Women at Work

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Rating
4.8
from
1366 reviews
This podcast has
161 episodes
Language
Explicit
No
Date created
2018/01/16
Latest episode
2025/07/07
Average duration
36 min.
Release period
17 days

Description

Women face gender discrimination throughout our careers. It doesn't have to derail our ambitions — but how do we prepare to deal with it? There's no workplace orientation session about narrowing the wage gap, standing up to interrupting male colleagues, or taking on many other issues we encounter at work. So HBR staffers Amy Bernstein, Amy Gallo, and Emily Caulfield are untangling some of the knottiest problems. They interview experts on gender, tell stories about their own experiences, and give lots of practical advice to help you succeed in spite of the obstacles.

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Podcast episodes

Check latest episodes from Women at Work podcast


That’s Our Show
2025/07/07
This episode marks the end of a show that’s meant so much to us. Amy Bernstein and Amy Gallo say goodbye, answer two last Ask the Amys questions, and reminisce with founding producer Amanda Kersey. HBR’s Maureen Hoch, who came up with the original idea for the podcast, joins to share how it all began.
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Ask the Amys: Sabotaging Bosses, Irritating Employees, and More
2025/06/30
What if your boss turns against you the minute you ask for a promotion? Or you struggle with strategic thinking and keep getting feedback that you’re “too in the weeds”? Or the person dragging down your team is doing just enough to stay out of trouble? The Amys give advice for dealing with sabotage, shifting how you're seen, and setting expectations with difficult colleagues.
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Let Go of the Beliefs That Limit How You Lead
2025/06/16
Many of us have internal beliefs—I need it done now, I know I’m right, I need to be involved—that feel like truth but actually hold us back as leaders. Executive coach Muriel Wilkins calls these counterproductive beliefs “hidden blockers,” and she talks the Amys through the process of identifying theirs and then reframing them. They also look at how blockers show up in team and organizational behavior, like when lack of trust results in too many meetings, and discuss how leaders can shift culture by first examining and adjusting their own assumptions.
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Managing Up, One Conversation at a Time
2025/06/02
Have you ever realized, mid-project, that you and your boss weren’t aligned on what success looked like or how to get there? Executive coach Melody Wilding explains why getting clear on goals and understanding each other’s working styles is essential, even when you’re already in a leadership role. They share advice on how to start these conversations in a way that feels natural and constructive, break down common style mismatches, and offer guidance for adapting without losing your authenticity.
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What We Can Learn from Taylor Swift
2025/05/19
When our colleague Kevin Evers wrote There’s Nothing Like This: The Strategic Genius of Taylor Swift, we knew we had to talk about it. For so many women, she’s a role model—personally and professionally. Four HBR Swifties who read the book highlight how her instincts and decisions offer lessons in leadership, strategy, and staying power.
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What to Share, What to Hold Back
2025/05/05
Self-disclosure at work can build trust and connection, but it also comes with risks. In one of our earliest episodes, the late Columbia professor Katherine Phillips explained how sharing personal experiences helps diverse teams connect. We revisit that 2018 conversation and talk with her longtime collaborators, Tracy Dumas and Nancy Rothbard, who explain how expectations around self-disclosure have shifted, especially with the rise of remote work, social media, and political polarization. Plus, the Amys reflect on what they’ve learned about when, why, and how to open up at work.
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The Difference You Can Make in a Recent Grad’s Career
2025/04/21
Young women are entering the workforce full of potential but without some of the interpersonal skills they need to succeed and advance. That’s not just their problem; it’s ours too. In this live conversation from SXSW EDU, Amy Gallo talks with Neda Norouzi, an architecture professor at the University of Texas at San Antonio, and Aimee Laun, director of the Career Connections Center at Texas Woman’s University, about the gap between what colleges teach and what workplaces expect—and the critical role mentors, managers, professors, and parents can play in bridging it.
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Ask the Amys: Favoritism, Unsupportive Managers, and More
2025/04/07
Imagine having a direct report who sobs every time you give them feedback. Or leading a team of people who’ve told your boss they don’t trust you. Or managing people for the first time—43 of them—with no training or guidance. The Amys offer advice for getting through these real situations from listeners–not just advice, but actual language for asserting your needs, earning trust, setting boundaries, and holding your ground even when emotions run high.
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The Essentials: Asking Purposeful Questions
2025/03/24
Purposeful questions do more than clarify details—they reveal how you think and demonstrate leadership potential. Amy Gallo talks with a program manager looking to strengthen her executive presence and question-asking skills. Harvard Business School professor Alison Wood Brooks joins them to offer research-backed guidance on eliciting useful responses, building credibility through questions, and adapting to different conversational settings.
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Getting Along with an Insecure Tormentor
2025/03/10
What do you do when a formerly supportive boss turns against you? Amy G advises a project manager who still believes in her team, just not the person leading it. Learn tactics for managing up, protecting your reputation, and preserving your sanity.
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Starting March 10, More Amys, More Often!
2025/03/03
After 10 seasons, Women at Work is changing things up for the better. We’re shifting to a new, year-round schedule, releasing a new episode every other Monday, starting March 10. That means more episodes that inspire reflection and growth, more practical advice, and more insights and stories that make you feel seen and supported in your career.
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We’re Asking for (and Getting) What We Want
2024/12/09
What could you achieve if you asked for what you truly want at work? Amy Gallo and four listeners embraced Alison Fragale’s “nos challenge,” requesting everything from clearer communication and help with a project to leadership opportunities and job title changes. As they pursued 10 rejections each, they noticed surprising patterns in how people respond, overcame fears of rejection, and made progress on personal and professional goals. Their experiences offer practical insights into how to ask assertively and gain status—even when the answer is no.
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How to Leap Mid-Career from One Industry to Another
2024/12/02
When you realize the line of work you’ve been in for years doesn’t interest you anymore or is in decline or won’t ever pay well enough, what’s your next move? Amy B speaks with executive coach Nina Bowman about the process of making a bold mid-career leap: how to identify a new path, build connections to land interviews, and tell the story of how you’ll succeed in a completely different role. Then, two listeners who made bold leaps themselves—one from academia to tech, the other from government to consulting—share their experiences and insights.
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Consumed by Caregiving
2024/11/25
A past guest recounts how she burned out, quit her job, intended to get a new job after taking a breather, and then didn’t for over a year. That’s because someone in her family kept getting sick or hurt, she had to move twice, and all of the logistical and emotional responsibilities fell to her (because who else was going to take them on?!) Sociologist Jessica Calarco helps her make sense of that exhausting year of unpaid work and the forces that put her and other women in this sort of position.
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Working While Parenting a Teen: Not What I Expected
2024/11/18
Do you expect to have more time for yourself and for your career as your kids become teens and young adults? Amy G did. If you too are getting “urgent” texts from your teenager at all hours, feeling judged by other parents about your level of involvement, and trying to figure out how to set the right amount of boundaries, she and Danna Greenberg hear you and have advice.
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Podcast reviews

