Age Diversity: Generational Gap: GEN Y

Age Diversity: Generation YIn the previous posts, I discussed the Matures, continuing the sequence; we met the Baby Boomers, Generation X or GEN X, and now I introduce Generation Y or GEN Y.

 

This is about Generation Y, otherwise called GEN Y, Millennials, Generation Next. They are 25 to 34 years old, and are 70 to 80 millions in the United States.

Gen Y, are shaped by their early experiences which created filters through which they see the world, and directly impact how they navigate their worlds. Events like the 9/11 attacks, The Columbine high school attack, Oklahoma City bombing, Iraq and Afghanistan wars wrought their world. They see themselves as extension of technology; Reality TV is also a way of life for them.

They were brought up in small families, one in four of Gen Y parents are college-educated. More than 50 percent of Gen Y in the United States are immigrants, or children of immigrants. They shaped the face of politics in the 2008 US elections through the use of social media. They are recognized as playing a major role in electing the nation’s first black president.

They are witnessing corporate greed, exposure of Ponzi schemes, and industry bailouts, and worldwide economic crisis.

The Y’ers have been defined by some as narcistic, self absorbed, and not reliable. Their heroes are not political figures or movie stars but regular people in their circles as teachers, family member or the firemen and police men like the ones that responded to the 9/11 attacks and risked their lives. .
• They are the fastest growing demographic at the workplace

• Famous examples of Gen Y: Zuckerberg, Justin Timberlake, Beyonce, and Michael Phelps.

• Musical Era: Back street boys, N Sync, Black Eyed Pea, Rihanna and Lady Gaga.

• Workplace: Work for deadlines not necessarily schedules, they value blending that is why they prefer working in open spaces and hate the closed door offices. They like to shop for both employers and vendors they remain connected 24/7, not your typical nine to five employees. They are multi-taskers, tech savvy, but they need immediate constant feedback, as well as mentors. They are socially responsible; believe in good causes and the environment; prefer to work for companies with the same values. They are critical of the ethics and morality of business.

• Family: Gen Y is comfortable living with their parents, maintaining close ties with their families. Friends are global and can be online. Gen Y has been the busiest generation of children, parents and teachers micromanaged their lives, leaving them with little free time. It is very common to hear them say my mother or father is my best friend.

• Leadership: They are redefining the rules; they value autonomy, and are restless. They are individuals with group orientations. They don’t look for leadership positions.

• Culture Ethos: They see education as important, but also expensive. They are participative in nature, embracing diversity. They have liberal attitudes toward issues such as gay marriage and interracial dating. They believe in volunteerism and service to communities. They are more involved in politics; and youth-driven activist organizations build grassroots movements for various social and political causes.

• Loyalty: They value personal freedom and autonomy, they are loyal to people either they work with or play with.

• Communications: Casual, instant, personal and direct; eager to please. They rather communicate with text messages and IMs. They will not listen to voice mails. They are connected online all day through their laptops, and cell phones.

• Recognition and motivation: They have high expectations and clear goals. They prefer individual public recognition, as they like attention and exposure. They like to be valued for their opinions; they will work hard to have opportunities to broaden their skills. They connect their actions to their personal and career goals. They get motivated by setting them up to work with other bright creative people, and by allowing them enough time and flexibility to live the life they want.

• Technology: They’re the first generation to grow up surrounded by digital media. 2/3 of them used computers before the age of five. They are connected 24/7. They are seen as the driving force behind the recent revolution in American political campaigning. They created new sites, and used existing ones as YouTube, and Facebook, to rally voters and raising money.

• As a customer: Gen Y wants to use the same tools as their peers but with a unique twist. They will consider a company’s products if the company is known for their humane attitude. They like technology-based products and look for more advanced tools to help them. They don’t trust companies’ marketing materials and check with online peers before making purchasing decisions.

The challenges and opportunities as well as solutions to the Generational gap links are attached.
Diversity starts at home,

Sahar Andrade, MB.BCh
Diversity Consultant – Social Media Strategist
Sahar Consulting, LLC. - Home of the D.I.A.L.O.G.™ Programs
Diversity& Inclusion in Active Leadership Organizational Growth
(Exchanging Ideas through Conversation)

http://www.saharconsulting.com

(818)861 9434

 Let’s connect on: LinkedIn Facebook Twitter SlideShare WordPress YouTube Flickr pinterest

Contact me: Skype saharconsulting

Age Diversity: Generational Gap: GEN X

Age Diversity: GEN X

In the previous posts, I discussed the Matures, continuing the sequence; we met the Baby Boomers, and now I introduce Generation X or GEN X.

Gen X is between 35 and 45 years old, their lives shaped by Watergate, fall of the Berlin wall, the challenger explosion, 1st Gulf war, the Iran hostage crisis, and the Reagan Presidency. They witnessed the inception of home computers, video games, cable TV, and Internet.

