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Mom-in-Chief

How Wisdom from the Workplace Can Save Your Family from Chaos

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

We work so hard to build our management and leadership skills in our careers, but we often feel like blithering idiots when faced with a child who won't cooperate, a husband who doesn't pay attention and a household that seems ready to collapse from the weight of our anxiety about chores. "Why can't I be as smart at home as I am at work?" I have often found myself wondering.

These words--written by Carol Evans and excerpted from the Foreword of Mom-in-Chief--sum up why leadership expert Jamie Woolf wrote this book. They reflect the sentiments of countless professional women who feel great about our accomplishments in the workplace but not so great about how we run our homes.

In this one-of-a-kind book, Woolf sets out to help readers bridge the gap between corner office and kitchen counter. Along the way she shares inspiring stories, practical strategies and interactive assessment tools to illustrate how the best workplace practices can bring more joy and success to family life.

Drawing from two decades of experience, she lays out her "best practices" to improve your communication, create a healthy family culture, discover your parent leadership style, manage crises, thrive during adolescence, and juggle work and family priorities. Readers will explore common leadership dilemmas, including:

  • When to step in and when to step back
  • How to maximize the learning opportunities that come from mistakes
  • How to stay connected with a pesky toddler or testy teenager
  • How to create rituals that strengthen the family's esprit de corps
  • When to push kids and when to let them quit
  • How to feel less like a maid or short-order cook and more like a skilled leader capable of unleashing the potential of others.

Mom-in-Chief addresses real quandaries and covers everything that smart career-oriented women need to know in order to fulfill their parenting potential and navigate challenges with skill and grace.

This book is a welcome reminder that leading a family doesn't mean churning out living masterpieces, or indulging children with the perfect everything. It does mean inspiring without pushing your own agenda, nurturing without micromanaging, encouraging without aiming to win a best-of-show competition, and expecting the best without ignoring the joyful ordinariness of childhood.

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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 19, 2009
      Woolf, a columnist for Working Mother
      magazine, addresses the universal work/home harmony issue: how can a successful executive use her leadership skills to make her household happy, more efficient and stress-free? Bringing leadership skills to parenting might seem like a real survival strategy to an overwhelmed exec/mom, and the author draws similarities between managing a business and managing a family—including the old saws of setting goals, cultivating self-awareness, fostering a healthy culture, managing crises, navigating difficult relationships and balancing priorities. In applying the concept to a variety of family scenarios ranging from recalcitrant husbands through defiant toddlers and oppositional teens to never-ending household chores, she covers everything she believes a smart career-oriented woman needs to know to unleash her parenting potential. Using the keystones of “transformational leadership” (influenced by The Leadership Challenge
      by Jim Kouzes), it might be possible for overworked executives to “feel less like overburdened servants and more like competent, effective family leaders.” All that is well and good, and reading this might help some women feel better about themselves, but in reality, a family is not a business, spouses are not executives, and children are not employees. While this may be a “mom development” book, its premise is slim and its contents stretched and repetitive. The more realistic question might be: how can parenting skills make better executives?

    • Library Journal

      February 15, 2009
      Woolf, a columnist for "Working Mother" magazine, demonstrates how working mothers can apply their career expertise at setting clear goals and managing conflict to their parenting practices. Woolf's comprehensive guide covers everything from discovering one's leadership style and leading through crises to managing the growing pains of adolescence and balancing home/work priorities. It's a good bet that many mothers, whether they work outside or inside the home, will find her strategies, case studies, and personal experiences helpful and applicable. For most public libraries.

      Copyright 2009 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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Languages

  • English

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