Re-defining success

My DBA classmate, Donna Dark has kindly passed on an article regarding work-life balance, thinking it might be useful for my research. I should say, that’s one of the benefits of having face time with peers for the DBA program of University of Wollongong, which provides valuable support, feedback and sometimes, sympathy that are much needed to finish a DBA…

I find the article itself is very interesting, inspirational and relevant to my research topic. It is a feature story about Arianna Huffington, who is a campaigner for the Third Metric, which tries to redefine success in more personal terms such as “the values of wellbeing, wisdom and kindness”, rather than by its traditional, male-focused measures of power and money. Arianna advocates work-life balance in searching for a new model of success that would work for women, AND men. One of her missions is to change people’s attitudes toward stress. She strongly promotes personal sustainability, encouraging people to maintain a more balanced work life, to get more sleep and to re-prioritise one’s work and life tasks. In short, she calls it, “unplug and recharge”.

Arianna is a strong-willed woman with many high achievements both politically and commercially. She is deeply influenced by her mother, who used to tell her, “There are no failures, only stepping stones to success.” Guess how Arianna defines her own success? She thinks the proud career she has achieved is only “a career success”, and her greatest life success is her two daughters. For her, success has two meanings from both work and life sides.

Reflecting on Arianna’s life story and her ideas, I believe there are more women, and even men, out there challenging the traditional definition of success and the meaning of work. However, to see a real change in culture and value systems is still a long way to go. Fortunately, there are campaigners like Arianna to make this process quicker and shorter, just like what my research wishes to do too.

an attribute to my father

I just came back from China after attending the one year anniversary of my father’s passing. My DBA journey has a long, special attachment to my father, – in fact, all my academic pursuit was deeply influenced by him. When I wrote the research proposal for enrolment application, my father was here staying with me, together with my mum, looking after my daughter, at that time who was too young to go to childcare. Every day after dinner and putting kids to bed, I would disappear into my room preparing for the 2,000-word proposal. My parents were delighted and supportive when I was accepted into the program. They were the only supporters I had because my husband did not agree with my “crazy” study commitment. When I got into April for the first year, struggling to meet assignment deadlines, my father encouraged me not to give up and he was so proud of me, telling my brothers and sisters that I was doing a doctoral degree. Like him, giving-up is not in my genes, neither. So I continued. His sudden passing last year is a huge strike to me and I have never really recovered from the sadness. At times I would be so painful when I think of him, I often cry quietly under the quilt or in the bathroom at midnight, missing him madly. I also got superstitious, searched on Google and other websites looking for evidence or traces of signs that spirit could live on after a person’s death. At such moments, I wish I had some religious beliefs so I could hang onto them to make my life easier. I become more sensitive to life or death topics. When I kiss my kids, I say to myself, “I love you, kids. I hope you remember the love when I die one day.” Sometimes I feel I’m silly thinking of death all the time.

After my father’s passing, I went through a few rounds of drawbacks. I first decided to withdraw from the DBA program and stopped all study activities. Then I quit my job. During the first month of my staying home, I felt like continuing the study to complete the wish for my father and myself, so I resumed the DBA after suspending for two months. After nine months of being a full-time student, I started a new job in October, because I found I was not as productive at home as I thought – I did not spend more time on study than when I was working full timely. During these changes, I always wanted to ask my father, – if he could hear me somehow, “am I doing the right thing?”, “what’s your opinion?”…. I feel I still need his answers for important life decisions, just like before when he was only a phone call away.

2013 has been a very, very difficult year for me mentally. I miss my father so much. I hope, somehow, he is watching me and blessing me to finish this DBA journey, which I could not have started without his encouragement. I do this not only for me, but also for him. I hope he’ll continue to be proud of me, if he could know. I love you, dad.

 

 

two weeks into my new job

Hmm, time flies. Already two weeks into my new job, still feel unreal. The worst thing is, as you can imagine, I have been so occupied with the new job (including opening the computer and working at night and on weekends) and have not done any study! The best thing is, my employer has a very flexible culture and delivers what they promise. I have not worked from home yet, simply due to overwhelming induction sessions, numerous meetings and all the other stress associated with starting a new job. Theoretically I can turn up or leave the office at any time I like and no one would even care. Except for Mondays when we usually have management meetings, I can work from home at any other days if I like. This is A BIG THING for me. I really love this new job and hope the good feeling would continue.

