Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Maddy Dychtwald

GET UPDATES FROM Maddy Dychtwald
 

Financial Profile: Are you More Like Oprah, Diane Sawyer, Gwyneth Paltrow or Lindsay Lohan?

Posted: 05/20/10 04:47 PM ET

A few weeks ago, I was at a meeting in New York about my new book, INFLUENCE: How Women's Soaring Economic Power will Transform Our World for the Better. Leslie Bennetts, author of The Feminine Mistake, one of the other attendees, voiced concern that young women today were too interested in bikini waxes, how to get a man, and celebrity culture to care much about being a woman of influence.

As the mother of a terrific 23 year-old young woman, who I sometimes spot reading about celebrity culture, I was disturbed by Leslie Bennetts' comments. Since then, I've spent a lot of time talking to young women (including my daughter) and have come to the conclusion that you can strive to be a woman of influence and still be interested in fashion and celebrity culture; the two worlds are not necessarily mutually exclusive. In fact, let's have some fun examining celebrity women to see examples of just how influence can work.

First, what do I mean by influence? I mean using your education, money, earning power and status to take charge of your life and make your mark on the world. Women are definitely on their way! Last year, 73% of all high school valedictorians were young women. Today, for every 100 men graduating from college, there are 133 women graduating. Young women are graduating from law school, medical school and MBA programs in almost equal numbers to men, giving young women the tools to succeed in our knowledge economy. And it's translated directly into earning power. As of this year, women now control more money than men.

In order to use our influence to affect change, it can be helpful to understand our own attitudes toward and behaviors with money--and, sometimes, to change them. New research, which I describe in INFLUENCE, found that most women fall into one of five money "profiles," --a collection of attitudes and behaviors that describes their feelings and values about money as well as their confidence in using their money to affect change.

Read the following profiles and try to figure out which one best matches you--or the women in your life.

1. Alpha Female: 18 percent of women
The most confident of our financial profiles, the Alpha, tends to act more like society expects a confident man to act with money. From the celebrity talent pool, think Oprah, Madonna or Angelina Jolie. She's the most optimistic, risk-tolerant and self-reliant of the personalities. She's a quick decision maker and is able to learn from her mistakes. She's great at delegating and uses outside help whenever possible to boost her decision-making. On the down side, she can be so gung-ho that she makes decisions before she has all the facts. Most important, the Alpha feels financially and psychologically independent. She's in charge.

2. Perceptive Planner: 35 percent of women
The Perceptive Planner is highly analytical, responsible, disciplined and usually optimistic. Think Sandra Bullock or Diane Sawyer. She thinks in the long term, and thoughtfully researches purchases, investments and financial commitments. Unlike the Alpha, she's motivated primarily by the desire for security and stability, and she's not inclined to move forward without having all the facts. She likes to mull things over carefully .

3. Power Partner: 23 percent of women
The Power partner is collaborative, willing to compromise, and believes two heads are better than one. Think Jada Pinkett Smith, Jennifer Lopez or Gwyneth Paltrow. Pragmatic and responsible, the Power Partner is very concerned that her partner's needs are met as well as her own. By the way, not all power partnerships are between spouses or romantic partners. Sometimes they're siblings, business partners, close friends, or even parents and adult children.

4. Supportive Traditionalist: 9 percent of women
These women hope that someone else will take care of everything money-related for them. They're highly emotional, not analytical, about financial matters. Think Jessica Simpson or Britney Spears. Even though neither of these celebrities is currently married, they cede their financial control to others. This type of woman enjoys spending, but isn't that interested in gaining knowledge when it comes to saving and investing. She avoids discussions about money. She's likely to find herself in deep trouble in the absence of a responsible partner. In our research, we met many women who started out as supportive traditionalists -- waiting for Prince Charming to take care of things -- and for a variety of reasons, changed.

5. The Uncertain Searcher: 16 percent of women
The least confident women fall into this profile: think Lindsay Lohan. She's fearful, confused and sometimes becomes paralyzed when it's time to make financial choices. She's an impulsive shopper who succumbs to instant gratification and holds few ideas about how to think about money in the long term. She knows she's ignorant about finances, but doesn't know where to turn or whom to trust. She's sometime too embarrassed by her lack of knowledge to ask for help.

Girls to Women
The top three profiles are the most confident of the financial personalities. They understand the power of money and are willing to seek help making good decisions. I would argue that in this modern age, all three of these groups are well positioned to make their economic influence felt in the world. However, the last two profiles, which represent a quarter of all women, are not. If you fall into one of these groups, it's critical that you take steps to gain better knowledge and control of your money and make it start working for you--and the world.

