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Women Don't Ask

Page 29

by Linda Babcock

standard doesn’t mean as much as the complexity of the job, the infor-

  mation it uses and generates, and the different kinds of relationships

  needed to do the work.”21 In another Harvard Business Review article, in 1997, the MIT management professor Peter Senge wrote, “Almost

  everyone agrees that the command-and-control corporate model will

  not carry us into the twenty-first century. In a world of increasing inter-

  dependence and rapid change, it is no longer possible to figure it out

  from the top.”22

  Jeffrey Pfeffer of Stanford University goes even further. In The Human

  Equation: Building Profits by Putting People First, he argues that “success comes from successfully implementing strategy, not just from having

  one,” and “this implementation capability derives, in large measure,

  from the organization’s people, how they are treated, their skills and

  competencies, and their efforts on behalf of the organization.”23 The

  overarching theme of Pfeffer’s argument is that in the new global econ-

  omy, businesses will only thrive by “putting people first.” This creates

  a pressing need for organizations to focus on the ways in which they

  manage their people: creating high worker morale and building a shared

  sense of commitment to the organization’s success. Doing this requires

  the use of management practices that promote mutual trust and reduce

  status distinctions among workers. It also requires practices that instill

  a sense of “ownership” among employees, such as sharing information

  concerning the financial health and performance of the organization

  and emphasizing that everyone in the organization is working toward

  common goals.

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  Research by the psychologists Richard Wagner and Robert Sternberg

  reinforces the value of this approach to management. Noting the lack

  of any demonstrated link between IQ and job performance, they con-

  clude that mere intelligence and the types of achievement taught and

  measured in schools have little bearing on whether or not someone

  makes a good manager. More important, Wagner and Sternberg con-

  tend, is something they call “tacit knowledge”—the practical intelli-

  gence that enables people to work well with others and motivate them

  to do what they want.24 In an article in the New Yorker, Wagner said

  that “in the real world, everything you do involves working with other

  people. . . . What I.Q. doesn’t pick up is effectiveness at common-sense

  sorts of things, especially working with people.”25

  Research suggests that women may possess more of this type of

  “common sense.” Studies show that men typically adopt more auto-

  cratic (directive, command-and-control) leadership styles while women

  employ more democratic leadership styles that allow subordinates to

  participate in decision making.26 Women’s more inclusive, consensus-

  building leadership styles fit nicely with the ability to manage different

  kinds of relationships emphasized by Drucker, the more collaborative

  management style Senge believes will be necessary in the future, Pfef-

  fer’s emphasis on “putting people first,” and Wagner and Sternberg’s

  belief in the importance of “tacit knowledge.” Research has also found

  that women leaders are more interpersonally oriented than men—more

  concerned with the welfare of the people they work with and with main-

  taining good professional relationships.27 These differences even color

  how women leaders think about their place in their organizations: Where

  a male leader is more likely to see himself at the top of his organization,

  a woman leader is more likely to see herself in the center of hers.28

  Marcela, the nuclear engineer, described her way of asking the people

  she supervises to do what she needs: “I talk about working with people, that people work with me, not for me. . . . I tend to couch things in

  those terms—asking for help, asking for input. . . . ‘I’m in the same boat

  with everybody else; we need to get this done.’ ”

  Cynthia, the chief executive of a large electronics manufacturer, de-

  scribed an early job at which she inherited an administrative office full

  of women who were used to an autocratic management approach.

  (Their previous boss had been male.) Finding this an inefficient, even

  counterproductive, system, Cynthia took a much more collaborative,

  democratic, and facilitative approach—a much more “feminine” ap-

  proach—to managing the office. She pushed her employees to work

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  out problems for themselves and take responsibility for finding solu-

  tions. The office rapidly became much more productive, and these

  gains helped her land an even better job. She has since moved up from

  position to position and is now the top corporate officer of a Fortune

  1000 company.

  As more and more organizations change from the pyramid structures

  of old to flat, more flexible organizations in which power is more dif-

  fuse, control is looser, and there is more interdependence,29 both busi-

  ness scholars and business leaders are starting to recognize the corre-

  spondence between the skills of women like Marcela and Cynthia and

  the new needs of organizations.30 Pulitzer Prize and National Book

  Award winner James MacGregor Burns, in his influential book Leader-

  ship, noted that effective leaders energize and inspire their followers and understand their needs and desires. “The male bias is reflected in the

  false conception of leadership as mere command or control,” he wrote.

