Women Don't Ask

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Women Don't Ask Page 18

by Linda Babcock


  Marcela knows, in private, that she has accomplished a great deal,

  but she’s aware of the risks entailed in publicly acknowledging this. She

  also admitted that if she doesn’t receive an award or a bonus that she

  feels she deserves, “I would never ask for it. If it wasn’t freely given, I

  wouldn’t ask for it. I might gripe about it at home, but that would be

  the extent of it.”

  Ways of Asking and Getting

  Ellen, the senior partner at a law firm, told us that when she was a

  teenager, her father said to her: “Honey, you know you can’t act like a

  tiger. You have to act like a kitten.” His point was clear: To get what

  she wants, a woman can’t be too aggressive or direct. Although society

  has changed in many ways since Ellen was a child, women still need to

  be careful about “coming on too strong.” Fortunately, women can be

  careful and—some of the time—still get what they want. Recent re-

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  search has identified ways for women to be influential and effective

  without making themselves less likeable and bringing social sanctions

  down on their heads. This research has shown that for women, the key

  to safely and successfully exercising their influence is to be “nice.” Like

  being likeable, being “nice” is expected of women—it’s a gender norm

  requirement. To be “nice,” a woman must seem friendly, act concerned

  about the needs and feelings of others, and avoid being confrontational.

  Several studies have demonstrated the efficacy of this approach for

  women.

  The social psychologists Linda Carli, Suzanne LaFleur, and Christo-

  pher Lober videotaped male and female research assistants trying to

  persuade their peers to agree with a particular point of view—in this

  case, that it would be better not to make any changes in the cafeteria

  meal plan at their university (an unpopular opinion to hold). The re-

  searchers videotaped eight different versions of the same script, four

  with a man making the argument and four with a woman. The text and

  the message were the same in all eight versions, but the actors in the

  videos were coached to use different nonverbal behavior strategies in

  each: a “dominant style” (making constant eye contact, using a lot of

  hand gestures, speaking in a loud angry voice, and tightening their face

  muscles so that they appeared tense); a “submissive style” (avoiding eye

  contact, making nervous gestures with their hands, speaking in a soft

  unsteady voice, stammering and hesitating, slouching); a “task-oriented

  style” (frequently making eye contact, using only calm hand move-

  ments, speaking rapidly and with few hesitations); and a “social style”

  (leaning toward the audience, using unintrusive gestures, acting re-

  laxed, communicating “friendliness and affiliation,” smiling). After the

  researchers screened the videotapes for mixed male and female audi-

  ences, they asked them to rate how much they agreed with each speak-

  er’s point of view (this served as an overall measure of the speaker’s

  ability to influence); they also asked them to rate each speaker on a

  number of qualities, such as how likeable, competent, and threatening

  he or she seemed.71 The audiences found that male speakers were most

  influential when they used a “task-oriented style” (rather than any other

  style) but that a “social style” worked best for women.

  Other research by the sociologist Cecilia Ridgeway supports this

  finding. Placing female confederates in mixed male and female groups

  that were instructed to make a series of decisions, she found that the

  women were most influential in the groups when they were “friendly,

  cooperative, confident, but nonconfrontational, and considerate.”72

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  They were able to exert far less influence on the group’s decision making

  when they acted merely self-confident and behaved in a self-interested

  way. This finding and the results of another study led Ridgeway to con-

  clude: “Women seeking to assert authority can mitigate the legitimacy

  problems they face by combining their assertive, highly competent be-

  haviors with positive social ‘softeners.’ . . . Using such techniques,

  highly competent women can overcome others’ resistance and win in-

  fluence and compliance. . . . The positive consequences of such tech-

  niques are not trivial. They allow very competent women to break

  through the maze of constraints created by gender status to wield au-

  thority. This begins to undermine the structural arrangements in society

  that support gender status beliefs.”73

  The psychologists Laurie Rudman and Peter Glick, in a study looking

  at hiring situations, produced similar results: Women were more likely

  to be hired when they paired competence with “communal” behavior

  (such as demonstrating an interest in the needs and challenges of those

  hiring them) than when they paired competence with more “agentic”

  behavior (such as focusing more on their own needs and ambitions).74

  As Rudman and Glick write, self-oriented or “agentic” women “are

  viewed as socially deficient, compared with identically presented

  men.”75 Being perceived as “socially deficient” may make a woman seem

  threatening. At the very least, it can make her seem less likeable and

  reduce her ability to influence others and get what she wants.

