Product Details
Working Mother (1-year)

Working Mother (1-year)

List Price: $28.00
Price: $9.97 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
Issues:8 issues / 12 months

Availability: Your first issue should arrive in 12-16 weeks.

Average customer review:

Product Description

This magazine is edited for career-committed working mothers who have made the decision to raise a family while pursuing their personal growth to manage a successful career. The magazine provides advice on child care, children's education, growth and development, health and well-being, personal health, fashion and beauty, career options, work/family issues, family finances, food and nutrition.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #359 in Magazine Subscriptions
  • Formats: Magazine Subscription, Print

Customer Reviews

Not what I was looking for...2
I would hoping this magazine would be something helpful to us "average" working mothers (read: not high-ups in a big corporation). I would love to read articles on time management, handling guilt, finding a good daycare, etc. Instead, this magazine prints lots of articles on what other companies are doing that's great for working moms (good for them, what does that help me?) and profiles women who make 6-figure salaries while raising kids. I'm sure there's a target audience out there who like this magazine, but it sure isn't me. Let me emphasize, too, that I'm not the mom who hates her job but works to put foot on the table. I like my job and choose to work, but I just don't find this magazine helpful or interesting at all. Highly disappointing.

Good articles4
I find that this magazine has a lot of informative articles and provides plenty of information for working mothers, regardless of what industry one may be employed in. It is nice to have a magazine that targets the working professional who juggles home, career and family!

Not for your regular working mom1
I bought Working Mother thinking that it would be filled with great tips on time management, recipes for food kids will actually eat (and don't take all day to prepare) and fashion tips for people who shop at JCPenney, not Banana Republic or Bloomingdales. This wasn't the magazine for that. It might be great for high-end moms who make $100k and have nannies but it seems to be oblivious to other working mom needs.