by Dot Callihan | Jul 26, 2018 | Acting As Empowered Women, Thinking Like Empowered Women
Today we frequently hear, “Words matter.” It is typically followed by the response “Action speaks louder than words.” This debate leaves us confused. Which is it? And why does it matter to women? Initially women we may be drawn to the side of the debate that says...
by Dot Callihan | Jul 10, 2018 | Acting As Empowered Women
All of our workplaces have goals and objectives they want to achieve. The standard approach is to ask the best and brightest employees to generate ideas, work through the planning process and develop a plan to achieve the objective. But, no matter how “well-planned,” our workplaces still experience problems achieving the objective.
Why is that?
by Dot Callihan | Jul 2, 2018 | Acting As Empowered Women
We like to think of negotiating as two sides coming together, sharing ideas and compromising on their interests in order to achieve a larger common objective. That is how negotiations work in an ideal world. All too often we wind up in negotiations where one or both...
by Dot Callihan | Jun 25, 2018 | Acting As Empowered Women, Understanding The Male-Dominated Workplace
My first boss died of a heart attack 4 months after I began working. A year later a male co-worker died of complications following quadruple by-pass surgery. Six months later a man I frequently worked out with died of a massive heart attack following a run. One month...
by Dot Callihan | May 29, 2018 | Acting As Empowered Women, Thinking Like Empowered Women
In spite of all of the workplace advice women are given I’ve noticed there is one topic that is seldom discussed – the importance of Informal Power. Instead we focus our attention on women achieving Formal Power. I presume this is because Formal Power is an easy...
by Dot Callihan | May 22, 2018 | Acting As Empowered Women
Is there a woman alive who hasn’t made a suggestion to a man or a group of men, only to be blown off? The response you get is: “No, we got this handled. We know what we are doing.” Then you think to yourself, “No, you don’t.” You think about all the things they...