A Woman's Place is...
Women in Industry- the New Trailblazers
I squint my eyes and let my mind wander back to those days
spent inside the ivy covered walls of the Illinois Engineering campus. Drab colors, institutional sanitizer and
well-worn army surplus furniture stood against the backdrop of overly
caffeinated students hustling, bustling and shuffling off to the next class. And, those students came from every continent,
every culture; literally every walk of life.
Except one thing was missing: women.
Actually, my own graduating class was small, around 50
students. And, only two of them were
female. That’s a whopping 4 percent. Now fast forward to interviews, job offers
and graduation. Based on my college
experience, it didn’t shock me when I discovered zero female presence in the
sales training program of my new employer.
Thinking about the whole thing in today’s terms is mind boggling.
A common misconception in the past of women in male dominated fields. |
Along the way, some of my contemporaries explained away the
issue with, “Female students don’t want to waste their Engineering degree with
a sales role.” At least a couple of my
bosses (great guys but from another generation) dismissed the whole idea of women
in “our business” by saying, “Even if qualified women could be hired, our
customers just aren’t ready for the women sellers, or managers or... anything
else.”
A few years later, I was blessed with a wife who was
breaking ground as a sales woman in a different male dominated industry. I saw the issues she faced and admired the
way she broke down barriers. I noticed
how her approach differed from my own. I
also couldn’t help but notice how she was forced to jump through higher hoops
to meet her goals. Yet she still managed
to make it look easy.
Over the course of the past couple of decades, I have seen
women break in to all levels of Distribution.
The best of these fine people demonstrated valuable traits like
organization and ability to listen.
There also seemed to be bonus characteristics not shared by my male contemporaries:
a gift for checking their egos at the door and working well with teams.
I am happy to say, I see breakthroughs across all areas of
distribution (and supply-partners.) Part
of this could be tied to the ongoing difficulty companies in our industry face
in finding qualified people of any kind.
Basically, it makes business sense to expand the field of
candidates. Secondly, a good many
companies are seeing the results of women in adjoining fields of business. Additionally, women are coming out of school
with the technical backgrounds our organizations need. For instance, Women graduating in science
related fields has risen to nearly 50% in math and science areas, even stogie
old Engineering degrees like mine now see women with about 20% of the jobs.
On an anecdotal note, I spoke at a distribution group where
the ratio of males to females was about equal.
I couldn’t help but observe some of the new types of questions coming
from the group. Even though the topic
under discussion was sales process, questions covering the interaction of
sales, customer service and group interaction were deeper and more pronounced.
One participant was keenly interested in how to best win
over workers and managers who didn’t understand the importance of the
process. In most male dominated
meetings, this topic is generally overlooked and an assumption made that change
can be driven by sheer force of will at the leadership level.
The main point of all this is simple. Women think and drive change differently than
men. Women do business differently than
men. And, women sell differently than
men.
Pulling from a recent opinion piece in Forbes Magazine:
Credit: David Cutler |
If you and the people around you
see the world in exactly the same way, then the ideas you are going to come up
with are going to be remarkably similar.
And that isn’t good.
What we need today is as many
good DIFFERENT ideas as possible so we can pick the absolute best one. And that
means coming up with different perspectives and different ways of approaching
and solving market needs.
I believe it’s high time for our world to take advantage of
a great source of diversity in approaching and solving market needs. And with this in mind, I want to call
attention to the work being done by the National Association of ElectricalDistributors and specifically the NAED Women in Industry Forum.
This group regularly honors a woman who has blazed the trail
for others. The award given is called
the Industry Trailblazer Award.
This year’s honor went to Tammy Livers, Vice President of
Sales with Eaton’s Residential and Wiring Device Division. Tammy joins a host of women who are changing
the face of our industry for the better.
Congratulations and our regards to Tammy.
For the rest of us, perhaps it’s time for some soul
searching…
Comments
I really enjoyed your article, thank you for sharing. I am an outside sales representative for a lighting manufacturer and this is a male dominate field. Needless to say I have overcome the macho minds out there and have earned their respect after 6 years. Your article I am certain will inspire many new comers and veterans as myself.
Thank you