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Authors: Mika Brzezinski

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BOOK: Knowing Your Value
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One reason for the lack of women in technology is that men with backgrounds in engineering, science, and math outnumber women four to one.
Studies by the Center for Women’s Business Research reveal that even when women
do
come up with the ideas in their dorm rooms, they are not very likely to get the capital needed to create these kinds of high-growth start-ups.
But that’s not the only reason women aren’t flocking to these sectors. Sheryl Sandberg, COO of Facebook, has actually investigated why there aren’t more women in the technology field. She points out that “the percentage of women getting computer science degrees is going down. And people with computer science degrees make a lot more money than people without; they get the right industries and the right jobs. One of the reasons, it turns out, is that boys play video games
and girls don’t. And people who play video games start coding, because they want to write things for their video games.” Sandberg suggests that one of the steps we could take to get more women into computer science is to make more women-centric video games, and encourage little girls to play them.
This is counterintuitive advice. “I keep taking the computer away from my little girls,” I say.
“Give it back,” Sandberg says. “And when your daughters wonder why they get to play video games, tell them to thank me.”
Yahoo CEO Carol Bartz agrees that educating our daughters will have an impact. “As parents, we let our daughters off the hook,” she says. “I believe more women are needed in the ranks of all industries because we do have different perspectives. One of the things we look at at Yahoo is, how do people interface with technology? What do women look for versus what men look for versus what different age groups look for? For instance, we know that when women look to a screen, they look more to the left or right, men to the lower left, kids across the top.” So the fact that designing a great user experience requires a combination of both technology and sociology should attract more women, she says, “because they actually believe they can add something more than just the raw algorithms, if you will.”
Bartz continues, “I think women in general need to encourage our grade-school girls to stay with science and math so that they have an option. If their last big math course is sixth-grade algebra, they’re never going to be an engineer.
Because by the time they think, ‘Hey, I want to go into computer science,’ guess what? There’s no way to catch up.”
Elizabeth Warren admits that she’s more concerned than ever about women catching up. “You know, here’s the funny part now. Because I’m older, I’m more experienced, right? I have a fancy chair at Harvard [and a special position at the White House], and I now find myself not furious on my own behalf, but furious on behalf of younger women, who fall into exactly the same traps I fell into.”
But others, like the FDIC’s Sheila Bair, are optimistic that things are changing: “I think one of the benefits of having women in senior positions is that we provide more models to younger women. They can see us sticking up for ourselves, taking credit for our ideas, demanding a seat at the table and an equal place to our male counterparts. I think being role models will help over time to change young women’s attitudes about themselves.”
How can we ensure that the next generation will have more female role models? Well, as I’ve said, we can only control what we can control. It’s up to me to control my own behavior, to take responsibility for my own actions. Not wait to be acknowledged, but to step up and own my success. I’ve earned it.
Tina Brown points out that “Assuming power is everything. You have to assume it, and I don’t think that women do. I think they wait to be asked.” She gives an example from a breakfast she attended recently. Representative Nancy Pelosi was a speaker, and one of the women in the audience asked how we can stop men from dismissing our potential
as leaders. “Nancy Pelosi said, ‘You can’t wait. You don’t wait. I didn’t ask anyone’s permission to run. I just ran.’ The answer is, the inmates have to seize the asylum. Ultimately, I think that the constant waiting for us to be part of the corporate power structure is not going to work—not going to happen. I think that’s why they need to start their own companies.”
I agree with Brown’s approach: the way to shift the balance is not to try to change existing workplace dynamics but to take matters into your own hands. She continues: “If you’re one woman in a room of seven men and the corporate structure is all male, you just feel you’re not getting anywhere. And you either leave or you fight like hell or you’re squashed. I think the best thing for women, frankly, when they find themselves in that situation, is to leave and start their own companies. I actually do think that women leading their own companies is where it’s at. They will build different corporate structures and different networks, and that’s going to be the healthy thing in the future.”
Encouraging women to take control of their own destinies is very much at the heart of this book. That’s why, when Valerie Jarrett asked me to moderate a panel at the recent Women’s Entrepreneurship Conference, I couldn’t say no, even though I was on deadline to finish this book.
The subject of the panel was Women-Owned Businesses in the 21st Century, and we were discussing the results of a recent report commissioned by the White House Council on Women and Girls about women entrepreneurs’ access to capital. The report shows, for example, that women are not given loans as often as men; when they are, the loans are smaller,
and although women start up as many businesses as men, they don’t last.
On the day of the conference I rushed off the set of
Morning Joe
, barely made it to the White House, and got up on stage, breathless, in front of 200 women who run both small and large businesses.
My opening remarks were, “It’s great to be here. I’m actually writing a book about knowing your value, and the results of this report are not only so important to us as women and where we’re headed, but it’s exactly what I’ve been writing about. We’re making great strides, but we need to do better. In fact, it was Jarrett who, a year ago, sitting in her office, told me that I shouldn’t just think about doing this book, that I
had
to do this book, and she inspired me to write it.
