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Play Like a Man, Win Like a Woman: What Men Know About Success that Women Need to Learn [NOOK Book]
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| Preface | 3 | |
| Introduction | 7 | |
| 1 | The Object of the Game | 15 |
| 2 | Four Ground Rules | 19 |
| 1 | You Are Who You Say You Are | |
| 2 | One Prize Doesn't Fit All | |
| 3 | Work Isn't a Sorority | |
| 4 | You're Always a Mother, Daughter, Wife, or Mistress | |
| 3 | Preparing to Play | 37 |
| Learn the Playing Field | ||
| Check Out the Team Culture | ||
| Get Picked for the Team | ||
| Wear the Right Uniform | ||
| Set the Right Goal | ||
| 4 | How to Keep Score | 57 |
| 5 | Playing the Game: Fourteen Basic Rules for Success | 63 |
| 1 | Make a Request | |
| 2 | Speak Out | |
| 3 | Speak Up | |
| 4 | Toot Your Own Horn | |
| 5 | Don't Expect to Make Friends | |
| 6 | Accept Uncertainty | |
| 7 | Take a Risk | |
| 8 | Be an Imposter | |
| 9 | Think Small | |
| 10 | Don't Anguish | |
| 11 | Follow the Team Leader | |
| 12 | Don't Assume Responsibility Without Authority | |
| 13 | Sit at the Table | |
| 14 | Laugh | |
| 6 | Six Things Men Can Do at Work That Women Can't | 121 |
| 1 | They Can Cry. You Can't | |
| 2 | They Can Have Sex. You Can't | |
| 3 | They Can Fidget. You Can't | |
| 4 | They Can Yell. You Can't | |
| 5 | They Can Have Bad Manners. You Can't | |
| 6 | They Can Be Ugly. You Can't | |
| 7 | He Hears, She Hears: Ten Genderbender Vocabulary Words | 137 |
| 1 | Yes (Exactly What It Means) | |
| 2 | No (Not What It Means) | |
| 3 | Hope (The Worst Word in the Game) | |
| 4 | Guilt (It Means Trouble) | |
| 5 | Sorry (It's a Sorry Word) | |
| 6 | Aggressive (It's Not Assertive) | |
| 7 | Fight (It's Not a Pretty Word) | |
| 8 | Game (a.k.a.: Fun) | |
| 9 | Glass Ceiling (Their Term, Not Ours) | |
| 10 | Future (Then and Now) | |
| 8 | How to Enter and Exit the Game | 159 |
| 9 | The Two Final Rules | 175 |
| 1 | Be a Woman | |
| 2 | Be Yourself | |
| Acknowledgments | 189 |
Anonymous
Posted April 14, 2000
This book was a fast and informative read. As a recent graduate of college, and fairly new addition to the work world, this book contained advice that I think will help ground and guide me through my career. I think it is a book from which any person, young or old, will benefit.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted January 28, 2001
This book is a must read - especially for young women just getting ready for the work force, I will be handing mine down to my two daughters. This book was such an easy read, and every thing she says makes you just sit back and go...oh, thats why he did that! LOL
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Posted September 1, 2000
Fabulous book -- Smooth read with incredibly applicable insight.
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Posted June 17, 2000
I wish I had this book when I started working for a Fortune 50 company 15 years ago. It would have kept me from stubbing my toe because I didn't understand how the guys played the game. I bought 5 copies and have given them as graduation gifts to my nieces and friends. This and 'Simple Money Solutions' should be required reading for all women and girls.
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Posted June 4, 2000
I found a lot of things from myself in the book. We know about dilemmas in business world for women. If you will compete for your future, in men's world, read the unwritten rules of the game! And i believe there are a lot of men who are not aware of these secrets!
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Posted June 7, 2000
I am the first to admit that unfortunately, I am not a big reader outside of the classroom. THIS BOOK KEPT ME TURNING PAGES UNTIL THERE WERE NONE LEFT TO TURN, AND I WANTED MORE. Not only did I learn much about men and their business 'game,' I learned much about myself and much about how women think. This book is highly inspirational; I have more faith that I will succeed in business now than I would have had otherwise.
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Posted April 28, 2000
Gail Evans has done a brilliant job of letting the cat out of the bag and letting women know exactly what they've been missing. As I read her thoughtful and too familiar account of some of the ways women get left behind in today's male run businesses I couldn't help but think how useful this would have been for me directly out of college. This book is a MUST READ for any young woman about to enter the workplace and a MUST CATCH UP AND READ for any woman who is struggling to make to positions of power. The advice is so easy and applicable. It is one of the few books I have read where I come away with a real plan of action. Thank you Gail Evans for sharing your insights. Now the good ol boys best look out!
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted April 14, 2000
Gail Evans openly sheds light on the dirty little secret in America's board rooms - and dares to take on the male-dominated corporate world where other women have kept quiet. As a woman of the Generation called `X', this startling revelation comes just in time. Young women in the corporate world today have certainly benefitted from the struggle of our fore sisters and we revel in the relative equality afforded us by their braveness in the past. But our equality perception is shortsighted if we believe that all progress has already been made and that we don't need to do anything about it. As Evans shockingly points out, 'women make up almost half of today's labor force but in corporate America they don't even share half the power and only four of the Fortune 500 CEO's are women'. This is an abyssmal and disheartening realization especially for young women - and one which Evans' book lays out a daring strategy designed to overcome. `Play Like a Man, Win Like a Woman' reminds us that success in the business world IS about strategy. Because men have dominated the business world for so long - they have developed their own rules without the input of women. Evans clearly identifies these rules, makes us aware as women of their importance to operating in business- and then provides useful and practical advice on how women can diplomatically follow these rules and finesse them to our (READ: women) advantage. `Play Like A Man, Win Like A Woman' is perfect for young women wondering what it takes to get to the top and how to do it - and in the process learn ways by which we can make our own strides in the fight for corporate equality.
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Posted December 10, 2011
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Overview
Women make up almost half of today's labor force, but in corporate America they don't share half of the power. Only four of the Fortune 500 company CEOs are women, and it's only been in the last few years that even half of the Fortune 500 companies have more than one female officer.A major reason for this? Most women were never taught how to play the game of business.
Throughout her career in the supercompetitive, male-dominated media industry, Gail Evans, one of the country's most powerful executives, has met ...