Gen X grew up in families where the divorce rates were the highest ever. They were raised mostly in single parent homes, and called ‘latchkeys kids.’ They might understandably exhibit a suspicious attitude and tend not to trust others easily. Change is more or less the rule of their lives rather than the exception.

They feel that the government, church, military, and major corporations deserve their skepticism. The Xers’ attitude is: “There is nothing we can count on in the future, so we’ll focus short term and make sure each day has significance.” That is why they might have difficulty making long term commitments.
They are different from the matures and baby boomers to whom institutions still mean a great deal; Gen X sees institutions as deserving nothing but cynicism.

The Xers have been defined by some as spoiled and characterized by others as unmotivated, self-indulgent and impertinent, but just because they are skeptical about authority and seek work-life balance, doesn’t make them bad. Do you blame them? They have been told that they wouldn’t be as successful as their parents. They are the junior executives, directors and managers in the workplace.

• Famous examples of Gen X: Sarah Palin, Gavin Newsome, Michael Jordan, Lance Armstrong and Alex Rodriguez.

• Musical Era: Madonna, Ricky Martin, U2, Whitney Houston, Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Guns and Roses, Motley Crue, Bon Jovi and heavy metal bands. They saw the rise and fall of Disco. Gen X is sometimes called the MTV generation.

• Workplace: Reject the die-hard work ethics of their parents, the boomers. Respect talent and achievement over tenure. Value control of their time. They look for a person in whom they can invest loyalty, not a company. They question authority, see rules as flexible, protocol is second as they try to find the fastest ways to results and solutions. They tend to replace face to face meetings with emails to save time.

• Family: Mainly two income families; women entered the workplace in high numbers. Soccer Mom/Dad are expressions used to describe Gen X as parents. They value work-life balance as well as freedom and responsibility. They are cautious with their money and tend to save it.

• Leadership: Rules are flexible, cooperation is more important. They do challenge authorities.

• Culture Ethos: They are the highest educated generation. They accept diversity, being diverse in such aspects as race, religion, ethnicity and sexual orientation. They try to have fun, avoid stress and burnout. Their loyalty is to their individual career goals. They change jobs an average of every three years.

• Communications: Want open communication regardless of position, title, or tenure. Communication is casual and direct. They use electronic gizmos. They see long meetings as waste of time, and may be answering emails on their Blackberries during a meeting. Time is money.

• Recognition and motivation: A balance of fair compensation (immediate) and ample time off as rewards is the best way they feel recognized. They can be more motivated if they are told to forget the rules and do things their own way.

• Technology: They started the Internet and are very familiar and comfortable with their PDAs, BBs, smart phones, and laptops. They embrace technology as a way to control their lives

• As a customer: They believe in “prove it to me” and they don’t trust the traditional sales techniques, hard sell or marketing gimmicks. They want options and choices to suit their preferences. They rely more on peer to peer referrals than any other generation. As customers, Gen X are very loyal.

Next comes Gen Y, Diversity starts at home,

Sahar Andrade, MB.BCh
Diversity Consultant – Social Media Strategist
Sahar Consulting, LLC. - Home of the D.I.A.L.O.G.™ Programs
Diversity& Inclusion in Active Leadership Organizational Growth
(Exchanging Ideas through Conversation)

http://www.saharconsulting.com

(818)861 9434

 Let’s connect on: LinkedIn Facebook Twitter SlideShare WordPress YouTube Flickr pinterest

Contact me: Skype saharconsulting

7 Tips For Job seekers – Part 3

Job seekers tipsThis  is the final post of Christmas for job seekers, offering job tips for job seekers.  The previous posts discussed Finding a job through Personal branding for job seekersusing  personal branding  for job search , using LinkedIn for job search,  networking for job seekersresume for job seekers,  7 tips for job seekers – Part 1, 7 tips for job seekers – Part 2.

 

Habit 5 – Seek First to Understand
then be Understood

Concentrate on what the hiring managers and recruiters are looking for in their candidates not what you think you understand what they need.

Human nature migrates towards the desire of being understood, so all our actions, thoughts and words try to convey our message so others can understand where we are coming from, as a result we spend most of our energy wasting time.

This habit is an important key that puts different dynamics to the conversation that should exist between job seekers and hiring managers and recruiters.  Try to get to the bottom of the qualifications they are looking for which will affect your chances to get called in for an interview and hopefully ace the interview and get the job.

By sincerely spending the time and effort to understand the prospective employer’s position, they become more open, more understandable, reachable, and more interested in what you may have to offer.

 

Habit 6 – Synergize

Synergy means: the interaction or cooperation of two or more people, organizations, substances, or other agents to produce a combined effect greater than the sum of their separate effects.  It means putting two heads or more together to brainstorm and come up with better and broader creative solutions that will be win-win.

