Press Coverage & Quotes
Section Index
Content Body
CNN.com, Oct. 2008
Dealing with tears at work
CNN - USA
Organizational psychologist Marcia Reynolds agrees."Though I don't think anyone should cry on purpose, a spontaneous cry can be damaging to the person who feels they are weak because they are crying," she says. "It is not a sign of weakness. It is a sign of being human."
Reader's Digest.com, Sept. 2008
Deal with Anxiety and Get Your Life Back on Track
Follow the Relax, Detach, Focus steps. Created by Marcia Reynolds, author of Outsmart Your Brain! the routine goes like this:
- Relax your body from the toes up.
- Detach from your thoughts.
- Center yourself in the moment (e.g., feel your head upon the pillow, or your feet on the ground, etc., depending on where you are).
- Focus on who you want to be and how you want to feel.
K107.1 Jon & Mary in the Morning Sept. 18, 2008
Drive time interview on the image of a leader with a focus on the current presidential and vice-presidential candidates.
Michael Dresser Talk Show Sept. 17, 2008
Talk show interview on Outsmart Your Brain! and how the election is affecting people on an emotional level.
Career Smart Advisor, Execunet, Sept. 2008
Organizational psychologist Dr.Marcia Reynolds says that if an executive can create an organization that is self-managed,groups can create their own guidelines for working together, thus enabling them to resolve their own conflicts instead of turning to their leader to do so. “If this is the case, then good training and coaching on conflict management/emotional intelligence skills should be provided for everyone so there is a common language and way of being with each other throughout the organization,” adds Reynolds.
SHRM Consutlants Forum, June 2008
Marcia Reynolds agrees. Reynolds left her corporate HR/training position in 1995 to start an executive coaching and leadership development firm, Covisioning. The consultancy’s clients range from CEOs to managers and are located around the globe. There is a distinct difference in coaching executives and mid-level managers, she notes. “For executives, they’re hiring a thinking partner to help them discuss decisions, expand perspective, balance home/work, strategize future possibilities and work through difficult issues,” she says. Coaching of supervisors and managers is usually based on a particular need because they have some problems, she says. “It is more about problem-solving and conflict resolution,” she says.
U.S. Business Review, April 2008
Dr. Reynolds says the problem she discovered wasn’t a glass ceiling, but a gilded treadmill of jobs that don’t offer women much of what they’re looking for. “What I found is that a lot of the high-achieving women are opting out on their own,” she says. “They don’t really stay long enough to achieve those positions.”
Better Homes and Gardens, March 2008
"I Hate Asking for Help" It's the four-letter word no woman likes to utter. How to ask for what you need.
We’d rather keep up the appearance of being in control, says psychologist Marcia Reynolds, Psy.D., author of Outsmart Your Brain. “Our resistance is about maintaining our own self-concept,” she explains. “It may often take a life-changing event like pregnancy or a medical emergency to teach us that even the most competent women can use a little help sometimes.”
View Highlife Magazine "Extreme Makeover For Your Life," February/March 2008
For many clients, it’s a matter of distractions blocking the road leading towards a goal. In one instance, Marcia worked with a seasoned senior vice president and attorney who said she needed help prioritizing tasks. After a couple of one-on-one sessions, she determined her client’s lack of motivation and commitment to her current job was actually the culprit——diverting her focus from her long-term career goals. By mapping out a concrete five-year plan, she was able to discuss her strategy with her husband, gain personal support, and then recommit to her job for three more years. Suddenly, her “prioritization” problems were solved! She realized that after a few more years in her current job, she could move on to new things. And that knowledge freed her to make good decisions and stick with her plan.
View Highlife Magazine "Extreme Makeover For Your Life: Dreaming Big and Getting What YOU Want" April/May 2008
Dr. Reynolds uses assessments to help her clients clear away their personal deadwood and formulate their goals. While these baby steps my seem trivial, most clients are amazed just how much easier and successful life feels for them once they start "bringing up their score" by addressing personal issues, clearing "their space," and soliciting support as needed. By mending the cracks, Dr. Reynolds and her clients are on track to coaching success!
More.com, January 2008
Reynolds, currently working on a dissertation about high-achieving women in the workforce, finds comfort that she's not alone in her predilection for a man content to bask in the shadow of her success. "My research found that 70 percent [of the working women she interviewed] are the primary breadwinners, yet feel their relationships are true partnerships."
