assignment - English
“ M E L I S S A , H I ! ” Su Yee Goh was
surprised to see her deputy’s
name pop up on her phone, but
she answered immediately. She’d
been meaning to check in with
Melissa for a few days.
Both worked in business
development for the Singapore
office of international energy-
foods firm Shapiro Global (SG),
Su Yee as director and Melissa as
her number two. Their team had
been working tirelessly since the
Covid-19 outbreak to ensure that
SG’s expansion plans in Southeast
Asia were not derailed. Melissa
had been leading the charge, but
in recent video calls the normally
focused American had seemed
distracted. Su Yee knew her work-
from-home situation during the
pandemic was not ideal. While
many offices in Singapore had
remained open, SG was one of
several multinationals that had
sent its entire staff home. Melissa
and her husband, who also had a
busy job, lived in a two-bedroom
condo with their six-year-old son,
whose school had gone remote
three months before.
“I’m glad you called! I was just
about to book some time on your
calendar,” Su Yee said. “Maybe we
could both pop out for some fresh
air and do a walk and talk?”
HBR’s fictionalized case studies present problems faced by leaders in
real companies and offer solutions from experts. This one is based on
the HBS Case Study “Shapiro Global” (case no. 407003-PDF-ENG),
by Thomas J. DeLong, Michael Brookshire, Monica Haugen, Michelle
Kravetz, and Sarah Sommer, which is available at HBR.org.
CASE STUDY
When Your Star
Player Asks to
Go Part-Time
by Thomas J. DeLong
Illustrations by BIANCA BAGNARELLI128 Harvard Business ReviewJanuary–February 2021
Su Yee was happiest when on
the move—not just exercising but
also working hard to advance her
career. In 1997, she’d been among
the first seven employees in SG’s
Singapore office. As an assistant
to the office manager, she had run
errands, answered the telephone,
and kept the office operating
smoothly. When it expanded, she
was promoted to business analyst,
and over the next 14 years she had
grown with the company, acquir-
ing skills and experience and
winning promotions. Now she
oversaw business development
for all of Southeast Asia, with 28
employees reporting to her. The
only female SG executive in the
region and the only vice president
who’d worked her way up from
the ground floor, she made a point
of mentoring the young employ-
ees, and particularly the women,
on her team.
“Sure, that would be great,”
Melissa replied.
“Anything special you wanted
to talk about?” Su Yee asked.
There was a pause. “I have
some news. Scott and I are expect-
ing,” Melissa finally said.
Su Yee didn’t process this right
away. “Expecting?”
“I’m pregnant,” Melissa said.
“About six months along.”
Only just walking out the door,
Su Yee stopped in her tracks. The
weather was balmy, but she felt
as if she’d walked into an ice-
cold wind. Quickly, though, she
snapped back into manager mode.
“Congratulations,” she said.
“That’s terrific news! I guess we’ll
need to talk about maternity
leave. In Singapore, it’s 12 weeks
of paid leave, much better than in
the U.S. !”1
“Well, that’s the thing,” Melissa
said. “I may be asking for a bit
more than that.” Su Yee’s jaw
clenched. Melissa was a rising star
at SG, one Su Yee had planned to
lean on—and continue to groom—
in the coming months and years.
Even a three-month absence
would be a struggle.
“What were you thinking?” Su
Yee said, still trying to hide her
surprise.
“Honestly, I’m not sure I want
to come back full-time.”
A RISING STAR
Su Yee struggled to process her
emotions. First came shock.
Since Melissa had arrived in
Singapore as a three-year transfer
from the San Francisco office
a year earlier,2 she had always
come across as a go-getter with
leadership capabilities, if not
C-suite-level ambitions. More
important, she was an extremely
hard worker—easily keeping pace
with long workdays and always
willing to put in weekend hours
if required. A quantitatively
minded analyst, she pushed
data-driven decisions that had
reenergized the group’s outreach
and boosted revenues. While Su
Yee had initially been frustrated
because Melissa’s rotation into
her office was forced through
without her consultation or
buy-in, she eventually came
to see in Melissa many of the
qualities that had fueled her own
rise. She quickly promoted her
to deputy, gave her three direct
reports, and nominated her
for key committees to give her
exposure to senior SG leaders.
The pair had developed a very
close working relationship.3
Su Yee thought back to one
of their late nights in the office
before the Covid-19 outbreak.
