PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to examine career‐life issues of successful women in the Americas.Design/methodology/approachA total of 30 interviews were conducted with successful women in Canada, Argentina and Mexico. Themes were pulled from the interview transcripts for each country, analyzed and then compared across countries, looking at universalities and differences of experiences.FindingsThe women in all three countries conveyed more subjective measures of career success, such as contributing to society and learning in their work, with Canada and Mexico particularly emphasizing receiving recognition as a hallmark of career success.Practical implicationsThis research provides insight into the experiences of successful women in the Americas, which can inform the career development of women in business.Originality/valueThis research contributes to the literature on women's careers, highlighting successful women's experiences across cultures and in an under‐researched area: Latin America.
Purpose -The intent of this cross-national research is to study the personal and cultural characteristics of successful professional women. High-achieving women may share certain personal characteristics, beliefs, and experiences, regardless of the countries in which they live. However, every individual is socialized within a particular national culture, and may be expected to share certain values and expectations with other members of that culture. Design/methodology/approach -Over 1,100 professionally ''successful women'' (including highlevel managers, entrepreneurs, academics, government personnel, and professionals) and 531 undergraduate business students in nine countries -
PurposeThis project aims to examine levels of career and life satisfaction among successful women in nine countries in the Americas.Design/methodology/approachA structured survey and in‐depth interviews were used, and a variety of occupations, demographics, and personality characteristics assessed – 1,146 successful women from nine countries in the USA responded the survey: 105 from Argentina, 210 from Brazil, 199 from Canada, 84 from Chile, 232 from Mexico, 126 from the USA, and 190 from three countries in the West Indies (Barbados, Jamaica, SVG).FindingsResults show no differences in satisfaction based on occupation or country and most demographic variables investigated did not have a significant relationship with satisfaction. Age had a small, significant, relationship, with satisfaction increasing with age; married women were significantly more satisfied than single women. Higher scores on self efficacy and need for achievement, and a greater internal locus of control were all related to higher levels of satisfaction. The relationship between career satisfaction and general life satisfaction was stronger in Argentina and Chile that in the other countries.Originality/valueExtends understanding of professional success and satisfaction, in terms of demographic variables and personality, as well as geographically.
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