Read The Confidence Myth Online
Authors: Helene Lerner
6.
“Blink Q and A with Malcolm,” gladwell.com,
http://gladwell.com/blink/blink-q-and-a-with-malcolm/
.
7.
Gladwell,
Blink
, 23.
I want to offer special thanks to the following people: Kim Lubel, chief executive officer of CST Brands; Jill Campbell, chief operations officer of Cox Communications; Sandra Dewey, executive vice president and head of business affairs, Turner Entertainment Networks and Cartoon Network Originals; Jacqueline Hernández, chief operating officer of Telemundo; Charisse Lillie, vice president of community investment of Comcast Corporation and president of the Comcast Foundation; Kathy Murphy, president of Fidelity Personal Investing; Debbie Storey, chief diversity officer of AT&T; Kathy Waller, chief financial officer of Coca-Cola; and the other amazing women leaders who contributed to this book.
I want to thank Neal Maillet and Jeevan Sivasubramaniam, whose enthusiasm about this project was welcome support. Thanks also to my interns Andreia Bulhao, Jessica Benmen, and Amanda Miller who made our work seem easy. Jessica, you went way beyond the call of duty and it is appreciated. Thank you to Susan Adams of Bentley University for distributing our Women and Confidence Survey to some of their students and alumni and reviewing the data, Andrew Acosta for the interpretation of the data, and to my good friend Laura Newberry for her abounding encouragement. I want to thank Joel Fortinos and Becky Post for their guidance, as well as Danielle Lucie Goodman and Shauna Lani Shames for their insights and craftsmanship. I am grateful to the Turkey Land Cove Foundation for providing a magical place to write this book.
In some examples, the women mentioned in this book are not actual people but composites representing the experiences of several colleagues, clients, friends, or acquaintances. On occasion names have been left out to provide anonymity.
accomplishments, promoting your,
74
â75
action plans,
87
aggressiveness,
26
Allaire, Paul,
18
Allard, Alan,
34
alliances,
71
,
81
,
99
.
See also
mentors/mentorship; sponsors/sponsorship
Altfeld, Suzanne,
3
attitude.
See
negative attitude;
positive attitude
attracting a sponsor.
See
sponsors/sponsorship
audiences
listening to your,
32
reading your,
29
sensitivity to your,
41
authenticity,
27
,
33
,
38
,
41
,
55
â56
balancing work and family/life,
64
â66
behavior
changing,
94
during a crisis,
27
people-pleasing,
57
beliefs
core,
28
in intuition,
85
limiting,
13
negative,
13
â14
Bhatia, Neerja,
15
Bidmead, David,
10
Blink: The Power of Thinking
without Thinking
(Gladwell),
85
boundaries
determining your,
61
â62
setting,
55
â56,
57
,
58
,
59
â60,
65
â66
Bündchen, Gisele,
82
Buonfantino, Giusy,
9
â10
Campbell, Jill
appearance/clothing,
37
giving feedback,
95
listening skills,
34
mad mind-chatter,
12
proceeding with caution,
88
respect for diversity,
29
setting boundaries,
65
â66
standing out,
73
treatment of others,
27
career stages, myth and truth about preparation for,
12
caution, proceeding with,
88
charismatic leaders,
30
communication.
See also
language style/usage
artful listening,
34
â35
delivering honest feedback,
51
â52
direct,
54
styles and language in,
36
confidence.
See also
Women
and Confidence Survey
benefits of developing,
1
â2
reasons for lack of,
17
â18
risk taking and,
19
Confidence Code, The
(Kay and Shipman),
4
Confidence Sparks
attention to others' appearance/presence,
36
,
39
balancing work and family/life,
67
dealing with disappointment,
14
defensive reactions,
47
first reactions to others,
89
giving feedback,
52
inventorying your strengths,
13
,
75
keeping your poise,
28
â29
listening skills,
35
listing your skills,
17
negotiations,
63
perceptions, your own and others',
48
public speaking,
33
receiving feedback,
49
reflecting on fear,
11
taking risks,
20
â21
thirty days of suggestions for,
101
â105
trusting your gut sense,
87
writing for clarity,
18
courage, Mandela on,
5
creating power parameters.
