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Why Women-Only Workplaces Just Don't Work
#1

Why Women-Only Workplaces Just Don't Work

I've come under a lot of fire from even men I thought red-pilled when I have said I refuse to work for a woman and this article from the Daily Mail enforces my decision.

If you show me a successful business woman, I'll show you a woman who surrounded herself with powerful and effective men.

I threw years of my life into a nonprofit that only had two female employees and the rest were men, including the CEO. Today, the ratio is completely flipped and with a female CEO, the place is going down the tubes.

Actual link is at the bottom of the article.



Catfights over handbags and tears in the toilets. When this producer launched a women-only TV company she thought she'd kissed goodbye to conflict...

By Samantha Brick
Updated: 09:36 EDT, 7 April 2009

Over in one corner sat Alice, a strong-minded 27-year-old who always said what she thought, regardless of how much it might hurt someone else. In the other corner was Sarah, a thirtysomething high-flier who would stand up for herself momentarily - then burst into tears and run for the ladies.

Their simmering fight lasted hours, egged on by spectators taking sides and fuelling the anger. Sometimes other girls would join in, either heckling aggressively or huddling defensively in the toilets. It might sound like a scene from a tawdry reality show such as Big Brother, but the truth is a little more prosaic: it was just a normal morning in my office.

The venomous women were supposedly the talented employees I had headhunted to achieve my utopian dream - a female- only company with happy, harmonious workers benefiting from an absence of men.
Samantha Brick

Samantha Brick: Her business was ruined by the destructive jealousy and in-fighting of an all-female staff

It was an idealistic vision swiftly shattered by the nightmare reality: constant bitchiness, surging hormones, unchecked emotion, attention-seeking and fashion rivalry so fierce it tore my staff apart.

When I read the other day that Sienna Miller had said there was no such thing as 'the Sisterhood', I knew what she meant.

I can understand why people want to believe that women look out for each other - because with men in power at work and in politics, it makes sense for us to stick together.

In fact, there was a time when I believed in the Sisterhood - but that was before women at war led to my emotional and financial ruin.

Five years ago, I was working as a TV executive producer making shows for top channels such as MTV, and based in Los Angeles. It sounds like a dream job and it could have been - if I'd been male.

Working in TV is notoriously difficult for women. There is a powerful old boys' network, robust glass ceiling and the majority of bosses are misogynistic males.

Gradually, what had started out as a daydream - wouldn't it be great if there were no men where I worked? - turned into an exciting concept. I decided to create the first all-female production company where smart, intelligent, career-orientated women could work harmoniously, free from the bravado of the opposite sex.

In hindsight, I should have learned the lessons of my past - at my mixed secondary school I was bullied by a gang of nasty, name-calling girls, so I knew only too well how nasty groups of women could become.

And working in TV, I'd met lots of super-competitive 'door-slammers' who'd do anything to get to the top. But I told myself that, with the right women, work could be wonderful.

So, in April 2005, I left my job, remortgaged my house - freeing up close to £100,000 - and began paying myself just £700 a month to set up this utopian business. Having worked extremely hard for 12 years, I had lots of experience and a good reputation. What could go wrong?
Picking my battles

I hired a team of seven staff and set up an office in Richmond upon Thames, Surrey. While the women I interviewed claimed to be enthused by the idea, they still insisted on high salaries. Fair enough, I thought at the time - they are professionals, and I knew most of them were talented and conscientious because I'd worked with them before.

But within a week, two cliques had developed: those who had worked together before and those who were producing 'new ideas'.

Most days would bring a pointed moment when some people were invited out for lunch or a coffee break - and some weren't. Nothing explicit was ever said; the cutting rejection was obvious enough.

Even when we all went to the pub after work, strict divisions remained, made clear according to who sat where around the table and who would be civil - or not - to whom.

Fashion was a great divider, though in this battlefield everyone was on their own. Hideously stereotypical and shallow as it sounds, clothes were a huge source of catty comments, from sly remarks about people looking over-dressed to the merits of their fake tan application.

