Busting through the glass ceiling
BARBARA DIAMOND
The Laguna Beach Womanâs Club plumbed the vast reservoir of talented,
successful women in town and came up with three peaches for a Glass
Ceiling forum.
Christy Joseph, Sue Ferguson and Anne Morris were the guest
speakers at the forum held Jan. 16 at the clubhouse.
All three have hit the roof, shattering the limits imposed on many
women in fields dominated by men. Joseph is a partner in a
multi-state law firm. Ferguson and Morris both found success in
marketing. Morris is a former resident and has worked in town for
years. Joseph and Ferguson live in Laguna.
Morrisâ path to success is perhaps the most traditional of the
three speakers, starting with a career in nursing and then using her
experience as a volunteer to move into marketing. She has loved
almost every twist in the road.
Morris had a mother who wanted her daughter to be able to take
care of herself and an insatiable need to learn new things.
âI knew I wanted to take care of people, so I went to nursing
school,â she said.
Morris spent 19 years in the profession and loved it. However, her
life changed dramatically in 1988 when she was diagnosed with breast
cancer -- with a life expectancy then of five years. She was 35 and
still living in her native Midwest.
She vowed not to die in Kansas and headed for California.
Morris began her life on the West Coast working for a doctor. It
was at the beginning of the managed health care era, and many
patients were unhappy.
âPeople started yelling at me and I started getting cranky,â said
Morris, who by that time was married to contractor Mike Morris. âI
told my husband I was going to quit, but I didnât know anything else.
He said, âYou know my business, so you are now my business manager.ââ
That was the first career change made by Anne Morris, but far from
the last -- and none planned.
The couple joined two chambers of commerce, and Anne Morris began
volunteering for every chamber committee. A friend suggested that she
apply for membership director of the Orange County chamber.
Anne Morris got the job, but gave it up when her husband
contracted Bellâs palsy, which eventually went away.
When Anne Morris was invited to sit on the volunteer board of the
Susan G. Komen Foundation, she thought it was a grand idea
âI realized I was intrigued with volunteerism, but I also was
selling advertising for the chambers,â Anne Morris said. âMike
suggested I get a job with a nonprofit.â
Anne Morris heard about a job opening at South Coast Medical
Center, applied for it and became the hospitalâs annual fund manager.
âI loved it and I learned new things,â said Anne Morris, who
managed to fit in a course in fundraising at UC Irvine.
She left the medical center when she was invited to be the manager
of the Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce. Through that job, she met
South County Bank officials, who offered her her present position as
vice president of development and regional manager of the branch soon
to open in Laguna Beach.
âI left the chamber in September and have spent the last three
months learning about banking,â Morris said. âI love it.
Past club President Kim Salter introduced the audience to attorney
Joseph, whom she has known for more than 20 years.
âWe met working in a restaurant while going to college,â said
Joseph, who planned to be an attorney.
âI got into a good law school [Hastings], graduated and thought,
what do I do now?â Joseph said.
Joseph chose to be a litigator, with a style all her own.
âLitigation is a fight, but does have to be an ugly fight?â Joseph
said. âMy style is to work with people, to find areas we have in
common, situations we can share and open communications.â
She developed her empathetic style on a tour of a lockdown mental
ward.
A second lesson was taught her by a young man who claimed that all
Asians discriminate against African Americans. Joseph said she got
defensive and then realized she had stopped listening to him because
of her personal convictions.
âWhen I go into a deposition -- which is the closest thing to a
trial -- I donât want to make anyone defensive,â she said. âI want
the truth, but I want [the witness] to be my best friend. That might
make them think they are smarter -- but bring it on.
âMy first approach is feminine, but when âswellâ doesnât work, the
mother lioness comes out. Sometimes, you have to be aggressive, but
you need to know when to battle.â
Joseph attributes her partnership in the 3,500-attorney law firm
partly to her ability to accept adversity and keep on trucking -- a
quality she believes is more prevalent in women than men.
âThe first year, I should have made partner was during the
recession,â Joseph said. âI was told to wait. It was a tough pill.â
She swallowed the pill and gracefully pushed aside the
disappointment. A male attorney in the firm also up that year for
partnership did not handle it as smartly.
âHe got angry and showed it,â Joseph said.
When the two were up again for partnership, the male attorney was
not voted in by the mostly male partners. Joseph was.
Ferguson took perhaps the chanciest road of all to the rooftop.
She is now retired from a company that grew from 500,000 customers to
7 million customers on her watch, for which she was well-compensated
and respected.
That wasnât how it started.
âWhen I got out of college, I wanted to work in mass transit,â
Ferguson said. âI was 22, and I interviewed like crazy.
âThe interviewers were cigar-smoking, martini-drinking guys who
practically laughed at me. They called me âsweetheart.â I was too
young and too naive to understand that they canât do that.â
The belittled Ferguson took a marketing job with a small firm --
mass transitâs loss. She then was offered a job with Quaker Oats,
where she spent seven years before moving to Citibank for eight years
and then to a cable company, which proved to be a stepping stone to a
satellite company, where she was destined to make her mark.
Ferguson quit a well-paying job to take a position with a little
satellite dish company. At the time, Echo Star was having trouble
meeting its payroll.
âThey said I would have to take a pay cut,â Ferguson said. âMy
friends said I was crazy, but I had seen the cable industry and I
knew we could eat their lunch. And we did.â
Today, Echo Star is a Forbes 500 company, its president is a
billionaire, and Ferguson is optimistic about the future of
professional women.
* OUR LAGUNA is a regular feature of the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. Write to Barbara Diamond, P.O. Box 248, Laguna Beach, 92652,
hand-deliver to 384 Forest Ave., Suite 22.
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