3 lessons on success from an Arab businesswoman Leila Hoteit

“Mom, who are these people?”

It was an innocent question
from my young daughter Alia

around the time when she was three.

We were walking along with my husband

in one of Abu Dhabi’s big fancy malls.

Alia was peering at a huge poster
standing tall in the middle of the mall.

It featured the three rulers
of the United Arab Emirates.

As she tucked in my side,

I bent down and explained
that these were the rulers of the UAE

who had worked hard
to develop their nation

and preserve its unity.

She asked, “Mom, why is it
that here where we live,

and back in Lebanon,
where grandma and grandpa live,

we never see the pictures
of powerful women on the walls?

Is it because women are not important?”

This is probably the hardest question
I’ve had to answer in my years as a parent

and in my 16-plus years
of professional life, for that matter.

I had grown up in my hometown in Lebanon,

the younger of two daughters
to a very hard-working pilot

and director of operations
for the Lebanese Airlines

and a super-supportive
stay-at-home mom and grandma.

My father had encouraged
my sister and I to pursue our education

even though our culture
emphasized at the time

that it was sons and not daughters
who should be professionally motivated.

I was one of very few girls
of my generation

who left home at 18 to study abroad.

My father didn’t have a son,

and so I, in a sense, became his.

Fast-forward a couple of decades,
and I hope I didn’t do too badly

in making my father proud
of his would-be son.

As I got my Bachelor’s and PhD
in electrical engineering,

did R and D in the UK,
then consulting in the Middle East,

I have always been
in male-dominated environments.

Truth be told, I have never found
a role model I could truly identify with.

My mother’s generation
wasn’t into professional leadership.

There were some
encouraging men along the way,

but none knew the demands
and pressures I was facing,

pressures that got particularly acute
when I had my own two beautiful children.

And although Western women love to give us
poor, oppressed Arab women advice,

they live different lives
with different constraints.

So Arab women of my generation
have had to become our own role models.

We have had to juggle more than Arab men,

and we have had to face
more cultural rigidity than Western women.

As a result, I would like to think
that we poor, oppressed women

actually have some useful,
certainly hard-earned lessons to share,

lessons that might turn out useful

for anyone wishing to thrive
in the modern world.

Here are three of mine.

[“Convert their sh*t into your fuel."]

(Laughter)

(Applause)

There is this word that everybody
is touting as the key to success:

resilience.

Well, what exactly is resilience,
and how do you develop it?

I believe resilience is simply
the ability to transform shit into fuel.

In my previous job,
well before my current firm,

I was working with a man
we will call John.

I had teamed up with John
and was working hard,

hoping he would notice how great I was

and that he would come to support
my case to make partner at the firm.

I was, in addition to delivering
on my consulting projects,

writing passionately on the topic
of women economic empowerment.

One day, I got to present my research
to a roomful of MBA students.

John was part of the audience

listening for the first time
to the details of my study.

As I proceeded with my presentation,

I could see John in the corner of my eye.

He had turned a dark shade of pink

and had slid under his chair
in apparent shame.

I finished my presentation
to an applauding audience

and we rushed out and jumped into the car.

There he exploded.

“What you did up there was unacceptable!

You are a consultant, not an activist!”

I said, “John, I don’t understand.

I presented a couple of
gender parity indices,

and some conclusions about the Arab world.

Yes, we do happen to be today
at the bottom of the index,

but what is it that I said or presented
that was not factual?”

To which he replied,
“The whole premise of your study is wrong.

What you are doing is dangerous and will
break the social fabric of our society.”

He paused, then added,

“When women have children,
their place is in the home.”

Time stood still for a long while,

and all I could think and repeat
in the chaos of my brain was:

“You can forget about
that partnership, Leila.

It’s just never going to happen.”

It took me a couple of days to fully
absorb this incident and its implications,

but once I did,
I reached three conclusions.

One, that these were his issues,

his complexes.

There may be many like him in our society,

but I would never let
their issues become mine.

Two, that I needed
another sponsor, and fast.

(Laughter)

I got one, by the way,
and boy, was he great.

And three, that I would get to show John
what women with children can do.

I apply this lesson equally well
to my personal life.

As I have progressed in my career,

I have received many words
of encouragement,

but I have also often been met
by women, men and couples

who have clearly had an issue
with my husband and I

having chosen the path
of a dual-career couple.

So you get this well-meaning couple

who tells you straight out
at a family gathering

or at a friends gathering,

that, come on, you must know
you’re not a great mom,

given how much you’re investing
in your career, right?

I would lie if I said
these words didn’t hurt.