For my work, I feel I still need two to three months to settle in before taking control. For my (poor, neglected) study, I have just made some resolutions that I’ll get into the study mood from tomorrow night (15th Oct) and will try to ensure 15 – 20 hours of study time each week from this week onward.

Tonight I just did my Annual Progress Report draft for Session 1 and sent to my supervisors for their comments before submitting online. Hope they will OK my report. Fingers crossed.

My methodology chapter has been “work in progress” for too long. During the past month – September, it experienced another shift of direction. Now I was advised to re-focus on the qualitative method only without bothering to add a quantitative part, which was a big hit for me unfortunately, after spending so much time on reading, designing and writing the quantitative element. Anyway, I think it is natural to move back and forth during the DBA journey and I’ll just have to take it as a learning experience.

I hope everybody else in the class has made good, steady progress in their study. All the best to all of us!

getting back to work…

After nine months of “full-time” study, I have recently returned to the workforce. Did not expect this would happen so soon, because the initial plan was to start looking for a job from Janurary next year. But it just happened due to one visit to Seek at the end of August. I take this as a call of destiny …

What I found is that when I stopped working and spent all day at home I was not very productive and studied the same or even less hours as when I was working full timely. So the feeling of guilt made me very uncomfortable and I felt I needed to do something to justify my time. Also I was afraid of losing confidence if staying out of employment for too long.

So only one day of visiting the Seek web changed my whole situation. I got the job within ten days from the first call. And most importantly, as I asked very clearly at the interviews, I could work from home a couple of days every week and they agreed – that’s why I say it’s a call of destiny. I did it at the right time and the right place. I just hope it would work out as it promises and I would be able to continue my study as planned. However I do need to change to part-time from next year, so I can do a proper job and maintain good study results.

I’m not sure how many people change their jobs during their doctoral study if they do work, but I do think doing the DBA has changed the way I make decisions toward my work. Flexibility and time autonomy are important criteria for my job consideration. I never want to give up my study although going back to work would definitely slow it down. I hope I could complete it within two years time.

Actually I’m thinking of doing a separate research post my DBA life, if by then I’d still like to do research. I’d like to see how doing a DBA has changed our work and life. And I have decided it must be a qualitative study of one-to-one interviews. I expect findings would be interesting. It certainly has changed my life and my work although I have not finished it yet.

increasingly ridiculous research grants?

Not surprisingly, the coalition’s announcement of cutting “increasingly ridiculous research grants” has angered many in the research community. Well, given that my doctoral research also falls under the somewhat criticised social science, I feel better to do a bit justification here.

As the Economist claims, “Forget China, India and the internet: economic growth is driven by women“, economic power of women is vital to our country’s economic success,  especially that here we have such a small workforce in Australia. Hence my research has a focus on work-life balance for women executives. We know that many working women tend to withdraw from employment, either temporarily or permanently in their career life. One of the key reasons reported is the inability to balance work and life demands, once they have children. So to gain a better understanding of work-life balance for women has an important economic meaning. Needless to say, flexibility to balance work and life has become a key attraction for many organisations to recruit and retain the desired talents. From an organisation’s point of view, that links to employee loyalty, work performance and productivity, which in turn affects the bottom line of a business. We have to admit that nowadays people’s attitude toward work has changed substantially. People put more emphasis on personal development, family life and leisure, challenging the traditional centrality of paid work. If we don’t seek changes, then we are continuing losing half of our talent pool, women professionals. Some research suggests that if we could increase our women workforce participation, then we can improve our GDP by 11%. Moreover, in Australia, poverty has a gendered face. Majority of the pensioners are women. We ask women to sacrifice for family but we do not recognise housework as paid work; instead, we give women financial penalty for staying at home. In that sense, insights into women executives and their work-life balance bear significant social meanings as well. I do believe social socience like this is as important as “hard” socience such as medicine or spacewalks. So I guess my research is worth its 2 cents.

Need to lean in

First read Evelyn’s post a few months back and now glad to discover that she has completed and got her doctoral title already! Reading her blog (again) today to give myself a bit of push – have been very unproductive lately on my DBA study due to other life things happening… Feel very guilty about my current status. Need to lean in more seriously. I’ll do a few things as she advised, to unplug the Internet, decline all offers of social activity, focus, focus, focus, and put more time, time, time. I really need to make some good progress in methodology in September. Well, have to stop talking and get back to study now.

Why do so many incompetent men become leaders?

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Why do so many incompetent men become leaders?
Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic
inShare

http://www.brw.com.au/p/leadership/why_do_so_many_ incompetent_men_become_HFH3byXhaaPVaW3jBBJt6I#!

