Julie Johnson,Sally Helgesen

The Female Vision

Notify me when the book’s added
To read this book, upload an EPUB or FB2 file to Bookmate. How do I upload a book?
This groundbreaking study reveals the vital perspective women bring to business—and how to make sure your organization takes full advantage of it.
Women and men experience the world differently. They not only see things differently—they also see different things. Men tend to have a bottom line, linear way of thinking. Women are more empathetic, more aware of the critical impact of interpersonal factors both within and without the organization. Everyone knows that both perspectives are important, yet organizations only reward traditionally male points of view.
Drawing on extensive research and workplace experience, Sally Helgesen and Julie Johnson demonstrate that the female perspective is the underutilized asset so many companies need to succeed. They delve into the stories of women whose vision improved their companies—even as they had to struggle against unresponsive organizations, dismissive managers, and their own personal fears.
The Female Vision also show how companies can create environments that welcome and encourage women to share what they notice, to the benefit of the organization as a whole—including the bottom line.
This book is currently unavailable
148 printed pages
Original publication
2010
Publication year
2010
Have you already read it? How did you like it?
👍👎

Quotes

  • David Rettig Hinojosahas quoted4 years ago
    The complexity of numbers makes them fungible. They appear solid—as proofs—but once they reach a high level of complexity, they can be interpreted to mean different things.
  • David Rettig Hinojosahas quoted4 years ago
    Intuition offers insights that resist being quantified or measured. As a form of intelligence, it is perceptual and governed by subjective logic. The “right brain” is popularly associated with intuitive processes, such as aesthetic perception and innovation, while the left brain is associated with logic and numbers. Although Western culture has famously privileged logic, more subjective ways of observing, perceiving, and defining value offer a powerful and often profoundly accurate means of knowing. Women’s long history of looking inward and trusting intuitive leaps can be a gift to organizations that need to broaden the scope of their information about the world. And as our tales of modern-day Cassandras show, this information is often essential.
fb2epub
Drag & drop your files (not more than 5 at once)