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The Opt-in Project

Podcast Episodes

The Opt-In Project announces the launch of its Podcast series. You can subscribe (for free) to the series via iTunes, which will automatically let you receive a new episode every two weeks from now through the end of May or you can listen to each episode on our website. The show will explore an array of issues raised by our larger discussions, conduct "mini-roundtables" on different industry sectors and practices just like our larger events and discuss how the issue of retention and advancement is being framed in the media. Our mission is the same as with our larger events: We hope that you will listen and then share with us your thoughts on each discussion as we go forward with finding new solutions for retaining and promoting women in all industries. Please email us your comments at optin@hellerehrman.com 

 

Episode Fifteen -  “The Way Forward,”- June 6, 2007

For our fifteenth and final episode of the Opt-In podcast, listen in on last week's capstone event in San Francisco, where we presented our observations and findings based on our discussions with representatives from all different industries over the past year.  Hear a summary of our findings, and comments from an enthusiastic audience who joined in the discussion about how to change the workplace.  The Opt In podcast will be on hiatus over the summer, but we'll be back in touch next fall as we continue to search for real-life solutions to long-term career sustainability and work/life balance for everyone.

To read the Final Report click here.

 

This podcast was produced in collaboration with Hear Now Productions: http://www.hearnowproductions.com 

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Episode Fourteen- "Where Do We Go From Here?"- May 17, 2007

In the fourteenth episode of the Opt In podcast, leading up to our capstone event on May 31st, we take a look back at the progress we've made over the past year. This podcast features excerpts from some of the presentations at Opt In roundtables over the past twelve months, and comments from Heller Ehrman's Pat Gillette. On May 31st in San Francisco, we'll come together to discuss how to fundamentally change the workplace, based on the discussions that have taken place over the course of the project. We look forward to seeing you there.

This podcast was produced in collaboration with Hear Now Productions: http://www.hearnowproductions.com 

 

 

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Episode Thirteen- “Asking for Directions: Finding Workable Career Paths”- April 19, 2007

Employers have a choice: they can continue to insist on a straight career path that leads to an up-or-out destination or they can adjust the traditional career path to try to address changes in workforce demographics, attitudes, and family structures.

The Opt-In project came to New York to hold a roundtable discussion with businesses who have chosen the latter path - mapping out the new ways to look at careers.

This episode we recap our New York roundtable and hear from Anne Weisberg, Senior Advisor to Deloitte & Touche LLP Women's Initiative, and co-author of the book, Mass Career Customization: Aligning the Workplace with Today’s Nontraditional Workforce (HBS Press, 2007),  who outlines the successes that Deloitte has had by moving the corporate ladder model of career progression into a corporate lattice.™  Laila Worrell, Head of Accenture’s New York Women’s Initiative, also shares with us how Accenture is implementing a program of creating “on-ramps” to bring women and men back into the workforce.

For a copy of the report from the evening click here.

This podcast was produced in collaboration with Hear Now Productions: http://www.hearnowproductions.com 

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Episode Twelve: “Creating Buy-In” March 29, 2007

If you are in the business of creating change, how do you approach the critical first step: getting decision-makers to agree that change is necessary?

Our last few podcast installments profiled new models for changing the workforce.  In this episode, we talk to people who are leading the way in building consensus around implementing change.  The topic is near and dear to our hearts, as the Opt In project transitions from our first year of identifying innovative solutions to our current focus on implementing those solutions across industries.

We talk to Karen Lockwood, partner at Howrey LLP in Washington DC and former President of the Women's Bar Association of the District of Columbia, about how she put together a working group of managing law firm partners to develop recommendations about changing the legal industry to support and retain women.  They produced a report, Creating Pathways (www.wbadc.org), outlining model policies and meaningful ways to get individual firms to implement them.

We also hear from Kathleen Bradley, attorney and Career Development Coach at Arent Fox, who shares her experience putting a women's initiative in place at her firm.  She talks about how she put together a comprehensive report that builds the case for implementing change.

This podcast was produced in collaboration with Hear Now Productions: http://www.hearnowproductions.com  

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Episode Eleven- “Women in Charge: Making a Difference”- March 8, 2007

Is there a difference when it comes to men and women’s leadership styles? Why does it matter to have women leaders?

