The Inside Job

When You're a Working Woman Among Many Men

By Liz Wolgemuth

Posted: November 25, 2008

This is, to be sure, 2008--Hillary Clinton is expected to replace Condoleezza Rice and Katie Couric hosts the evening news. But while female leaders/executives may be more commonplace today than they were in the past, they are often still working mostly among men. (The same goes for some women among the rank-and-file.)

The Wall Street Journal has a piece today on "ways women can hold their own" and "navigate a mostly male office." It's a bit strange to read the suggestions, such as erasing tentative-sounding vocabulary and avoiding sentences that start with "I think"; separating the alpha and beta males for separate kinds of treatment; even organizing your own work events if you're left out of the all-male social hour.   

The truth is, it sounds exhausting.

The work on your desk is often tiring enough. I'm curious to know whether women out there really feel like they have to put this much effort into holding their own in male-dominated workplaces. Please share your thoughts in the comments: Is this extra work a reality for you?

(I've had the fortune of working in pretty balanced offices where most of the leaders were male, but my peers were well-mixed, so I really don't know what it's like.)

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No special treatment for men in the office

I've always related to men at the office as I do other guys in my life. Things are complex enough - following a protocol that dictates a woman's relationship with men in the office? I don't think so.

Marsha

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Marsha Keeffer of CA @ Nov 25, 2008 23:14:03 PM

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The Inside Job

The Inside Job

You're taking a break from your job-hunting and job-hopping ways and have decided to stay put in your current position. Liz Wolgemuth’s careers blog will show you how to make the very best of your job, each day.

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