We hear all the time about the struggle women face in getting to the
top in their careers. We know it can be a hard push, with long hours,
the double shift, competing demands, and the bias
that can exist in workplaces. And we know that many women are saying
that it’s just all too hard, so they are sidelining themselves, starting
their own businesses, or opting out all together.
We need more women in
leadership
roles – but we also need specific strategies to help them get there
other than telling them to lean in when all many women want to do is
lean out (or to be more precise perhaps, to lie down).
Research (link is external) conducted in the US found that sixty-six percent of women surveyed said they wanted a better career,
with 60% acknowledging that if they had just one career wish, it would
be for better opportunities. Yet only a small percentage of women
actually have a career plan in place, with more than 70% of women
operating without one, and nearly 40% saying they are just “winging it.”
We look to the senior ranks of our organisations and wonder, “Where
are the women?” And we relentlessly tell women to lean in to
opportunities and push through the pipeline barriers to get to the top.
But it appears there is still a translation gap between what the experts
say is needed and what is actually resonating with the women who are
trying to breakthrough.
Women need real strategies and support mechanisms that enable them to create robus career plans, tangible help to seek out the opportunities they crave
but can’t seem to identify, and the support to make real inroads in how
to manage the never ending work and life struggle.
A really surprising result in the research was regarding work-life
balance. It was predicted that working mothers would show up in the
findings as struggling to manage their work and home demands. The
prediction was spot on, with 64% of women with kids believing that they
can’t have it all. No real shock there.
But 72% of women without kids believe that they can’t balance work
and home life either, and a staggering 70% of women overall are
struggling with their well-being. In fact, 65% of women say they are
“just trying to get by,” and more than 40% of women surveyed say they
are “hanging on by a thread.”
A large majority of the women polled reflect what I see in my work
with thousands of professional women each year: they are exhausted,
barely keeping up with the demands of work and life, which leaves the
strategies required to get ahead and address the pipeline issues in our
organisations as merely a passing after thought as they concern
themselves with their reality: Just getting by.
So what can we do? How do women get career plans in place, look
forward with energy and excitement, and better manage their well-being
and resiliency? Here are three strategies to start with:
1. REALISE YOU DO NEED A PLAN
One of the issues with not having a career plan is that you are at
the whim of whomever you are working for. If you are good at your job,
there will always be someone who wants you. That’s great and a good
position to be in. But unless that role is going to leverage your
strengths, your passion, what makes you feel purposeful at work, and
what energises you, you can quickly become one of the 8 out of 10 people
who don’t get to do what they do best every day, and slide into the 70%
of people who just show up for work, disengaged, waiting on the
paycheck.
Start somewhere and start small if you need to. Look at your next 6
to 12 months. Where are you at, what is energising about your work,
where could you see your next role, and why? These are good questions to
discuss with your mentor or sponsor. It doesn’t really matter where you
start with a plan; just start one.
2. GET THE BALANCE RIGHT
A small minority of people have a rigorous, linear career plan that’s
focused on the exact role they want and when they want it. The problem
with a plan that is too stringent is that it doesn’t leave any room for
the magic moments.
These opportunities that come up–special projects, off shore
appointments, sideways steps that may not look good on paper but are
career making in reality, and development opportunities that can add a
new layer to your skill set–can literally make your career. When you are
too focused on your plan, you can miss these opportunities to the
detriment of your career. Get the right balance between knowing where
you’re going and leaving space for the right opportunities.
3. PRIORITISE YOUR WELL-BEING
As a working woman, with or without children, it is clear that things
aren’t working optimally. You need to make your well-being a
non-negotiable. Taking care of you first, as the natural nurturers, is not the first response for most women.
Think about what you need to truly thrive and plan for it. Build it in
to your days. That could include going for a run in the morning,
meditating for five minutes twice a day, drinking a green smoothie for
breakfast, or making sure you get those seven to eight hours of sleep that are so critical.
Factor it in. Make it the most important thing you do. And then
hopefully some of those statistics will start to trend in a more
positive direction.

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