We began our evening asking these very questions during Opt-In Project’s first East Coast appearance in Washington, D.C. The program, our third roundtable discussion, asked men and women in the public and private sectors to discuss how to advance more women into leadership positions and outline the case for creating more women leaders. This episode we feature a recap of the event.

The program, "Women in Charge: Making a Difference," featured Sanyin Siang, Managing Director of the Center of Leadership and Ethics at Duke's Fuqua School of Business and Kimberly Jenkins, former head and founder of Microsoft Corporation's education division. In addition to her work with Microsoft, Kimberly also ran The Internet Policy Institute and is the current executive-in-residence at Duke University. Hear what they have to say about the importance of having women in positions of power and leadership and their response to some of the questions that were brought up during the evening.

For the report handed out at this event click here.

For more information on the Fuqua's COLE Center click here.

This podcast was produced in collaboration with Hear Now Productions: http://www.hearnowproductions.com 

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Episode Ten: “International Women’s Day and the Workplace” February 22, 2007

In March of 1908, 15,000 women marched through the streets of New York City, demanding that their employers offer shorter hours, more pay and better working conditions.  A year later International Women’s Day was established to commemorate the protest and to continue the momentum that was begun that day in 1908.

Almost a century later, in countries all over the world, people celebrate International Women’s Day in countless ways. Companies with a global focus mobilize their global workforce to use the holiday as an occasion to talk about how they can advance the women in their ranks.

We profile what one company, Accenture, has done to take the lead in using this day to raise awareness about the issues women face in their workforce, and to help start conversations that continue throughout the year.

Valerie Benjamin, Accenture’s Director of Global Inclusion and Laila Worrell, Head of Accenture’s New York Women’s Initiative, outline their plans for the 2007 event. They also talk about the many ways that the company and its employees benefit from the energy surrounding their International Women’s Day program.

This podcast was produced in collaboration with Hear Now Productions: http://www.hearnowproductions.com 

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Episode Nine- “The New Network”- February 8, 2007

"More business decisions occur over lunch and dinner than at any other time.” – Peter Drucker, Management Professor

If Peter Drucker was right that your time outside the office is so important to your time inside the office, what does that mean for balancing your work and family life? How do parents who don’t want to give up their after-hours time find equal networking opportunities?

This episode we profile a group that has created a new solution for this problem. The Seattle based group, MAMAS was founded to be a source of support for attorney mothers, where they can network, share experiences, learn from each other, problem solve, and talk about issues unique to being a mother attorney.

 Rachel Black, who co founded the organization and Lori Lynn Phillips talk with us about the founding of the organization and the need that this group fills for its members. We also hear from members Davina Inslee and Kristin Lindsay on the benefits that the group offers.

For more information you can visit the MAMAS website at www.mamaseattle.org.

This podcast was produced in collaboration with Hear Now Productions: http://www.hearnowproductions.com 

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Episode Eight- “Work/Life Balance: Not Just for Women”- January 25, 2007

Who asks for work/life balance? Who benefits from it? When we think of programs to help implement work/life balance, do we assume it's only for women, or more specifically, for women who are mothers? Why? How does this affect the conversation and advancements in this area?

These are the questions that we wanted to answer at our third roundtable discussion, “Work/Life Balance: Not Just for Women”. In this podcast episode we recap what we heard at the event. If you weren’t able to make it we encourage you to read our report we put together to help lead the conversation. It is available here.

We asked Noni Allwood, Senior Director of Worldwide Diversity and Inclusion at Cisco Systems, of Cisco Systems and Eric Drattell, Vice President and General Counsel at Risk Management Solutions to lead the conversation to speak with us about these questions because even in this male dominated business environment, high tech companies have been able to make extraordinary advances in offering flexibility to highly demanding professionals.

The tech industry seems to have recognized that the employees who benefit from flexible programs are not just women. Rather, this industry has found that to attract and retain the employees they want and to make their business run efficiently, they have to make the workplace accessible and acceptable to all employees. As a result, they have embraced and fostered a work environment that accommodates all types of schedules and all types of needs.  And their employees, both men and women, have taken advantage of this “alternative” work style.

