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Same Words, Different Language: An Updated Guide for Improved Gender Intelligence at Work

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Barbara Annis, the world's leading corporate gender specialist, believes that men and women don't understand each other because they don't appreciate the different ways men and women relate, communicate, problem-solve, and make decisions. In this original, solutions-based book, Annis explains exactly where we differ and how to improve the way we communicate with one another. Learn of cutting-edge, scientific research into the different neurological frameworks and functions of the male and female brains and how these innate biological differences determine how we: View the world; Solve problems; Make decisions; Prioritize; Manage emotions; Deal with stress; Work in teams; and Lead.

213 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 23, 2003

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Barbara Annis

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for ☼Bookish in Virginia☼ .
1,318 reviews67 followers
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May 11, 2017
This book was an Advance Review Copy

Men are from Mars... Women from Venus -- for Business

If you're up on your business reading/watching you no doubt know that corporations with women on their Board of Directors are more profitable than those whose boards have only men. Why? you ask. Because of diversity. Regardless of all the progress women have made in our society, the fact is that women have not become clones of men and they tend to approach problems differently. This diversity is money in the bank.

Or it would be money in the bank if women didn't decide so often to walk out the door in frustration. Sometimes to go to work for other firms, but often times to open shop and become competition to the very companies they left.

It's this dissatisfaction that Annis and her firm study; and which they think they have a solution to. And in this book the author introduces the topic of gender diversity -- ie., how men and women are different in the workplace -- and shows you the research that proves this exists, and her own firm's experience with fixing broken work environments.

WHAT I LIKE about the book is that it's short. That might not sound like a compliment but it is. Annis does not waste your time. She masterfully introduces the topic and helps people to finally see how others may be interpreting the situation. And this works both ways. Men and women have their own prejudices.

I'm not sure how useful this book will be for the average reader. As she points out herself some people are so stuck on themselves and their favorite explanations for things, that it's hard to break down the walls. I'm guessing though that if you picked up this book that you might not be one of the thick-headed sort and that you might get some good ideas on how to move forward.
Profile Image for Joanne Kamens.
130 reviews5 followers
March 24, 2017
If it had been an article it might have been a 4. This was hard to stretch to a book but had some great ways of looking and gendered communication issues in the work place.
Profile Image for Silea.
227 reviews14 followers
July 10, 2016
Some great and useful insights, but incredibly dated. An awkward read for anyone uncomfortable with genders being treated as binary and cohesive (women always say this, men never do that, etc).
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