My children are the most
precious thing to me,

and the thought that I could be
failing them in any way is intolerable.

But just like I did with John,

I quickly reminded myself
that these were their issues,

their complexes.

So instead of replying,

I gave back one of my largest smiles

as I saw, in flashing light,

the following sign in my mind’s eye.

[Be happy, it drives people crazy.]

(Applause)

You see, as a young woman
in these situations, you have two options.

You can either decide
to internalize these negative messages

that are being thrown at you,

to let them make you feel like a failure,

like success is way too hard
to ever achieve,

or you can choose to see that others'
negativity is their own issue,

and instead transform it
into your own personal fuel.

I have learned
to always go for option two,

and I have found that it has taken me
from strength to strength.

And it’s true what they say:

success is the best revenge.

Some women in the Middle East

are lucky enough to be married
to someone supportive of their career.

Correction: I should say “smart enough,”

because who you marry is your own choice,

and you’d better marry someone supportive
if you plan to have a long career.

Still today, the Arab man
is not an equal contributor in the home.

It’s simply not expected by our society,

and even frowned upon as not very manly.

As for the Arab woman,
our society still assumes

that her primary source of happiness
should be the happiness and prosperity

of her children and husband.

She mostly exists for her family.

Things are changing,
but it will take time.

For now, it means
that the professional Arab woman

has to somehow maintain the perfect home,

make sure that her children’s every need
is being taken care of

and manage her demanding career.

To achieve this, I have found the hard way

that you need to apply your hard-earned
professional skills to your personal life.

You need to work your life.

Here is how I do this in my personal life.

One thing to know about the Middle East

is that nearly every family
has access to affordable domestic help.

The challenge therefore becomes
how to recruit effectively.

Just like I would in my business life,
I have based the selection

of who would support me
with my children while I’m at work

on a strong referral.

Cristina had worked
for four years with my sister

and the quality of her work
was well-established.

She is now an integral
member of our family,

having been with us
since Alia was six months old.

She makes sure that the house
is running smoothly while I’m at work,

and I make sure to empower her

in the most optimal conditions
for her and my children,

just like I would my best talent at work.

This lesson applies
whatever your childcare situation,

whether an au pair, nursery,

part-time nanny
that you share with someone else.

Choose very carefully, and empower.

If you look at my calendar,

you will see every working day

one and a half hours
from 7pm to 8:30pm UAE time

blocked and called “family time.”

This is sacred time.

I have done this
ever since Alia was a baby.

I do everything in my power
to protect this time

so that I can be home by then
to spend quality time with my children,

asking them about their day,

checking up on homework,
reading them a bedtime story

and giving them
lots of kisses and cuddles.

If I’m traveling,
in whatever the time zone,

I use Skype to connect with my children
even if I am miles away.

Our son Burhan is five years old,

and he’s learning to read
and do basic maths.

Here’s another confession:

I have found that our daughter
is actually more successful

at teaching him these skills than I am.

(Laughter)

It started as a game, but Alia loves
playing teacher to her little brother,

and I have found that these sessions
actually improve Burhan’s literacy,

increase Alia’s sense of responsibility,

and strengthen the bonding between them,

a win-win all around.

The successful Arab women I know

have each found their unique approach
to working their life

as they continue to shoulder

the lion’s share
of responsibility in the home.

But this is not just
about surviving in your dual role

as a career woman and mother.

This is also about being in the present.

When I am with my children,

I try to leave work out of our lives.

Instead of worrying about how many minutes
I can spend with them every day,

I focus on turning these minutes
into memorable moments,

moments where I’m seeing my kids,

hearing them, connecting with them.

[“Join forces, don’t compete."]

Arab women of my generation
have not been very visible

in the public eye as they grew up.

This explains, I think, to some extent,

why you find so few women
in politics in the Arab world.

The upside of this, however,

is that we have spent a lot of time

developing a social skill
behind the scenes,

in coffee shops, in living rooms,

on the phone,

a social skill that is
very important to success:

networking.

I would say the average Arab woman

has a large network
of friends and acquaintances.

The majority of those are also women.

In the West, it seems like ambitious women
often compare themselves to other women

hoping to be noticed as the most
successful woman in the room.

This leads to the much-spoken-about
competitive behavior

between professional women.

If there’s only room
for one woman at the top,

then you can’t make room for others,
much less lift them up.

Arab women, generally speaking,

have not fallen
for this psychological trap.

Faced with a patriarchal society,

they have found
that by helping each other out,

all benefit.

