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TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 09, 2010

Lots of employers would like to be able to hire cheap, temporary teams of seasoned pros with experience managing $2 billion (around Rs8,500 crore) investment portfolios, running ad campaigns or earning PhDs in neuroscience. But few know the secret to finding temps of that calibre: Look on playgrounds and at PTA meetings.

Ilustration: Jayachandran / Mint

Ilustration: Jayachandran / Mint

The decision among some highly educated women to stay home with children is sparking a countertrend: the rise of the mommy “SWAT team”. The acronym, for “smart women with available time”, is one mother’s label for all-mom teams assembled quickly through networking and staffing firms to handle crash projects. Employers get lots of voltage, cheap, while the women get a skills update and a taste of the professional challenges they miss.

The University of North Carolina’s Kenan-Flagler Business School was able to muster an “incredibly talented” team with eight at-home mothers — including a Stanford University PhD in neuroscience, a University of Virginia MBA, an attorney and a former news executive — by tapping female staffers’ neighbourhood networks, says Mindy Storrie, Kenan-Flagler’s director of leadership.

The team taught leadership skills to 100 MBA candidates last year by role-playing difficult management situations with them and critiquing their performances. The simulation training was so successful that enrolment doubled this spring and Kenan-Flagler made it mandatory for leadership training. Cost to the B-school: $21 an hour per woman.

In another case, a team of five at-home moms hopped on a one-month project at Lending Tree to rewrite 600 job descriptions after several acquisitions and integrate them into its organization chart. “I was very impressed with the calibre of women” delivered by MomCorps, an Atlanta staffing firm, says Kathy Fritzsche, vice-president, rewards, for the online lending exchange.

Ivanna Garibaldi Campbell of Charlotte, North Carolina, a former Bank of America senior manager who led the Lending Tree team, headed project meetings with her baby in tow. Once she became a stay-at-home mom, she says, it was “tough to go from 500 mph to stepping back... I found myself a little stir-crazy.”

Skilled workers taking temp projects isn’t new, of course. What’s different about these teams is that they’re available on short notice because the women are usually at home; they tend to work cheap because their main motive is to keep their skills fresh; and they’re often extraordinarily well-qualified, having left the workforce voluntarily when their careers were on the ascent.

Michelle Fenton used to manage $2 billion in assets for Invesco AIM. But because the Denver executive quit her job a year ago to care for her two children, she was available to work for far less than one-tenth of her former salary to help tiny TangentWorks, a Web project-integration start-up, write a business plan. Her marketing partner on the project, which was staffed by Flexible Executives of Atlanta — Liz Ward, who used to direct the Levi Strauss, Dockers and Pillsbury brands for the ad agency Foote, Cone and Belding, then ran her own successful ad consultancy for several years.

For TangentWorks, deploying those two “was like having a C-level team” — chief financial and marketing officers — “without the salaries,” says Zaina Ajakie, CEO of the three-employee firm.

Such successes partly reflect the growing power of women’s networks. Fenton is a former client of Flexible Executives co-founder Jamie Pennington, a mother of three and former stockbroker and investment banker. Ashley Hewitt of Charlotte, a member of the Lending Tree team and a former human resources director for Duke Energy, connected with a MomCorps executive at a children’s birthday party. And Donnabeth Leffler, a former news executive, connected with Kenan-Flagler staffers through friends at church; it was Leffler who coined the “SWAT team” label.

“Using the brain cells, making the contacts, feeling productive and useful...and being in a room with people a lot like me,” she says, make such projects worth the effort.

Write to wsj@livemint.com

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Maneesha Said:


Middle and upper class Indians have long stressed the importance of education. With more Indian professional women in the workplace than ever before and a massive economic boom, we seem on the verge of looking for new solutions to problems that our western counterparts have been dealing with for a while. The question of how to balance our professional identity with our cultural past arises. Elders and children that need to be cared for are a universal component of family life. Where the Indian professional differs from her western counterpart are the options that are available to her. No matter how far the Indian professional has come in having her own career and independence, there are still cultural expectations that keep her linked to the home. As indicated in the article, women are happy to work for a reduced fraction of their previous salaries to keep their skills current whilst maintaining the flexibility to work on their own terms. Avtar in Chennai, Tata’s second career pilot program and now most recently Gharkamai.com provide such solutions. Gharkamai.com will be launching its project based web portal in the next 3 months, providing project-based work for skilled professionals. Indicating that there are many women out there looking for alternative work solutions. Why not then consolidate this playground mum network? Project work seems to be a feasible solution. Providing benefits to the employer and a work life balance for the professional. As the Indian economy continues to grow, the question of where to find skilled labour continues. The ability to offer flexible work options can well mean gaining a competitive edge as a result of having employed skilled professionals. As such the niche area that Sue Shellenbarger writes about is an area of impending growth in India. It is also possibly a more culturally specific solution to women who wish to juggle the demands of pursuing a career and fulfilling other duties expected of them within the Indian context.

Posted On 6/1/2008 7:02:50 PM
BRIJESH Said:


You guys have to ensure that your readers get to read latest articles from around the world. I reckon i read this article almost 1 month back somewhere else.

Posted On 6/17/2008 7:55:56 AM
Jinny Said:


Really loved reading ur article.If something like this is happening to help women like us who carry suitable expertise and skills but are unable to carry their professional lives due to family will definetly get a sigh of relief to work for such organisations sitting at home at the same time earn n enhance their skills.

Posted On 6/27/2008 9:23:02 PM
Deepa Said:


Very encouraging indeed. Such an initiative will be a great step for moms who choose to stay at home to manage their children. However strong your resolve to work or however well educated you are, many mom's give up their jobs. Growing up a child needs spending time with the child. A baby sitter or grand parents can do a good job of fulfilling the needs of the child but cannot fill in for the mom's time.

Posted On 7/1/2008 4:27:13 PM
Siddharth Said:


I've heard from a couple of friends that there's a startup firm piloting such an idea. Check out gharkamai.com.

Posted On 8/2/2008 9:10:24 PM