Breaking Through Bias: Communication Techniques for Women to Succeed at Work

More than fifty years after the beginning of the Women’s Movement and forty years after passage of Title IX, women are still not “making it” in traditionally male careers. Women start their careers on parity with men but generally end them far earlier, having achieved less status, lower compensation, and less satisfaction than men. Breaking Through Bias explains that it is the stereotypes about women, men, work, leadership, and family that hold women back, and it presents an integrated set of communication techniques that women can use to avoid the discriminatory consequences of these stereotypes. Women define career success in a wide variety of ways. But whatever a woman’s personal definition, if she is in a traditionally male-dominated career—virtually all high status, highly compensated fields—her career is at risk because of pervasive gender stereotypes. This highly practical book makes clear that women don’t need to change who they are to succeed in their chosen careers, and they certainly don’t need to act more like men. Women do, however, need to be attuned to the negative gender stereotypes that surround them; they need to anticipate the biases these stereotypes foster, and they need to manage the impressions they make to avoid or overcome these biases. Based on the authors’ personal experiences as business leaders and practicing attorneys, involvement in compensation and hiring decisions, extensive mentoring activities, and numerous scientific and academic studies, Breaking Through Bias presents unique, practical, and effective advice about how women can at last break through gender bias in the workplace and win at the career advancement game.

Andrea S. Kramer, Alton B. Harris

Andie’s and Al’s perspectives, although closely aligned, are not identical. As a result, their book and presentations offer unique, balanced advice about what women can do to prevent gender stereotypes and biases from obstructing their ability to advance as fast and as far as they wish in their careers. Andie and Al’s advice reflects their belief that by learning to use distinctive, practical, effective communication techniques, women can overcome gender bias and be noticed as the capable, competent, ambitious professionals they are. Andie and Al also make senior male business leaders aware of the difficulties women face in their careers and encourage these leaders to adopt policies and practices to reduce these difficulties and make women’s career opportunities more comparable to men’s. For more than thirty years Andie and Al have been sounding boards for each other’s ideas, collaborating on more than thirty articles, and working together to promote gender equality in the workplace. They are accomplished experts in their respective fields of law and both are adjunct professors at Northwestern University School of Law. Andie and Al live in Chicago. They have a daughter in medical school, three rescue dogs, and four rescue cats.

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Bibliomotion, Inc.

Bibliomotion is a book publishing house designed for the new publishing landscape. While many publishers work to retrofit old processes for new realities, Bibliomotion was founded by book-industry veterans who believe the best approach is a fresh one—one that focuses on empowering authors and serving readers above all else. Moving away from the top-down model that has dominated the publishing process for years, we give each member of the team—including the author—a seat at the table from the very beginning and in doing so, work side-by-side to launch and sell the best books possible.

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