It can only be done successfully if you have first practiced habits 4 and 5. The well-known definition of synergy is as follows:  It is “the whole is greater than the sum of the parts”.

Win- win solutions can be reached only if we understand the other party position, if we believe that we can change a bad situation to a better one, if we visualize where we want to go.  It is like a pyramid or like a domino effect once triggered properly everything falls in the proper place.  It is the sequence of events that start by applying and executing the habits properly; synergetic solutions will be an inevitable natural product of your efforts.

 

 

Habit 7 – Sharpen the Saw

The last habit of the 7 Habits is - Sharpen the Saw. In this habit, you are the saw; and to Sharpen the Saw is to always be at your best game, find ways to sharpen your skills, increase your knowledge, become better, keener and more effective.

Always take the time to Sharpen your Saw. What is meant by Sharpening the Saw is to regularly engage in the exercise of the three dimensions which make up the human condition: body, mind and spirit.

Because of the nature of job-hunting, you will face ups and downs and sometimes even some potholes, but by trying to stick to the positive attitudes on the 7 habits you may also find some great corners and crossroads that you have never expected.

Take the time to breathe in, look at the silver lining because it always gets better no matter how long it takes, the sun always rises after a long night; just be prepared to change your attitude and do adjustments on the way.  Celebrate your progress, rest when you need then jump back on the wagon.

Always remember that your next interview might be starting now, so always be on your best tip top shape mentally and physically.

 

Best of luck in your job search

 

Thank you Santa for the jobs you brought throughout 2011- We need a lot more jobs in 2012 and please start very early-like right after you rest from New Year’s Eve,

Happy New Year

Sahar Andrade, MB.BCh
Diversity Consultant – Social Media Strategist
Sahar Consulting, LLC. - Home of the D.I.A.L.O.G.™ Programs
Diversity& Inclusion in Active Leadership Organizational Growth
(Exchanging Ideas through Conversation)
http://www.saharconsulting.com 
(818)861 9434

Let’s connect on: LinkedIn Facebook Twitter SlideShare WordPress YouTube Flickr
Contact me: Skype saharconsulting

7 Tips For Job Seekers- Part 2

This  is the seventh post of Christmas for job seekers, offering job tips for job seekers.  The previous posts discussed Finding a job through Personal branding for job seekersusing  personal branding  for job search , using LinkedIn for job search,  networking for job seekers, resume for job seekers, and 7 tips for job seekers – Part 1.

Tips for job seekersOn my seventh day of Christmas, my true love gave to me…

Tip 2 – Begin with the End in Mind

People in certain cultures like the U.S. culture define themselves by the degree of success they achieve either at work, or the house they own or the car they drive.  So when they lose their jobs they feel humiliated or feel that they lost their identity forgetting that they make the job and that the job doesn’t make them.

 

When job seekers start visualizing themselves where they want to be and how they will be in their new job they can start planning to get there   The “end” they begin to think about represents the purpose of their life and where the job will fit.   It is the general purpose of your life what does it mean to you, that you have control on how to maneuver your life and switch gears whenever needed to bring you the greatest satisfaction.

There are no short-cuts here.   We need to visualize what will become of our dream, define our vision and set the path to reach it to happen.  Until we have defined our vision – the big dream to which we will be working – we will be unable to reach it – we need to know where we want to go so defining what job you are seeking, in which industry, and name few companies in a list then you can start moving to execute your plan.  This habit provides a basic framework for us to re-align your efforts so that we will ultimately achieve our heart’s desire.

 Tip 3 – First Things First

 

This habit is about managing your time effectively.  Consider the simple urgent/ important, which plots the concepts of urgency and importance against each other; and represents where you are spending your time.

Developing a detailed time based strategy — and sticking to it becomes crucial to avoid anger and frustration.  The job-search must be balanced to take advantage of all potential opportunities. Focusing too much time in one area, such as job-hunting online, or trying for any job without specification will be just a waste of time.  First things to think assess where you are in your career if you lack the necessary experience to move into a new job, so find the time to volunteer or find internships or even part time jobs; if you do not have a big network chart time for networking either online or offline to increase your contact list that might help you find a job; or you may find you are lacking some skills, certifications, or education you need as minimum requirements to get hired — or even to get job interviews. So you will need to plan for time to take a course online or offline, get training, or certifications you need. Don’t be discouraged if you need additional education — regardless or your age or situation. There are many non expensive education resources like the one stop job centers or local community colleges.

Prioritize your projects, divide them to small goals, have a daily to do list, use a calendar or a journal and reward yourself when you finish part of your plan.

 

Tip 4 – Think Win Win

 

Think Win-Win is another mind attitude, it is about believing that when we think positively and foster an attitude that is committed to always finding solutions or remedies that will truly benefit both sides in any case.

 

Solutions do not, of course, exist in themselves; they must be created.  Even if we can’t visualize the solution at the moment, it does not mean that it doesn’t exist.

