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How Women Mean Business: A Step by Step Guide to Profiting from Gender Balanced Business
 
 
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How Women Mean Business: A Step by Step Guide to Profiting from Gender Balanced Business [Paperback]

Avivah Wittenberg-Cox
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Product details

  • Paperback: 424 pages
  • Publisher: John Wiley & Sons (13 April 2010)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 047068884X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0470688847
  • Product Dimensions: 21.3 x 13.2 x 3 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 241,636 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

More About the Author

Avivah Wittenberg-Cox
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Product Description

Review

‘The book takes the reader comprehensively through 4 stages to achieve a more representative gender balance in business.’ (ChangingPeople.co.uk, April 2010).

‘…clearly and comprehensively documents how corporations can best implement strategies to achieve gender balance and attract the best…’ (Women Mean Business, June 2010).

Product Description

Why Women Mean Business showed you why business needs to change. Now Avivah Wittenberg–Cox’s new book shows you how to achieve a healthy and profitable balance.

We know that business needs more women. Gender balance has been proven time and time again to lead to more innovation, better business performance and corporate governance. The only question is, how can business leaders make this happen?

Avivah Wittenberg–Cox, an acknowledged world authority on women and business, points the way. In four simple steps she provides guidance on how to bring about real change:

• Audit – where are you really at with gender balance now?

• Awareness – Opening your eyes to what better gender balance could mean for your company

• Alignment – Ensuring the buy–in that will bring about real results and change

• Sustain – Building gender diversity into corporate DNA

This lively, hands–on guide is packed with research and case–studies showing how some of the world’s biggest blue–chip firms have done it.

Women are most of the talent and much of the market – you need this book.


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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
How Women Mean Business is the follow up to the highly successful `Why Women Mean Business' which Avivah Wittenberg-Cox co authored with Alison Maitland. I loved that book as you can see from my review, so approached its successor with no little trepidation. Could it be half as good as the first?

How Women Mean Business is a solo effort from Avivah . It has a sub title of:
`A Step by Step Guide to Profiting from Gender Balanced Business'.
And that is exactly what you get. It is a manual of how to successfully introduce gender bilinguality into your organisation and should be in every HR department and library, another excellent resource book!

Four Stages
The book takes the reader carefully through 4 stages to achieve a more representative gender balance in business. The four stages are:
Audit - looking at the actual statistics in an organisation, benchmarking, and talking to employees, women and men.
Awareness ¬- ensuring top managers truly understand the case for gender balance and the opportunities it presents them.
Alignment - training requirements, the talent in the organisation.
Sustain - how you maintain the change and measure progress.

Here's an extract from a section on inviting senior managers to a first meeting on achieving gender balance:
"Avoid invitations signed by HR, Diversity or a women's association. That would limit and label participant's view of the session before they even enter the room.
The invitation should introduce gender balance as a strategic lever for achieving other 21st century change initiatives.
Be careful.........not to call it something like `Gender Training' sessions generating endless jokes before the session starts. Instead, describe the session as a strategic debate, not as a training or awareness workshop. The invitation must start with the key messages, vocabulary, and positioning of the effort. That way, it will control how the issue is perceived, and what response it prompts."

Role Models
As well as pithy and practical advice on the actual steps to take, the book also gives examples of organisations that have had success not only with gender issues, but also increased profitability. I will be featuring some of these examples in other blog posts as it's an absolute treasure trove of information.

Highly Recommended
You'll have guessed by now that this is a book I highly recommend. It's not an easy read but it's an interesting and informative one. I read the latter half of it while stuck on a train and realised I was mouthing `yes, yes! ` a lot of the time, possibly creating the wrong impression of the type of book I was reading to my fellow passengers... But as a feminist it is a joy to read this type of book. It doesn't simply point out the faults in most of the working environments in the western world, but it gives an entirely credible and practical approach for remedying them. If you're seriously interested in gender issues, man or woman, buy it!
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By Robert Morris TOP 100 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
This is one of two books written by Avivah Wittenberg-Cox that I have recently read, the other being Why Women Mean Business published two years earlier (2008). Although they examine many of the same socioeconomic issues and core concepts, it would be unfair to both books to suggest that one is a prequel or sequel to the other. There is much to be said for reading both, perhaps WHY first, but each can - and indeed should - be judged on its own merits. At least that is the approach I now take.

In a perfect business world, all organizations are pure meritocracies. Only the best people recruit, interview, hire, and then train only the best candidates. Those hired then become evangelists for the organization while helping to ensure that- at all levels and in all areas - operations are productive, efficient, and profitable. Moreover, the organization has a steadily growing customer or client base, all of whom are evangelists.

In the business world as is, however, there are inequities and imbalances as well as ignorance, arrogance, incompetence, fraud, waste, etc. The best that leaders can do is to drive a process of continuous (albeit imperfect) improvement in terms of what is done, how it is done, and by whom. As the book's subtitle correctly indicates, what Wittenberg-Cox offers is a "step by step guide to profiting from gender balanced business." Only an organization's leaders can - and should - determine the nature and extent of what that balance should be. As she correctly notes, "This is not about the advancement of women: gender balance -- a relevant mix of both men and women -- is simply better for business."

