Women in the workplace have often struggled with taking risks and embracing change.
But if this pandemic has taught us anything, it’s that we are actually quite good at it.
“I believe it’s not that people don’t like change, it’s that they fear uncertainty,” Carla Harris, vice chairman of wealth management and senior client adviser at Morgan Stanley, recently told Know Your Value’s Mika Brzezinski.
She added, “…But I think the beauty of what we have gone through… each of us now have evidence, hard evidence that you can do it, that you can pivot, that you can create, that you can ideate. So, we shouldn’t worry about taking risks and whether or not we can learn something for the first time or whether or not we can do things in a different way. We did it … And if you did it before, you’ll be able to do it again …
Brzezinski chatted with Harris about a number of topics, including risk-taking, building trust, bringing greater diversity into the financial industry and more.
Below is their conversation, which has been edited for brevity and clarity:
Mika Brzezinski: I’ve been thinking about the time I’ve spent with you and hearing your incredible, booming voice, giving the most amazing advice to women at our Know Your Value events.
Since then, I’ve really been focusing on our 50 Over 50 initiative, which celebrates women over the age of 50 who have achieved significant success later in life, often by overcoming formidable odds or barriers.
So, I’m curious. When you were younger, in your teens, 20s and 30s, did you imagine your career after the age of 50?
Carla Harris: No, I did not.
It wasn’t that life didn’t exist, but what you could have said about life after 50, and I certainly would have said yes to this, was that I would be successful at that point. But the beauty of how life has turned out, and I think the opportunity for everybody, is to understand, there are so many opportunities that you will be exposed to and accomplishments that you can make that you cannot even define at 20, 30, 40 and not even at 50.
Given the rate of innovation, there are companies and opportunities that will present themselves that literally do not exist today. [For example], you couldn’t have said 20 years ago, “I want to be the chief people officer at Instagram” because those companies didn’t even exist.
Brzezinski: I think the innovation, growth, opportunity, efforts of diversifying, has now allowed for such a long runway for women from all walks of life. They don’t have to go, “Oh my God. I got this job. I’ve got to stay in it forever. I have to work as hard as I can right now because it’s going to be over soon.”
Harris: That’s exactly right.
… I was having this discussion with another senior woman this morning and I said, along with my career path, and certainly as I got more senior, I used to cringe every time I would see a high profile woman in a position of power say, “you can’t have it all.” I would cringe because I grew up with a mother who … had it all. She was a mom, she was a professional, she was a wife, she was involved in her community. So I grew up with the model that there weren’t any sacrifices to be made to pursue what one wanted to do …
Brzezinski: When you’re working and growing in an organization, you talk a lot about trust. How do you build trust? My advice to women is not to be Chatty Cathy and friends with everybody. That’s not what trust is. Trust is not always friendly. Trust is respectful. What do you think?
Harris: …Trust is key to getting people to follow you into unknown territory. And we’re all going into unknown territory because none of us have ever lived on the other side of a pandemic.
And in order to build trust, you have to have transparency. It is a key ingredient to building trust. And the way that you build trust is simply deliver over and over and over again. So, what’s my evidence? Think about the people in your personal life that you trust. Maybe it’s the one person you let get near your hair with a pair of scissors. Maybe it’s the people taking care of your kids or the people looking after your parents. Maybe it’s that one restaurant that you go to every time there’s an important event because you know the food is excellent and the service is impeccable. Why do you trust them? Because over and over and over again, they have delivered.