Start by developing a list of your key accomplishments, skills sets, talents, and abilities as discussed in the previous posts about self branding.  Focus on your best accomplishments, advantages and solutions that you can bring to a company and quantify them.  Think how your transferable skills, experience and talents can be a win for an employer, and a job can be a win for you.  Prepare your elevator speech, USP, and interviewing techniques.

 

The more you practice this habit, the more committed you will become as you find solutions which truly do benefit you and the other party.

 

Tomorrow is our last post of the season, if you liked any of the posts please let us know

Cheers, and best of luck

Sahar Andrade, MB.BCh
Diversity Consultant – Social Media Strategist
Sahar Consulting, LLC. - Home of the D.I.A.L.O.G.™ Programs
Diversity& Inclusion in Active Leadership Organizational Growth
(Exchanging Ideas through Conversation)
http://www.saharconsulting.com 
(818)861 9434

Let’s connect on: LinkedIn Facebook Twitter SlideShare WordPress YouTube Flickr
Contact me: Skype saharconsulting

 

 

 

 

7 Tips for Job Seekers- Part 1

This  is the sixth post of Christmas for job seekers, offering job tips for job seekers.  The previous posts discussed Finding a job through Personal branding for job seekersusing  personal branding  for job search , using LinkedIn for job search,  networking for job seekers, and resume for job seekers.

On my sixth day of Christmas, my true love gave to me…

Tips for job seekersJob searching is a job on its own, especially with the current state of the economy where there are not any guarantees on how long the job hunt will take.  I have friends and clients that found jobs within 45 to 60 days and some that have been out of a job for more than six month to a year.

One thing for sure is that to find a job you need to have total commitment that involves energy, hopes, time, emotions and most of all, planning a strategy.

Job seeking is exhausting regardless, but the roller coaster ride of ups and downs – of hopes and despair is better managed with a strategy.  To be effective, treat your job hunt as a project that require developing, planning and implementing a job search strategy to avoid unnecessary waste of time, panic and pressure.

The philosophy of the “7 habits of highly effective people” by Steven Covey can be used as a general road map for a strategy.  If you haven’t read the book it is a great investment to make.

Being effective is learning to do things “which produce the desired result”.  If you want to be successful in achieving your goals of finding a job, then being effective is consistently doing the things that will bring about the results that you are after.

Covey discusses basic principles of effectiveness that can actually be found in each one of us and can be easily implemented if these habits (which I will call TIPS) can be used as steps of a plan applied every single day till it becomes a way of life even after a job is found.

Your beliefs become your thoughts. Your thoughts become your words. Your words become your actions. Your actions become your habits. Your habits become your values. Your values become your destiny.” Mahatma Gandhi

 Tip 1 – Be Proactive

You are not captive of your past or your present conditions.  What it really means is to focus our efforts and attention on the long-term and to think in terms of the long-term consequences of our actions.

Reactive people (opposite of proactive) are those who actually believe that they have no control on what happens and they can’t change the fact of not having a job as the whole country is in bad shape.  Whatever they believe in becomes the truth in their hearts and minds.  When they believe that they can’t do anything about finding a job then they simply will not actively hunt for a job as they believe that there is nothing they can do.

Proactive people, on the other hand, simply will not accept status quo, or will not accept that there is nothing that can be done about not working, they believe that there are always choices and decisions that we can make or take, proactive people can and do affect the future. Their thought patterns are based on the fact that we might have no control over what life throws at us but we always have a choice about how we are to respond.  They think of ways either to increase their expertise or gain more knowledge while looking for a job to better their resume and avoid gaps in their resumes so they would enroll in new courses to gain new skills or volunteer for jobs that can increase their expertise

Having a particular attitude of mind can make a huge and positive difference to almost everything we experience in life; is opposite to those who have already internalized having no control. Is the glass half empty or half full, positive attitude is a choice.

Being proactive comes with accepting responsibility and accountability for the effects that manifest in our lives; when we have the strength of character to admit it when we make mistakes (even big ones); when we are completely free to exercise the options available to us in every situation; that way job seekers can start steering their own destiny `

 

Part two to follow

Sahar Andrade, MB.BCh
Diversity Consultant – Social Media Strategist
Sahar Consulting, LLC. - Home of the D.I.A.L.O.G.™ Programs
Diversity& Inclusion in Active Leadership Organizational Growth
(Exchanging Ideas through Conversation)
http://www.saharconsulting.com 
(818)861 9434

Let’s connect on: LinkedIn Facebook Twitter SlideShare WordPress YouTube Flickr
Contact me: Skype saharconsulting

Finding a Job through Personal Branding

There will be 12 posts for the 12 days of Christmas to help job seekers hopefully land a job.