I always felt sorry for anyone who naively showed off a new purchase in the office, because everyone would coo appreciatively to their face - then harshly criticise them as soon as they were out of earshot. This happened without exception.
Sienna Miller

Sienna Miller recently said the sisterhood does not exist after she experienced bitchy comments from other women

My deputy, Sarah, the general manager, first showed how much style mattered when she advertised for an office assistant and refused to hire the best-qualified girl because she could not distinguish Missoni from Marc Jacobs. This girl would have been making tea and running errands. But I didn't challenge the decision not to hire her because I had a policy of picking my battles carefully.

The office was like a Milan catwalk, but with the competitiveness of a Miss World contest - and the low cunning of a mud-wrestling bout.

A fashion spat ended one friendship when Sarah and our young development researcher received the same surprise Christmas gift - a Chloe Paddington bag worth £900.

When they clocked the matching bags in the office, it was like pistols at dawn. They forced a few compliments, but relations never recovered, to the expense of my company.

Another time, when two members of staff bought the same jeans, one proclaimed: 'They'll look better on me, because I'm a size eight and she's a ten.'

It didn't take long for the office to become divided between the girls who wore make-up and those who didn't. Comments from the former were typically 'Doesn't she know what spot cover-up is?' or 'Has she ever met a hairbrush?', while the no-make-up clan were equally biting, with comments - behind their backs, naturally - such as 'People on the morning bus must think she's a prostitute'; or 'She looks like a slapper'.

The obsession with appearance meant nearly all the staff were on diets. If I bought a tuna mayonnaise baguette for lunch, I would overhear staff commenting that I was pig - I'm a size 12.

Two of the skinny girls often snidely said about the largest girl: 'I'd kill myself if I got that fat.' One of the assistants got her own back on the food police for several weeks by pretending to buy them fat-free lattes. . . which were really full-fat.

Employees considered it acceptable to take time off for beauty treatments - and not out of their holiday allowance. One girl regularly came in late because she was getting her hair coloured, and when I mentioned this she blew up in outrage. Though at least she had a reason; most just turned up late regardless, and huffed 'That's the time my train gets in' if I pointed at the clock.

In hindsight, I can see I should have been more strict. My idealism was my downfall because I tried to see the best in people - I was convinced they would behave as they were treated, so I treated everyone kindly.
Snide comments

If I'd have been more cynical, I would have been more successful.

I was often out trying to win contracts, but back at the office, work was an afterthought. It came second to conversations about shopping, boyfriends and diets - oh, and spiteful comments from my two development researchers, who were sharpening their acrylic nails against another staff member, Natasha.

Six months after the company's inception, tensions spilled over when one of the researchers took Natasha's laptop and refused to return it. That day I was forced to cancel my meetings and return to the office to patch up relations.

Though Sarah, my general manager, was present, she refused to get involved because she didn't want to be the 'bad cop'.

Despite being in charge, she was scared at the prospect of being bitched about - it was as though, in a women-only environment, staff were unable to keep their defined roles.

Soon, arguments became a daily occurrence. It would start with snide comments between two people then, as others joined in, emotion and anger would grow until an eruption - shouting, screaming, swearing - which always left someone in tears.

Then the friends of the woman who was upset would follow her to console her, leaving one group in the office and another group in the ladies. Both would then bitch unreservedly about each other - and do absolutely no work.

It reached the point that I even wrote a handbook for staff on how to be nice to each other. The advice centred on being respectful to everyone and treating people equally - taking phone messages properly whether the call was for me or a junior.

I also said there should be no more criticising or whispering in the office. But although when people read it they said they loved the idea, it made no difference.

Many of the women were aggressive or defensive, or both. The most aggressive masked a host of insecurities with their outgoing nature, while the defensive ones opened up only when provoked.

The worst type I encountered, however, was the 'passive aggressive-She doesn't seem mean, but is the worst of the pack, ruthlessly bringing you down in such a sweet and unassuming manner that you don't realise what she's done until long after the event.
Broken hearts

She conceals her bitchy words in flowery phrases - one of my staff told another sweetly: 'I don't mean to be a bitch, but I just can't bear to be in the same room and breathe the same air as you right now.'

But the biggest force wasn't personality type, it was hormones. When one woman started having IVF, she unleashed her rage without warning and without apology.

At 'that time of the month' - which in an office staffed only by women meant someone was always at that point - any bad mood was swiftly passed on to the rest of team as if by osmosis.

Hormones came second as an excuse for absence and bad temper only to love life problems. When one woman split up with her boyfriend, I was told in no uncertain terms by her that I must 'be super-understanding and sensitive towards her at work' - in an email she sent me. A true drama queen, her tears went on for a week.

Naturally, her enemies in the office delighted in her broken heart.

Another girl, juggling two relationships at once, frequently primed everyone in the office about what to say to whom whenever either of the men called the office.

Another woman had a voracious sexual appetite and, in a female-only environment, saw nothing wrong with screeching across the open-plan room details of her marathon sex sessions. I received frequent complaints about her crude language.

I can still remember the name of all of my staff's partners and their affairs because it interfered with our work so often.

Professionally, however, the company was somehow thriving.

We secured two programme commissions, one with ITV and a series with Living TV, so could afford new offices in West London.

But this brought another explosion from Sarah when she paid out for a parking permit while another girl was given a free space by the building's landlord.

During a massive row, Sarah said the girl had over-stepped her rank, while the girl told her it was just 'tough'. They never spoke again.

The effect a lack of testosterone was having in our office was even more apparent when I temporarily hired two male directors to work on a series (camera operators are usually men because of the heavy equipment). The team suddenly became quieter, more hard-working and less bitchy - partly because they were too busy flirting.

Two girls openly went after one director, even though he had a live-in girlfriend - his partner didn't stand a chance against their relentless flirting, and was dumped when one of them won his affections.

When we had meetings with men, staff turned ferocious, each out to prove that they were the sexiest in the room. With a male commissioner at Channel 4, one employee said 'Watch this!', then stuck her hand down her bra and tweaked her nipples. The man and I were speechless.

In this climate, I didn't dare employ any men because of the distraction and - even worse! - catfights they created. I hate how much that sounds like stereotyping, but I'm afraid it's what I found to be true.

And while I stand by my initial reason for excluding male employees - because they have an easy ride in TV - if I were to do it again, I'd definitely employ men. In fact, I'd probably employ only men.

Making close to half a million in our first year should have meant profit, but this was wiped out by high salaries and accounting errors by staff. Then, when we began having cash-flow problems, Sarah signed herself off sick with stress for a month. She also confessed she'd been dodging calls from people who were due payment, thus ruining my firm's reputation.

By then I was back and forth on a plane between Britain and the U.S. dealing with fractious staff in London and barmy LA producers.

My general manager was nowhere to be found, bills hadn't been paid and the tension in the office was palpable.

To pump extra cash into the business, I sold both my cars, but it was too late and we went bankrupt in March 2007, less than two years after I'd formed the company.

Though I will not absolve myself of all guilt, I believe the business was ruined by the destructive jealousy and in-fighting of an allfemale staff. Their selfishness and insecurities led to my company's demise. When I needed the socalled 'Sisterhood', believe me, it just wasn't there.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/articl...z4tvd2inJK
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#2

Why Women-Only Workplaces Just Don't Work

Great read, hilarious and funny.

There was a small mobile phone operator that had an all female staff and an all male leadership (with a thread to boot). That must have been a great office to work in!

Women make great workers if they're lead by men.
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#3

Why Women-Only Workplaces Just Don't Work

[Image: cat-fight-gif-2.gif]
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#4

Why Women-Only Workplaces Just Don't Work

Poetry.
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#5

Why Women-Only Workplaces Just Don't Work

Dupe?

thread-60597...pid1502572
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#6

Why Women-Only Workplaces Just Don't Work

The myth is that men are more "violent" than women, more given to battle and conflict, while women are the soft, understanding peacemakers. In fact, most [masculine] men have a better understanding of the nature of conflict, and as such know that conflict is generally to be AVOIDED. You're willing to fight, but only when absolutely necessary. Otherwise you try to reach an agreement by some other means.

Women (and effeminate males) don't understand conflict, and so are much more given to engaging in petty fights, ego-driven squabbles, etc.

When men fight, it tends to be clear and obvious what they're fighting about. With women, the issue is never what it seems to be. There can be many layers — all kinds of stuff below the surface that even they aren't aware of. And the issues can change and evolve over time.

Then again, sometimes the underlying issue is simply the desire to shake things up and create some drama. The workplace can be awfully boring, you know....
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#7

Why Women-Only Workplaces Just Don't Work

She blames her failed business on her employees, while she was in charge. It were her shitty hiring and managing practices that led to the demise of her company.

Other then that, the behavior she describes is displayed by both men and women in the tv business. A lot of people that want to work on tv have problems. Men can be horribly unprofessional, passive aggressive attention whores and in the places I worked at, they were worse then the women.

Fun read.
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#8

Why Women-Only Workplaces Just Don't Work

Good read. My mother at work has several female underlings at a school, and if there is one thing she hates about her job, it's the cattiness from these women. Drives her nuts. She handles it by separating these women as much as possible, assigning them different schedules and even sending them to different schools. Can only do so much if it's hard to fire someone, especially if they can come back with a harrassment suit -- which happened before.
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#9

Why Women-Only Workplaces Just Don't Work

I'd not refer to a specific instance. In my reckoning women have very specific capabilities, and can indeed thrive in certain industries and environments.

The idea that men are better at every enterprise is just as wrong as the idea that men and women are equal.
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#10

Why Women-Only Workplaces Just Don't Work

Quote: (09-27-2017 08:40 PM)mensch Wrote:  

I'd not refer to a specific instance. In my reckoning women have very specific capabilities, and can indeed thrive in certain industries and environments.


Unless you start backing up your statements with examples, you won't last long here with these sort of claims.
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#11

Why Women-Only Workplaces Just Don't Work

Quote: (09-27-2017 08:58 PM)Mercenary Wrote:  

Quote: (09-27-2017 08:40 PM)mensch Wrote:  

I'd not refer to a specific instance. In my reckoning women have very specific capabilities, and can indeed thrive in certain industries and environments.


Unless you start backing up your statements with examples, you won't last long here with these sort of claims.
Eh? I'm sorry to state the plainly obvious, but I'd never wish for men for carry the running of my children's kindergarten. Some jobs require the softness and shrewdness of women.
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#12

Why Women-Only Workplaces Just Don't Work

Quote: (09-27-2017 09:11 PM)mensch Wrote:  

Quote: (09-27-2017 08:58 PM)Mercenary Wrote:  

Quote: (09-27-2017 08:40 PM)mensch Wrote:  

I'd not refer to a specific instance. In my reckoning women have very specific capabilities, and can indeed thrive in certain industries and environments.


Unless you start backing up your statements with examples, you won't last long here with these sort of claims.
Eh? I'm sorry to state the plainly obvious, but I'd never wish for men for carry the running of my children's kindergarten. Some jobs require the softness and shrewdness of women.

You'd be surprised. Here in China, due to a shortage of women willing to live and work in a sexual desert with a minimum of alpha males willing to let them date up, the majority of the foreign kindergarten staff members are male and many are absolutely excellent with children and great at their jobs.

I'm the King of Beijing!
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#13

Why Women-Only Workplaces Just Don't Work

Quote: (09-27-2017 09:11 PM)mensch Wrote:  

Quote: (09-27-2017 08:58 PM)Mercenary Wrote:  

Quote: (09-27-2017 08:40 PM)mensch Wrote:  

I'd not refer to a specific instance. In my reckoning women have very specific capabilities, and can indeed thrive in certain industries and environments.


Unless you start backing up your statements with examples, you won't last long here with these sort of claims.
Eh? I'm sorry to state the plainly obvious, but I'd never wish for men for carry the running of my children's kindergarten. Some jobs require the softness and shrewdness of women.

From experience, there's certain fields where women are better suited. Fields which have a combination of interpersonal, scripted and repetitive duties. Call centres for instance.

Men rarely last long in these fields because there's no room for autonomy and it's almost robotic. Most quit after a few months. In contrast, I've noticed women thrive.

Makes sense from the perspective that these roles are about as far removed from any masculine endeavour as humanely possible. Probably why they're largely filled with women and gays.

There are zero examples with companies who have a female CEO and predominately female workforce which are successful. That should say all there is to know on that point.
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#14

Why Women-Only Workplaces Just Don't Work

Workplaces with 100% women work in the direct opposite correlation to workplaces with 100% men.
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#15

Why Women-Only Workplaces Just Don't Work

In my school. We have all male teachers while the aides are all female. It's good for the kids to have foreign male teachers, assuming that they are not pushovers. Women staff tend to coddle the children too much in China -Chinese in general tend to over-coddle children. Having male teachers helps to impose discipline and obedience in the children and give them the kick in the ass that many of these kids need to not be little Princes and Princesses.
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#16

Why Women-Only Workplaces Just Don't Work

This is how you do it: Give them all a "manager" or similar important sounding title so they can tell their friends they're managers but they're all equally under the thumb of male directors.

4 Accounts managers and 3 accounts staff hahaha

[Image: meet-the-staff7-e1384368823807.png]
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#17

Why Women-Only Workplaces Just Don't Work

So women seek equality with men in senior positions through the hypergamous vehicles of sex and "positive" discrimination? Who would have thunk it!

There is one group strangely absent from this article: the bottom 80% of men who work in TV.

Kingston-Upon-Thames: one of the richest and most expensive places to live in the UK...
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#18

Why Women-Only Workplaces Just Don't Work

Quote: (09-28-2017 12:36 AM)Sooth Wrote:  

This is how you do it: Give them all a "manager" or similar important sounding title so they can tell their friends they're managers but they're all equally under the thumb of male directors.

4 Accounts managers and 3 accounts staff hahaha

[Image: meet-the-staff7-e1384368823807.png]

There is maybe four women in that spread that have real jobs. Many of those titles are phony and just boost up sales staff and client relationship staff as you mentioned into thinking they are important.

The solo woman on Sales support is likely a hawk who performs well but is either to inexperienced, or not good with other women to be put in a supervisor or management position. I say this because she is floating on a island within the organization chart so something is clearly different about her, unless of course she is just the glorified secretary.
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#19

Why Women-Only Workplaces Just Don't Work

Quote: (09-27-2017 11:17 PM)Suits Wrote:  

Quote: (09-27-2017 09:11 PM)mensch Wrote:  

Quote: (09-27-2017 08:58 PM)Mercenary Wrote:  

Quote: (09-27-2017 08:40 PM)mensch Wrote:  

I'd not refer to a specific instance. In my reckoning women have very specific capabilities, and can indeed thrive in certain industries and environments.


Unless you start backing up your statements with examples, you won't last long here with these sort of claims.
Eh? I'm sorry to state the plainly obvious, but I'd never wish for men for carry the running of my children's kindergarten. Some jobs require the softness and shrewdness of women.

You'd be surprised. Here in China, due to a shortage of women willing to live and work in a sexual desert with a minimum of alpha males willing to let them date up, the majority of the foreign kindergarten staff members are male and many are absolutely excellent with children and great at their jobs.

I'm sure it's possible. But women are hardwired to care about children.

They're also usually better at customer service in non-technical environments, where the product isn't the key factor (or not the key factor in their job, at least) - but the job is to make the client more comfortable.

In any case, I largely agree with OP that an all-female run organisation is probably not the best. I'm just equally sceptical of the idea that women are worse than men at *literally everything*. Come on guys, read up on biology.
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#20

Why Women-Only Workplaces Just Don't Work

Being familiar with the drama from that British all female production company, having read that Daily Mail article before.
Once I heard that prominent Australian actress Rose Byrne had established her own / joint female production company, I was curious to see how it would fair.

& while admittedly it has not collapsed since first announced back in April 2015, can't say it's produced jack shite on the other hand...

http://www.the-dollhouse.com/projects/

Can't say I've seen much fanfare about "The Dollhouse Collective" since & can't say it's a tour de force either...
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#21

Why Women-Only Workplaces Just Don't Work

Quote: (09-28-2017 06:35 AM)CynicalContrarian Wrote:  

Being familiar with the drama from that British all female production company, having read that Daily Mail article before.
Once I heard that prominent Australian actress Rose Byrne had established her own / joint female production company, I was curious to see how it would fair.

& while admittedly it has not collapsed since first announced back in April 2015, can't say it's produced jack shite on the other hand...

http://www.the-dollhouse.com/projects/

Can't say I've seen much fanfare about "The Dollhouse Collective" since & can't say it's a tour de force either...

Film production in Australia is about the worst of anywhere on earth. Australian cinema is largely government funded, and the biggest funder is Screen Australia. They actually have a policy whereby, a project can only gain funding if 3 of the 4 key positions are occupied by women [Producer, Director, Writer, Acting lead]. Co-incidentally, the industry in Australia is on tax payer funded life-support. In other words, we're paying for the latest production of "Rosemary's period" or something similar.
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#22

Why Women-Only Workplaces Just Don't Work

Quote: (09-28-2017 07:00 AM)Rush87 Wrote:  

Film production in Australia is about the worst of anywhere on earth. Australian cinema is largely government funded, and the biggest funder is Screen Australia. They actually have a policy whereby, a project can only gain funding if 3 of the 4 key positions are occupied by women [Producer, Director, Writer, Acting lead]. Co-incidentally, the industry in Australia is on tax payer funded life-support. In other words, we're paying for the latest production of "Rosemary's period" or something similar.

I take it they don't see the hypocrisy in bemoaning "patriarchy" despite requiring "patriarchy" for their coffers & comforts...
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#23

Why Women-Only Workplaces Just Don't Work

Quote: (09-28-2017 03:38 AM)kosko Wrote:  

Quote: (09-28-2017 12:36 AM)Sooth Wrote:  

This is how you do it: Give them all a "manager" or similar important sounding title so they can tell their friends they're managers but they're all equally under the thumb of male directors.

4 Accounts managers and 3 accounts staff hahaha

[Image: meet-the-staff7-e1384368823807.png]

There is maybe four women in that spread that have real jobs. Many of those titles are phony and just boost up sales staff and client relationship staff as you mentioned into thinking they are important.

The solo woman on Sales support is likely a hawk who performs well but is either to inexperienced, or not good with other women to be put in a supervisor or management position. I say this because she is floating on a island within the organization chart so something is clearly different about her, unless of course she is just the glorified secretary.

Probably because she is the best looking one, most likely the rest are jealous of her.
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#24

Why Women-Only Workplaces Just Don't Work

Quote: (09-28-2017 12:36 AM)Sooth Wrote:  

This is how you do it: Give them all a "manager" or similar important sounding title so they can tell their friends they're managers but they're all equally under the thumb of male directors.

4 Accounts managers and 3 accounts staff hahaha

[Image: meet-the-staff7-e1384368823807.png]

WNB WNB WB WNB WB

WB

WB WNB WNB WB

WNB WNB WB WNB WB

WNB WNB WB WNB WNB

WBRAGP (would bang repeatedly and give promotion)

WNB WNB WNB

WB WNB WB


Can't believe no one did this yet. You guys are losing your touch.
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#25

Why Women-Only Workplaces Just Don't Work

Quote: (09-28-2017 12:36 AM)Sooth Wrote:  

This is how you do it: Give them all a "manager" or similar important sounding title so they can tell their friends they're managers but they're all equally under the thumb of male directors.

4 Accounts managers and 3 accounts staff hahaha

I looked at that graphic and, heaven help me, but the first thing I thought was, "Man, those four guys have it lucky!"
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