Inompetent men often thrive because people have trouble telling confidence from competence.

There are three popular explanations for the clear underrepresentation of women in management, namely: They’re not capable, they’re not interested, or they’re interested and capable but not able to break the glass ceiling – the invisible career barrier, based on gender stereotypes, that prevents women from accessing the higher ranks of power. Conservatives and chauvinists tend to endorse the first explanation; liberals and feminists prefer the third; and those somewhere in the middle are usually drawn to the second. But what if they’re all missing the big picture?

In my view, the main reason for the uneven management sex ratio is our inability to discern the difference between confidence and competence. That is, because we commonly misinterpret displays of confidence as signs of competence, we’re fooled into believing that men are better leaders than women. In other words, when it comes to leadership, the only advantage that men have over women is the fact that manifestations of hubris – often masked as charisma or charm – are commonly mistaken for leadership potential, and that these occur much more frequently in men than in women.

Self-centered, overconfident and narcissistic

This is consistent with the finding that leaderless groups have a natural tendency to elect self-centered, overconfident and narcissistic individuals as leaders, and that these personality characteristics aren’t equally common in men and women. Freud argued that leaders are in part created when a group of people (the followers) replace their own narcissistic tendencies with those of another person (the leader), such that their love for the leader is a disguised form of self-love or a substitute for their inability to love themselves. “Another person’s narcissism,” Freud wrote, “has a great attraction for those who have renounced part of their own … as if we envied them for maintaining a blissful state of mind.”

The truth of the matter is that men from pretty much anywhere in the world often think that they’re smarter than women. Yet arrogance and overconfidence are inversely related to leadership talent – the ability to build and maintain high-performing teams, and to inspire others to set aside their selfish agendas in order to work for the common interests of the group. Indeed, whether in sports, politics or business, the best leaders are usually humble – and whether through nature or nurture, humility is a much more common feature in women than in men. For example, women outperform men on emotional intelligence, which is a strong driver of modest behaviours. Furthermore, a quantitative review of gender differences in personality involving more than 23,000 participants in 26 cultures (published in 2001 in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology) indicated that women are more sensitive, considerate and humble than men – arguably one of the least counterintuitive findings in the history of the social sciences.

An even clearer picture emerges when one examines the darker side of our personalities. For instance, data from the personality assessment firm Hogan Assessment Systems, where I serve as a vice president, shows that men are consistently more arrogant, manipulative and risk-prone than women.

Getting the job vs doing the job

The paradoxical implication is that the same psychological characteristics that enable male managers to rise to the top of the corporate and political ladders are actually responsible for their downfall. In other words, what it takes to get the job isn’t just different from what it takes to do that job well – it’s the complete opposite. As a result, too many incompetent people are promoted to management jobs.

Unsurprisingly, the mythical image of a strong leader embodies many of the characteristics commonly found in personality disorders, such as narcissism (Steve Jobs, Vladimir Putin), psychopathy (fill in the name of your favourite despot here) and extravagant theatricality (Virgin Group founder Richard Branson, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer). The sad thing isn’t that these mythical figures are unrepresentative of the average manager, but that the average manager will fail precisely for having these characteristics.

In fact, most leaders – whether in politics or business – fail. That has always been the case: The majority of nations, companies, societies and organizations are poorly managed, as indicated by their longevity, revenues and approval ratings, or by the effects they have on their citizens, employees, subordinates or members. Good leadership has always been the exception, not the norm.

Leaning in

So it has struck me as a little odd that so much of the recent debate over getting women to “lean in” has focused on getting them to adopt more of the dysfunctional leadership traits commonly associated with men. Yes, people with these behaviours are often our leaders – but should they be?

Most of the character traits that are truly advantageous for effective leadership are predominantly found in those who initially fail to impress others with their management talent. This is especially true for women. There is now compelling scientific evidence to suggest that women are more likely to adopt more effective leadership strategies than men. Most notably, in a comprehensive review of 45 studies, published in 2003 in the Psychological Bulletin, Alice Eagly and colleagues showed that female managers are more likely to elicit respect and pride from their followers, communicate their vision effectively, empower and mentor subordinates, approach problem-solving in more flexible and creative ways, and fairly reward direct reports. In contrast, male managers are statistically less likely to bond or connect with their subordinates, and are more inept at rewarding them for their performance. Although these findings may reflect a sampling bias that requires women to be more qualified and competent than men in order to be chosen as leaders, there is no way of really knowing until that bias is eliminated.