Job seeking posts On the first day of Christmas, my true love gave to me…

Given the current economic situation, where there is more demand than supply, no longer is job search simply a matter of posting your resume on popular job sites and waiting for the phone to ring. As a job seeker, you need to stand out from the rest of the crowd now more than ever.

Branding is a combination of tangible and intangible characteristics that make a brand unique and readily identifiable. Branding is about developing an image using a strong message – that promises equally strong results to match. A brand is a promise of what a product or someone can deliver. The development of a brand makes you a valuable asset, rather than merely an addition to corporate head count.

What goes into a brand?

  • name
  • reputation
  • quality
  • performance
  • appearance
  • promise of value

You need to examine which characteristics, features, and skills comprising your personal and professional qualities that employers will seek and expect in their employees. After identifying these unique qualities, you must embrace them as your own and ensure they are nurtured and cultivated into an appealing and admirable product that demonstrates value.

It’s about identifying and promoting your exceptional qualities, marketable skills, work experience, unique leadership experience, professional memberships, education, training, and institutional knowledge and build a reputation that captures the attention of employers and those within your professional network.  Personal branding defines who you are, where you excel, and why you should be sought out.

Personal branding defines your reputation and emphasizes your unique selling points. Personal branding is about building a name for yourself that others instantly recognize and admire, showcasing what sets you apart from others, and describing the added value you bring to a situation.

Your brand should answer a few questions like:

  1. How can I help an employer address challenging issues and exploit unique opportunities it will have in the future?
  2. How can I leverage personal successes, and emphasize my capability to handle these challenges and opportunities?
  3. Why I believe I am the perfect fit for this position?

Most job seekers make the mistake of emphasizing their personal expectations from the position, rather than thinking about exceeding the prospective employer’s expectations. Unfortunately, companies do not care about how you value your skills, but rather care about what you can do for them, including solutions you will bring to their table and the value you are adding to their organization. This means that you, as the job seeker, must tailor your strategy to match the needs of each particular company.

Market yourself as you would market a product; the same tactics are applied for promoting a product or a person using the proper marketing mix. Your brand as a job seeker will be determined by the viewpoint of the audience, and is based upon appearance (packaging), personality (overall attitude towards your brand, how you make them feel), sophistication (a person’s competency) and differentiation (which results in you being selected over your competition).

You control your marketing mix:  (4Ps)

  • Product: “YOU”, including your brand positioning statement
  • Promotion: The way you brand yourself, and job-search communications, including cover letters, resumes, interviewing, and follow-up activities
  • Price: Your salary and benefits and how your negotiate them (the value proposition)
  • Placement: Location, job-search strategy, and your network of professional contacts

You need to highlight your achievements more than your rewards, for example instead of mentioning that you were rewarded an achievement certificate for project completion on time, talk about your leadership and time management skills, problem solving capabilities etc., point out positive attributes as strengths related to the job description.

Align your goals with the potential employer and how the company will benefit from you achieving your goals rather than what you’ll get from it.
The first step in personal branding is to determine what your brand is, and then start with an objective understanding of the exact situation where you currently are, where you want to be, and establish a direction for getting there.

The second step is to ensure your brand is genuine and consistent across all communication channels

The third step is to have both an offline and online brand presence as many recruiters search for their candidates online these days

How to begin building your brand:

  1. Track accomplishments and gain new experience: Accomplishments are the foundation of your brand.  Plan a strategy and focus your efforts upon gaining new experience in areas that strengthen your brand or develop competence where you are weak.  Volunteering in your field could pay huge dividends if you are currently seeking a job to gain experience (we will discuss this in a future  post).  You can also consider freelancing or consulting to build upon your  portfolio. Many websites, like odesk, and guru, offer attractive opportunities.
  2. You might also consider taking a few courses or pursue a graduate degree, specialized training, or industry-recognized certifications. Getting additional education has the potential to greatly enhance your career brand. You can seek advice through professional networking, mentors, career coaches, or community college advisors.
  3. “Build it and they will come” doesn’t work anymore. If no one is aware of you and your brand, then you will not achieve success.  Here comes the promotion part; while you should never push your message or brand upon anyone, you can try building relationships and credibility where others will talk about your brand and evangelize it for you.  Using a portfolio both offline and online to let the whole wide world know about the benefits your brand brings is a great idea.  A portfolio should include all important brand artifacts including your personal mission statement, resume, accomplishments, work samples, articles, blogs, videos (a portfolio will be discussed in a later post)
  4. Build credibility through establishing yourself as an SME (Subject Matter Expert). For example, write articles or white papers and publish them, look for guest blogging opportunities, interviews, and get quoted by offering your thoughts, ideas, and opinions to journalists and reporters. You can find these opportunities on Twitter or sites like HARO, or seek out speaking engagements at associations or chambers of commerce, even if you do this work for free.
  5. Build bridges i.e. relationships, by helping as many people as you can using your expertise; pay it forward and your good will toward others will emphasize your expertise and provide anecdotal evidence about you for others to talk about you. Word Of Mouth testimonials are one of the strongest marketing tools one can have.
  6. Self Branding is not static. You must keep working at it to continue strengthening your brand. Do not stop developing your brand once you land a job as there will always be competition looking to fill your shoes.

