โI donโt know how you do itโ.
I get this all.the.time. It seems like a compliment, right? That Iโm making this work life integration thing happen. False. For me, itโs a frequent reminder that the barriers are still so high for working moms and that we are far from where we need to be. Because the truth is, Iโm exhausted and anxious that Iโm dropping the ball somewhere.
โWe still ask women to work like they donโt have kids and parent like they donโt work.โ
Iโm tired of living in fear. Fear that Iโm not pulling my weight at work as much as my male and childless colleagues, fear that my son feels less loved because Iโm the absentee parent who needs a sitter to take him to soccer practice, fear that Iโm losing precious time with aging family members, fear that infrequent face to face time will deteriorate friendships. Fear that Iโm just never enough.
As an executive female in tech, mom of two kids under six, COO of our household, commuter, and athlete, every minute of my day is critical, and thatโs just from an operational standpoint. Couple the emotional and mental labor (worrying about childcare, scheduled activities, homework, birthday parties, finding quality time to spend with your partner) with managing people at work and youโre left with zero time for yourself.
I recently saw this viral comic on Twitter that couldnโt feel more spot on.
How are women expected to get into and more importantly, stay, in leadership roles when there are so many daily struggles that continue to pose barriers?
Why do we define success as more? More responsibility, bigger teams, how much we can cram in a day? Itโs almost become a bragging right (oh, and Iโm guilty of it too). We are all headed for burnout, if we havenโt already hit it.
The last thing I want to do is set the example for younger women that having it all is easily doable. The truth is you need community as your support system โ from colleagues who understand, to partners, relatives, friends and neighbors, because it takes a village. Iโm fortunate to have a partner who carries his share of the load, a sitter, and family nearby, and yet, at the same time, Iโm still not able to do it all. Iโve missed school events like โBring your parent to school dayโ or forgot about pajama day and accidentally single my children out in their everyday clothes. Whoops.
I donโt have a magic wand to change things overnight. However, in order to have any chance of change, I believe we need a two pronged approach.
Company culture must become more inclusive
Iโve been lucky to have worked for people and companies who hold the value of โoutcomes over outputsโ. This is generally applied to the work you are doing. But Iโve also applied it to face-time in the office. While it would be challenging for a leader to be exclusively remote, I believe itโs possible to achieve outcomes with flexible schedules including work from home days. Iโm also selfishly happy to gain back 3 hours in my day, not to mention have the ability to attend school events and focus on heads down work that open office environments make a bit tough. In turn, my company gets an employee who continues to be fulfilled by her work and is invigorated to come into the office despite a long commute.
When I started my search for a new role at the end of 2019, an inclusive culture with people Iโd kill to work with was in my top criteria. I was thrilled to find Electric and more importantly, the people with whom I couldnโt wait to work.
Is Electricโs culture 100% inclusive of parents? No, but is any companyโs? With anything in life, you get out what you put in. I saw this as an opportunity to build on our 5-star culture that is already supportive and inclusive of who each individual is.
Apply some basic PM and leadership principles into our daily lives to ease the burden
Naturally, I have to bring in my Product Management lens and apply that to life.
- Get organized: Make sure you have a backlog for everything in your life and that itโs prioritized based on urgency and effort.
- Donโt compare yourself to others: Just like your individual teamโs velocity is unique to that team and they want to improve against themselves, thatโs how we need to think about ourselves.
- Donโt be afraid to ask for help and delegate: As PMs, we are privileged to lean on and work with a team to accomplish our goals. Do the same in your personal life. This was a revelation for me as I had a hard time delegating.
- Quality > quantity: Itโs not about the number of features you build but the impact you have with your products. Whether itโs work or time spent with kids, more isnโt always best. The hours you spend at your desk is not correlated with performance. Similarly, the number of hours you spend with your kids does not necessarily correlate to happier and healthier kids and parents.
- Progress not perfection: If itโs 80%, ship it. Donโt get paralyzed because youโre striving for something to be perfect. Celebrate that you took the first step.
- Place the bets: We often experiment with our products which could result in total failure and thatโs okay. Be courageous. Donโt be afraid to set the standard.
- Be kind to yourself: Do your best. Weโre only human. We wonโt always get it right and it doesnโt mean weโve failed. Some days are just going to suck. Whatโs important is to have the community who can support you at home and at work.
Iโm focused on just trying to do my best and encouraging others to do the same.
This piece originally appeared on LinkedIn, and was published here with permission.