Family-friendly
workplace policies make good business sense. Tensions
between work and home life distract; they increase
stress. They are bad for families, bad for employees,
and bad for employers. The Boston Bar Association’s
recent study “Facing the Grail,” for example,
discovered that 43% of associates stay less than three
years at a firm. For women and minorities the figure
goes even higher. The high rate of departure is a
losing proposition for the firms since it takes four
years on average to recoup the original investment
in an associate’s training. Recognition of the
costs is not limited to the professions. IBM, in fact,
has been at the forefront of job sharing and telecommuting
and recently targeted $25 million to expand or improve
the childcare and elder care facilities on corporate
campuses.
But
balancing work-and-family issues remains as difficult
for corporations as it is for their employees. Even
when family-friendly policies are in place at a company,
the individual employee must make the business case
that fits her personal situation. Putting forward
a persuasive business case can be particularly challenging
at companies that have yet to adopt firm-wide policies.
Arguments about fairness won’t work and can
do damage. Lingering under the surface of any fairness
argument is the accusation that the decision-maker
is not fair—that he or she needs to shape up
and get with the program. That is not the place to
start the negotiations if you want a favorable hearing.
It puts your listener on the defensive. He or she
may quite legitimately object to being cast as an
enemy of motherhood and apple pie. In fact, what you
consider a “fair arrangement” may cause
a boss scheduling headaches and precipitate grumbling
from colleagues about extra work or inconvenience.
Any solid business case must take those factors into
account.
Making
the Business Case
Companies want to attract and retain good people.
They want to be known as good places to work, places
that draw talent. Before a manager can be convinced
to accommodate work/family demands, he or she needs
to believe that the accommodation is practical and
that it is worth making in your specific situation.
Moreover, the jobless recovery puts little pressure
on employers. With a loose labor market they might
not be so willing to be accommodating in order to
keep or attract good people as they were just a few
years ago.
Also
the possible arrangements range widely —from
telecommuting to job sharing and on-site daycare.
Before you can build a business case for a particular
work/family arrangement, you have to be sure about
what you want. The effects of these decisions ripple
into the future and should be made in the context
of an overall career strategy. Once you are clear
about solutions that work for you, you must then persuade
the decision-makers that at least one solution
works from their perspective too.
How
do you go about making that business case? Three steps
are involved.
Step
#1: Learn as Much as You Can
Information is a valuable commodity in negotiations.
Two distinct kinds of information come into play in
negotiations. Factual information provides
the hard data—the pertinent facts and the intelligence
about policies, practices, and precedents—that
you use to back up your arguments. Scouting information
helps you predict the hearing those arguments will
get so you can fine-tune your approach.
To
negotiate work/family arrangements effectively, you
must base your case on a solid informational foundation.
You have to be ready to supply concrete reasons why,
say, a day or two telecommuting would not disrupt
the workflow. Factual information can also ground
the discussion and prevent it from deteriorating into
a debate over personal preferences and beliefs. Facts
extend well beyond quantitative data. They cover a
whole host of organizational policies and precedents
as well as comparisons that can be drawn from other
sources. If, for example, you want to propose a flexible
work schedule, you can make your argument more effectively
if you can point to other examples within the organization
or to arrangements at other companies that have worked
well.
Factual
information like this takes away some of the situation’s
uncertainty. Scouting information, on the other hand,
allows you to anticipate problems. If your demands
are likely to bump up against entrenched attitudes
or established ways of doing things, you know where
to fine-tune your requests. Flexible schedules can
create headaches for management. They can also present
career challenges for women in situations where “face
time” is important for advancement. Without
safeguards in place you can find yourself gradually
working longer hours but still being regarded as a
part-time employee on the “mommy track.”
Abundant information is available on work/family issues,
especially online. The Families
and Work Institute website is one source. Another
is Juggling
Work and Family with Hedrick Smith, which features
a list of national organizations that offer help and
information as well as a reading list for employees
and managers.
Step
#2: Demonstrate the Value You Bring to the Organization
It is important to establish the value you bring to
an organization before you get into the complications—like
special work/family arrangements. That starts the
negotiations off on a positive note rather than with
a problem. This rule applies whether you are already
on board or are trying to get in the door.
People
negotiate with you openly when you have something
they want. Take stock. What assets do you offer that
the company really needs? Knowing your value gives
you a psychological edge in a negotiation. You may
want the job and the flexible schedule, but the company
has to believe that it would be getting something
of equal value in return. It is your job to make that
case—to put your value right there on the table
where it becomes obvious. Once managers are convinced
that you would make their life easier or their operations
more productive, they are much more inclined to talk
about what you need to make that happen. Suppose,
for example, that you want to relocate to another
office for personal family reasons. The department
head (and the controller) may look more favorably
on the shift in venue if it moves you closer to your
key customer. Rather than issue an ultimatum, you
can point to the obvious benefits of the move.
Step
#3: Be Flexible
More often than not negotiations involve change. Creating
a flexible work schedule or introducing a job share
moves a negotiation beyond a simple yes-or-no proposition.
A manager may want to accommodate your needs, but
not be sure how without unduly disrupting the workflow
or establishing a precedent. You must provide concrete
incentives for the manager to work with you in finding
a solution.
The
more ways you can give the other person to say yes,
the better your chances are that he or she will. Presented
with one proposal, the other side has a choice: yes
or no. He or she may not be disposed to say no, but
may find that particular solution problematic.
With more options to choose from, he or she has more
room to maneuver and more flexibility to say yes.
If the company has been slow to implement family/friendly
policies, a manager might consider a trial run—a
three-month experiment that could be reassessed. That
reassessment is key; it allows you both to test the
arrangements and see how they work. You don’t
want to succeed in arranging a telecommuting schedule
only to find that you are gradually being cut out
of the loop at the office. Any good proposal will
have safeguards built in for both sides.
Learn
More
To find out more about the common obstacles women
face at the bargaining table, visit the authors’
Web site: www.theshadownegotiation.com.
Discover the results of a recent survey in which more
than 400 women evaluated their bargaining skills.
©
The Shadow Negotiation, LLC
See
other WomensMedia articles on Work-Life Balance:
The
Myth of Balance
The
Reality of Balance
Or our new articles on Women's
Issues.
About
The Authors:
DEBORAH M. KOLB and JUDITH
WILLIAMS authored The Shadow Negotiation:
How Women Can Master the Hidden Agendas that Determine
Bargaining Success, named by the Harvard Business
Review as one of the Top Ten Books of 2000. Everyday
Negotiation: Navigating the Hidden Agendas in Bargaining,
an expanded version, was published this year by Jossey-Bass.
CAROL FROHLINGER is the founder of
Crossell, Inc., a consulting firm focused on advancing
women in business, and a partner in theshadownegotiation.com.
The authors are currently working on a book on how
women lead—to be published by Jossey-Bass early
next year.
Check
out the first courses on negotiation designed by women
for women. Available online or in CD-ROM format, these
practical courses develop skills by drawing on the
experiences of real women and the lessons learned
in those real-life situations.
-
Getting the Salary You Want—
a crash course in salary negotiation
-
Getting Out of Your Own Way—a
short primer on how to avoid the pitfalls of negotiation
-
Getting What You Are Worth—a
comprehensive interactive program
http://www.theshadownegotiation.com
By
Kolb, Williams
& Frohlinger |