See
power parameters
credibility, appearance and,
38
criticism.
See also
feedback
reacting to,
42
Davis, Ruthie,
19
defensiveness
DeHaas, Deborah,
27
â28
detachment,
54
attracting a sponsor,
72
building a sponsor relationship,
76
following your intuition,
85
giving feedback,
50
knowing your audience,
96
direct communication,
54
disappointment, handling,
13
â14
dressing for leadership,
37
â38,
41
ego,
10
Einstein, Albert,
82
empathy,
33
Executive Presence: The Missing Link between Merit and Success
(Hewlett),
26
expectations,
12
experience,
94
â95
Fayard, Gary,
77
fear(s)
as ally,
98
myth and truth about transferring,
9
of public speaking,
31
reflecting on your,
11
speaking up in spite of,
17
â18
taking action despite,
16
feedback
cautions for giving/receiving,
52
delivering honest,
51
â52
myth and truth about,
42
necessity of honest,
42
on others' perceptions of you,
48
reaching out for,
22
sincerity of,
49
taking in/discarding,
48
â49
taking the stigma out of,
44
â48
tools for giving/receiving,
54
value of,
98
feelings inventories,
14
first reactions,
89
Forget a Mentor, Find a Sponsor
(Hewlett),
71
Gadsden-Williams, Michelle,
71
Galinsky, Ellen,
64
gender issues
advancement for women,
77
appearance,
41
challenges for women,
83
communication differences,
30
expectations during a crisis,
27
giving feedback,
49
high-level positions for women,
72
inequities,
1
intuition of women versus men,
84
judgments on men versus women,
37
leadership,
26
listening skills,
34
male-dominated industries,
73
male/female self-identification,
115
meeting job requirements,
15
â16
negotiation strategies,
61
standards for males and females,
21
,
60
work-family balance for women,
64
â66
Gladwell, Malcolm,
85
Glickstein, Lee,
32
goals,
22
â23
guilt,
104
gut feelings.
See
intuition
Harvard Business Review
,
83
Hernández, Jackie
being agreeable,
57
envisioning positive outcomes,
31
â32
following your intuition,
86
,
87
â88
learning from experience,
94
â95
nervous energy,
16
â17
stepping up,
78
Hewlett, Sylvia Ann
appearance blunders,
37
behavior during a crisis,
27
finding a sponsor,
71
reading your audience,
29
sponsor relationships,
78
tough women,
26
honesty, in giving feedback,
50
Hudnell, Rosalind,
20
humility,
27
inner compass.
See also
intuition
for evaluating feedback,
49
relying on your,
92
scenarios for,
91
inner mentoring,
83
insights, sharing,
10
instincts.
See
inner compass;
intuition
international rules and culture,
30
â31
interviews, addressing fears
about,
17
intuition.
See also
inner
compass
following your,
99
myth and truth about,
82
options for using,
87
â90
tools for using,
54
trusting your,
82
as your business edge,
83
â87
inventories
for attracting a sponsor,
76
spot-check,
24
of your feelings,
14
â15
of your strengths,
13
Jobs, Steve,
83
Kay, Katty,
4
Kinney, Cathy,
16
Kudlacz, Lisa,
43
â44
language style/usage,
36
.
See also
communication
cursing,
43
for self-promotion,
75
when giving feedback,
52
leadership presence
artful listening,
34
â37
attaining,
98
dressing the part,
37
â38,
39
,
41
as leader,
98
myth and truth about,
25
â26
poise under pressure,
26
â28
reading the room,
29
â31
scenarios for,
40
speaking with,
31
â33
learning from experience,
94
â95
Lerner, Helene,
97
“Lessons in Leadership: My Rules to Live By” (DeHaas),
27
â28
Levine, Shari,
3
â4
life-work balance,
64
â66
Lillie, Charisse
conveying your image,
38
following your intuition,
86
giving feedback,
49
overachieving tendencies,
60
â61
picking your battles,
96
receiving feedback,
48
â49
limits
self-imposed,
11
â15
shaking off beliefs about,
13
LinkedIn,
76
listening
to expression style,
36
â37
to sound of voice,
35
Lubel, Kim
attracting a sponsor,
72
â73