Thursday, December 11, 2008

Working Women


Here is an article that touches on something I think about a lot: gender in the executive workplace...

Starting Up Women

By Alana Conner

Hidden inside most people’s minds is the belief that Warren and Bill should start businesses, but Oprah and Martha should not. This subtle, yet culture-wide association between maleness and entrepreneurship discourages women from launching their own start-ups, research shows.

Yet a new psychological study finds that “we can encourage more women to open businesses just by changing the way we talk about entrepreneurship,” says Vishal K. Gupta, an assistant professor at the Binghamton University School of Management and the study’s lead author. “You don’t have to do anything dramatic. Just make sure that the message you are sending is that entrepreneurship is gender neutral.”

For the study, Gupta and colleagues asked 469 undergraduate business students to read one of several articles about the qualities of successful entrepreneurs. In the control condition, the participants read a story that made no mention of gender. In the female stereotype condition, they discovered that humble, social, and caring people make good entrepreneurs. And in the gender-neutral condition, they learned that successful entrepreneurs show characteristics of both men and women, such as being creative, well-informed, and generous.

The researchers found that for women, entrepreneurial aspirations were highest after reading the gender-neutral story, which explicitly affirmed that gender does not matter in entrepreneurship. In contrast, women in the gender-free control condition had weaker intentions. “Even when you don’t say anything about gender, the first connection people make in their heads is with masculine characteristics,” Gupta explains. Women in the female stereotype condition had similarly lukewarm ambitions: “It may be that redefinition of a masculine stereotype as feminine is only possible when the alternative stereotype actually exists in society,” the authors write.

Although popular culture overwhelmingly depicts entrepreneurs as aggressive, risk-taking men, “it’s a myth that stereotypically male characteristics make you succeed,” says Gupta. To counteract these powerful messages, “we need to reach kids when they’re young and tell them that entrepreneurship is a good profession that men and women can do equally well. By the time they reach 19 or 20,” he adds, “it becomes more difficult to change their ideas about who can be an entrepreneur.”

From "Stanford Social Innovation Review", Winter 2009, Volume 7, Number 1.




Monday, December 8, 2008

Relatedness


"Our relatedness brings us into reality, provided we are open to it.  For instance, we prefer to avoid those people who annoy us, upset us, rub us the wrong way, push our buttons.  Yet these are precisely the people who can help us grow.  Our reaction to them exposes the egoism we try to hide, the fear we suppress, the spite we pretend isn't there.  Let's ask ourselves, 'Who is the person I most hate to be around?'  We need that very person in order to be real.

"Relationships show us what's truly happening in our life, if we have the courage to face it.  They reveal this separate, unreal self of ours who wants to isolate us from the rest of the human race...There is no such thing as a solitary Christian."

- Terence Grant, The Silence of Unknowing

Monday, December 1, 2008

I am pleased to announce....

...Teldon's newest magazine: Blush.

Now available at all Please Mum stores. For my lovely mom-friends:
























Thursday, November 27, 2008

Raise Your Voice


Finally!  The Voices for Bulembu campaign website is live.  My favourite part?  The trailer by that hot director.


Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Peaking

I've always been a fan of radio.  When I was 12 I would ride the bus from the outskirts of Winnipeg to my high school downtown.  Wrapped in parka head-to-toe, I would clutch my yellow Sony sports walkman (you know you had one too) and listen to the radio for the 45 minute drive.

I quickly found out that my growing knowledge of popular music was my gateway to conversations with boys, like I needed a reason to listen to the radio anyways.  I listened everyday and loved it.  Somehow it made me feel independent.

Then I worked for a non-profit that produced daily radio shows.  I produced a few of them myself and found out that the radio was still alive in kicking in the face of new media.  In fact, women are the most common listeners of radio.  It is the only kind of media they can easily use while doing other tasks.

Vancouver has disappointed me for a long time with its radio.  X-FM 104.9 was my fave until it disappeared into elevator-music-land.   We've been desolate for the past number of years.  There's some recent light - The Peak 100.5.  Not X-FM, but getting a bit closer.  

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Monday, November 17, 2008

Hope

Here is a video of my man talking to 24 hours about his new film--Rwanda: Hope Rises--premiering tonight at the Vancity Theatre: 

http://www.vancouver.24hrs.ca/videos