John Oliver thinks it’s ridiculous that the United States doesn’t guarantee paid maternity leave, and he’s using his platform to let the world know it. The award-winning satirical newscaster devoted a blistering segment on Sunday’s Last Week Tonight to exposing the hypocrisy of lawmakers who publicly celebrate their mothers on Mother’s Day but oppose paid leave policies. As he put it: “You can’t go on and on about how much you love mothers and then fail to support legislation that makes life easier for them.”
Read MoreYou hear it all the time: women don’t help other women; women undermine one another at work rather than lift each other up. But pretty much every success I’ve had in my career has come from the support of other women. I’ve been lucky to have multiple mentors who have changed my life. Here are three lessons I learned from three mentors that shed light on how to find a mentor, and keep her.
Read MoreDave Goldberg, the CEO of SurveyMonkey and husband of Sheryl Sandberg, died on Friday following a treadmill accident. He was 47.
Read MoreMarc Benioff, you get all the points. The CEO of the cloud computing company is personally examining the salaries of his 16,000 employees to eliminate the pay gap between men and women. When he finds evidence of a gap—get this!—he raises the woman’s salary. He’s already given out a few raises, and told The Huffington Post, “When I’m done there will be no gap.” He then tore open his shirt to reveal a superhero suit underneath. (Kidding, but he totally could have, and no one would’ve blinked.)
Read MoreLast week the equal-pay movement gained an unlikely supporter in Pope Francis, who called the pay gap between men and women “a pure scandal.” The Pope used his weekly address to urge Christians to demand equal pay for equal work, saying, “Why is it expected that women must earn less than men? No! They have the same rights.”
Read MoreThe financial services giant will extend its paid maternity leave benefits from 12 weeks to 16 weeks, Chief Executive Stephen Schwarzman announced on Wednesday!
Read MoreA study of women’s professional ambition released by the Center for Talent Innovation found a striking demographic disparity: black women are far more comfortable with wanting and pursuing power than white women. 22% of African American women said they “aspired to a powerful position with a prestigious title,” whereas 8% of white women said the same.
Read MoreKPMG, one of the largest professional services companies in the world, announced last week that Lynne Doughtie will become its first female CEO and chairperson. She has been with the company since 1985. When Doughtie takes over in July, two of the Big Four accounting firms will have women in the top spot (Deloitte hired Cathy Engelbert as its CEO in February).
Read MoreBut some companies may think it is, according to a new study from the Robert H. Smith School of Business and Columbia Business School. The researchers studied 1,500 companies from 1991 to 2011 and found a “quota effect”: after hiring the first woman to fill one of a company’s top five positions, the chances of that company hiring a second woman executive dropped by 51%.
Read MoreJust when we thought we couldn’t love her any more, she goes and does something like this. Meryl Streep is launching a writing program for female screenwriters over 40 in partnership with New York Women in Film & Television.
Read MoreLook at all the feminists!! That was our main thought as we scrolled through Time’s annual list of the 100 most influential people in the world this week.
Read MorePeople tell stories about you all the time. When they recommend you for jobs, for blind dates, for community/school/religious group leadership opportunities.
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