by Solange Lopes | Jun 3, 2016 | Career
This is our weekly career and lifestyle news update, where we round up exciting news of the last week and we let you have it…ahem, news-wise that is…
Think of it as your career gossiping section on steroids…
And while you’re at it, follow us on Facebook, Twitter,IG, and Pinterest!
Here we go…
Happy Friday
PS: Like this post? Click HERE to get The Corporate Sister’s career, lifestyle and entrepreneurship, bi-weekly updates.
To your success,
The Corporate Sis.
by Solange Lopes | May 27, 2016 | Career
This is our weekly career and lifestyle news update, where we round up exciting news of the last week and we let you have it…ahem, news-wise that is…
Think of it as your career gossiping section on steroids…
And while you’re at it, follow us on Facebook, Twitter,IG, and Pinterest!
Here we go…
- I’ve been a longtime admirer of Ellevate Network’s Sallie Krawcheck. In this article, she hits the nail right on the head about the best career advice women are not getting;
- Have you ever wondered what people your age earn in the US? Business Insider tells you here;
- Speaking of age, US News lists 10 things you should know about work by the age of 30 ( still working on #6 here);
- Want to improve your relationship with your boss? The Muse recommends you ask these 4 questions on a regular basis (and in my opinion, this one is the most important);
- No one likes to fail, but believe it or not, it can sometimes be the stepping stone to your most incredible successes. Ellevate Network tells you why in this gripping article;
- If you’ve ever asked yourself if you’re a cultural fit for the job, Careerealism may have the answer for you;
- Snapchat much? Well, Levo actually asks if applying for a job through Snapchat is the new normal (now I need to get on Snapchat for real);
- Ever had entrepreneurial dreams? In this post, I ask if it’s best to quit your job to follow the dream, or just stay put and hustle on the side? Thoughts?
- “Sorry I ain’t sorry”…In Beyonce’s words, being sorry kinda sucks. Well, Ellevate Network also agrees that saying “sorry” at work can seriously undermine your message;
- Time for some work wardrobe sprucing? The Nordstrom designer sale has started, and Corporette lists some of the best deals here.
Happy Friday!
PS: Like this post? Click HERE to get The Corporate Sister’s career, lifestyle and entrepreneurship, bi-weekly updates.
To Your Success,
The Corporate Sis.
by Solange Lopes | May 26, 2016 | Career
You see them in the media, on your Facebook or Twitter feed, through the books you read and the shows you watch. Those women, those “corporate entrepreneurs” who’ve hustled and grinded their way out of a “normal” job into the business and life of their dreams. The Oprahs, the Sara Blakelys, the Barbara Corcorans, the Sallie Krawchecks of this world…
Think about it, Oprah used to be a reporter before her big break! Sara Blakely was a fax-machine saleswoman before her Spanx invention took off! Shark Tank’s Barbara Corcoran had about 20 jobs, including diner waitress, before founding her multi-billion real estate company! Ellevate’s Sallie Krawcheck was a corporate executive and research analysts before becoming an entrepreneur!They were once the “corporate entrepreneur” you may now be, dreaming of success, time, flexibility, and maybe…more sleep!
If you’re a corporate entrepreneur working a regular job while building your business, being inspired by those who did it before you, dragging yourself out of bed at 5am and surviving on excessive caffeine, you’re not alone. Looking at some of the most famous women entrepreneurs who bootstrapped themselves from corporate, normal gigs to their own empires, here are 7 of their most prominent traits:
- Vision. You know when your little cousin from back home tell you you must have fallen and hit your head to come up with that crazy entrepreneurial idea, that you’re a visionary. If others think you’re crazy, yet you can see beyond the way things are, then you have a vision. If you’re bent on doing a new thing others think is impossible, and the thought of burying your vision under your cubicle desk the rest of your life makes you throw up in your mouth, that’s Vision!