This podcast was produced in collaboration with Hear Now Productions: http://www.hearnowproductions.com 

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Episode Seven- “Reframing the Issue”- January 11, 2007

It’s about the future and it’s about harnessing the incredible power that each individual brings to the table in our company that make the inclusive environment happen.”-Sandra Bushby, Director of Women’s Initiatives, KPMG

The Opt-In Project kicks off the new year with an episode profiling KPMG’s work style diversity assessment program. Sandra Bushby, Director of Women’s Initiatives for KPMG, speaks with us about how the company has re-imagined the way to look at diversity though identifying each employee’s work style characteristics. We learn how exactly this program has benefited KPMG, their clients, and how it filters out gender, ethic, or racial bias from the conversation.

Work Style Diversity Assessment Chart

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Episode Six- “The Opt-Out Discussions- Part 2”- December 14, 2006

Many women never get near that glass ceiling because they are stopped long before by the maternal wall..” --The New York Times, “The Opt-Out Revolution,” October 26, 2003.

We continue our conversation on the Opt-Out Revolution debate taking place in the media with the four writers we featured in episode five. This time we concentrate on what they had to say about changing family roles and the culture of work in general.  We also bring the conversation back full circle, to what changes employers are making that promise a different future.

We continue talking with:

Susan Douglas, chair of Communication Studies at The University of Michigan, co-author of The Mommy Myth: The Idealization of Motherhood and How it Undermines Women, and contributor to In These Times.

Maggie Jackson, is an award-winning columnist and author of What's Happening to Home? Balancing Work, Life and Refuge in  the Information Age. Her twice-monthly column on work life issues, “Balancing Acts” appears in The Boston Sunday Globe.

Rebecca Traister, contributing writer who covers gender politics for Salon.com.

Cathy Young contributor to Reason Magazine and op-ed columnist who has written about gender issues for The Boston Globe.

This podcast was produced in collaboration with Hear Now Productions: http://www.hearnowproductions.com 

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Episode Five- “The Opt-Out Discussions- Part I”- November 30, 2006

“Why don't women run the world? Maybe it's because they don't want to.” --The New York Times, “The Opt-Out Revolution,” October 26, 2003.

In this, our fifth episode of the Opt-In podcast, we return to the original inspiration for the Opt-In project and talk about how the debate over women and the workforce has evolved in the media. Over the next two episodes, we talk to op-ed contributors and columnists who cover work life and gender issues and ask them how they see the discussion progressing. We hear what they think about the way the media has covered the so-called “opt-out revolution” and what issues they feel need more attention.  

Featured in this episode:

Susan Douglas, chair of Communication Studies at The University of Michigan, co-author of The Mommy Myth: The Idealization of Motherhood and How it Undermines Women, and contributor to In These Times.

Maggie Jackson, is an award-winning columnist and author of What's Happening to Home? Balancing Work, Life and Refuge in  the Information Age. Her twice-monthly column on work life issues, “Balancing Acts” appears in The Boston Sunday Globe.

Rebecca Traister, contributing writer who covers gender politics for Salon.com.

Cathy Young ccontributor to Reason Magazine and op-ed columnist who has written about gender issues for The Boston Globe.

This podcast was produced in collaboration with Hear Now Productions: http://www.hearnowproductions.com 

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Episode Four- “Back in Business”- November 16, 2006

“Amid increasing competition for talent, many employers are taking rising interest in wooing back successful female employees who left for personal reasons.  And research suggest that many women who take a break from their professional lives to raise children are interested in returning.” – The Wall Street Journal, “Business Schools Target At- Home Moms,” May 10, 2006

Answering the demand described above is a new solution developed by Dartmouth's Tuck School of Business, which is conducting its inaugural session targeting women and men who have left the workforce and want to reenter.  We profile the "Back in Business" program to find out more about this kind of career “on-ramping” and hear from Tuck professors Constance Helfat and Anant Sundaram about how they designed the Back in Business curriculum.

