Managing Your Career (HBR Working Parents Series) by Harvard Business Review
Author:Harvard Business Review
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Harvard Business Review Press
Published: 2020-08-12T00:00:00+00:00
Section 5
All in the Family
Manage Relationships
12
Bring All of Your Identities to Work
by Carrie Kerpen
Quick Takes
Set the tone for your team
Share parts of yourself other than your work self
Donât be afraid to share failures
Consider policies or events that build a culture of openness
For years, working parents have discussed and debated bringing our âwhole selfâ to work, or meshing our professional identity with our personal one. Should we try to hide our pregnancies until the third trimester? Should we talk about our children at work? Should we ask for accommodations when we need to go to a parent-teacher conference or soccer game?
A Deloitte study found that 61% of employees âcoverâ their identities in some way and downplay parts of themselves (such as their identity as a parent) due to fear that theyâll be discriminated against or seen as not taking their work seriously enough.1 And unfortunately, there are studies that support these concerns. One study from Cornell University shows that mothers (but not fathers) are often discriminated against in workplace evaluations.2 And of course, the perception that mothers are less devoted to their jobs than childless employees is so rampant, it has a name: the âmotherhood penalty,â or the âmaternal wall.â
Well, no matter how much weâve tried to hide the âother sideâ of ourselves from our colleagues, Covid-19 has essentially given us no shelter. Aside from essential workers fighting the pandemic on the front lines, many of us are working at homeâfrom weather forecasters and news anchors, to the cast of SNL, to the CEOs of the worldâs largest companies. Did you ever think youâd get to see a corner of Stephen Colbertâs home office? I certainly didnât.
This new normal of working from our homes has merged so much more than just our âparentâ and âemployeeâ identities, though, because all of us are far more nuanced than that. Iâm not just âWork Carrieâ and âHome Carrie.â Iâm a CEO, a mentor, a wife, a mother, and a daughter, too (and most recently, a teacher, chef, and birthday party planner). Weâve been forced to reveal all of our layers, and as scary as that seemed for so long, itâs actually been, in my opinion, a major turning point.
Here are some tips for unveiling more of your identities at work, along with some ideas to encourage your team to do the same.
Lead by Example
When my company instituted a âwork from homeâ mandate, I started filming a Facebook Live video every morning in my teamâs Facebook group as a way to keep them up-to-date and establish some sort of routine. Through these daily videos, my team has truly seen every side of me: the frizzy hair, the pajamas, the kids running around in the kitchen, and everything in between. I do talk about workâI recognize accomplishments, give motivational speeches, and keep my team informed on the status of the company. But I donât just talk about work. In fact, I talk much less about work than I do about other things, like what Iâm baking,
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