Inforum in the News

If health reform bills are to succeed, Congress needs to pare back the legislation and decide what's most affordable and doable, a health futurist told a Detroit group Tuesday.

Democrats tried for too much and "the opportunity to provide an affordable health insurance package for people went right out the window," said Jeff Goldsmith, president of HealthFutures, a Charlottesville, Va., consulting and health strategy firm. For more, click here.

Preparing America's neighborhoods to handle the additional power that electric vehicles are expected to require is among the challenges facing the utility and automotive industries as plug-in electric vehicles are introduced, DTE Energy Chairman Tony Earley said today.

For more, click here.

 
The media all around Michigan is buzzing about Inforum Center for Leadership's release of the 2009 Michigan Women's Leadership Index. The Index studies the placement of women in executive positions, on boards and compensation. The index results were formally presented on Wednesday, Oct. 21 at events in Grand Rapids and Dearborn.

Here is a sampling of the coverage:


Grand Rapids Press
Michigan Women's Leadership index finds few women executives at West Michigan companies
By Julia Bauer


In a year when more women than men are in the work force, the top jobs still are elusive for female executives.
Among publicly held West Michigan companies, only a handful have women on their boards, and even fewer have promoted female executives to one of the five highest-paid jobs at the company.
More here
 
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Crain's Detroit Business
Women execs few in Michigan, Inforum study says
Numbers called detriment to keeping talent
By Sherri Begin Welch
 
Michigan's top 100 public companies aren't tapping women as directors on their boards and top executives any more than they were six years ago, and that could be hurting the state's competitiveness, according to a new study. More here 

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WJR Radio
Paul W. Smith talks to Terry Barclay, CEO of Inforum and the Inforum Center for Leadership and she says there's good news and bad news for women in the workforce. More here


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WJR Radio
Frank Beckmann speaks with Terry Barclay, President and CEO of Inforum, A Professional Women's Alliance, about women in leadership roles in the workplace. More here

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WWJ Radio
Michigan Business Women 10/19

With Roberta Jasina: Some advice for Michigan business-women who want to make it to the top: Apply for those jobs.
Podcast here

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Great Lakes IT Report (a WWJ e-publication)
Inforum: Michigan's Lack Of Female Execs Hurts State Economy

The top executives and directors of Michigan's top 100 publicly traded companies remain overwhelmingly male, according to the results of the Inforum Center for Leadership's 2009 Michigan women's Leadership Index, to be released Monday. More here

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West Michigan Business Review
Inforum's 2009 Women's Leadership Index shows gender diversity still lacking
By Olivia Pulsinelli
 
Experts predict women will soon outnumber men in the work force, and they continue to gain in the current economy's growing industries.

Yet the biannual Inforum Center for Leadership's latest Women's Leadership Index shows most of Michigan's biggest public companies still lack gender diversity in their leadership.
More here

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Booth Newspapers
Women hold few top business jobs, but recession could clear their way
By Rick Haglund

I've covered a lot of high-level business conferences over the years, and the single thing these events have had in common is this:

They're mostly populated with middle-aged or older white men.
More here

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Kalamazoo Gazette
ABC News' Shipman offers advice for working women
By Julie Bauer

GRAND RAPIDS -- Plenty of cultural and social pressures could explain why so few women reach the top jobs at their companies.

One big challenge is keeping a career spinning as a family grows.
But the disparity in pay and promotion for men and women starts with the first job offer, said Claire Shipman, an author and senior national correspondent for ABC News' ``Good Morning America.'' More here

 

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Detroit Free Press
Want to help Michigan? Let women lead
Compuware sets example for Michigan firms to follow
By Tom Walsh
 

Here in Mother Michigan, she of the 15.3% jobless rate, there is much consternation about brain drain, the flight of talented young people.

That is driving Terry Barclay bonkers as she reflects on results of the 2009 Michigan Women's Leadership Index, which shows -- as similar surveys did in 2003, 2005 and 2007 -- that women hold fewer than 10% of the top-earning jobs and corporate board seats in the state's top 100 public companies.
More here

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Detroit News
Michigan businesswomen lag behind in top job parity
Female parity lacking in top power positions, says Women's Index report
By Nathan Hurst

Detroit -- Female executives may make up nearly half of Michigan's professionals and managers, but they've yet to join their male peers at parity in positions of top power.  More here
 

 

 


 Click here to download this issue. Highlights include:
* ICL introduces a new program: Executive Presence

By Elizabeth Slowitz

The women's business group Inforum is sponsoring a group for its mid-level and senior executive members who are looking for new jobs, thanks to the recession.