Tomorrow’s post will discuss brand positioning, USP, how to build your brand and plan it step by step, pitfalls to avoid, and how and where you can promote your brand.

Best of Luck

Sahar Andrade, MB.BCh
Diversity Consultant – Social Media Strategist
Sahar Consulting, LLC. - Home of the D.I.A.L.O.G.™ Programs
Diversity& Inclusion in Active Leadership Organizational Growth
(Exchanging Ideas through Conversation)

http://www.saharconsulting.com

(818)861 9434

Let’s connect on: LinkedIn Facebook Twitter SlideShare WordPress YouTube Flickr
Contact me: Skype saharconsulting

Ethical Leadership in Diverse Environments 1

First published on Technorati: http://technorati.com/lifestyle/article/ethical-leadership-in-diverse-environments-1/

 

The recent Penn State scandal, what transpires from it, and how it was handled by many or not has been fascinating to me.It highlighted the diversity of how different people see or practice ethics. Supporting “Coach Patterno” students had pleasure turning over cars and starting fires while others were outraged having vigils for the victims.

Some knew or witnessed little children allegedly being molested, hurt and raped at Penn State; and just turned the other way. How do we as human beings define ethics and priorities? Do we sacrifice ethics for the sake of priorities, even if misguided? Was winning and having a football team at Penn State more important than protecting children?

Our country is diverse, and this is the beauty of it. Diversity is supposed to bring us all together to a greater good, to better solutions, to better outcomes. I still want to believe in that, despite witnessing leaders like Coach Patterno, that has been a role model for over 40 years, knowing about the children being harmed; and either didn’t care or just felt that it was more important to win and maintain the status quo.

Ethics are ethics and exist in any culture; they are the standards of right and wrong that influence behavior. What is considered unethical in some cultures is considered ethical in others. But harming the people we are supposed to protect is unethical in any culture and no matter how diverse our backgrounds are.

Integrity is an important trait of effective leaders in any culture, and ethics and trust are part of integrity.
Recently we have seen many leaders from diverse backgrounds lose their way. A French politician, inspiring President, and former head of International Monetary fund allegedly accused of rape; a Republican US Senator (Nevada) paying off people to cover an extra-marital affair; a previous CEO for Hewlett-Packard falsifying expense reports covering a relationship with a contractor; dictators in the Middle East like Mubarak and Gadhafi that were aspiring great leaders at the beginning.

 

All these diverse leaders were successful and at the top of their game, their subsequent behaviors are shocking, making me wonder what made them lose their way?
• Was status more important to them than ethics; was money, wining, greed their priorities?
• What turned them to be unethical toxic leaders?
• What made them risk everything they had?
• Did they think they were above the law? And rules that applied to everyone else did not apply to them?
These leaders that lost their way didn’t get to leadership roles to do wrong or be unethical, yet they did. The reason is that at a certain point they lost their ethics, their moral compass and direction, making the other side look greener.
Ethical leadership across any culture, either personal or organizational, requires courage, and the ability to do the right thing at the risk of rejection and loss.
As human beings including the leaders, as diverse as we are, share the need to be liked by others, fitting in without rocking the boat, we take risks when we challenge status quo by speaking our mind and fighting for what we believe is right and it requires courage.

Courage means we do the right thing in spite of fear and it is difficult. It requires taking responsibility for our mistakes and failures, rather than trying to cover them up or blaming others.

Moral and ethical values are important to our well being, it is not just about making money or wining or having an elite status, it is not right to lie, hide or even stretch the truth; Once a lie is made it triggers a domino’s effect of other lies, it has hidden costs, as loosing self-respect, reputation and morals

Leaders from any background should lead by ethical example and enforce ethical standards, because it is the right thing to do.
We will discuss ethical behaviors and more about courage in the next post.

Diversity starts at home,

Sahar Andrade, MB.BCh
Diversity Consultant – Social Media Strategist
Sahar Consulting, LLC. - Home of the D.I.A.L.O.G.™ Programs
Diversity& Inclusion in Active Leadership Organizational Growth
(Exchanging Ideas through Conversation)

http://www.saharconsulting.com

(818)861 9434

Let’s connect on: LinkedIn Facebook Twitter SlideShare WordPress YouTube Flickr
Contact me: Skype saharconsulting

Diversity Equals Positive Work Environment

First appeared on Technorati: http://technorati.com/lifestyle/article/diversity-equals-positive-work-environment/#ixzz1TndkVPib

Diversity_ Positive work environmentA 2006 survey by Gallup Management Journal found that 56 percent of the US workforce are “not-engaged,’ or sleepwalking through their workday, costing their organization money by putting in time without any passion or personal involvement. Fifteen percent of the United States workforce is “actively disengaged,” where employees are unhappy and manifest their unhappiness not only by undermining the efforts of the engaged employees, but also by creating a hostile work environment that is toxic for all employees possibly leaing to workplace violence. In April 2009, the U.S.Bureau of Labor Statistics published a press release reporting that the usual weekly earnings of wage and salary workers for the first quarter of 2009 were: “Median weekly earnings of the nation’s 100.2 million full-time wage and salary workers were $738 in the first quarter of 2009.” A yearly median salary will be $38,376.00 ($738X52 weeks), the actively disengaged employee will cost their employer 41 percent of their annual salary i.e. $15,922.00. Multiplying that by 15 percent of the workforce, and it demonstrates employer’s loss of millions, if not billions of dollars. Gallup estimates the lost productivity of actively disengaged employees costs the US economy $370 BILLION annually. In February 2010, the number of employees voluntarily quitting surpassed the number being fired or discharged, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The issue becomes how long an organization can afford to survive before dealing with the problem of actively disengaged and disgruntled employees. The solution is available for a fraction of the cost of the loss incurred by these organizations. The solution is fostering a positive work environment through diversity and inclusion, training, action plan, execution and follow-up. Creating an organizational culture where all employees feel valued and a vital part of the organization.

Positive work environment is created when the employees feel that they are part of a team working collectively with the senior management towards common goals, be part of decision making and collaborate towards the success of the organization.

Culture will eat strategy for lunch anytime of the day, so it becomes evident why a culture of respect and acknowledgment goes a long way.

The foundation of positive work environment lies on the commitment of every single person at the organization to engage with each other, manage diversity and inclusion, transparency, develop cross-cultural leadership skills, and being accountable for their individual actions, progress and goal achievements.

The most successful workplaces are those in which everyone works well together to create a positive work environment by living the mission, vision and core values of the organization, in alignment with its culture of respecting the diverse talents, valuing and embracing the differences.

In a positive work environment teamwork is appreciated and builds on each others’ strengths and abilities; a strong belief that every single employee is unique and bring their own unique abilities and capabilities to the table and have the right to be treated with dignity and respect; Diversity & Inclusion are weaved through the threads of the organization’s culture where exclusive clubs and ISMs do not exist

Diversity starts at home.

 

Sahar Andrade, MB.BCh
Diversity Consultant – Social Media Strategist
Sahar Consulting, LLC. - Home of the D.I.A.L.O.G.™ Programs
Diversity& Inclusion in Active Leadership Organizational Growth
(Exchanging Ideas through Conversation)

http://www.saharconsulting.com

(818)861 9434

Let’s connect on: LinkedIn Facebook Twitter SlideShare WordPress YouTube Flickr
Contact me: Skype saharconsulting

Diversity And Isms

Diversity and IsmsToday, I found a card on top of our mailbox, it read “Love your race”, and the back read”Stop affirmative action” with a link to a website that spewed hatred, with messages as: “We must have new societies throughout the White world which are based on Aryan values and are compatible with the Aryan nature. We do not need to homogenize the White world. What we must have, however, is a thorough rooting out of Semitic and other non-Aryan values and customs everywhere.”

I stopped for a second in disbelief, not because of the intolerance, and hate messages but because it was so blatant, and destructive.

When cultural differences present themselves in any community it can go either way depending on the surrounding factors. They can become an advantage; conflicts can arise or even worst the symptoms of “Isms” start showing when people don’t coexist peacefully.

Racism is perhaps the most problematic of these “Isms”. Simply put, racism is hatred without bounds. It affects all types of organizations and societies.

Racism is when people dislike others simply because of their race, color, religion, gender or even sexual orientation. Those infected by this hatred cannot work well in a diverse environment as they are overcome by their “ISM.”

Sexismclassismableismhomophobiaxenophobia and ageism are also other “Isms.” Although homophobia and xenophobia are not necessarily “Isms,” they are based on hatred.

Many of the “Isms” are the result of a lack of understanding of the various cultures in society. Many individuals confuse culture with race, and lack of communication or knowledge regarding that particular culture creates additional turmoil due to this lack of understanding.

Culture is not only about race or ethnicity but is about common characters such as age, gender, race, religion, sexual orientation, physical ability, education, marital and parental status that allow people within a group to have a common identity.

For example, some Native Americans are raised in a tribal group that does not permit compliments in front of peers in public. Therefore, a Native American individual may exhibit displeasure at a public compliment, not because they are unappreciative, but because it is against their beliefs. However, if the person complimenting him does not understand that, they may take offense to it.

When English is a second language or poorly spoken, language can create misunderstandings leading to issues of loyalty. This lack of understanding often leads to xenophobia, a fear of anything that is foreign or unknown.