  All of these studies tell us that when women go into a negotiation,

  in addition to arming themselves with information, ideas, and resolve,

  they must also bring along an arsenal of “friendly,” nonthreatening so-

  cial mannerisms; they must be prepared to be cooperative and inter-

  ested in the needs of others; and they must avoid being confronta-

  tional.76 This does not mean they need to back down or give in. Imagine

  that a woman who likes her job but feels underpaid receives a job offer

  from another company for more money. If she goes into her boss’s office

  and says “I’ve received an offer for $xx,000 more and I’m going to take

  it if you don’t match that salary,” he may react badly to her direct ap-

  proach and tell her to take the other job. Starting out with something

  like, “Hi, I need to talk to you about my salary; is now a good time?” can

  set a different tone for the negotiation. Demonstrating that she knows he

  has many demands on his time shows concern for him and his situation.

  If he agrees to talk, she could explain that she’s been offered the other

  job and mention the salary that goes with it. Then she might say, “I

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  really enjoy working for you, but I have to consider this offer because

  it’s for so much more money. You’ve always treated me fairly and I want

  to be fair to you by letting you know about this offer.” She might also

  say that she’ll stay if he matches the salary she’s been offered. This will

  not only reinforce that she cares about the relationship, it will also frame

  the situation positively (she wants to stay) rather than posing it as a

 
threat (she’ll go if he doesn’t meet her demands).

  Although this approach can often produce better results, many

  women (including the two of us) may resent that women have to work

  so hard not to offend in this type of situation. As Ridgeway writes, “there

  is a price associated with such techniques as well: They inadvertently

  reaffirm gender stereotypes that require women to be ‘nicer’ than men

  in order to exercise equivalent power and authority.”77 Rudman and

  Glick also concede that this puts an extra burden on women: “Treading

  the fine line of appearing competent, ambitious, and competitive, but

  not at the expense of others, is a tall order. . . . To the extent that women

  have to maintain a ‘bilingual’ impression of themselves (as both nice

  and able) in order not to be perceived as overbearing and dominant,

  their situation is more difficult and tenuous in comparison to their male

  counterparts.”78

  The psychologist Janice Yoder goes further: “Relying on women

  themselves to compensate for structural inequities is inherently unfair,

  even to successful women, and makes less successful women vulnerable

  to self-blame and victim blaming from others.”79 Although this is un-

  doubtedly true, more pragmatic scholars prefer to point to the positive

  aspects of these findings, which can, in fact, help women. Social psy-

  chologist Linda Carli argues that more friendly, social behaviors need

  not be seen as expressing weakness or an excessive desire to please since

  studies show that communal behaviors (such as smiling) do not suggest

  low status.80 She believes that pairing assertive and communal behaviors

  can allow women to become more successful and that these behaviors

  can be a source of real power. And while earlier research has suggested

  that acting tentative, apologetic, and uncertain (the Bully Broads ap-

  proach) can also reduce the threat competent women pose in male do-

  mains, this type of behavior has the negative side-effect of making

  women appear less competent.81 Using a friendly, social style provides

  a more attractive alternative, since it minimizes the threat posed by a

  woman in a leadership role while still communicating competence and

  self-confidence.

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  Whether or not this advice seems offensive or useful, it appears that

  successful women have taken heed. Research on the leadership styles

  of men and women has found that highly successful women do employ

  more communal types of behavior and a softer style than equally suc-

  cessful men.82 An article in the June 10, 2002, issue of Fortune provides a good example of a woman whose social style has clearly helped her

  gain great power and influence in her field. The article, about the stock

  research firm Sanford C. Bernstein, described the personal style of the

  firm’s then-chair and CEO, Sally Krawcheck, 37. Sanford C. Bernstein

  was famous for making tough calls and never pulling its punches. Bern-

  stein would downgrade a stock every other firm was promoting and

  put out “buy” recommendations on stocks no one else wanted to touch.

  And the firm had an excellent track record for making good calls, which

  turns out to be unusual for securities analysts. How did Krawcheck

  succeed in running such a hard-hitting, uncompromising enterprise

  without suffering the punishment many women encounter for rising

  too high in their professions? What allowed her to become such an

  effective leader in a male-dominated field without being called a bitch

  or being sent to Bully Broads? Explained writer David Rynecki: “She

  has a gracious, refined manner that masks her toughness.”83

  Smart Women, Smart Choices

  How can the information we’ve presented in this chapter help women

  ensure that their work is fairly evaluated and free them to pursue their

  professional and personal ambitions without fear of punishment? We

  see three courses.

