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Advancing Women in Business--The Catalyst Guide: Best Practices from the Corporate Leaders (Jossey Bass Business and Management Series)
 
 
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Advancing Women in Business--The Catalyst Guide: Best Practices from the Corporate Leaders (Jossey Bass Business and Management Series) [Hardcover]

Catalyst (Author), Sheila W. Wellington (Foreword)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

0787939668 978-0787939663 March 17, 1998 1
Optimize Your Company's Leadership Potential

Develop a more diverse, creative, and resourceful pool of leadership talent for your company. Reinforced by the cutting-edge research and consulting expertise of Catalyst, America's premier nonprofit dedicated to the advancement of women in business, this guide details the best practices of corporations noted for their ability to cultivate and leverage the abilities of their female employees. Stories of initiatives undertaken at Hewlett-Packard, JC Penney, and DuPont, among other companies--coupled with practical, hands-on advice--illustrate a compelling framework organizations can follow to more fully develop their own human capital at a time when no company can ignore a single source of competitive advantage.


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Advancing Women in Business--The Catalyst Guide: Best Practices from the Corporate Leaders is literally a self-help manual for anyone interested in expanding management opportunities for women while simultaneously advancing larger business objectives. Produced by the nonprofit Catalyst organization and opening with a foreword by its president Sheila Wellington, the book presents an array of practical suggestions for developing programs that ultimately benefit all employees and positively impact the bottom line. A variety of helpful resources are identified, and laudable programs at companies such as Eastman Kodak, Sara Lee, and Motorola are described. --Howard Rothman

Review

"Catalyst has provided a collection of best practices aimed at creating a climate for maximizing women's contributions in the workplace. This is a business imperative in today's global marketplace." --John F. Smith, Jr., chairman, president and CEO, General Motors Corporation

"Catalyst has produced a valuable tool to help women realize their potential in the workplace and for companies to best tap the talent women represent. This book reminds us why Catalyst is rightly viewed as one of America's most respected business research organizations." --Lynn Martin, former United States Secretary of Labor

"This is the first book I would turn to for excellent advice on how to foster, improve, and accelerate the role of women in contemporary organizations. Well-written, beautifully organized and filled with clear-cut how-tos, I found this book important and illuminating." --Warren Bennis, distinguished professor of business, University of Southern California

"Building a diverse organization requires strong leadership, commitment, hard work, and time. And while there is no ?right' way to do it, Advancing Women in Business gives readers a few must-dos along with a lot of alternatives to try." --Lois Juliber, executive vice president and chief of operations, Developed Markets, Colgate-Palmolive Company

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 244 pages
  • Publisher: Jossey-Bass; 1 edition (March 17, 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0787939668
  • ISBN-13: 978-0787939663
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.2 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,449,413 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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4.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Invaluable Benchmarks, March 5, 2000
This review is from: Advancing Women in Business--The Catalyst Guide: Best Practices from the Corporate Leaders (Jossey Bass Business and Management Series) (Hardcover)
For those organizations which seek to establish and then sustain programs which optimize the talents of the women whom they employ, this is an immensely informative book. Of even greater value than the information provided are the specific suggestions it offers based on three decades of research on all manner of companies. Catalyst is a non-profit organization which "partners with U.S. corporations and professional firms that understand the critical power of women at work, that know that women's advancement is not a feel-good or even a do-good issue but a bottom-line practicality."

The Catalyst Award is given to those corporations which have achieved lasting, measurable results in this area. The book examines many of these corporations. For example: IBM, Avon Products, E.I. du Pont de Nemours, Eastman Kodak, Arthur Andersen, Motorola, American Airlines, Morrison & Foerster, McDonald's, J.C. Penney, Dow Chemical, Knight-Ridder, Texas Instruments, and Allstate. I hasten to point out that most (if not all) of the information and suggestions provided by the book are also relevant to small-to-midsize organizations and may indeed be of even greater value to them than to (let's say) "Fortune 100" companies.

Advancing Women in Business is divided as follows:

Part I. Changing the System

Part II. Best Practices

Part III. Resources: The Catalyst Award

"The Catalyst Approach" can maximize the value of a workforce by "capitalizing on the talents of women" only if all efforts are made within an "inclusive, problem-solving, comprehensive program." Specifically, first establish a strong foundation by connecting each initiative explicitly to a business rationale; next, build a fact base by gathering information that will create the baselines for evaluating each initiative's progress; finally, develop, pilot, and implement action plans whose initiatives achieve practical solutions tailored to the organization's environment. How? Several dozen corporations are examined which illustrate what the "Catalyst Approach" requires of those involved in its implementation. Specific strategies and tactics are discussed. Results are measured and evaluated. I rate this book so highly because I think it is very well written, because it provides a wealth of important information about "best practices from the corporate leaders", and because it includes a number of practical suggestions as to HOW to derive greatest benefit from that information.

