7 TED lectures for young boss

7 TED lectures for young boss

We live in an exciting time when a woman can finally achieve success in various fields and share their experiences and support with others. Of course, in many mining areas there are still significant gender inequality, complicating the process of climbing to the top, but this should not stop us. We've put together a series of lectures with the TED conference, which will help you to believe in their own strength, to become more successful in their work and break through the "glass ceiling". Do not forget to include Russian subtitles.

1. "As I said throughout the year," yes "," Shonda Rhimes

Women involved in the creation of TV series "Gray's Anatomy", "How to Get Away with Murder" and "Scandal", shares the lessons received, a year answering "yes" to those things that used to frighten her.

Dream job - not a fairy tale. This is real work, blood, sweat and no tears.

Rhymes talk about how important it is to find a balance between work and personal interests, to become a strong leader, but at the same time is divided by how hard it is to escape from your phone, and finally to do chores.

2. "Why do successful women flat head?" Dame Stephanie Shirley

Shirley - one of the most successful entrepreneurs in the field of modern technology, which in its bright and eccentric style, tells of how she founded a small company with women programmers and was able to expand it to a company with a market capitalization of several billion pounds.

As a young girl, survived World War II, she decided to make his life "worthy of salvation," and then found this new meaning and build a successful management career. Shirley helped women get back into the sphere of programming, originally regarded as feminine, and led several important factors of success, which can create you.

3 "for a career that you are the Council, most likely, never received" Susan Kolantuono

While women make up 50% of middle management and professional positions, the proportion of women in leadership positions in these organizations is less than a third. Kolantuono discusses how leadership is manifested at every level, and why so many capable leaders are stuck in middle management.

You should see the appeal if you feel that your career is stuck in place, and you have already demonstrated your skills and even achieved higher wages.

4. Amy Cuddy "body language shapes your personality,"

Each of us makes a lot of conclusions based encountered human body language, so that your non-verbal skills play a major role in how people think about us. In this TED Talk Amy Cuddy explains how to position yourself so that you feel around a true leader, able to lead the crowd.

5. "What's makes a great leader?" Rozelinda Torres

One well-known consultant Rozelinda Torres found a disturbing trend among its own customers to get stuck at one point and decided to look for a solution to this problem in other countries. It has long traveled the world to find out how different perceived leadership and what it takes to succeed. Rozelinda found that strong leaders need to work with people who are very different from their own, and be able to win the trust of others, and in this video you will learn how it can be learned.

6. "Why do we have so few women leaders?" Sheryl Sandberg

Even if you think that enough women in high positions Russia - you are seriously mistaken. In any part of the world so far there is no gender equality, and in his speech Cheryl divided frightening statistics. She also talks about his own experience of reaching the top of the career ladder, not hiding, it is difficult to be a leader-woman. Cheryl encourages us to support each other and share personal stories of climbing up in a world still dominated by men.

7. "3 lessons for the success of the Arab businesswomen" Leila Hotayt

One little daughter Leila Hotayt wondered why the walls of state institutions, or even shopping malls nowhere pictures successful and influential women? Are they so unimportant? The woman had a lot to think about this question, because, despite the fact that she always succeed in "male" fields, she has never met a suitable role model for themselves. In his TED-talk Leila shares his thoughts on how difficult it was to achieve its when your whole nation has insisted that a woman needs to deal exclusively with the house and children.

And some career advice once helped you?