These are among Wittenberg-Cox's key points that caught my eye:

o There is no glass ceiling. Rather, "gender asbestos" that prevents organizations from creating "a relevant mix of both men and women."
o The annual "20-first WOMENOMICS 101 Survey" (reports on the number of women in C-level positions in 101 largest companies in US, Europe, and Asia)
o A gender audit answers three Qs: "What's our balance now"? "What do others do?" and "What does our balance now say about us?"
o There are four phases of the process to achieve gender balance: Audit, Awareness, Alignment, and Sustain.
o The key drivers of gender balance are leadership (individuals and teams), talent (best available), and markets (influence of women)

Re this last point, according to recent research, decisions by women account for at least 85% of all consumer purchases including everything from autos to health care. For example: 93% of food and OTC pharmaceuticals, 92% of vacations, 91% of new homes, 89% of bank Accounts, and 80% of healthcare.

o Employee training in establishing and then sustaining appropriate gender balance (Chapter 8)
o Six ways to "make a difference" in recruiting (Pages 239-247)
o Measuring performance, progress, and impact of gender balance initiatives (Chapter 12)

I commend Avivah Wittenberg-Cox on her brilliant use of various reader-friendly devices throughout the book. They serve two separate but interdependent and important purposes: they focus on important points, and, they facilitate, indeed expedite frequent review of that material later. (That is why I highlight key passages and urge others to do so.) These devices include a "Checklist" of reminder questions at the end of each chapter as well as dozens of Figures and Tables, boxed mini-commentaries on real-world situations or major issues, and checklists of bold-faced key points or action steps to consider. Here in a single volume is just about everything a business leader needs to know about HOW to profit from gender balanced business, but also to derive substantial non-monetary benefits that include but are by no means limited to those who comprise the given workforce, viewed as a human community.

Two points are worth keeping in mind. First, it is no coincidence that most of the same companies listed annually as being the "most highly regarded" and "best to work for" are also ranked among the most profitable in their industry and have the greatest cap value. Also, the results of dozens of major research studies indicate that feeling appreciated is ranked either first or second in importance to both employees and to customers. What about compensation and price? They are ranked anywhere between 9th and 14th.
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Amazon.com:  2 reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Refreshing perspective on a business strategy 9 Dec 2010
By Larissa - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
"How Women Mean Business" is a refreshing perspective on how integrating women into the modern workplace is in fact a business problem, not a "women's problem" and I have long held this view! What is also enjoyable about this book is that the increasing utilisation of "half the talent pool" is proving to be beneficial for the company bottom line and is certainly grabbing the attention of all senior managers of companies around the world. A must read!
How and why appropriate gender balance is an immensely promising business opportunity 11 April 2012
By Robert Morris - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
This is one of two books written by Avivah Wittenberg-Cox that I have recently read, the other being Why Women Mean Business published two years earlier (2008). Although they examine many of the same socioeconomic issues and core concepts, it would be unfair to both books to suggest that one is a prequel or sequel to the other. There is much to be said for reading both, perhaps WHY first, but each can - and indeed should - be judged on its own merits. At least that is the approach I now take.

In a perfect business world, all organizations are pure meritocracies. Only the best people recruit, interview, hire, and then train only the best candidates. Those hired then become evangelists for the organization while helping to ensure that- at all levels and in all areas - operations are productive, efficient, and profitable. Moreover, the organization has a steadily growing customer or client base, all of whom are evangelists.

In the business world as is, however, there are inequities and imbalances as well as ignorance, arrogance, incompetence, fraud, waste, etc. The best that leaders can do is to drive a process of continuous (albeit imperfect) improvement in terms of what is done, how it is done, and by whom. As the book's subtitle correctly indicates, what Wittenberg-Cox offers is a "step by step guide to profiting from gender balanced business." Only an organization's leaders can - and should - determine the nature and extent of what that balance should be. As she correctly notes, "This is not about the advancement of women: gender balance -- a relevant mix of both men and women -- is simply better for business."

These are among Wittenberg-Cox's key points that caught my eye:

o There is no glass ceiling. Rather, "gender asbestos" that prevents organizations from creating "a relevant mix of both men and women."
o The annual "20-first WOMENOMICS 101 Survey" (reports on the number of women in C-level positions in 101 largest companies in US, Europe, and Asia)
o A gender audit answers three Qs: "What's our balance now"? "What do others do?" and "What does our balance now say about us?"
o There are four phases of the process to achieve gender balance: Audit, Awareness, Alignment, and Sustain.
o The key drivers of gender balance are leadership (individuals and teams), talent (best available), and markets (influence of women)

Re this last point, according to recent research, decisions by women account for at least 85% of all consumer purchases including everything from autos to health care. For example: 93% of food and OTC pharmaceuticals, 92% of vacations, 91% of new homes, 89% of bank Accounts, and 80% of healthcare.

o Employee training in establishing and then sustaining appropriate gender balance (Chapter 8)
o Six ways to "make a difference" in recruiting (Pages 239-247)
o Measuring performance, progress, and impact of gender balance initiatives (Chapter 12)

I commend Avivah Wittenberg-Cox on her brilliant use of various reader-friendly devices throughout the book. They serve two separate but interdependent and important purposes: they focus on important points, and, they facilitate, indeed expedite frequent review of that material later. (That is why I highlight key passages and urge others to do so.) These devices include a "Checklist" of reminder questions at the end of each chapter as well as dozens of Figures and Tables, boxed mini-commentaries on real-world situations or major issues, and checklists of bold-faced key points or action steps to consider. Here in a single volume is just about everything a business leader needs to know about HOW to profit from gender balanced business, but also to derive substantial non-monetary benefits that include but are by no means limited to those who comprise the given workforce, viewed as a human community.

Two points are worth keeping in mind. First, it is no coincidence that most of the same companies listed annually as being the "most highly regarded" and "best to work for" are also ranked among the most profitable in their industry and have the greatest cap value. Also, the results of dozens of major research studies indicate that feeling appreciated is ranked either first or second in importance to both employees and to customers. What about compensation and price? They are ranked anywhere between 9th and 14th.
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