“And now a year later, by giving me the honor of being your moderator today, Jarrett has also inspired me to miss my deadline.” The whole room exploded with laughter, and then I said, “But we’re women. We’ll get it done, right?” And they all started to cheer.
This book, like my memoir,
All Things at Once,
can’t be wrapped up tidily at the end with a pretty bow. I don’t pretend to have all the answers. I don’t see myself featured on the cover of
Good Housekeeping
or
Fortune
magazine as the person who figured out how to have it all and do it all well. I’ve struggled in my public and private life to hit all the right notes, and I take full responsibility for my failings—as well as for my successes. And in terms of my earning what I’m worth, let’s just say I’m getting there. I do know this: if I’d written this book ten years ago and taken the advice of its interviewees to
heart, I’d be a multimillionaire today. Knowing the fair-market value of our contributions at work is a critically important piece of knowledge for today’s (and tomorrow’s) professional woman. Our families’ future depends on our knowing what we should be paid, and getting it. If we can’t quantify and communicate our value with confidence, the achievements of the tremendous women before us will have all been for nothing. Knowing our value and communicating it effectively is the next chapter in the story that began with the women’s rights movement. Let’s write it together, and let’s get it done.
INDEX
Administrative Science Quarterly
agents
aggression
All Things at Once
(Brzezinski)
Anderson, Cameron
anger
apologies
Apple
Apprentice, The
(TV show)
assertiveness
authenticity
Autodesk
Babcock, Linda
backlash effect
Bair, Sheila
and difficulty of getting people to listen
emotionalism disdained by
on mentors
on motherhood
self-undervaluing by
subprime crisis and
on Wall Street crisis
Banfield, Ashleigh
Bartz, Carol
on asking for raises
as assertive
compensation package of
on compliments
on confidence
as confrontational
on education
on knowing salaries of peers
on quitting
self-undervaluing by
working mothers supported by
Behar, Joy
independence of
behavioral economics
Belkin, Lisa
Benard, Stephen
Bernanke, Ben
bitches, ambitious women perceived as
body language
Born, Brooksley
on being a working mother
on Wall Street crisis
on women helping women
Bowles, Hannah Riley
on author’s dispute with Griffin
on diverse teams
flirting disdained by
on gender disparity in negotiating
on gender disparity in networking
on raises
on role models
on sponsors
Brion, Sebastien
British Columbia, University of
Brown, Isabel
Brown, Sarah
Brown, Tina
on assuming power
female employee overlooked by
institutionalized preference for men disdained by
on networking
on rejection
on working mothers
Brzezinski, Ian
Brzezinski, Mark
Brzezinski, Mika:
apologizing of
in argument with manager
book deal of
career moves of
clothes of
contract of
daughters of
depression of
as desiring to be liked
expenses of
financial problems of
Griffin’s dispute with
hair clip incident of
Hillary Clinton’s campaign covered by
marriage of
Morning Joe
schedule of
negotiating skills of
as news reader
news show offered to
Paris Hilton incident and
pay of
quitting considered by
radio show of
raise sought by
“relentlessly pleasant” behavior and
Scarborough’s job offer to
self-undervaluing by
start at MSNBC
start on
Morning Joe
2008 election covered by
Brzezinski, Zbigniew
Bush, George W.
Carter, Jimmy
Catalyst
CBS Evening News
CBS News
Celebrity Roasts
Center for Women’s Business Research
Child
children, raising of
Clinton, Bill
Clinton, Hillary
CNBC
collaboration
Comedy Central
Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)
compliments
computer science
Condé Nast
confidence
Congress, U.S.
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
Correll, Shelley
Cosmopolitan
credit card agreements
Curb Your Enthusiasm
(TV show)
Daily Beast
Daley, Richard
David, Larry
Deutsch, Donny
on aggressiveness
on negotiations
on raises
Deutsche Telekom
diversity
Dobbins, Lucille
Dole, Elizabeth
Dole, Robert
double bind
drive
education
Effron, Mark
election of 2008
Elle
Ely, Robin
emotions, emotionalism
entitlement, sense of
Ephron, Nora
on favored nations
on quitting
self-undervaluing by
equal pay,
see
gender wage gap
Esquire
Essman, Susie
on people skills
on sponsorship
Facebook
fear
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)
Financial Times
flattery
flirting
Florio, Steve
Flynn, Frank
Forbes
Fortune 500
Freeland, Chrystia
Friars Club
Gaston, Gina
Geist, Willie
Geithner, Tim
gender,
see
men; women
gender bias, subconscious
gender-neutrality
gender wage gap
General Electric
“Getting a Job: Is There a Motherhood Penalty?” (Correll, Benard, and Paik)
Google
Government Accountability Office (GAO)
Grand Hyatt Hotel
Greenspan, Alan
Griffin, Phil
author’s book project aided by
author’s dispute with
Scarborough’s arguments with
group-think
guilt
hair clip incident
Harvard University
Hegewisch, Ariane
Herbert, Joe
Hoffer, Jim
HomePage
housework
Houston, University of
Huffington, Arianna
BOOK: Knowing Your Value
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