- Grit. It’s hard to wake up at the crack of dawn to chase a dream, only to turn around, put your suit on and go earn your paycheck. It’s challenging to do what you have to do until you can do what you want to do. That’s called grit, that inner conviction, that hunger, that self-fueled energy that pushes you to work twice as hard than everyone else.
- Passion. Along with the grit, comes the passion. That red-hot, fiery sense drive to accomplish your goals, no matter what. It’s what makes you smile when you want to cry, what pulls you out of bed in the morning, and what makes you want to change the world!
- Comfortable with change. Pastor TD Jakes said it best: “Growth is [..] uncomfortable.” Pursuing your dreams will make you shake in your boots, introduce you to new territory, and make you stretch beyond what you thought possible. And when you combine that with holding down a job, raising a family, and doing the best you can, you’ll grow comfortable with being uncomfortable most of the time.
- Determination. I’ve never met a corporate entrepreneur who’s not determined to make it happen. Despite the moments of weakness, despite the failures, the setbacks, they’re bent on finding whatever means it takes to accomplish their objectives.
- Self-awareness. You’ve got to know who you are before you can stretch yourself to the end of who you are. It takes self-awareness to keep yourself grounded when battling on the career and entrepreneurial front at once. It takes knowing your strengths so you can capitalize on them, and realizing your weaknesses so you can forgive yourself and keep pushing. Most importantly, you must have charity about your purpose in order to have a true, meaningful impact.
- Love. This may just be the most important trait a corporate entrepreneur can ever have. You’ve got to love yourself, love others, and love the journey! Without it, you won’t have the strength to forgive yourself, start over, appreciate the good, learn from the bad, and keep your happy as you make it happen! Without it, you won’t learn to collaborate with others in a way that makes all parties fulfilled. And without it, you won’t enjoy the process. And isn’t that really the point of it all?
How many traits of a corporate entrepreneur do you have? Please chime in…
PS: Like this post? Click HERE to get The Corporate Sister’s career, lifestyle and entrepreneurship, bi-weekly updates!
To your success,
The Corporate Sis.
by Solange Lopes | May 21, 2016 | Career
Work, work, work!
While the song may be on an entirely different level, Rihanna was definitely onto something with her new catchy tune. Although it makes me smile every time I hear it, it also makes me think: “Yep, that’s right! Work, work, work, ’tis the working woman’s anthem!”
I’ve never believed in work-life balance. Shonda Rhimes actually most eloquently put my thoughts into words in her June 8, 2014 commencement address to the Dartmouth class of 1991: ““Whenever you see me somewhere succeeding in one area of my life, that almost certainly means I am failing in another area of my life.” To me, work-life balance was always this beautiful illusion used by society to make working women feel better about their reality. A reality based on work. Work at work, work at home, work on our marriages, work at parenting, work in our relationships, work, work, work, work, work….
I remember waking up on a Saturday morning, turning over in the bed, and asking my husband: “What’s today’s schedule?” Because after the work week is over, the work week-end starts, filled with planning kids’ activities, catching up on household chores, laundry, working on our dreams, the yard, social media, etc….
Facebook COO and Author of the Lean In book/movement Sheryl Sandberg recently apologized in a Facebook post for underestimating how difficult it is for single moms to thrive at work when they’re overwhelmed at home. Sandberg suddenly lost her husband last year, and has since acknowledged not grasping at first the hardships encountered by single mothers, and working mothers everywhere who may not have all the support they need to succeed at work. And as I understood through my own lens, women everywhere for whom all there is, most of the time, is work, work, and more work…
When I first read “Lean In”, the hype around the book was at an all-times high. I remember closing the book with a sense of hope mixed with a twinge of fear, followed with this overwhelming thought: ” How can I manage to ever accomplish all of that?” By “all of that”, I mentally meant thriving in my career while still spending quality time with my family, pursuing my dreams, keeping up with the laundry, cooking healthy meals, and making it to every soccer game and piano recital with my curls in place and a bit of sanity left…How? Oh Lord, how?
