Transforming Job-Family Conflict into Competitive Advantage

Balancing Father Stress and Professional Success Workshop


These powerful workshops teach dads strategies for reducing the conflict they feel between work and family life and increase their effectiveness and satisfaction at both.

Each program can be tailored to your company's specifics. Find out more about how Balancing Father Stress and Professional Success workshops can help your company by clicking here.

Articles

Generation Daddy:
Today’s fathers struggle for balance.
Juggling roles as a business executive, father and coach is all in a day's work for men of Generation X. These new dads with new priorities represent a broad shift from prior generations in their level of involvement with their kids.
(read more)

Fathers Work To Gain Flexibility At Office
Long considered tools for women, flexible scheduling, job sharing, reduced hours and telecommuting options are becoming increasingly necessary for men. With many families relying on both partners to produce incomes and contribute at home, there are signs that both sexes are looking for innovative ways to achieve a balance between work and life.
(read more)

Slowly, employers adapt to new views toward fatherhood
"Culture still doesn't support the notion that fathers need to be as engaged as women in their kids' lives," said Roland Warren, president of National Fatherhood Initiative, based in Gaithersburg, Md. But career and human-resource experts said companies are taking notice that more men want such benefits. (read more)

For some dads it's family, then career
Gen X men beginning to put work on hold to spend more time at home. (read more)

Balancing work and life
Younger workers demand flexibility. The New York-based Families and Work Institute in New York reports that about 37 percent of those between 40 and 59 report being chronically overworked, compared to under 30 percent of those under 40. (read more) .

Professionals Demanding a Work Life Balance and Backing it Up
Young professionals and managers are starting to rebel against the extreme work demands being imposed on them -- and will defect to employers willing to accommodate their personal lives, according to the authors of a survey released yesterday. (read more)
© Copyright 2005 Fathers At Work All Rights Reserved.
site by accentdigital.com