This article originally appeared on Invest in You: Ready. Set. Grow., a CNBC multiplatform financial wellness and education initiative, in partnership with Acorns.
Launching and advancing your career can be tough.
For women it can be even more difficult, despite the strides that have been made in recent years.
They still struggle with a pay gap, making just 85% of what men earned in 2018, the Pew Research Center has found. There is also still little progress being made in boosting women’s representation in U.S. companies at every level, from first jobs to the C-suite, according to a late 2018 study conducted by management consulting firm McKinsey, in partnership with LeanIn.org.
Therefore, women need to be smart about getting their foot in the door and working their way up the ladder, according to Mika Brzezinski, founder of Know Your Value, a movement and multi-touchpoint platform meant to empower women to express their worth.
People-pleasing is poison, especially in business. You’re there to stay focused and to make the goals play out in real time, to get it done.
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It starts with realizing what you bring to the table.
“To know your value and communicate it effectively and be effective in business, you’ve gotta be able to talk about your value,” said Brzezinski, also co-host of MSNBC’s “Morning Joe.”
“You can’t expect people are just going to notice it.”
Brzezinski has become a champion of gender equality. She’s spoken extensively on the topic and is also the author of The New York Times best-sellers “All Things at Once,” “Know Your Value” and “Obsessed.”
She wrote her latest book, “Earn It: Know Your Value and Grow Your Career, in Your 20s and Beyond,” with “Morning Joe” producer Daniela Pierre-Bravo.
So what should young women do to launch their careers and move up through the ranks? Brzezinski, along with Pierre-Bravo, focus on several key things.
Get in the door
It’s hard work to start your career, so you may have to get creative.
Brzezinski points to Pierre-Bravo’s story as a great example of how being “scrappy” paid off.
An undocumented immigrant from South America, Pierre-Bravo grew up in a small town in Ohio. She got her work permit and state identification through President Barack Obama‘s Deferred Action for Childhood program, also known as DACA — and set her sights on New York after college graduation.
“I applied to everywhere and anywhere in New York City, but I did a little white lie,” said Pierre-Bravo, also a millennial contributor to Know Your Value.
“I told everybody I lived in New York City so the hiring manager wouldn’t not want to call me back.”
When the call came for an interview the next day, she hopped on an 18-hour bus ride and made it to the city in time to meet with the hiring manager.
She landed the gig, but it was unpaid. So she worked four side jobs. “Anything I could to make it work,” she said.
Develop your brand
Once you get your foot in the door, you need to work hard to grow your brand, Brzezinski and Pierre-Bravo advise.
Pierre-Bravo eventually landed at NBC in an entry-level role and met Brzezinski, who picked up on her co-worker’s tenacity. Brzezinski said she was particularly struck by Pierre-Bravo’s attention to detail.