Melissa had confessed that, even
though she knew the move to
Singapore would accelerate her
rise at SG, doing so with a small
child had been a difficult decision.
She’d said yes only when Scott,
her husband, also managed to get
a three-year transfer, and they’d
found a terrific nanny and school
for their son. Doing the math in
her head, Su Yee realized that
Melissa was probably pregnant
Case
Study
Classroom
Notes
1. On average,
OECD countries
pay 16 weeks
of parental
leave at a rate
of 55% to 100%
of wages. The
U.S. is the only
OECD country
that lacks
government-
mandated paid
parental leave.
2. Job rotations
have long been
a popular way to
build the skills
and experience
of promising
employees.
Should the
fact that
Melissa’s time
in Singapore is
relatively short
influence Su
Yee’s thinking?
3. Resilience,
defined as
the capacity
to adapt to
stressful
circumstances,
has been a
hallmark of Su
Yee’s success.
But has it led
to her having
unrealistic
expectations of
her workers?
Experience
Harvard Business Review
January–February 2021 129
when they’d talked then but
hadn’t mentioned it! She couldn’t
help feeling a little betrayed.
But then Su Yee felt a wave of
empathy. She knew how difficult
the past few months had been for
Melissa as she’d tried to juggle
her work and family obligations
during office and school closures.4
To be pregnant in a pandemic, far
from friends and family, would
only have added to her stress.
And Su Yee had the power to
help. She had the final say in what
allowances were made for Melissa
beyond SG’s official maternity
leave. Recent efforts by headquar-
ters to set global HR standards
had fallen apart when regional
managers (Su Yee included) had
complained that they needed to
be able to handle requests on a
case-by-case basis.5
Su Yee listened quietly as
Melissa laid out her proposal:
After her 12-week leave, she
wanted to work a three-day week
at 60% of her full-time pay. Su
Yee cringed inwardly. She was
surprised that Melissa was asking
for a part-time schedule. When
she suggested an extension to her
leave instead, Melissa replied that
both she and Scott worried about
continuing to manage virtual
school for their son and bringing
their live-out nanny back into
the house given the uncertainties
surrounding Covid-19.
Su Yee knew better than
to push back any further. She
congratulated Melissa again and
promised to give her an answer on
her proposal without delay. She
then walked back to her desk and
sent an email to the HR staff to fill
them in on the situation—really
just a formality, since she knew
the decision rested with her.
OTHER OPTIONS?
That night, after a string of
meetings with corporate lasting
late into the Singapore evening,
Su Yee finally had time to think
about Melissa’s request. The most
obvious solution was to accept
Melissa’s proposal and restructure
her job as a three-day position.
Su Yee’s own managerial duties
would not be affected much, and
Melissa would be able to accom-
plish a lot in the compressed
workweek—conducting business
via videoconference, which was
now the norm anyway, even if
she wouldn’t travel. But Su Yee
worried the arrangement would
have an adverse effect on her
other subordinates: The cutback
in hours would most likely mean
additional work for them.
And it might set a precedent
that she—and SG as an organi-
zation—would regret. Melissa
would be leaving in two years,
once her transfer period was com-
plete. That meant her manager in
her next assignment would have
to continue the accommodation
4. In a recent
poll by Ginger,
an on-demand
mental health
company, nearly
seven in 10 U.S.
workers reported
that navigating
the Covid-19
pandemic
has been the
most stressful
experience of
their careers.
5. Should HR
departments
of global
companies
standardize
benefits or leave
decisions to
regional and
local managers?
130 Harvard Business ReviewJanuary–February 2021
or deny it, which could cause
problems in the new role. And Su
Yee wouldn’t ever see the payback
on being a flexible boss.
Another alternative was to
create a new, part-time special-
projects position for Melissa after
her leave and hire a replacement
for her current role. But that
would be a tough sell in an eco-
nomic downturn.
The simplest approach would
be to persuade Melissa that a
part-time arrangement was
neither advisable nor feasible. Su
Yee had invested a great deal of
time, energy, and social capital
in developing and promoting
her, and Melissa had an amazing
future at SG ahead of her. The
research was clear that switching
to part-time work hurts employ-
ees—often women; they end up
toiling away for more hours than
they should for much lower pay
and less credit. Meanwhile, many
male professionals simply take the
time they need without formally
reducing their hours and pay.6
Would Melissa leave SG if she
didn’t get her way? Pre-pandemic,
she had seemed totally enamored
with her career at SG. Her salary
would easily cover the cost of a
larger apartment and a live-in
nanny. Perhaps an offer to shorten
her workday to eight hours would
suffice, giving her time to exper-
iment with work-family balance
and renewing her enthusiasm for
her job.