In a multicultural diverse society, zero tolerance for racism and prejudice should be adopted, celebrate the uniqueness of each culture, learn from it and use it as strength for our community or organization to build a stronger culturally diverse nation. Diversity and multiculturalism are NOT affirmative action created to right a wrong, and was not created to adversely impact anyone.

Granted, there have been cases where some organizations mistakenly applied Affirmative action alienating deserving employees to be employed or promoted because they were not minorities. Does it justify intolerance? Does it justify racism and prejudice? 
Diversity and multiculturalism should neither be a demand for special rights for minorities, a threat to protecting one’s own cultural identity and safety, nor a majority ruling.

First, we all need to confront our own bias and prejudice first. Who gets to decide what is normal? Who gets to decide who is right and who is wrong and most of all who are we to judge? We are all human beings sharing more or less the same values and desires, it is not a Kumbaya song, but is reality. We all have in common the love of our families, yearn for freedom, want to love and be loved, want to be safe, want to trust and be trusted, be equal in our rights and responsibilities, and most of all we all look for happiness.

Diversity is about dignity, respect and most of all being human. We spend too much time looking for our differences when we have so much in common to celebrate. We keep looking at the five percent differences while ignoring our ninety five percent commonalities. Join me in looking for our similarities rather than our differences to embrace our different cultures in harmony.
Diversity starts at home.

 

Sahar Andrade, MB.BCh
Diversity Consultant – Social Media Strategist
Sahar Consulting, LLC. - Home of the D.I.A.L.O.G.™ Programs
Diversity& Inclusion in Active Leadership Organizational Growth
(Exchanging Ideas through Conversation)
http://www.saharconsulting.com 
(818)861 9434 

 

Let’s connect on: LinkedIn Facebook Twitter SlideShare WordPress YouTube Flickr
Contact me: Skype saharconsulting

Is Glass Ceiling For Women a Myth? Part 3

First appeared on Technorati:http://technorati.com/women/article/is-glass-ceiling-for-women-a3/

Breaking the glass ceilingIn the first part of this post we discussed the Glass Ceiling as being an invisible barrier against promoting women to senior executive roles; the second part discussed the obstacles faced.

Looking at the obstacles women face; it becomes evident that the problems are from both sides: women and organizations and since it takes two to tango- solutions have to originate from both sides:
A. Change organizations cultures
B. Women to learn how to brand themselves properly, project their leadership skills knowing how they are perceived

Easier said than done but here are some ideas to tackle the issues:

A- Organizations: Change the culture of the organization

1- Offer flexibility at the workplace for parents; and elderly care-takers especially women
2- Offer leadership training that is not bias towards male leaders
3- Have proper succession plans, including the proper assessments for female leaders, career development and training
4- Offer proper coaching, mentoring and sponsoring for promising female leaders
5- Research the acceptable work practices that can help women advance to senior positions instead of hindering them
6- Monitor the selection process of people for high visibility projects that can enhance a career
7- Offer incentive education re-imbursement for masters and doctorates programs for women
8- Have zero tolerance for stereotyping and discrimination against women – strong HR policies and departments are a great asset.
9- Have proper progressive performance evaluations and constructive feedback

B- Women Leaders:
1- Project their brands, and skills properly and assertively with confidence
2- Empower each other by forming and joining ERG and affinity groups to make their voices heard and to name the barriers and bias they might experience
3- Engage with the organizations in effective initiatives to change the organizations cultural barriers
4- Get rid of the “Glass Ceiling” excuse or as a fate defining issue, or fall under the self fulfilling prophecy to justify why they are not advancing. Acting as a victim is debilitating, we become what we work for.
5- Strategize a plan for your career: Plan properly for your S.M.A.R.T. goals, know what is needed to advance, get the required qualifications as education or certification or mentoring, 
6- Stand for themselves and speak-up; prevent others from assuming or trying to perceive their styles, competencies and abilities
7- Ask for feedback from managers or superiors, colleagues that they trust; take their comments into consideration as we are what we do – our actions, verbal and non verbal communications and behaviors affect how we are perceived. Never get defensive
8- Study and research what is needed as knowledge, skills and abilities needed to advance. It is fine to ask for help, seek coaching in areas identified as vulnerable
9- Knowing that it will not be easy, or comfortable, they will need to adapt to many changes along the way, get out of their comfort ones but who said life was easy? Look at career as being a adventure along the life journey.

Then, and may be then a path can be created to propel women through the glass ceiling to executive positions.

Diversity starts at home

 

Picture credit for http://www.nurseweek.com

Sahar Andrade

Diversity Consultant – Social Media Strategist
Sahar Consulting, LLC.
http://www.saharconsulting.com 
(818)861 9434

Let’s connect on: LinkedIn Facebook Twitter SlideShare WordPress YouTube Flickr
Contact me: Skype saharconsulting