Advice for Men Who Are Nervous About Mentoring Women
If we want more women leaders, we need men in powerful positions to support their ascension. How should men approach mentoring in today’s workplace? Babson Professor Wendy Murphy weighs in.
For too long, business as usual has benefitted some, but not all. Inclusive leadership is needed to truly reimagine how to change an organization from within, creating a culture where more women and underrepresented groups can succeed and have equitable representation in the C-suite and on corporate boards. Companies with a truly inclusive leadership style are better at innovation, gain more market share, are more competitive in the hunt for top talent, and outperform less diverse competitors.
Babson Executive Education’s experts in inclusive leadership bring field research in leadership, women’s access to capital, corporate social responsibility, and more to their work. They lead and facilitate inclusive leadership workshops, arming organizations such as Google, Comcast, PWC, Rapid7, and Wells Fargo with the expertise and action plans needed to make measurable progress in diversity, inclusivity, and equity.
If we want more women leaders, we need men in powerful positions to support their ascension. How should men approach mentoring in today’s workplace? Babson Professor Wendy Murphy weighs in.
Babson expert Susan Duffy says companies need to stop confining discussions of gender to women-centric events and instead normalize gender diversity throughout their organizations.
Companies need to prepare to meet future crises with sound balance sheets, caring leadership, and genuine compassion, says Babson Professor Raj Sisodia.
For an organization to reach its full potential, its leaders must treat increasing diversity, equity, and inclusion as a core competency. We call this inclusive leadership—see what it means at Babson and how our programs can help.
Read the ArticleHaving spent the last 20 years shifting his own mindset from the wrongdoings of business, to business’s potential to do good—Professor Raj Sisodia has made it his life’s work to share this reawakening with others. He is the leader of Conscious Capitalism, a movement that believes in business as a force for good.
A yearlong planning collaboration between the Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce and Babson College’s inclusive leadership experts has led to All in for Advancement, a program designed to give participants a better understanding of how to change workplace cultures.
Inclusive leadership is not only the morally right thing to do—it’s also good for the bottom line. Diverse and inclusive organizations are 70% more likely to capture new markets, 36% more likely to outperform on profitability, and 75% more likely to see ideas become products.
Babson’s inclusive leadership workshops will reframe your perspective, designed to give you the inclusive leadership assessments and blueprints for change that you need to truly make an individual impact.
Develop a personalized, strengths-based leadership action plan, expand your sphere of influence, and gain new skills in our entrepreneurial leadership programs for women and their allies.
Customize any of our inclusive leadership programs for your team or organization. Gain the capabilities your organization needs to yield meaningful change, build inclusive cultures, develop and retain talent, and have better outcomes to show for it.
The ideas and innovations that will propel organizations into the future are strongest when they come from diverse and inclusive communities. For an organization to reach its full potential, its leaders must treat increasing diversity, equity, and inclusion as a core competency. These conscious, inclusive leaders are connected to a higher purpose, lead with authenticity, put the well-being of the people they lead at the center of what they do, and recognize that the way they lead impacts the way people and their families live. As your inclusive leadership partner, we can help upskill your senior leaders and help you become a more inclusive leader.
Babson Executive Education offers programs in four practice areas: strategic innovation, entrepreneurial leadership, inclusive leadership, and entrepreneurship. We work with organizations and professionals around the world to turn ideas and challenges into opportunities.
Our programs are about more than theory; they’re about action, and equipping you with the practical tools and strategies necessary to have an immediate impact on your organization or business