08 August 2008

Is Your Career Waiting for Prince Charming?

By Galia BarHava-Monteith

The traditional tale

Once upon a time, all a girl had to do was be kind, beautiful and helpless - preferably while locked in a tower, or lying in a glass coffin, or being subjected to domestic abuse. But as long as she waited patiently (while looking beautiful and being kind) her Prince Charming was bound to find her, kiss her, and voila! They'd live happily ever after and all her troubles would be over.

womenatwork.jpgThe underlying messages from these tales have found their way into the psyche of our mothers and grandmothers, into how society saw women, how they have seen themselves and how they were expected to behave. These legends and myths have also influenced women's ideas about how they should approach their future: they were to adopt a passive manner, never 'claiming' their place in the world. Those few women who didn't wait patiently and who took control of their own destinies were labelled as… well, I'll leave it for you to fill in the dots.

Then came the F revolution and it all changed. We professional working women now scoff at these myths and prejudices; we create our own destinies; we craft our own futures. We buy our daughters the post-modern renditions of those fairy stories. You know the ones - where Princess Smarty-Pants gets rid of her unwanted and unwelcome admirers to live on her own happily ever after.

We have well and truly let go of this Prince Charming myth. Right? Wrong!

The modern tale

Sure, it is now completely socially unacceptable for a self-respecting, intelligent, professional working woman to voice out loud that she is planning to make herself look beautiful and to behave kindly, while she passively waits for her Prince Charming to find her and marry her and thus sort her life out for ever more.

However, for some reason, many of us seem to think it is completely acceptable to treat our career in this way!

Surely not! I hear you gasp in horror. Well, ladies (and the few wonderful gentleman that read Professionelle regularly), let me paint you a picture of the archetypal, bright, young, professional woman I come across.

Our modern heroine is very determined and a hard worker. She achieved top marks in her university courses and landed an excellent first job as a graduate. She worked really hard on all her assignments/cases/projects, diligently putting in the hours and patiently delivering excellent results. She has been careful not to shout her achievements from the rooftops as she is quite averse to self-promotion. And anyway, she believes that she should be noticed for all her hard work she's put in, and for the results she's delivered.

Her thinking goes like this: someone (in a position of power) will notice me and that's how I'll get my next career break!

Is this beginning to sound familiar? It took me a while to realise it, but this is how my early career looked. And it's how the careers of many other bright young women I meet and talk with look, too. But this passive Prince Charming-driven approach to careers is, like its fairy tale ancestor, an illusion.

No successful professional working woman I have ever come across in person, or in my research, ever got to where she wanted to be by waiting to be noticed by her career Prince (or Princess) Charming. They all took control of their professional futures, mostly very early on.

Just recently, I had a coffee with an incredibly bright young thing to talk, in part, about her career. She is so talented and hard working and, yes, modest. When once again, I heard her say that she 'doesn't have any real career plans but she just thinks that her hard work on this project she's currently doing will get her the next project' I decided I had to write about it. Of course, when I pointed out to her how similar her approach was to the old 'be beautiful, kind and passive and your Prince will find you' approach, she was horrified.

And the moral of this story is…

We can drive our careers and we can make our own rules - and we can do these things and still be feminine. But we can only do so by taking control. We can also carefully and thoughtfully communicate our worth to others, and do it in a way that is consistent with our personal values and feels right to us. But we need to find that way. None of us, no matter how young we are, should ever leave our careers to be taken care of by someone other than ourselves!

I, too, waited for Prince Charming. Like others, I thought that my hard work and the results I delivered would get me noticed and that 'someone' (a powerful, senior, and, yes, male figure) would give me my next career break. And it did work like that, but only up to a point.

Finally, I realised that in order for me to have the kind of work I wanted, doing the thing I love, in a way that works for me, I had to actually take control of my own professional future. And I never looked back.

© Professionelle Limited 2008

You are welcome to use this article in training and reading for your staff or link to it from your Web Pages/Website as long as you give us full credit and link to us!

Comments (0)

Add your comment

Add your comment

  • This is not shown on the site, but required for emailing follow up comments to you.