  The first and perhaps most obvious is for women to start their own

  businesses. As the C200 Index figures demonstrated, many women

  have already given up trying to get fair treatment in conventional busi-

  ness settings and have decided to strike out on their own.

  A second possibility is for women who work in male-dominated

  industries or organizations to do everything they can to reduce their

  token status: recruiting other women to their fields and their firms;

  mentoring younger women and helping them rise to higher levels; and

  working actively to build networks of women that can provide the same

  benefits men’s networks have traditionally provided. These include

  serving as conduits for information, providing opportunities to establish

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  strong relationships with peers in related fields, and creating sources of

  mutual support.

  The third course involves choosing wisely. Women can seek out

  firms where a lot of women already do what they want to do. Even in

  occupations that are mostly male-dominated, some firms will have more

  women performing those functions than others. Research has shown

  that a “lifting of sanctions” begins to occur when the percentage of

  women in a particular environment reaches about 15 percent; when 35

  to 40 percent of the people in a given environment are women, the

  range of behaviors allowed to women widens considerably and the envi-

  ronment can actually become quite hospitable to women.84 Women can

  also choose firms with an organizational culture that supports female

  advancement, discourages stereotyping, and maintains an open and

  well-structured system for evaluating people.

  A well-structured evaluation system is particularly key, and several

  aspects of how a firm evaluates its people can make a big difference for

  women. First, women fare better when an evaluation process is more

  structured, includes clearly understood benchmarks, and is less open

  to subjective judgments.85 A situation in which everyone at a particular

  level, in a particular group, or performing a particular function must

  meet similar performance benchmarks can work very well for women,

  for example. Second, women do better and suffer less harm from nega-

  tive stereotypes about their competence when they are evaluated for

  their individual work products rather than for their contributions to the

  work of a team. When a team performs well or achieves a high level of

  productivity, evaluators can attribute the team’s good performance to

  any one of the team members—and a woman on the team is least likely

  to be seen as responsible for the group’s success.86

  Choosing wisely also involves feeling entitled to “shop” for a job by

  doing plenty of research before you decide where to apply—and

  then asking questions during the application and interview process. In

  a “Careers” column in Fortune, Matthew Boyle offers this advice: “The

  first step, often overlooked, is to find out what suits you. . . . Then it’s

  time to find out who offers that specific environment.” Once you’ve

  done this much legwork and you’re considering a particu
lar company,

  Boyle says “ask how you’ll be evaluated.” He quotes Thomas Tierney,

  former CEO of Bain & Co., who said “It’s amazing how many people

  don’t ask that. . . . You’re going to sign up for a game and not know

  how the score is kept?”87

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  Transforming the Context

  We don’t mean to suggest that only women need to change. As a society,

  as managers and coworkers and clients and friends, we all need to ex-

  amine our responses to women when they behave in ways more typi-

  cally thought of as “masculine.” Managers, in particular, need to recog-

  nize that stereotypes can influence how they evaluate people without

  their knowing it. They need to take strong steps to prevent this from

  happening when women are performing jobs that have traditionally

  been performed by men or when the proportion of women doing a

  particular job is very small. They need to establish transparent evalua-

  tion processes and criteria that minimize the impact of subjective re-

  sponses in performance evaluations. By teaching themselves to react

  differently to women who assert themselves, and consistently applying

  fixed and well-known standards to the work of everyone they supervise,

  male or female, managers will free women to promote their own inter-

  ests without censure or blame. Doing so will help them retain talented

  employees in whom their firms have invested substantial resources. But

  they shouldn’t do it just because it’s good business. As a result of the

  courage and persistence of one woman, it’s also now the law.

  In 1982, Ann Hopkins was the only woman out of 88 people being

  considered for partner at the accounting firm Price Waterhouse. Hop-

  kins had brought in $25 million in business and billed more hours that

  year than any of the 87 men, yet she was rejected for partner. “Her style

  was assertive, task-oriented, and instrumental,” writes Virginia Valian.

  “She had all the qualities that gender schemas dictate successful men

  should have. Her problem was that she wasn’t a man.”88 Hopkins sued,

  pressed her case all the way to the Supreme Court, and won each time.

  Instrumental in the case was the testimony of Susan Fiske, a research

  psychologist and expert on how stereotypes can influence people’s

  judgment. Relying on Fiske’s testimony and on an amicus curiae (friend of the court) brief filed by the American Psychological Association, the

 

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