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Plastic Surgery; A Must-Have Career Tool ?


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By Steven Foley - Posted on 30 April 2008

Earlier this month a blogger named Penelope Trunk who’s also a columnist for the Boston Globe wrote an interesting article about how plastic surgery may be the next must-have career tool!

In the article she takes a look at studies done by author Gordon Patzer who’s recent research for his new book Looks: Why They Matter More Than You Ever Imagined explores the advantages, good “looks” have on society, business, and life in general from birth onward.

In fact, did you know that highly attractive people may earn from 7.5 -15% more than their average looking colleagues? It’s true... a study by the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis and reported by CNN Money.com made the following finding:

Quote:
Economists also found that women considered obese in terms of their body mass index (BMI) in both 1981 and 1988 earned 17 percent less than women within their recommended BMI range.

Penelope explains why it’s economically beneficial for a company’s bottom line to pay for good-looking executives and offers three things you can do to if you’re not good-looking.

Quote:
And, while good-looking executives cost a company more money (because they have higher salaries), they actually increase the bottom line so much that the unconscious premium in pay that people give to the good-looking is actually a wise investment.

So what should you do if you are not good looking?

1. Stay out of sales and management.

These areas are where tall, good-looking people have the strongest advantage in objective performance measures, according to a study by management professors Daniel Cable, of the University of North Carolina, and Timothy Judge of University of Florida. This makes sense to me because leadership is so much about charisma, and charisma is so much about looks. And it makes sense that people will buy more stuff from you if they are attracted to you. (Hence the huge industry of turning cheerleaders into salesgirls.)

2. Be honest with yourself.

The more honest we are about where looks matter a lot, the less time we’ll waste doing something we probably won’t excel at. (This is where women have an advantage over men because women better understand where they fall in the spectrum of good-looking.)

For example, all else being equal, a good-looking woman will negotiate better for a company than anyone else—even a good-looking man, according to research by Sara Solnick of the University of Miami and Maurice Schweitzer from Wharton. Good-looking women drive harder bargains than everyone else, and good-looking women get more concessions than anyone else. (Makes sense, right? Since these are the women in highest demand for reproducing, the genes for good looks must come with genes for having a sense of entitlement when it comes to negotiating a good deal.)

3. Get plastic surgery. Maybe.

Before you get all over me about how insane this advice is, think about this: When I was a young girl, I remember hearing women talk about if it was “okay to dye your hair.” Today we don’t think twice about it. No one cares if you do or don’t, and many styles actually emphasize unnatural hair colors.

To be honest, I am way too scared to cut anything on myself. But still, plastic surgery makes total sense to me.

We don’t flinch when we hear that Cameron Diaz got a nose job or Brad Pitt had his ears pinned. It seems like a reasonable thing to do given their profession. And look at Chelsea Clinton. She did a few changes just as she hit the adult world as a consultant at McKinsey. She’s not an idiot, and she certainly does not seem obsessed by her appearance. But she realized that she was not great looking, and the plastic surgery seems to have made some improvements.

Now, I concede this is a very big “Maybe” and I’m sure most doctors would advise against it but is there merit here? Cosmetic surgery is sought for many reasons -- some medical, some out of necessity, and some just out of pure vanity -- but is it possible, that in order to get ahead and to make an equal or better salary than your peers, we may see plastic surgery done as a career move?



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