It's good news that most women today fall into the more confident groups. But it's troubling that many still don't. Also troubling is the fact that younger women are almost twice as likely as mature women to call themselves supportive traditionalists, even if they aren't married. They are more likely than older women to think money might make them less attractive and to say they'd see their partner as "more of a man" if he took control of the finances.

Maybe these girls are still dependent on "helicopter" parents or these are just youthful fantasies about a rosy future--fantasies that more seasoned women had long since let go. But one thing is clear: in this age of self-empowerment, any woman who remains an Uncertain Searcher or Supportive Traditionalist faces clear and urgent dangers to her long-term independence and perhaps her economic survival.

The good news is that these personalities aren't fixed within us. Many women have been able to educate themselves into a more confident role. And, yes, maybe we can strive to be more like Oprah, Diane Sawyer or Gwyneth Paltrow rather than Lindsay Lohan.

 
 
 

Follow Maddy Dychtwald on Twitter: www.twitter.com/@GoInfluence

A few weeks ago, I was at a meeting in New York about my new book, INFLUENCE: How Women's Soaring Economic Power will Transform Our World for the Better. Leslie Bennetts, author of The Feminine Mist...
A few weeks ago, I was at a meeting in New York about my new book, INFLUENCE: How Women's Soaring Economic Power will Transform Our World for the Better. Leslie Bennetts, author of The Feminine Mist...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 15
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
02:50 PM on 05/24/2010
Lindsay Lohan, without the talent.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kristaS
08:52 AM on 05/24/2010
Alpha female here
04:23 AM on 05/22/2010
She sounds so much like Bella Mondschein in every way, like stealing a sibling's entire inheritance with no remorse, no sense of right from wrong with an overblown sense of self and entitlement.

What a waste!
photo
LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
12:51 AM on 05/22/2010
None of 'em. I'm just the guy who was reading about the is-ought problem.
11:49 PM on 05/21/2010
I am really happy that I have lived long enough to hear women discuss their " financial type".
When I was a young, women did not have enough of their own money to have a "type".
Economic freedom and independance for women has improved 1,000% in my lifetime.
For the sake of my daughters, granddaughters and the one that come after them, I hope this trend continues.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Maddy Dychtwald
01:55 PM on 05/23/2010
Sometimes we forget how far women have come in such a short peeriod of time. I, too, hope the trend will continue.
04:58 PM on 05/21/2010
I'm an Alpha Female, no bones about it!

Just finished reading "Influence" and I want to be able to teach other women to be as confident as I am about money. I bought my house when I was single (at 30), and even though my boyfriend lives with me, I handle all of my bills, my retirement, etc. And we're both ok with the fact that he's probably always going to earn about half of what I do in a year.....
08:24 PM on 05/21/2010
Wow, that's awesome! Alicia, it seems more women your age are living life this way. I just read an article that stated real estate agents should pay more attention to single women as their target market!
02:12 PM on 05/21/2010
I've have always been a "power partner," until recently when I began to feel the "boiling frog" effects of being a corporate working mom. Then I wanted to change my mindset and go against everything I was taught by my mom and grandmother to become a "supportive traditionalist," and let me husband take the reigns. I knew this was unrealistic but I wanted to believe in this myth anyway, go back to the fantasy of childhood fairy tales. When I recalibrated my work life, set the proper boundaries and chose work that suited me, then I was able to regain my healthy financial profile. Just like work and life, our financial profiles can be cyclical too.
01:25 PM on 05/21/2010
I'm a combo - and that fits me to a "T" since I am a young baby boomer or/and older Gen X'er. Call me a 3 with a rising sign of 1. I want to be the Queen, but I know two heads are better than 1. Tomorrow's economy demands collaboration, partnerships, and building relationships that extend beyond "What can you do for me today" to "what can you do for me 5-10 years from now". Live in the now, but prepare for the future. It's a fine balancing act, but you have to be ahead of trends in order to gain from the trend.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Maddy Dychtwald
02:05 PM on 05/23/2010
A lot of people see themselves as combinations. In fact, some days I see myself as an Alpha female while others I become a perceptive planner. And I always have my power partner hat on.
01:21 PM on 05/21/2010
Terrific and fresh look at women and their changing roles. Finances have always been an area where women didn't feel confident to stretch their wings,be creative or take risks. It's so different now and I have to say,incredibly liberating. I choose the pragmatic path but,at times,I leap off the cliff. Doesn't always work,but I learn from those mistakes. Thank you for the confidence nudge.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NickyD
12:54 PM on 05/21/2010
This is a great article, I am an Alpha for sure! Have fun touring with your new book, I hope its a success! I help authors all over the country!
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Maddy Dychtwald
02:04 PM on 05/23/2010
thanks so much for your comments. I appreciate it. How do you help authors all over the country?
04:02 PM on 05/20/2010
i everything want you see go to ready love you keep yourself said.