everywoman launch the Navigator guide on International Women's Day
To celebrate International Women's Day, we're delighted to launch the Navigator, a free practical guide that helps you plan your future in business. Brought to you by everywomanClub, a membership group of senior women in business, the Navigator is for women who want to reach their full potential within an organisation or achieve success in their own businesses.
The guide includes advice, tips, self-diagnostic tools, research and thought leadership on the challenges women face in business including:
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The start of your working life
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Making your next move
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Your first step into management
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Becoming a leader
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Picking up where you left off - coming back into the workplace
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The realities of work/life balance
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Handling your first crisis
Download your free copy of the Navigator >>
Dame Mary Perkins, co-founder of Specsavers; Chris Browne, Managing Director of Thomson Airways, Larry Hirst CBE, former Chairman of IBM EMEA and Perween Warsi CBE, Founder and Chief Executive, S&A Foods are among those supporting the guide which offers expert advice and insight into the barriers that often hold women back in their working lives.
Dame Mary Perkins, an advisory board member of everywomanClub, says: “If we are to get more women into senior positions and running large businesses then we need to support the flow of talented women to the top. We hope the Business Navigator will go some way in doing this. We need to help women plot their business course so they have the support and skills in place to achieve their goals.”
Composed by this very successful group of women from all areas of business, the guide is a ‘living’ document that will grow over time and includes advice, tips, self-diagnostic tools, research and thought leadership on the challenges women face in business including: roadblocks to promotion, returning to work, self-esteem, confidence to lead, and the reality of ‘having it all’.
Chrissie Rucker MBE, founder of The White Company, says on leadership: “As a leader you are only as good as the team you have around you. To build a great team you must seek out the right people and give them ownership of what they are managing.”
Claire Scott-Priestley, Partner at Squire Sanders, says on self-esteem: “Women can be extremely harsh critics of themselves and in that way we are generally different to men. It is important to remind yourself of what you have achieved so far instead of letting yourself fall into a spiral of negativity.”
Rebecca Salt, EVP Marketing and Communications of CEVA Logistics Ltd, says on being a manager: “One of the biggest challenges for anyone promoted to a manager role is, in general, they are not given training in management and leadership skills. I’ve looked at the differences between managers I have enjoyed working with and those I haven’t and incorporated these into the way I manage. To be a successful manager and leader of people is a key skill for women looking to succeed in business and we should actively be helping these women develop the right skills in this area.”
Helen Kelisky, Vice President, Comms and Media Industry of IBM UK and Ireland, says on planning: “You should have a plan, it is important to have the next two or three steps ahead planned out and in your sights, but be prepared to change your plan to take advantage of opportunities as they arise.”
Karen Gill MBE, co-founder of everywoman, says: “We know we have a problem with the numbers of women on the boards of UK businesses. But putting all the focus simply on board numbers is a very short-sighted view and also excludes women in enterprise”.
“The UK female pipeline is broken. Until it is fixed, there will not be the women ready to move up into senior management in a constant stream or more women setting up their own businesses – if women started businesses at the same rate as men there would be 150,000 more businesses a year.
“Addressing this problem is not just a nice to have, it is an economic imperative and like any business situation if we want to affect change we need to give it some focus.
“We hope that with the Navigator we have created a useful guide for women in business. It is both cohesive and practical and tailored to the needs of women operating either a business or in the workplace.”