Read Women at Work podcast reviews


4.8 out of 5
1366 reviews
Wagnacs 2026/01/24
Thank you
Your podcast kept me grounded in my first few years as a leader. Thank you!
Kelly Lynn Adams 2025/11/15
A must listen to podcast!
I am absolutely loving this podcast I look forward to tuning in every time a new episode is released!!
Ashbytt 2025/08/02
Incredibly helpful! 💙
Thank you so much for this amazing podcast! So sad it’s over, it helped me incredibly as a new manager! Will forever cherish you all! 💙
PegsCats 2025/07/30
Women at Work
This is a great podcast. So sorry to see it end
hungrynow2019 2025/07/07
Done too late
This review is done too late for the hosts to receive, but hopefully anyone searching for thoughtful and insightful content will stop and listen. The ...
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SeldomPoster1 2024/06/18
LOVING the How to Manage Series!
Long time listener of W@W and devout fan of most HBR podcasts and I LOVE the most recent series The Essentials and How to Manage. The Essentials on E...
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design4all 2024/04/17
So many helpful ideas!
I learn so much from this podcast! I look forward to what Amy and Amy and their guests share every week and their topics always seem to apply to issue...
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Nadyne 2024/03/10
I want to be Amy B when I grow up
Every time I listen to an episode of Women at Work, I learn something. In each episode, they bring the best workplace research from around the world, ...
more
SophiePaga 2023/07/06
So comforting to hear these women say what I think out loud!
I can’t thank you enough for this content. So many thoughts go through my head at work every day. Many that I can’t find the space to release. To hear...
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elizabethdg 2023/01/31
Great Podcast
I found the entire series very useful, but I wanted to highlight the episode re supporting employees with children with mental health challenges. I’ve...
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