I’m not a single mom though. I’m blessed with a wonderfully supportive husband, as well as family and friends I can count on. Yet as I was reading Sheryl Sandberg’s accounts of her successful career, as a woman of color in Big Corporate who started from scratch, doesn’t yet have the power network, chef, chauffeur or nanny, I felt I had so much more work to do…
For many, if not most women, work is all there seems to be, mot of the time. As much as we may love our families, our jobs, and be nurturing our dreams as much as we possibly can, we can’t seem to avoid this overwhelming sense that we constantly have to be “doing”. In a society that has raised the bar on how much we can do in little time, whether it’s climbing the corporate ladder, raising the best/cutest/most athletic kids, or taking as many (happy) selfies as possible, we’re constantly “doing”, “doing”, and “doing” some more…
Because “doing” is the disease of our century, and women are the most afflicted. And if there’s an antidote to it, society’s definitely hasn’t found it yet…Instead, we keep focusing on adding more to our already overflowing plates, to be more like Sheryl Sandberg, more like that seemingly perfect mom on Facebook with the thousands of perfect selfies, more like that Senior Manager working 80 hours a week…And less like ourselves…
At the end of the day, to borrow Oprah’s words, what I know for sure, is that all we can testify to is our own experience. And the best we can do is work on ourselves to make that experience the best it can be for us. Not for others, not for society, not for work-life’s balance’s sake, but for ourselves. Whether it means shutting down the computer and taking a nap. Or getting out of work at 5pm. Or meditating 15 minutes a day. Or letting the kids play their own way instead of having them in five different activities…
Sheryl Sandberg may not have known what it felt like to be a single mom back when she wrote “Lean In”. And it may have taken Shonda Rhimes getting to the pinnacle of success to realize and share that it’s more about give-and-take, than work-life balance after all. And it may take us some of us a lot of work to make peace with the fact that work is not all there is…
As long as we respect our own individual journeys, and in the midst of all the work there still is to do, find our own places, in peace, love and acceptance…
PS: Like this post? Click HERE to get The Corporate Sister’s career, lifestyle and entrepreneurship, bi-weekly updates.
Love,
The Corporate Sis.
by Solange Lopes | May 20, 2016 | Career
Weekly News Roundup
This is our weekly career and lifestyle news update, where we round up exciting news of the last week and we let you have it…ahem, news-wise that is…
Think of it as your career gossiping section on steroids…
And while you’re at it, follow us on Facebook, Twitter,IG, and Pinterest!
Here we go…
- ‘Tis graduation season, and with it inspirational speeches, like President Obama’s empowering commencement address for Rutgers University students, whom he urges to keep positive during setbacks…Way to keep it real, Mr. President!
- In other inspirational news this week, Facebook COO and Lean In author Sheryl Sandberg gave a moving commencement address at UC Berkeley, reminding everyone of the power of resilience (and how she coped with her husband’s death);
- If the fact that it’s Friday makes you absolutely ecstatic, Business Insider shares 9 ways to stay happy at work most of the time (and not just on Fridays);
- I’ve always believed in the power of keeping a journal. And I totally agree with the Personal Branding Blog that we should all be journaling at work;
- At the risk of sounding (slightly) biased, female entrepreneurs deserve some serious kudos for keeping up with family life while still pursuing their dreams. Ellevate Network has a few tips they use to keep it together;
- You know how you met this great contact at your company’s networking event, and then…you failed to follow up? Ellevate Network offers a few tips to master the follow-up in your networking;
- Crazy busy at work? Don’t let it ruin your stella reputation. Forbes tips you off on keeping it together when all hell breaks loose at work;
- Stuck in an elevator (or in the hallway) with someone who could change the course of your career? Ellevate Network tips you off on how to create memorable elevator pitch!
- Wondering what to ask your manager? If you have only one question to ask, this ONE is it!
- Last but not least, Corporette’s suit of the week had me doing double-takes! Gorgeous!
Happy Friday!
PS: Like this post? Click HERE to get The Corporate Sister’s career, lifestyle and entrepreneurship, bi-weekly updates!
Love,
The Corporate Sis.