Poker Articles
High stakes poker games are no longer the sole
province of men. Increasingly, women are playing (“power poker”)—the
mind-bending game of bets, raises, bluffs and calls— that
is sometimes played with cards.
It is not that the men who once dominated these tables with iron
fists have suddenly turned soft-hearted and accommodating; it is
that women have toughened up by hunkering down to their poker studies.
Bobby Baldwin, CEO of Mirage Resorts, Incorporated and a former
World Series of Poker Champion, once noted that The only difference
between the poker room and the boardroom is the shape of the table
and truly, I approach the card tables as I do business meetings;
carefully observing the participants and analyzing the risk/reward
ratios that apply to the subject at hand. The big winners are the
savviest negotiators and women who combine their theoretical studies
of the game with their natural intuitiveness, and a dash of feminity
are rapidly moving up in the ranks of big winners. .
In poker there are four major negotiating strategies::
Betting with absolute strength (a hand that is indisputably the
winner, or in poker parlance having “the nuts.”) Here
there are various betting options to maximize profits, such as betting
big and hoping that someone else takes the bait and tries to bluff
you out of the hand, or perhaps betting less to draw an opponent
into the fray. I usually lead aggressively with strength and often
reel in the “macho moron.” Women can be macho morons
as well as men!
Betting with comparative strength (a hand that is better than your
opponent’s but not necessarily a strong hand). Here, mediocre
holdings can win if you “read” your opponent, expertly—
accurately cataloging his strategies or specific actions in prior
hands and studying his demeanor and mannerisms, to determine if
you have the upper hand. In poker lexicon, a player’s unconscious
signals of information about his hand are called “tells.”
If you are lucky enough to discover a surefire “tell”
in an opponent, there will be times when you will be playing against
him as if his cards were dealt face up!
Betting with potential (a “semi-bluff” hand). This
hand is probably inferior to your opponent’s at an early stage
in the betting. You must “draw” favorable cards in a
later betting round to beat him. To semi-bluff effectively, you
must calculate quickly and accurately the probabilities of winning
the hand and analyze, precisely, the long-term risk/reward ratio
to such a bet.
Betting with position (a hand in which you act after your opponent).
When you have the advantage of being last to act, you are betting
with maximum information about your opponent’s holdings. You
can often bluff effectively in this position, when your opponent
checks his hand or otherwise signals weakness. In effect, you are
betting more on your opponent’s view about his hand than you
are about the quality of your own.
After thoroughly understanding these strategies, you need to develop
a mix of workable techniques that play to your own personal strengths
and avoid revealing your weaknesses.
For example, I am better at sizing up people than recalling hand
histories, so I can “bet with position” more often than
average, while I act more cautiously when a perfect assessment of
comparative strength is necessary to get the money. I mentioned
earlier, I usually lead aggressively with “the goods,”
because both in the poker room and the boardroom I can identify
and therefore target players who are bullies— the ones who
refuse ever to give me credit for a good hand until I prove it in
a showdown.
I have also learned through experience that women can win more
by bluffing less than men. The men who call you when you have absolute
strength—convinced you have nothing, will also call you when
you have nothing in your hands but perspiration.
In poker you take responsibility for your actions—instantly.
The showdown arrives in seconds. In business, the consequences of
your actions may take years to catch up with you.
What I learned in the conference room gave me the tools to become
the first woman to finish in the money at the World Series of Poker.
What I have learned at poker tables is like a graduate curriculum
for fast, clear, thinking on your feet.
Reprinted with Permission

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