Cheap Marketing Shop

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Saturday, 30 December 2006

How will things change when women run our institutions?

Posted on 04:37 by Unknown
Want to predict the future? Look at the demographics. And they say that in the future we'll have many, many more women leaders than we do now: women are 57% of college students, USA Today reported in 2005. They're the majority of medical school students and 45% of law school students, too. So, the days of "old white men" running the place are numbered.

Which has caused me to wonder how that may change our lives. Today's New York Times has a small glimpse ("Madam Speaker, After Her First Year of Firsts.") Christine C. Quinn is one year into her term as the first woman Speaker of the New York City Council, an unruly body of fifty-one representatives which has typically been a vocal adversary of the mayor. Here are some notable quotes from the article:
“She has injected more democracy, with a little ‘d,’ into the Council,” said James S. Oddo, the Republican minority leader, who has known Ms. Quinn since they worked for different council members in the early 1990s. “Every single council member has a say in the budget. Every single council member has the ability to fight for their constituents....”
She first indicated her willingness to work with the mayor three weeks into her term, after he called for restrictions on lobbyists in his annual address to the City Council. Instead of rejecting the idea, since it opened the Council’s inner workings to public scrutiny, she embraced it....

In April, she sought to end the bazaar-like process by which members lobbied the speaker for projects to be included in the city’s operating budget. She required that members limit themselves to four written requests that had the support of nine colleagues from three boroughs....
Then she charmed, cajoled and fought the mayor into considering her call for an end to the so-called budget dance....

“I find that if we disagree, she’s very, very clear,” said Simcha Felder, a Brooklyn councilman. “I don’t walk out of the room thinking she said yes but she means no....”
It's dangerous to generalize from one person's experience to an entire gender, but if more women in power means more collaboration, more effective negotiation between opposing parties and more disciplined political processes, then I'm for it.

innovation, politics, New York, New York Times, leadership, demographics
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Ann knows segmentation
    Friday's "Boss Talk" feature in the Journal presented an interview with Ann Taylor CEO Kay Krill . Most fascinating to me abou...
  • Cherish those distant connections
    The new book " Firing Back: How Great Leaders Rebound After Career Disasters ," excerpted in the January Harvard Business Review, ...
  • Top 5 HBR Breakthrough Ideas
    Harvard Business Review's annual look at hot new ideas is something to cherish, but who has time to digest all twenty ideas? So, here a...
  • Innovation: doing it all yourself is so twentieth century
    My most recent work experience involved a smaller company that, with limited resources, relied significantly on partners for technology inno...
  • It's the handsets, baby
    One message at the MVNO Strategies & Markets Conference this week is that the handset has become perhaps the most important aspect of a...
  • Is Microsoft innovative?
    In case you missed it, there's a nice article in yesterday's Wall Street Journal featuring a dialogue between Robert Scoble and Da...
  • Cingular an "unpopular distribution partner"...NOT
    In his wide-ranging attack on Steve Jobs in today's WSJ Op-Ed article (" iGenius " - $$), Michael Malone hits Cingular with an...
  • The sneaky price increase - should you use it for business services?
    Harvard Business School's Working Knowledge site has just republished a fascinating piece from 2004 in which HBS marketing professor Jo...
  • Satellite phones make a comeback in "Miami Vice"
    OK, OK, I just can't let "Miami Vice" go. But of the movies I've seen in recent years, it stands alone in its celebration ...
  • Yahoo-AT&T: an alliance under pressure
    Nothing cures end of the week writer's block better than a front page Wall Street Journal article on one of my favorite subjects: allia...

Categories

  • adoption
  • alliances
  • awards
  • blogging
  • blogs
  • branding
  • change management
  • communications
  • Harvard Business Review
  • innovation
  • leadership
  • lists
  • management
  • marketing
  • mobile
  • mvno
  • narrative
  • negotiation
  • New York Times
  • obituaries
  • open innovation
  • PDMA
  • presentation
  • private label
  • product development
  • promotion
  • psychology
  • reading list
  • retail
  • sales
  • spoken blogging
  • spoken post
  • sponsorship
  • sports
  • storytelling
  • strategy
  • technology
  • telecommunications
  • Wall Street Journal
  • what-in-hell-is
  • wireless

Blog Archive

  • ►  2007 (69)
    • ►  March (11)
    • ►  February (30)
    • ►  January (28)
  • ▼  2006 (157)
    • ▼  December (23)
      • How will things change when women run our institut...
      • What I'm reading now...
      • Fortune 500 Corporate Blog Review: EDS (#108) part 2
      • Goodbye to another innovator
      • Friday comix - Christmas 2006
      • Top 10 best articles of the year
      • Top 10 (actually 11) Shop Talk Posts for 2006
      • Top 10 favorite posts of the year
      • A product leaps from the virtual world to the real
      • Friday comix - FAO Schwartz's revival
      • Fortune 500 Corporate Blog Review: EDS (#108)
      • Worst practices in customer service #2
      • "Business first" at a trade show: a cautionary tale
      • An alternate approach to product innovation: the L...
      • Another inspiring thought from Dr. Yunus
      • What is the cost of our inability to be present in...
      • Friday comix - the Happiness Home (tm)
      • Fortune 500 Corporate Blog Review: Interpublic Gro...
      • Low-price companies change consumer behavior perma...
      • More stories--this time, listening
      • A very brief history of wheeled luggage
      • Is Microsoft innovative?
      • Friday comix-a day in the life of a cubicle-dweller
    • ►  November (36)
    • ►  October (26)
    • ►  September (27)
    • ►  August (15)
    • ►  July (17)
    • ►  June (13)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile