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On The Table Read Magazine, “the best book magazine in the UK“, engineer turned project manager Lauren Neal released Valued At Work to address what happens to women after they land STEM positions.
Valued At Work
Author of Valued At Work: Shining a Light on Bias to Engage, Enable, and Retain Women in STEM, Lauren Neal, is a female engineer turned project manager who has worked in the energy sector for 18 years. She has observed that while programs encouraging female students to study STEM subjects, and programs compelling companies to hire more women, are all well and good, until businesses do a better job of addressing what happens to women after they land STEM positions, nothing will really change.
Inspired by real-life stories, Valued At Work includes “top tips” for both organizations and women in STEM to equip all readers with strategies for driving real change.
You can have the most confident and competent women coming into these organizations, but if they are not included and they are not feeling valued, they are either going to walk right out that door, or, for whatever reason, if they need to stay, they are going to be soul-destroyed.
-Lauren Neal
Neal draws from her own experiences, compelling research and numerous real-world examples to provide what she calls tried-and-tested approaches to help male-dominated organizations create and maintain more inclusive workplace cultures.
The book is structured as a conversation between two male managers genuinely trying to improve the retention of women in their respective organizations. Readers get to be “flies on the wall” as these two men discuss the problems that women face within the patriarchal system — using concrete examples — and actively try to understand the challenges and find ways to course correct the company’s inclusion efforts.
They get it right, and they get it wrong.
This fictional approach to a real business problem allows readers to empathize with these male organizational leaders in their own struggles, as well as with the women in theirs, with less judgement than is typical when discussing this topic.
Lauren Neal
Champion of gender equity and career progression within STEM, Lauren Neal, was originally from Aberdeen, Scotland. Named one of the UK’s top female computing students at age 18, she gained a master’s degree in electronic and electrical engineering, and since 2005 has worked with men and women offshore, onshore and onsite on multimillion-dollar projects across the UK, Angola, Trinidad, Azerbaijan and Indonesia.
Chartered through both the Institution of Engineering and Technology (IET) and the Association of Project Management (APM), she is a certified IC Agile team facilitator and coach focused on improving team dynamics for optimal project delivery.
Find more from Lauren Neal now:
Kindle: https://amzn.to/49xqAZ5
Paperback: https://amzn.to/3TiJzR8
Hardcover: https://amzn.to/49xH1ED
Connect with Lauren Neal on LinkedIn at https://www.linkedin.com/in/laurenneal/.
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