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- <text id=90TT2970>
- <title>
- Nov. 08, 1990: Why Can't a Woman Manage More Like...
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Nov. 08, 1990 Special Issue - Women:The Road Ahead
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ON THE JOB, Page 53
- Why Can't a Woman Manage More Like...a Woman?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Goodbye to the male clone: today's executive prefers to play by
- her own rules
- </p>
- <p>By Barvara Rudolph--With reporting by William
- McWhirter/Chicago
- </p>
- <p> A jockstrap was a parting gift when Marion Howington retired
- last year from the once all-male post of senior vice president
- at J. Walter Thompson. It was a teasing tribute to a woman who
- was well known for beating the pants off men at their own game.
- For Howington, a striking 60, who began climbing the ad agency's
- ladder in Chicago in 1967, the key to success was to "be
- aggressive" and "think like a man." In 22 years, she says, she
- never turned to other women for professional support or advice.
- "I didn't think they had anything of value to share," she says.
- "There's not a woman anywhere who made it in business who is not
- tough, self-centered and enormously aggressive."
- </p>
- <p> Maybe not. But these days, as more women find their way into
- the executive suite, they feel less compelled to act like male
- alter egos. Some observers, in fact, see the emergence of a new
- style of management--most frequently but not exclusively
- practiced by women--that is less rigid and hierarchical, more
- open and inclusive, than the classic male approach. Sally
- Helgesen, author of The Female Advantage: Women's Ways of
- Leadership, calls it a feminine style of management. It is
- characterized, she says, by talking more frankly with employees,
- sharing information rather than withholding it and keeping the
- office door almost always open. Observes Juanita Kreps, a former
- Secretary of Commerce and a board member of several FORTUNE 500
- companies: "Women bring a problem-solving attitude that
- embraces coordination more than the masculine drive to have
- power."
- </p>
- <p> As founder and president of ASK Computer Systems in Mountain
- View, Calif., Sandra Kurtzig has adopted a style that would have
- shocked the button-down troops that Howington trained with. "I
- have a style of walking around and stroking people," says
- Kurtzig, 44. "Whenever possible, I try to compliment them in
- front of their peers and go up and hug them. A woman can show
- the warmth that a man often can't." While a woman's emotional
- range and empathy were once looked upon as distinct
- disadvantages in business, nowadays some executives see them as
- potential resources. "The best way to negotiate," Kurtzig
- insists, "is to understand what the other side wants. With men,
- it's often all or nothing. They can end up where it's the last
- time either side will do business with the other."
- </p>
- <p> Naturally, not all women managers like to hug their
- employees, and not all male bosses are insensitive negotiators.
- "Gender isn't necessarily destiny in management style," affirms
- Christie Hefner, 37, who succeeded her father two years ago as
- chairman and chief executive of Playboy Enterprises. Nor do the
- so-called feminine qualities of consensus building and listening
- imply a lack of spine, although, as Hefner wryly observes, such
- traits "were not greatly valued in management books until they
- began to be defined as Japanese."
- </p>
- <p> The emergence of a distinct female style has hardly
- transformed workplaces into cozy dens of peace and goodwill. For
- one thing, not many women have arrived at positions that are
- truly high enough to influence a corporate culture. Says Lester
- Korn, chairman of the executive-recruiting firm Korn/Ferry
- International: "Most successful women have adapted to the fact
- that it's a male world. They have not, by and large, changed the
- way that business is done."
- </p>
- <p> Research by Professor Jeffrey Sonnenfeld of the Emory
- Business School indicates that women have fared best in
- merit-driven industries, such as entertainment, biotechnology
- research and computer software. He likens these businesses to
- baseball teams and finds that women thrive there because they
- "can be themselves and say, `Here's what I've produced. Judge
- me on these terms.'" Women tend to be less successful in the
- type of industry that Sonnenfeld calls "the Club"--utilities,
- insurance firms and commercial banks--where promotions are
- often based less on individual worth than on seniority and
- status. It is in these clubbier, more tradition-bound industries
- that women face the toughest, most shatterproof "glass ceiling,"
- the invisible barrier of old-boy bias that keeps them from
- rising to the top.
- </p>
- <p> Work-force demographics suggest that the emerging female
- style of management will become more prevalent, not only because
- more women will achieve positions of power but also because a
- flexible, mediating approach will be vital in dealing with
- America's ever more heterogeneous workers. "It's going to be
- increasingly important to understand the different cultural
- ground rules that employees are bringing to the workplace," says
- Madelyn Jennings, 55, a senior vice president for the Gannett
- newspaper chain. Since women tend to be better at that, she
- says, "rather than women having to adapt, men are going to have
- to learn from women."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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