Earlier today I came across this helpful  article on one of my favorite blogs, the  Glass Hammer, with leadership  advice from various executive women. Being a woman in the business word  can be difficult, to say the least. Fortunately, the bloggers at the Glass Hammer have gathered some simple and straightforward  advice. Check out a clip of their article below. 
 
Get Really, Really, Really Good at  Your Job.
“I didn’t chart my career out,” said Sutton, “but I always  had a good view of what I loved doing and what the next career step  might be.” Sutton started her career in finance as a clerk with Wachovia  and worked her way up through the organization over 35 years, until  she left to establish the banking business for Morgan Stanley. She added,  “I’ve given advice to people I’ve mentored that if you are too  focused on the next step, you are not going to do a very good job in  the job you are in. And I’ve seen that over and over again. Get really,  really, really good at the job you are in because if you are and you’ve  mastered it, you will move from the next role to the next role to the  next role, but if you look too far ahead, you probably won’t… People  who seem to be really successful are great operators. They get in the  business and understand the business.” 
Be Comfortable With Ambiguity.
Said Smith, who, after 14 years of brand management and executive  roles at Kraft Foods, was brought to Avon by Andrea Jung to help her  transform the company: “We are all taught that great leaders set the  strategy and then set everybody off marching. But, right now, nothing  is more important than a general agile leader who is comfortable with  ambiguity. Let’s face it - it is going to be a bumpy and fascinating  ride. We need people who are nimble and agile in their thinking who  are, to some degree, comfortable with figuring it out as they go along.  We [at Avon] look for people who can handle change, who can handle the  curve balls…understanding that you can’t possibly have it all figured  out and being open to that. Also, people that can communicate and inspire.  That’s always been important in leadership but now more than ever  because you have to communicate and be really transparent and take people  along on the journey, to say, ‘This is uncharted territory but this  is where we are going.’” Sutton agreed, adding that even her job  at Morgan Stanley, which was created for her, changed shortly after  she joined the company. “What I was hired to do changed in 6 months  and that shifted because the environment changed. [But it was OK because  of] the belief I could make a difference.” 
Think of Your Career as a Jungle Gym  Rather Than a Ladder.
Moderator Pattie Sellers advised the audience of MBA women: “Don’t  think of your career as a ladder, think of it as a jungle gym. If you  think of it as a ladder, you won’t have the peripheral vision to enable  you see the lateral opportunities and especially today when you don’t  know what the hot job is going to be tomorrow. You’ve got to keep  yourself open and you’ve got to swing to the opportunities that come  along.” Smith agreed, “I believe the greatest plans are restrictive  instead of instructive. Figure it out as you go along. The only guiding  principle I’ve had is to insist that my life and work have passion  and purpose. When I think about the pivotal jobs I took [like her move  to Kraft’s Callard & Bowser-Suchard to handle the then-unknown  Altoids brand for Kraft or the jump from being Group Vice President  and President of the U.S. Beverages and Grocery Sectors in Kraft to  Brand President for Avon], they really made no sense on paper.” She  continued: “Just go into everything saying – I’m going to be inspired  and I’m never going to settle and go where that takes you. ” And  Sellers added, “I’m struck by women on the Fortune’s Most Powerful  who’ve taken lateral moves or even taken downward moves because they  wanted to expand their experiences. And that’s what pays off in the  long term.” 
