workplace

For Women in The Workplace, Does Loving Your Job Matter?

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We enjoyed this piece from Take the Lead on loving our jobs -- at least some of the time. How generous we are with others and even the perceptions we reinforce in our own minds, as well as traits like courage and resourcefulness, can help us see the best -- and do our best -- in almost any job. Another crucial element is leadership: If you're confident in the leadership at your company, you are more likely to love your job. It's a lesson workers and founders alike can keep in mind for happy, healthy workplaces. taketheleadwomen.comWashington Post publisher and owner Katharine Graham reportedly once said, “To love what you do and feel that it matters, how can anything be more fun?”

Agreed, not all of us love our work every second of every day. Nor are most of us rushing off to the bathroom to weep or call a friend in a panic. Well, not every day.

You don’t have to love your job all the time, but you can try to love your job a lot of the time. So just how can you fall in love, or stay in love with your job, your work and your career?

Some experts say that starts with how you treat others.

“By giving others the benefit of the doubt, you’ll feel a lot happier at work because you won’t be held back by resentment or anger. Just think about how much easier it would be to get back to your work when your mindset changes from ‘My boss ignores everything I’m working on,’ to ‘My boss doesn’t micromanage me,’ according to The Muse.

And if you feel as if your boss or supervisor is competent, you are also more likely to like your job. Nothing like feeling you are a passenger on a runaway train to bring you down. Trusting that your manager knows what she is doing makes a huge difference in your happiness level.

by Michele Weldon

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Diversity is good for business

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bdlive.co.za - GALLUP, Harvard, and McKinsey are among organisations that have compiled studies that show the advantages of a gender-diverse executive and workforce.

Increasingly, corporations and politicians are realising the benefits of increased diversity. Diversity makes the business and political world go round. It simply "makes bottom-line business sense", writes Sangeeta Bharadwaj Badal, primary researcher for Gallup’s Entrepreneurship and Job Creation Initiative, commenting on a recent Gallup study, which found that hiring a demographically diverse workforce can improve a company’s financial performance.

Men and women have different viewpoints, ideas, and market insights, which enables better problem-solving, ultimately leading to superior performance.

Despite the overwhelming evidence in its favour, however, gender equality is taking one step forward and two steps back.

A study by tax and assurance company Grant Thornton unearthed distressing results: little progress is being made globally to highlight gender advancement in business leadership. And in SA, only 23% of senior management positions are occupied by women, while just less than 40% of companies have no women at all in leadership positions.

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