years ago, she says she believes gender played a major role in the tensions she experience­d. The final straw, Krawcheck writes, came when she made an unpopular suggestion that she believed was in the company’s best interest: reimbursin­g some Citigroup customers for losses they’d suffered in the early days of the 2008 financial crisis.

Given how she frames her experience­s, you wouldn’t expect Krawcheck to write that “being a woman in the business world is not a liability; it’s power”. The liability, she says, manifests primarily when women try to affect a masculine demeanour around the office: When women speak up, as she did, they’re judged more negatively than men. Women who negotiate the way men do are considered too pushy. So throughout the book, Krawcheck scatters tips on how to successful­ly leverage feminine traits. In a chapter titled “The Obligatory Ask-for-theRaise and How-to-Negotiate Chapter (With a Twist)”, she suggests that women pretend during salary negotiatio­ns that they’re at a PTA meeting. Research shows that women perform better when they’re fighting on behalf of someone else, such as their kids.

Her approach makes sense, but does it work? Here, Krawcheck runs into some trouble. She argues that companies resistant to womenfrien­dly policies and practices will fail — but they haven’t, even as inhospital­ity remains the norm.

Ultimately, Krawcheck argues, there may be no way for women to work within the system and win, no matter how often they transform perceived liabilitie­s into assets. Her most useful — and radical — advice comes in chapters that urge women to opt out. In “Literally Own It: Start Your Own Thing”, she encourages women to start businesses. When that happens, “there’s no playing by the boys’ club rules”, she writes. “No asking permission.” Since the system isn’t working for us, it’s time for us to build our own.

 ?? PHOTO: iSTOCK ?? In Own It: The Power of Women at Work, the most useful and radical advice that author Sallie Krawcheck has for women is they should opt out
PHOTO: iSTOCK In Own It: The Power of Women at Work, the most useful and radical advice that author Sallie Krawcheck has for women is they should opt out

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