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"If life were predictable, it would cease to be life and be without flavor."
–Eleanor Roosevelt
COMPARING MALE AND FEMALE
LEADERS
In The Female Advantage: Women's Ways of Leadership (New York:
Doubleday, 1990), Sally Helgesen outlines the common traits of male leaders
as researched by Henry Mintzberg and those of female leaders as researched by
Helgesen herself:
Male Leaders:
1. The executives worked at an unrelenting pace, with no breaks in activity
during the day.
2. Their days were characterized by interruption, discontinuity, and fragmentation.
3. They spared little time for activities not directly related to their work.
4. They exhibited a preference for live action encounters.
5. They maintained a complex network of relationships with people outside their
organizations.
6. Immersed in the day-to-day need to keep the company going, they lacked time
for reflection.
7. They identified themselves with their jobs.
8. They had difficulty sharing information.
Female Leaders:
1. The women worked at a steady pace, but with small breaks scheduled in throughout
the day.
2. The women did not view unscheduled tasks and encounters as interruptions.
3. The women made time for activities not directly related to their
work.
4. The women preferred live action encounters, but scheduled time to attend
to mail.
5. They maintained a complex network of relationships with people outside their
organizations.
6. They focused on the ecology of leadership.
7. They saw their own identities as complex and multi-faceted.
8. The women scheduled in time for sharing information.
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