We also profile the reasons behind corporate involvement and sponsorship in the program with Hans Morris, Chief Financial officer at Citigroup Inc’s Corporate and Investment Banking unit. Citigroup Corporate and Investment Banking is the lead sponsor of the Tuck program, providing both assistance and financial support to subsidize the program.  A participant, Gregory Clow, also shares his experiences of what he is gaining from the program.

To learn more about Tuck’s “Back Business” program click here or about Citigroup’s recruiting efforts click here.

This podcast was produced in collaboration with Hear Now Productions: http://www.hearnowproductions.com 

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Episode Three- “Generation Y and the Workplace”- November 2, 2006

“ Just as employers have changed the rules about employees, these young people want to make up their own rules when they enter the workforce. If we let their voices be heard, experiment with their ideas, then retaining them and stimulating them won't be” that much of a challenge - in fact, the new world Gen Y brings could benefit us all.” – Johanna Torsone, “Generation Y Will Change the Way We Work,” Philadelphia Inquirer, May 28, 2006

Media coverage regularly tells us that generation Y is going to demand a more flexible workplace – and that the landscape of business and employment will change over the next two decades as a result. But how will this happen? What do they want?  In our third episode of the Opt-In Podcast we profile Generation Y and their views on a flexible workplace. We hear from Lindsey Pollak, author of Getting From College to Career: 99 Things to Do Before You Join the Real World (HarperCollins, April 2007 -- www.lindseypollak.com) who has profiled this generation and its perceptions of the workplace. 

We also brought together several “Gen Y’ers” and asked them to speak frankly about what they want from the workplace.  Our panelists include Albert Lee, VP of a hedge fund, Kristen Jacoby, first-year associate at Heller Ehrman; Ed Bayley, law student, and Rebecca Freeland, consultant for an environmental planning firm.

Who is Generation Y? Click here for a profile.

This podcast was produced in collaboration with Hear Now Productions: http://www.hearnowproductions.com 

 

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Episode Two- “The Day After Tomorrow”- October 19, 2006

Cathy Benko, National Managing Director for Deloitte’s Initiative for the Retention and Advancement of Women, proposed in her opening speech   at our first roundtable that we look at “the day after tomorrow,” when planning for the future workplace. The stop-gap solutions of part and flex time work  fill an important need, but what are the bigger solutions in retaining employees and restructuring the workforce? What will the day  after tomorrow be like? How do we get there?

We take a look at this in our episode and see how Bain & Company is approaching this question by speaking with partner Heidi Locke Simon.   We also talk with Harvard Business School professor Kathleen McGinn    on what the future of business might look like, and discuss how one re- frames the retention issue to get more people involved with Ralph Pais partner at Fenwick & West.

This podcast was produced in collaboration with Hear Now Productions: http://www.hearnowproductions.com 

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Episode One- Premiere-October 5, 2006

The Opt-In Project hosted the first of several roundtable  discussions on September 28, 2006 exploring structures and programs pro-fessional     and financial service firms have developed to retain and promote women  in their industries. In this podcast, we introduce our series and outline diff-erent perspectives presented at the event.  Hosted by Anne Mercogliano,   Diversity Specialist at Heller Ehrman, we hear from Pat Gillette, co-chair      of the firm’s Labor and Employ-ment Practice Group and Gender Diversity Committee, Elissa Ellis, Executive Director of the Forte Foundation, and Cathy Benko, National Managing Director for Deloitte’s Initiative for the Retention and Advancement of Women.

They describe the work being done by their respective firms to change the way we think about career alternatives. You’ll also hear a collage of com-ments from some of the women who attended our roundtable event, including Brooke Johnson and Kim Wiatrak of PricewaterhouseCoopers and Brooke Andrich of Heller Ehrman.

This podcast was produced in collaboration with Hear Now Productions: http://www.hearnowproductions.com 

     

  

         

 

 

  

          

    

 

 

 

 

 

         

                

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   

          

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

      

               

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

      

               

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

       

             

  

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

     

                

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

       

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

         

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

          

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

           

 

    

     

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

          

Lindsey Pollak, Author

 

 

 

 

 

  

       

Heidi Locke Simon, Partner Bain & Company

 

 

 

 

   

Check out the report produced to shape the  discussion for the evening. 

How do you do it? Roundtable  Discussion-  Questions and Models