— -- It may be called Sharpen Your Heels, but the message of this career-advice book for women is blunt: To get to the top, you need to do all the things that men do to get there, and then some.
Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter. The Financial Times' Mrs Moneypenny takes her editor to the pre-show gala of the Chelsea Flower Show under the ...
Women need more financial knowledge than men. We live longer and therefore need to provide for ourselves for longer, while, statistically, we earn less money than men over an average lifetime. We ...
Tess Vigeland: Today, there’s no shortage of women sitting at the head of the table. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, New York Times executive editor Jill Abramson, Harvard President Drew Gilpin ...
Mrs Moneypenny, aka Heather McGregor, a prominent columnist and spokesperson for women in business, has just launched a book: Mrs Moneypenny’s Careers Advice for Ambitious Women. It’s got a ...
Why is Gloria Steinem hopping mad? Mrs Moneypenny, beloved Financial Times columnist, misses the train to Cambridge with the US feminist, but manages to send an FT colleague instead. The result is a ...
The SuperScrimpers return, with enough money-saving tips to banish those financial blues for good. Mrs Moneypenny is putting cash back in the nation's bank accounts by revealing her insider trade ...
Mrs. Moneypenny, a former banker (boo, hiss), writes a column in the FT. This show is part lecture, part storytelling and part cookery demonstration. A benign Fanny Craddock with a Johnny, who does ...
Every Saturday, Mrs Moneypenny's column in the Financial Times is said to be read by more than 700,000 people across the world. She has been writing for the paper since 1999 and her witty and personal ...
This article is brought to you by our exclusive subscriber partnership with our sister title USA Today, and has been written by our American colleagues. It does not necessarily reflect the view of The ...
Mrs Moneypenny tackles the wasteful Jain family from Birmingham, who spend a whopping £24,000 a year more than they earn. After creating a shocking mountain of their excessive consumption in the ...
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