The fix Overcome the invisible barriers that are holding women back at work

Michelle P. King, 1982-

Book - 2020

"In the vein of #Girlboss and Nice Girls Don't Get the Corner Office, discover how to thrive at work from the director of inclusion at Netflix with this "passionate, practical roadmap for addressing inequality and finally making our workplaces work for women" (Arianna Huffington)"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Atria Books 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Michelle P. King, 1982- (author)
Edition
First Atria Books hardcover edition
Physical Description
x, 324 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781982110925
  • Foreword
  • Introduction: It's Not a Woman Problem, It's a Work Problem
  • Part I. Awareness
  • 1. Who Broke The Workplace? A Brief History
  • 2. Gender Denial
  • 3. Privilege At Work: How Denial Feeds and Breeds Inequality
  • 4. It's A Path, Not A Ladder: Becoming Aware of Your Workplace
  • Part II. Understanding
  • 5. The Achievement Phase: Six Invisible Barriers from Graduate to Manager
  • 6. The Endurance Phase: Balancing Management and Motherhood
  • 7. The Contribution Phase: Six Invisible Barriers Women Leaders Face
  • Part III. Action
  • 8. Breaking Up With Don Why Men Need Gender Equality Just as Much as Women
  • 9. Equality A Call to Lead
  • 10. It's Our Workplace So, Let's Fix It Like Our Futures Depend on It
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

It is exhausting to hear researchers and authors dump issues about gender equality in the workplace at the feet of women themselves. Failure is due to, they claim, any number of individual issues, from nonconformity to lack of awareness about corporate dos and don'ts. Nonsense. It is the fault of the workplace, an environment designed by men, for men. Consultant King more than proves her point with case histories and statistics documenting the invisible barriers women face: the confidence-versus-competence catch-22. The penalties ladled out to moms who adopt part-time work. Even the so-called standard of success (which she calls "the Don Draper syndrome"). Though King touts "the fix" throughout, there is no one panacea, nor any one way to ensure equality. And unfortunately, the last section, on how to act to change the workplace, falls flat when she simply looks at awareness and understanding of barriers, with action afterwards, as the fix. Detailed roadmaps, please; otherwise, it will take at least another century to realize a 50-50 balance in the C-suite.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

King, head of the UN Women's Global Innovation Coalition for Change, debuts with a welcome addition to the growing chorus of voices calling out the system rather than individual women for workplace gender inequity. She asks why people are obsessed with the idea that women need to be fixed, despite being more likely to have the characteristics commonly associated with good leaders--being collaborative, communicative, and well-educated. To her, the answer lies in an outdated expectation of what constitutes the "ideal worker": a stereotypically masculine, aggressive, and family-deprioritizing man, an ideal she associates with Mad Men's Don Draper character. King writes about how privilege and denial keep inequality going, how men are also harmed by gender assumptions, how feminism hasn't gone far enough, and how working mothers and female leaders still struggle with stereotypes and institutional barriers. The challenge, she shows, is in getting people to understand there's a problem at all, but King is there with strategies for taking action--she calls "for breaking up with Don" and critically reexamining how ideas about masculinity play out in the workplace. This thoughtful, thorough, often enraging look at a broken system delivers a resounding and memorable message: "Women are not the problem." (Mar.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A global expert on organizational diversity and inclusion explains how to create an equitable workplace.King is head of the U.N. Women's Global Innovation Coalition for Change and an advisory board member for Girl Up, a campaign by the United Nations Foundation that helps fund and support programs that focus on adolescent girls. She is also a keynote speaker, researcher, and writer as well as the host of a weekly podcast, The Fix, in which she shares ways men and women "can advance equality at work." In her debut book, King challenges the notion of the ideal worker and condemns the success prototype common in traditional workplace environments. While the author acknowledges that strides have been made, she contends that organizations, often unknowingly, "operate in a way that marginalizes, excludes, or devalues women." She also contends that many organizations do not value differences and that their "diversity and inclusion efforts" are often "aimed at fixing women" rather than creating a workplace that truly supports men and women equally. Backed by extensive research data and interviews with company and thought leaders, the book is divided into three primary sections. In Part I, King explores the history of the workplace and the challenges faced by both women and men in this conventional environment. In Part II, she identifies three career phases common for women and the "invisible barriers" that women typically face at each stage. In Part III, the author provides a call to action for employees and leaders to begin discussing these hidden barriers and implementing changes that create environments and cultures that support everyone in an organization. Throughout the book, King also calls out problems and identifies specific ways employees and leaders can begin fixing them. Although the text is particularly geared toward issues faced by women, the author rightly asserts that equality in the workplace will benefit everyone.A common-sense guidebook for creating a workplace that values men and women equally. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.