In sum, there’s no denying that women’s path to leadership positions is paved with many barriers, one of which is a very thick glass ceiling. But a much bigger problem is the lack of career obstacles for incompetent men, and the fact that we tend to equate leadership with the very psychological features that make the average man a more inept leader than the average woman. The result is a pathological system that rewards men for their incompetence while punishing women for their competence, to everybody’s detriment.

Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic is an international authority in personality profiling and psychometric testing. He is a professor of business psychology at University College London and vice president of research and innovation at Hogan Assessment Systems. He is the co-founder of metaprofiling.com and the author of Confidence: Overcoming Low Self-Esteem, Insecurity and Self-Doubt.

© 2013 Harvard Business School Publishing Corp.

Topics:
C-Suite
Leader
Personal development

Would work values disappear?

According to Schwartz and other researchers, work values are the reflection of basic human values in the work setting. But I was always wondering: would work values disappear? Since basic human values are lasting, then shouldn’t their reflection, i.e. the work values also last? Then how do we explain the fact that some women quit their jobs after having kids and never return to the workforce? Do their work values disappear completely? Similar to basic human values which are believed to be formed at early adulthood, Jin and Rounds claim that work values are also stabilised after adulthood and that work values are more stable than personal characteristics. But how to explain the drop-out? I find it hard to get any literature exploring the phenomenon of working women becoming stay-home mums and its values mechanism behind. Anybody has some suggestions?

my methodology puzzle

Yesterday I had a discussion with my supervisor regarding my research design. It evolved in the end that a small quantitative part was suggested to be included, in addition to the main qualitative interviews. So I am a bit stressed now of re-designing the research method. I sat in front of the computer for a long time today but felt not knowing where exactly to start. My supervisor suggested me not to mention generalisation, not to mention interpretivism and not to mention research philosophy at all, instead to borrow ideas from these concepts just without labelling them explicitly. Maybe I should start simple, then expand and elaborate. I’m so afraid that I would waste time by going the wrong direction. It seems I should use interviews for the work-life balance side and use some questionnaire for the work values side. Can I converge them logically? Does that mean I need to apply both quan and qual analysis techniques, and also using both SPSS and Nvivo? I came across an article by Andrew, Salamonson and Halcomb (2008), ‘Integrating mixed methods data analysis using NVivo: An example examining attrition and persistence of nursing students’, International Journal of Multiple Research Approaches, vol. 2, no. 1, pp. 36–43. Maybe that would give me some idea of how to integrate and present both quan and qual data? Meanwhile I feel I also need to find some articles with a work values focus to help my design of the quan questionnaire. I really need to make some real progress on the methodology chapter during this month.

An article about e-working’s psychological effects on work-life balance

psychological factors for eworkers

A database alert prompted me to an article by Grant, Wallace and Spurgeon (2013), ‘An exploration of the psychological factors affecting remote e-worker’s job effectiveness, well-being and work-life balance’, which was published on Employee Relations, vol. 35, no. 5, pp. 527-546. The article attracted me because its title contained “psychological factors” and “work-life balance” which I expected would give some indications for my thesis and also that it was an exploratory qualitative study using thematic analysis.

After reading the article, I was a little disappointed about its limited elaboration on “psychological factors” in the “Results” part. The article summarised 10 themes arising from the data analysis, but only “trust” I feel it is directly related to psychology. It could become more integrated with its title and abstract if the authors either clearly indicate which themes can be labelled as psychological factors or explain whether they consider all these ten themes belong to psychological factors – as some are clearly not, such as “e-working practices”. I could feel a disconnection between the earlier parts of the article and its findings, which might be a matter of effective reporting other than a structural issue.

The “Introduction” part is very well written. One particular feature is that the authors effectively defined “e-working” by indicating it was about “moving work to the workers instead of moving workers to the work” (p. 529), contrary to the traditional meaning of office working and by giving a comparison to “teleworking” that e-working focused on the “location independent aspect” while teleworking more on “travel substitute aspect” (p. 529). In addition, the authors discussed some representative psychological aspects which were commonly related to e-working in terms of trust, psychological contract, stress, social isolation, restorative effects, and well-being.

The methodology part is inspirational for my own research. The interview questions are designed to be suitable for three types of interviews, face-to-face, email or telephone. In addition the authors mentioned using “Braun and Clarke’s (2006) thematic approach” for data coding (p. 535), which I need to check upon and see whether is applicable for my future data analysis.