In my previous job, I was the most
senior woman in the Middle East,

so one could think that investing
in my network of female colleagues

couldn’t bring many benefits

and that I should instead invest my time

developing my relationships
with male seniors and peers.

Yet two of my biggest breaks
came through the support of other women.

It was the head of marketing
who initially suggested

I be considered as a young global leader
to the World Economic Forum.

She was familiar with my media engagements
and my publications,

and when she was asked
to voice her opinion,

she highlighted my name.

It was a young consultant,
a Saudi lady and friend,

who helped me sell
my first project in Saudi Arabia,

a market I was finding hard
to gain traction in as a woman.

She introduced me to a client,

and that introduction led to the first
of very many projects for me in Saudi.

Today, I have two senior women on my team,

and I see making them successful
as key to my own success.

Women continue to advance in the world,

not fast enough, but we’re moving.

The Arab world, too, is making progress,
despite many recent setbacks.

Just this year, the UAE appointed
five new female ministers to its cabinet,

for a total of eight female ministers.

That’s nearly 28 percent of the cabinet,

and more than many
developed countries can claim.

This is today my daughter
Alia’s favorite picture.

This is the result,
no doubt, of great leadership,

but it is also the result
of strong Arab women

not giving up and continuously
pushing the boundaries.

It is the result of Arab women
deciding every day like me

to convert shit into fuel,

to work their life
to keep work out of their life,

and to join forces and not compete.

As I look to the future,

my hopes for my daughter
when she stands on this stage

some 20, 30 years from now

are that she be as proud
to call herself her mother’s daughter

as her father’s daughter.

My hopes for my son

are that by then, the expression
“her mother’s son” or “mama’s boy”

would have taken on
a completely different meaning.

Thank you.

(Applause)

“妈,这些人是谁?”


是我小女儿

艾莉亚三岁时提出的一个天真的问题。

我们和我丈夫一起

在阿布扎比的一个大型高档商场里散步。

艾莉亚正凝视着
站在商场中央的巨大海报。

它以阿拉伯联合酋长国的三位统治者
为特色。

当她蜷缩在我身边时,

我弯下腰解释
说,这些是阿联酋的统治者,

他们
努力发展自己的国家

并维护其统一。

她问:“妈妈,
为什么在我们住的地方,

以及在
爷爷奶奶住的黎巴嫩,

我们从来没有
在墙上看到有权势的女人的照片?

是因为女人不重要吗?”

就此而言,这可能是我作为父母

和 16
多年职业生涯中必须回答的最困难的问题。

我在黎巴嫩的家乡长大,

是两个女儿中最小的一个,她
是一名非常勤奋的飞行员

和黎巴嫩航空公司的运营总监,

还有一位非常支持
家庭的妈妈和奶奶。

我父亲鼓励
我和姐姐继续接受教育

,尽管当时我们的文化

强调应该由儿子而不是
女儿受到职业激励。

我是
我这一代

中为数不多的 18 岁离家出国留学的女孩之一。

我父亲没有儿子

,所以从某种意义上说,我成了他的。

快进几十年
,我希望我

在让我父亲
为他未来的儿子感到骄傲方面没有做得太糟糕。

当我获得
电气工程的学士和博士学位,

在英国进行研发,
然后在中东进行咨询时,

我一直
处于男性主导的环境中。

说实话,我从来没有找到
一个我可以真正认同的榜样。

我母亲那一代
人不喜欢专业的领导。 一路上

有一些
鼓励的人,

但没有人知道
我面临的要求和压力,

当我有自己的两个漂亮的孩子时,压力变得特别严重。

尽管西方女性喜欢给我们
贫穷、受压迫的阿拉伯女性建议,

但她们过着不同的生活
,受到不同的约束。

所以我这一代的阿拉伯女性
不得不成为我们自己的榜样。

我们不得不比阿拉伯男人更多地玩弄杂耍

,我们不得不面对
比西方女性更多的文化僵化。

因此,我
想我们这些贫穷、受压迫的女性

实际上有一些有用的、
当然来之不易的经验教训可以分享,这些

经验教训可能

对任何希望在现代世界中茁壮成长的人有用

这是我的三个。

[“把他们的屎变成你的燃料。”]

(笑声)

(掌声)

每个人
都在吹捧这个词是成功的关键:

韧性。

那么,弹性究竟是什么
,你如何发展它?

