MENLO PARK, Calif. - Sheryl Sandberg helped build Facebook into a
multibillion-dollar company. Now, she wants to build a new women's
movement.
Little did she know that the launch of her book - Lean In: Women, Work and the Will to Lead -
would so swiftly ignite a national dialogue about women in the
workplace, while drawing fire from critics who see her as naive and
disconnected from reality.
In her only interview with a newspaper,
conducted at Facebook's sprawling campus in Silicon Valley, Sandberg
doesn't shy away from the fight. The book that she describes as "sort of
a feminist manifesto" has been fodder for weeks now, even before its
March 11 launch. Indeed, a 60 Minutes profile will air Sunday night, a segment on ABC's Good Morning America is scheduled for Monday, and Sandberg appears on the cover of Time.
The
book, though dotted with career advice, details why American business
largely remains a man's game, and what women - and men - can do to
change that mindset. She details the insults and points the finger back
at a culture that she says still doesn't fully comprehend the hurdles
women face.
"I welcome a reaction," Sandberg says. "If nothing was said, that would be disappointing. The point is to create a dialogue."
If
that means blowback from men and women uneasy about taking on the
issues of gender equality in the workplace, so be it, she says. Most of
the criticism leveled at the 43-year-old mother of two centers on the
decades-old debate over whether working women can "have it all" - a
career and family.
That is likely to help sell her book, which
already has a first printing of 400,000. And in aligning herself with a
cross section of influential women such as Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand,
D-N.Y., feminist Gloria Steinem and tech CEOs, perhaps she can make
progress on an issue that she says is a societal afterthought.
Her mission transcends equal rights; she makes an economic argument,
too. "We should use the talents of the full population," says the
happily married Sandberg, who once said she leaves work at 5:30 to go
home to see her kids.
Lean In is the most visible manifestation of a
years-long effort by Sandberg to bring attention to a decade-long slog
for women in top-management in the USA. In the PR ramp-up to her book
("It is the only one I will ever write," she jokes.), she has
coordinated the launch of a website, leanin.org, and a think tank at
nearby Stanford University to spread the word.
The
gambit might also signal the passing of a generational torch to a
top-ranking executive at one of the most well-known companies in the
world. Cultural trailblazer Betty Friedan wrote The Feminine Mystique as a housewife 50 years ago.
Sandberg,
who has earned the respect and admiration of her peers in Silicon
Valley for her candor, is especially direct about the state of American
women in upper management: She says it is desultory.
"The blunt
truth is that men still run the world," says Sandberg, whose slim tome
(240 pages) doesn't so much highlight one of America's most powerful
tech executives as it tackles head-on the challenges women face in the
workplace.
"Ten years of no progress is a stall," says Facebook's
chief operating officer and No. 2 executive after CEO Mark Zuckerberg.
"We need a new dialogue on gender."
Workplace hurdles
Women
make up 51% of the U.S. population and 47% of the workforce, yet only
4% are CEOs and 17% are board members, according to Catalyst, a
non-profit market researcher. They also earn, on average, just 77 cents
for every $1 for a man, says the Institute for Women's Policy Research.
"Almost no one understands that women have made no progress at the
top in 10 years - that is true of any industry and government," Sandberg
says. "I want to change the conversation from what (women) can't do to
what we can do."
If nothing else, she wants to dispel the
perception that a woman can't have it all and erase stereotypes in the
workplace. One common theme in the book: As men advance, they are more
liked. But as women make strides in an organization, they are less
liked.
While her personal crusade has earned her much admiration,
it has detractors. They reject what they deem the Superwoman ideal,
especially one that comes from a C-suite mom who has the finances to
afford child care and other amenities.
Sandberg sidestepped comment on critical pieces in The New York Times and London's Daily Mail that portrayed her as a rich elitist hopelessly out of touch with most women.
"There
is a lively debate," she concedes. "Passions run deep, which is good.
I'm simply worried about stagnation and apathy on this topic."
She also denied the book is a springboard to a run for political office, as some recent reports suggest. "Absolutely not."
Her
message is simple: A deep cultural shift among men and women is needed
just as much as a legislative one, based on Sandberg's anecdotes of
lingering sexism from the halls of Silicon Valley to investment banks in
Manhattan.
