
These days it seems that you need a degree to do anything, so I鈥檓 quite pleased that I was able to do well without one in the first place. There鈥檚 always been a part of me that likes to break the rules, stretch myself and take on a challenge.
Sandra Waterhouse is the Global Director of Operations for Cambridge 探花直播 Press and a member of the Press Board since 2012. After starting work at the Press in 1978 as a trainee in the Accounts and Costing Department, she has since worked her way up through a number of senior roles.
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These days it seems that you need a degree to do anything, so I鈥檓 quite pleased that I was able to do well without one in the first place. There鈥檚 always been a part of me that likes to break the rules, stretch myself and take on a challenge.
I was a bit rebellious as a teenager: I would party hard and come home late after curfew. I think I was quite hard work for my parents. I remember the day I told my father I wasn鈥檛 going to go to university; he was incredibly disappointed as I think he had dreams of me being a barrister. But back then there was nothing I really wanted to study and I was fed up being at school. Many years later I was put forward for a Cambridge MA and my dad was chuffed to pieces, but to be honest I think part of me felt that I didn鈥檛 deserve it. 探花直播Chief Executive of Cambridge 探花直播 Press said it wasn鈥檛 really an honorary degree because I鈥檇 fully earned it, but I still don鈥檛 completely buy that.
I鈥檓 quite uncomfortable with being seen as successful. I know it鈥檚 a strange position to hold because if I step back and look at it, of course I鈥檝e been successful. I鈥檝e got a great career and I have a very positive home life. From the outside I鈥檇 probably be seen as successful because I鈥檝e got responsibility for Global Operations and I鈥檓 one of only three women on the Press Board. But it feels a bit too easy if I鈥檓 really honest. I move in reasonably successful circles and when I think about the people I really rate, it鈥檚 the ones who have built something from scratch and really grafted. I鈥檝e had challenges, but perhaps I didn鈥檛 see them as significant enough to allow myself to properly value my achievements. I know that鈥檚 a bit nonsensical; intellectually I get that I am successful but emotionally I don鈥檛.
鈥淲hen I think about the people I really rate, it鈥檚 the ones who have built something from scratch and really grafted.鈥
Looking back on my time at Cambridge 探花直播 Press I don鈥檛 think gender has been an issue for me at all. Being a woman in the print business in the 1980s had its moments but they didn鈥檛 overly affect me. I do recall a meeting where a colleague said to me, 鈥業 don鈥檛 know why you鈥檙e even talking, because you鈥檝e got babies at home and that鈥檚 where you should be.鈥 My approach was not to lower myself to that level and just get on and do my job really, really well. You鈥檙e going to get spiteful comments thrown at you at different points in your career and you need to move past them.
I can remember my mum saying to me, 鈥榊ou really need to let go more, you don鈥檛 have to be superwoman.鈥 I鈥檇 listen to all of that and think it was nonsense, but at that point I was still attempting to live up to an impossible standard. I was trying to run a spotless house, bring up the children brilliantly and have a successful career. After my first marriage broke down in the early nineties, I didn鈥檛 want anybody to say to me that I couldn鈥檛 manage. Self-reliance was very important to me and for a long time it was a necessity as I was on my own.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think for me success can ever be just about the job. It鈥檚 no good having a great job and then a lousy family life.鈥
Being as independent and forceful as I am, I never thought that I would settle down again, but actually I have learnt that I like to have somebody to lean on. I think I was a bit deluded to believe I could do it all myself. My husband taught me to share the load and to achieve a better balance. I have a very active life, but it needs to be about more than work. I enjoy going to a party, or heading off to the spa with my girlfriends or setting myself a new physical challenge. It鈥檚 also important to have some down time and a really good support structure. I used not to have that and without it life can be really, really miserable.
I don鈥檛 think for me success can ever be just about the job. It鈥檚 no good having a great job and then a lousy family life. I think you need to do the best you can and it鈥檚 down to you to define what that means, it鈥檚 no good somebody else doing it for you. You鈥檒l earn respect just from the fact that everybody knows you鈥檙e giving all you can.
I was fifty-five in January, so I do wonder what the next few years will hold. Will I stay at work? Will I retire early? My husband and I both have a dream to live by the sea and sail. My daughter鈥檚 married and my son has gone off travelling, so there is a bit of empty-nest syndrome, but I can鈥檛 imagine that I鈥檓 going to put my feet up and start knitting any day soon.
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