"Be the Key: Ten Korean Women on Careers, Culture, and Identity" is a deeply human and refreshingly honest exploration of what it means to shape a career, a sense of self, and a purpose--across cultures, expectations, and moments of doubt.
>From confronting patriarchal norms in male-dominated industries to navigating motherhood while managing high-pressure roles, these stories offer no illusions about ease or perfection. One author shares what it felt like to present the same proposal four times until it finally succeeded. Another recalls pumping breast milk in the newsroom bathroom while covering politics. Others reflect on corporate survival training in the Scandinavian wilderness or negotiating promotions in environments where job titles mattered more than talent. These are not tales of polished triumph, but of persistence, reinvention, and deeply personal growth.
The authors first met through the British Embassy in Seoul and the British Chamber of Commerce's EMPOWER program--a year-long initiative that connected women professionals through mentorship, storytelling, and mutual support. That shared experience led to the group's first book, published in Korean in 2024. Encouraged by readers who said the stories gave them courage and comfort, the group decided to write again--this time in English, reaching out to a global audience. With support from the Australia-Korea Foundation, their reflections continued to evolve through a creative project in Melbourne, where new cross-cultural encounters shaped the pages of this book.
"Be the Key" is not a linear success manual nor a prescriptive guide to leadership. Instead, it offers something quieter and more enduring: the voices of women who have grown by questioning, adapting, stumbling, and continuing. The book honors those who are often overlooked--those who lead not by command but by clarity, who turn inward not to hide but to listen, and who find power in connection over competition.
This is a book for readers who seek meaningful stories about becoming--whether in the early stages of a career, during a period of transition, or in search of direction in an unfamiliar world. It speaks to those navigating cultural dualities, managing expectations, or simply wondering if they are allowed to want something different. Above all, it reminds us that change doesn't come from waiting. It comes from turning the key--and realizing we've had it all along.
Be the Key: Ten Korean Women on Careers, Culture, and Identity
by Saeyoung Park (Author), Serena Jeong (Author), Minyoung Kim (Author), Soeun (Sarah) Lee (Author), Narai Kim (Author), Victoria Yi (Author), EJ Choi (Author), Sangeun Kim (Author), Yousun Lim (Author), HeeJung Rim (Author), Josie Daw (Editor)