In one passage, she recounts how former House
speaker Tip O'Neill said to her, "You're pretty. Are you a pom-pom
girl?" In another, she describes an unnamed male executive who welcomed
questions from other men during a dinner meeting but wouldn't allow
women to join in.
Her own work experiences, and recent and even
current data on women in Corporate America, led her and others to this
conclusion: Despite progress from 1970 to the mid-1990s, the revolution
has stalled.
To illustrate her point, Sandberg grabbed a yellow
legal pad from a reporter and drew two lines flatter than a crushed ant -
both depicting the "gains" women had made as CEOs and board members
from 2002 to 2012. The percentages have hovered in the mid-teens, with
little change.
"I believe the women's movement has stalled," says
Gillibrand. "Sheryl is creating an organized effort ... for women to be
heard."
Sandberg is "not putting herself out on all women's issues
- it's up to lawmakers to change the dynamics in Washington," says the
first-term senator, who is sponsoring legislation for equal pay and
improved child care. The two are friends and allies in furthering
women's issues.
An overachiever's advice
Sandberg
is a rare, overachieving exception in this testosterone-dominated
corporate world: chief of staff at the Treasury Department by age 29;
vice president at then-obscure start-up Google at 32; chief operating
officer of Facebook.
Her fast-track career might even land her in
the CEO seat at Facebook one day, if its current occupant, Zuckerberg,
decides to focus on long-term product development as Bill Gates did at
Microsoft. Such is the conventional wisdom in Silicon Valley circles.
Lean In amounts
to a secondary job for Sandberg, who oversees daily operations at
Facebook, which has annual revenue of $5.1 billion. But she has eagerly
embraced this mission.
"There are several factors that
contributed to the stalled revolution that started in the mid-1990s,"
says Shelley Correll, professor of sociology and director of the Clayman
Institute for Gender Research at Stanford University. At Sandberg's
invitation, she has spoken to Facebook employees about reducing gender
bias.
"Workplaces haven't really changed, especially for women
who are about to have children while they are in middle management,"
Correll says. "For just starting the conversation, she has done us all a
favor."
This is not an overnight revelation for Sandberg, who
first broached the topic in 2010 at the TED conference - an exclusive
retreat for thought leaders - and again in a speech at Barnard College's
graduation the following year.
The book is an outgrowth of her
tireless work as an "organizer and activist" for a broad swath of women,
says Gina Bianchini, CEO of social-networking service Mightybell and a
longtime Sandberg friend.
"The true power of Sheryl is she brings together women of different backgrounds, interests and experiences," says Bianchini.
In a post on her Facebook page last month, Steinem said that Lean In
"addresses internalized oppression, opposes the external barriers that
create it, and urges women to support each other to fight both. It
argues not only for women's equality in the workplace, but men's
equality in home-care and child-rearing. Even its critics are making a
deep if inadvertent point: Only in women is success viewed as a barrier
to giving advice."
Finding 'the right balance'
Like
her predecessors, Sandberg may inspire and irritate. She has legions in
the tech community who idolize her - as well as inflamed concerns among
detractors, who call her movement a top-down operation fueled by a
personal fortune worth hundreds of millions on paper and a bully pulpit
in Facebook, which has more than 1 billion members.
"You can have
it all, by her definition, which is unrealistic," says Alexandra Levy, a
former Google executive hired by Sandberg before Sandberg left for
Facebook. "But I think she misses the fundamental issue about time
management. There are only 24 hours in a day. How many hours do you want
to spend with kids? Exercising? Running a huge company?"
"Life is
about choices," says Levy, who is managing partner of Silicon Alley
Media, a digital marketing and communications agency. "You can't do it
all, but you can try to find the right balance. There is a reality and
context to what you do."
Adds Doreen Bloch, CEO of personal-care
site Poshly.com: "I don't question Sandberg's intentions or perspective.
She is a marvelous leader, and I consider her a role model. I
personally do not see value in buying the book because the concept is
straightforward. Rather than read about climbing the corporate ladder,
it's best to just get back to work."
Written By: Jon Swartz, USA Today