我相信韧性只是
将粪便转化为燃料的能力。

在我之前的工作中
,在我现在的公司之前,

我和一个我们称之为约翰的人一起工作

我曾与约翰合作
并正在努力工作,

希望他会注意到我有多么出色,

并希望他会来支持
我的案子,成为公司的合伙人。

除了
提供我的咨询项目外,我还

热情地撰写了
关于女性经济赋权的主题。

有一天,我
要向一屋子的 MBA 学生展示我的研究。

约翰

是第一次
聆听我研究细节的听众。

当我继续我的演讲时,

我可以看到约翰在我的眼角。

他已经变成了深粉色

,并
明显羞愧地滑到椅子底下。

我在
鼓掌的观众面前完成了我的演讲,

然后我们冲了出去,跳进了车里。

他在那里爆发了。

“你在上面做的事情是不可接受的!

你是顾问,不是活动家!”

我说:“约翰,我不明白。

我提出了几个
性别平等指数,

以及一些关于阿拉伯世界的结论。

是的,我们今天恰好
处于指数的底部,

但我认为是什么? 说或提出
的不是事实?”

他回答说:
“你研究的整个前提是错误的。

你所做的事情很危险,会
破坏我们社会的社会结构。”

他顿了顿,又补充道:

“女人有了孩子
,就在家里。”

时间静止了很长一段时间

,我只能
在混乱的大脑中思考和重复:

“你可以忘记
那种伙伴关系,莱拉。

这永远不会发生。”

我花了几天时间来完全
理解这一事件及其影响,

但一旦我这样做了,
我得出了三个结论。

一,这些是他的问题,

他的情结。

在我们的社会中可能有很多像他一样的人,

但我永远不会让
他们的问题成为我的问题。

第二,我需要
另一个赞助商,而且要快。

(笑声)

顺便说一句,我得到了一个
,男孩,他很棒。

第三,我将向约翰展示
有孩子的女性可以做什么。

我同样将这一课应用
到我的个人生活中。

随着我事业的进步,

我得到了很多
鼓励的话,

但我也经常遇到

与我的丈夫和

我选择
双业夫妻道路明显有问题的女性、男性和夫妻 .

所以你得到这对善意的夫妇

,他们
在家庭聚会

或朋友聚会上直接

告诉你,拜托,你必须知道
你不是一个好妈妈,

考虑到
你在事业上投入了多少, 对?

如果我说
这些话没有伤害,我会撒谎。

我的孩子
对我来说是最宝贵的东西,我

无法以任何方式辜负他们的想法。

但就像我对约翰所做的那样,

我很快提醒自己
这些是他们的问题,

他们的情结。

因此

,当

我在闪光中看到以下迹象时,我没有回答,而是回以我最大的微笑之一。

[开心点,让人抓狂。]

(掌声)

你看,作为一个年轻女性,
在这种情况下,你有两个选择。

你可以
决定内化这些

被扔给你的负面信息

,让它们让你觉得自己很失败,

就像成功太难
达到一样,

或者你可以选择看到别人的
消极情绪是他们自己的问题

,而是将其
转化为您自己的个人燃料。

我学会
了总是选择第二个选项

,我发现它让我越来越
强大。

他们说的是真的:

成功是最好的报复。

中东的一些女性

很幸运能够
嫁给支持她们事业的人。

更正:我应该说“足够聪明”,

因为你嫁给谁是你自己的选择,

如果你打算有一个长期的职业生涯,你最好嫁给一个支持你的人。

直到今天,这个阿拉伯人
在家里还不是平等的贡献者。

这根本不是我们社会所期望的,

甚至被认为不是很有男子气概。

至于阿拉伯妇女,
我们的社会仍然

认为她的主要幸福来源
应该

是她的孩子和丈夫的幸福和繁荣。

她的存在主要是为了她的家人。

情况正在发生变化,
但这需要时间。

目前,这
意味着专业的阿拉伯女性

必须以某种方式维持完美的家,

确保她孩子的每一个需求
都得到照顾,

并管理她艰巨的职业。

为了实现这一目标,我

发现你需要将你来之不易的
专业技能应用到你的个人生活中。

你需要努力工作。

以下是我在个人生活中的做法。

关于中东需要了解的一件事

是,几乎每个家庭
都可以获得负担得起的家庭帮助。

因此,挑战变成了
如何有效地招聘。

就像我在商业生活中所做的那样,在我工作时,
我会根据强有力的推荐来

选择谁会支持
我的孩子

克里斯蒂娜
和我姐姐一起工作了四年

,她的工作质量
很好。

她现在是我们家不可分割的一
员,

自从 Alia 六个月大时就一直和我们在一起。

在我工作时,她确保房子运转顺畅

,我确保

在最
适合她和我的孩子的条件下赋予她权力,

就像我在工作中发挥我最好的才能一样。

本课程适用于
您的育儿情况,

无论是保姆、托儿所

还是与他人共享的兼职保姆。

选择非常谨慎,并赋予权力。

如果您查看我的日历,

您会发现每个工作日

从晚上 7 点到晚上 8 点 30 分阿联酋时间

被封锁,被称为“家庭时间”。

这是神圣的时刻。

自从艾莉亚还是个婴儿以来,我就这样做了。

我尽我
所能保护这段时间,

以便到那时我可以回家
与我的孩子共度美好时光,

询问他们的一天,

检查家庭作业,给
他们读睡前故事

并给他们
很多亲吻和拥抱 .

