Jen Dalitz
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  1. Women in Business, Supporting Women's Economic Empowerment - June 6th - Register now Jen Dalitz 24-May-2012
  2. Congratulations to Nikki White at The Heart Of, winner of Suncorp's Helping Hand competition Jen Dalitz 24-May-2012
  3. Melinda Gates says it's time to put contraception back on the agenda. Your thoughts? Jen Dalitz 24-May-2012
  4. Gender Discrimination: speak out, suffer in silence or just move on? Jen Dalitz 24-May-2012
  5. 7 steps to making money from LinkedIn (and other social media) and MAX your return on investment Jen Dalitz 04-May-2012
  6. Competition, all-girl groups and the case for single-sex schooling Jen Dalitz 04-May-2012
  7. 5 tips (and loads of links) to help you score a seat at the table as Women on Government Boards hits record high of 35.7 per cent Jen Dalitz 26-Apr-2012

Fruit at Work


The 5 management attitudes that will make or break return to work decisions by parental leavers

Tuesday, August 02, 2011

Management attitudes and practices - and not policies - will dictate the success of the Paid Parental Leave scheme, according to new research by coaching and development consultancy Family Matters.  It should come as no surprise that the research found attitudes and biases play a significant role in return to work decisions, with 5 key management attitudes identified:

  • Traditionalists - see the work place as a male domain and a woman's place as homemaker and child-rearer.
  • Resenters - are more concerned with what happened to them and the belief that no one deserves special treatment.
  • Avoiders - are overly concerned with doing the 'right' thing, that it paralyses them into doing nothing.
  • Protectors - want to wrap the woman in cotton wool and protect her from anything and everything, including job responsibility.
  • Supporters - see this stage of a woman's career as challenging yet manageable through setting and managing expectations for all stakeholders.
These are just the kind of invisible barriers that we need to firstly identify and then break down in order to create gender balanced workplaces in Australia. 

What's your take - have you seen or experienced any of these attitudes in action?  I'd love to hear your thoughts...

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