Glancing at the clock, Su Yee
closed her laptop and decided to
sleep on it.
ROLE MODELS
“Auntie, what is the matter
with you today? You seem so
distracted.”
Su Yee put down her kaya toast
and looked at her niece, Jing Yi,
sitting across from her. Breakfast
on Saturday mornings at the
Raffles Hotel was their tradition
and Su Yee’s favorite part of the
week. Jing Yi, a bright 22-year-old,
loved hearing her aunt’s office
gossip and usually found a way to
make Su Yee laugh—but not today.
Su Yee leaned forward and
laid out the situation with Melissa
for Jing Yi. She explained to her
niece that she had misjudged her
protégé’s ambitions. No doubt
Melissa could continue to contrib-
ute to SG as a part-time worker,
but she wanted to get off the fast
track. She would essentially be
sidelining herself, moving from
superstar to solid employee.7
Su Yee couldn’t shake the feeling
that this was a mistake. She
wanted to tell Melissa to snap out
of it. Why, after years of being a
successful working mom, did she
now want to derail her career and
squander her talent? Yes, the pan-
demic had made life much more
difficult, but eventually life would
return to normal. Su Yee knew,
6. A study
by Erin Reid
of Boston
University
found that even
though few male
employees ask
for reduced
hours, many
are able to limit
their workweeks
to attend to
personal issues
without calling
attention to their
absences.
7. Many firms
invest significant
resources in
attracting and
retaining star
performers.
Do they
underestimate
the importance
of supporting
players?
Harvard Business Review
January–February 2021 131
however, that giving that kind of
advice from a position of power
was ethically—not to mention
legally—questionable.
“I don’t know,” Jing Yi said.
“My mom took a different path
than you so that she could be at
home with me. She’s not well-off
or powerful, but I appreciate what
she did and know she feels she
made the right decision. She’s just
as happy as we are.”
Su Yee was surprised. Her niece
had gotten top marks at university,
worked at a prestigious consulting
firm, and would begin her MBA
the following year. Su Yee had
always felt slightly sorry for her
sister, who had led such a conven-
tional life, and thought Jing Yi felt
similarly. “At the same time,” her
niece continued, “I had the best
of both worlds because I had you
as a different sort of role model.”
Su Yee nodded, slightly
reassured. “I suspect that Melissa
doesn’t yet know what will make
her happy, but I need to think of
how this affects my team.”
Jing Yi took a sip from her cup
of hot kopi and tilted her head.
“Auntie, you’ve always supported
women at work—but for promo-
tions, not for the right to step to
the side,” she said. “This must be
a difficult decision for you.”
“Yes,” Su Yee reflected, “it
certainly is.”
Should Su Yee grant Melissa’s
request to go part-time?
THE EXPERTS RESPOND
ELIZABETH MCKINNON
is a co-CEO of
Environmental
Justice Australia.
132 Harvard Business ReviewJanuary–February 2021
Experience
Group Assignment #6 (5%)
Section [ ]
Student ID
Name
Remark
1
2
3
4
5
6
Criteria/Marks
Very Poor
Poor
Average
Good
Excellent
Score
Able to apply related theories and concepts.
0-0.5
0.6-1.0
1.1-1.4
1.5-1.7
1.8-2.0
Ideas are presented in proper order, the presentation is convincing
0-0.5
0.6-1.4
1.5-2.0
2.1-2.4
2.5-3.0
Instruction:
· Students must read the case prior to the discussion class
· Students need to write their answer in this assignment sheet
· Each group need to select 2-3 representatives to present their answers in the discussion class of week11
1. In the Trait approach, which leadership traits do you think Su Yee, the director of business development has? Please provide explanation and example from the case to support your answer.
2. In terms of Behavioral approach, which leadership style best describe Su Yee’s characteristic? Please provide explanation and example from the case to support your answer.
3. Put yourself in Su Yee’s shoes, which option will you offer Melissa? And Why?
4. Refer to the previous question, which type of leadership model best reflect your answer? (i.e. directive, supportive, participative, or achievement-oriented leader) And Why?
5. What is the difference between Transactional leader and Transformational leader? Do you think Su Yee leadership style is more on transactional or transformational style? Why?
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