Vicky H. Black, who is coordinating the program, said she and Inforum leader Judy Welch realized early this year that the economy was exacting a toll on some members of the group.

'We thought there could be some camaraderie, support and learning we could all do together,' said Black.

Women on the Move includes women with experience in marketing, human resources, communications, customer service, sales, writing, public relations and financial operations with profit and loss responsibility.  Read more.

Susan Hodgkinson to speak here June 16

By Pete Daly

When Rodney Dangerfield anxiously wiped his brow with a hanky and said, ''I’m dying up here'' during his stand-up routine, people laughed and that was good--because that was his job. But when an executive standing at the podium or seated at the board room table is truly DOA, it's not funny--and eventually, he or she could lose that job.

Everyone has a ''personal brand'' that comes across in face-to-face communication with others, but some work better than others. Susan Hodgkinson, principal of The Personal Brand Co., has a reputation for knowing how to repair or tune up a ''personal brand.'' She will share tips June 16 at the Inforum event at the Western Michigan University Conference Center in downtown Grand Rapids.
Read more.

Click here for Corp! Magazine, 5/18/09  


A very candid look at the woman behind Martha, Inc.

By Michael F. Carmichael

The sold-out Inforum audience listened intently -- it was a Good Thing that they had been told to put their cell phones on 'stun.'
 
Martha Stewart started off her conversation with the sold-out crowd of members of Inforum, one of the largest professional organizations for women in the nation, and guests at the Renaissance Room of the Detroit Marriott with a recollection that she initially started coming to Detroit when she was negotiating with Kmart. She said that was one of many profitable associations she's made over the years. She was like that, perfectly frank about being a self-made multimillionaire – and, oh by the way, a former felon - and at the same time offering words of hope for an economically challenged city and country.
 Read more.

Jaclyn Trop / The Detroit News

After seven years of oh-so-respectfully rebuffing requests, Martha Stewart came to Detroit -- and gave Michigan businesswomen advice about the power of technology, using passion as a guide, and expecting the unexpected.

The New Jersey-bred domestic doyenne and formerly incarcerated icon spoke Friday at the Renaissance Center before more than 800 members of Inforum, Michigan's largest women's business network, about how she transformed herself from hobbyist to household name.  Read more.

BY MARY FRANCIS MASSON
FREE PRESS BUSINESS WRITER

 

Martha Stewart says the essential ingredient in her recipe for success is passion. And she's passionate about getting what she wants.

 

When a chair she sits in for an interview strikes her as uncomfortable, she sends staff scurrying for a new one. And when she buys towels, she purchases just a washcloth first, takes it home and washes and dries it.

 

Stewart talked about her successful strategies in a speech Friday to Inforum, a statewide women's business organization, at the Detroit Marriott Hotel in the Renaissance Center. She packed the house; more than 820 people showed up.

 

Stewart, who drives a Chevy suburban and owns several Ford and Chevy pickup trucks, said she's sensitive to the downturn in Detroit. She said her company has continued to do well because people are entertaining and cooking at home in response to a tough economy.

 

Stewart's ventures include Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, magazines Martha Stewart Living and Martha Stewart Weddings, marthastewart.com Web site, and Martha Stewart Living Radio. 'The Martha Stewart Show' airs on WJBK-TV (Channel 2) in metro Detroit. Her line of craft products has seen a year-over-year increase, she said.

 

'People are at home, crafting, learning ... living well while they are trying to figure it out,' Stewart said about the popularity of the products.

 

Stewart talked a lot about her mother's lessons about home keeping and her father's inspirational influence. 'Martha, girls can do anything,' she said her father told her.

She's upbeat about the future of her company and the American economy.


'We will have a rebound. Consumers will start buying cars again and homes again,' she said.


Contact MARY FRANCIS MASSON at 313-222-6159 or mmasson@freepress.com.

Click here to see photos and Angela's take on Martha Stewart's presentation at Inforum's Annual Meeting on May 15, 2009. 

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