如果我正在旅行
,无论在哪个时区,

我都会使用 Skype 与我的孩子们联系,
即使我在数英里之外。

我们的儿子布尔汉五岁了

,他正在学习阅读
和做基础数学。

这是另一个坦白:

我发现我们的女儿

在教他这些技能方面实际上比我更成功。

(笑声)

一开始是个游戏,但是Alia
喜欢给她的弟弟当老师

,我发现这些课程
实际上提高了Burhan的素养,

增加了Alia的责任感

,加强了他们之间的联系,

一个双赢的局面 .

我认识的成功的阿拉伯女性

每个人都找到了自己独特
的工作方式,

因为她们继续

承担着家庭中最大的
责任。

但这不仅仅是为了

职业女性和母亲的双重角色中生存。

这也是关于活在当下。

当我和孩子们在一起时,

我试图将工作从我们的生活中排除。

与其担心
我每天可以和他们一起度过多少分钟,

我专注于将这些分钟
变成难忘的时刻,

让我看到我的孩子,

听到他们的声音,与他们建立联系。

[“联合起来,不要竞争。”]

我这一代的阿拉伯女性

在成长过程中并没有出现在公众视野中。

我认为,这在一定程度上

解释了为什么
在阿拉伯世界中很少有女性参政。

然而,这样做的好处

是,我们花了很多时间

在幕后

、咖啡店、客厅

、电话中

培养一种社交技能,这是
一种对成功非常重要的社交技能:

网络。

我想说,一般的阿拉伯女性

都有庞大
的朋友和熟人网络。

其中大多数也是女性。

在西方,雄心勃勃的女性似乎
经常将自己与其他

希望成为房间里最
成功的女性的女性进行比较。

这导致了职业女性之间备受关注的
竞争行为

如果
顶部只有一个女人的空间,

那么你就不能为其他人腾出空间,
更不用说提升他们了。

一般来说,阿拉伯女性

并没有
落入这个心理陷阱。

面对男权社会,

他们
发现互帮互助,

人人受益。

在我之前的工作中,我
是中东最资深的女性,

所以人们可能会认为投资
于我的女性同事网络

并不能带来很多好处

,我应该把时间花在

发展
与男性前辈和同事的关系上 .

然而,我最大的两个
突破来自其他女性的支持。

最初建议

我被视为
世界经济论坛的年轻全球领导人的是营销主管。

她熟悉我的媒体活动
和我的出版物

,当她被要求
发表意见时,

她突出显示了我的名字。

是一位年轻的顾问,
一位沙特女士和朋友

,帮助我
在沙特阿拉伯销售了我的第一个项目,

我发现
作为女性很难在这个市场获得关注。

她把我介绍给了一位客户

,那次介绍促成
了我在沙特的许多项目中的第一个。

今天,我的团队中有两位资深女性

,我认为让她们成功
是我自己成功的关键。

女性继续在世界上进步,

速度不够快,但我们正在前进。

尽管最近遭遇了许多挫折,但阿拉伯世界也在取得进展。

就在今年,阿联酋任命了
五名新的女部长进入内阁

,总共有八名女部长。

这几乎是内阁的 28%,

而且比许多
发达国家所能声称的还要多。

这是今天我女儿
艾莉亚最喜欢的照片。

毫无疑问,这是伟大领导

的结果,但
也是坚强的阿拉伯妇女

不放弃并
不断突破界限的结果。

这是阿拉伯妇女
每天都像我一样

决定将粪便转化为燃料,

努力工作
以将工作排除在生活之外,

并联合起来而不是竞争的结果。

展望未来,

我对女儿
在20、30年后站在这个舞台上的希望

是,她可以像父亲的女儿一样自豪
地称自己

为母亲的女儿。

我对我儿子的希望

是,到那时,
“她母亲的儿子”或“妈妈的男孩”这个表达方式


具有完全不同的含义。

谢谢你。

(掌声)