Frankly, I had hoped that a gender-specific book such as this would not be relevant in the year 2000. Well, unfortunately, it is. I now hope that enough people buy it and enough organizations are guided by it so that one day very soon, my granddaughters will read it and then ask me "What's this all about? Was it really like that? That's ridiculous!" Yes it is.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Invaluable Benchmarks, March 13, 2000
This review is from: Advancing Women in Business--The Catalyst Guide: Best Practices from the Corporate Leaders (Jossey Bass Business and Management Series) (Hardcover)
For those organizations which seek to establish and then sustain programs which optimize the talents of the women whom they employ, this is an immensely informative book. Of even greater value than the information provided are the specific suggestions it offers based on three decades of research on all manner of companies. Catalyst is a non-profit organization which "partners with U.S. corporations and professional firms that understand the critical power of women at work, that know that women's advancement is not a feel-good or even a do-good issue but a bottom-line practicality."

The Catalyst Award is given to those corporations which have achieved lasting, measurable results in this area. The book examines many of these corporations. For example: IBM, Avon Products, E.I. du Pont de Nemours, Eastman Kodak, Arthur Andersen, Motorola, American Airlines, Morrison & Foerster, McDonald's, J.C. Penney, Dow Chemical, Knight-Ridder, Texas Instruments, and Allstate. I hasten to point out that most (if not all) of the information and suggestions provided by the book are also relevant to small-to-midsize organizations and may indeed be of even greater value to them than to (let's say) "Fortune 100" companies.

Advancing Women in Business is divided as follows:

Part I. Changing the System

Part II. Best Practices

Part III. Resources: The Catalyst Award

"The Catalyst Approach" can maximize the value of a workforce by "capitalizing on the talents of women" only if all efforts are made within an "inclusive, problem-solving, comprehensive program." Specifically, first establish a strong foundation by connecting each initiative explicitly to a business rationale; next, build a fact base by gathering information that will create the baselines for evaluating each initiative's progress; finally, develop, pilot, and implement action plans whose initiatives achieve practical solutions tailored to the organization's environment. How? Several dozen corporations are examined which illustrate what the "Catalyst Approach" requires of those involved in its implementation. Specific strategies and tactics are discussed. Results are measured and evaluated. I rate this book so highly because I think it is very well written, because it provides a wealth of important information about "best practices from the corporate leaders", and because it includes a number of practical suggestions as to HOW to derive greatest benefit from that information. By now, frankly, I had hoped that a gender-specific book such as this would be unnecessary in the year 2000. Well, unfortunately, it is. I now hope that enough people buy it and enough organizations are guided by it so that one day very soon, my granddaughters read it and then ask me "What's this all about? Was it really like that? That's ridiculous!" Yes it is.

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3 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars INTERESTING TOUR DE FORCE OF BEST PRACTICES., April 22, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Advancing Women in Business--The Catalyst Guide: Best Practices from the Corporate Leaders (Jossey Bass Business and Management Series) (Hardcover)
The book begins with a three phase approach for advancing women that is basic to all successful initiatives. It explores some of the best practices of corporations to provide advice on women's advancement issues. It also briefly highlights the programs of numerous Catalyst award winners. The book is based on Catalyst's research reports, case histories, and best practices. This is an interesting tour de force of best practices. Reviewed by Gerry Stern, founder, Stern & Associates, author of Stern's SourceFinder: The Master Directory to HR and Business Management Information & Resources, Stern's CyberSpace SourceFinder, and Stern's Compensation and Benefits SourceFinder.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Catalyst has found that efforts to maximize the value of a workforce by capitalizing on the talents of women are likely to be successful only when an organization takes an inclusive, problem-solving, comprehensive approach. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
strategic diversity plan, parity initiative, technical women, women brokers, gender awareness training, advancing women, flexible work arrangements, diversity initiative
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Catalyst Award, Sara Lee, Con Ed, New York, Avon Mexico, Bank of Montreal, Texas Instruments, Management Intern Program, Blue Collar Prep, Eastman Kodak, Hoechst Celanese, Pitney Bowes, United States, Bankers Trust, Dain Bosworth, Dow Chemical, Vertical Parity Initiative, Price Waterhouse, Booz Allen, Personal Safety Program, Avon Products, Benchmarking Culture, Michael Cook, Technical Women's Conference, Wall Street
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