  “As leadership comes properly to be seen as a process of leaders engag-

  ing and mobilizing the human needs and aspirations of followers,

  women will be more readily recognized as leaders and men will change

  their own leadership styles.”31 Similarly, Judith Rosener observed that

  “there is a convergence between the need to reinvent today’s organiza-

  tions and the interactive leadership styles of women.”32

  Many women in high management positions are also recognizing the

  need to reinvent today’s organizations—and they feel up to the chal-

  lenge. “Women’s goals used to be to get into management, to get onto

  the boards of Fortune 500 companies, to become CEO,” says Margaret

  Heffernan. “There is a new goal. The aim now is more radical and more

  ambitious: It is to change the game entirely.”33

  All of this suggests that women’s greater participation in the business

  world will not just provide more opportunities for women and greater

  gender equality—it may actually produce a strengthening of business

  culture. By focusing their efforts on cooperating rather than competing,

  women may be able to teach men to negotiate and manage—and lead—

  more effectively. By sharing information rather than hoarding it, women

  may demonstrate the power of a more collaborative approach and

  model ways in which both men and women can make the best decisions

  for themselves and their organizations. By involving others in decision

  making rather than decreeing solutions, women may set a new standard

  for motivating workers to
take pride in their work. And, as Judith Ro-

  sener puts it, by approaching management as a process of linking peo-

  ple rather than ranking them, women may lead the way in designing

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  T H E F E M A L E A D V A N T A G E

  new organizational structures that achieve far higher levels of efficiency

  and profitability.34

  Rather than being a threat to either the power of men or the power

  of our business culture, as men have sometimes feared, and rather than

  weakening business culture by introducing an inappropriate emotional

  dimension or focusing on the wrong things (such as relationships rather

  than outcomes), “Women can transform the workplace by expressing,

  not giving up, their personal values,” contend business writers John

  Naisbitt and Patricia Aburdene in Reinventing the Corporation.35 The psychologist Jean Baker Miller envisions it this way: “I am not suggesting

  that women should soften or ameliorate power—but instead that, by

  their participation, women can strengthen its appropriate operation.

  Women can bring more power to power by using it when needed and

  not using it as a poor substitute for other things—like cooperation.”36

  This is not merely an idealistic goal. It’s a practical one as well. Being

  hampered by the “mythical fixed-pie bias” is like “burning money”—

  the lesser agreements reached instead are often inefficient and, in dollars

  and cents, costly. By leading the way in showing us how to reach better

  overall agreements more of the time, manage more effectively, and de-

  velop new forms of leadership for the new times in which we live,

  women will be contributing to more stable and sophisticated business

  relationships—relationships based on mutual advantage rather than on

  cruder, more competitively defined measures of success. And strong

  business relationships are the hallmark of a healthy economy. By dem-

  onstrating the benefits of approaching power differently, women may

  not only be improving their own position within the larger business

  world, but—as befits an approach that proceeds from a communal im-

  pulse—they may be helping us all.

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  E P I L O G U E

  Negotiating at Home

  Formuchofthisbook,we’vetalkedaboutnegotiatingintermsofthe

  workplace—how women can get to do the work they want to do,

  see that their work is fairly evaluated, make sure they’re paid what

  they’re worth, and proceed as high into the upper levels of their profes-

  sions as their talent and ambition will take them. We’ve focused on

  workplace negotiations not because they’re inherently more important

  than negotiations in other realms, but because most of the existing re-

  search about negotiation looks at workplace situations. We just don’t

  know very much about how the factors that constrain women from

  negotiating for themselves play out in the private sphere. We know that

  the gender gap in asking widens in ambiguous situations without clear

  guidelines,1 and ideas about proper male and female roles have changed

  enough in recent years to suggest that many private situations now lack

  clear guidelines for behavior and feel more ambiguous to women.

  We do have plenty of evidence, however, that learning to negotiate

  more in their private lives, particularly with their spouses or partners,

  may improve women’s lives and their health. Numerous studies, for

  example, have shown that women do far more housework than men,

  take more responsibility for caring for their children, and have far less

  leisure time than their spouses.2 This is true whether they work full-

  time, part-time, or work entirely in the home. Virginia Valian reports:

  “Almost all employed women in heterosexual relationships live in

  households where the division of labor is grossly and visibly inequita-

  ble. . . . The imbalance exists among all groups of women who live with

  men, including professional women. Married women who work for pay

  average about thirty-three hours of housework per week—about two-

  thirds of the total household work. Married men who are employed do

  fourteen to eighteen hours of housework a week.”3

  The impact of this unequal division of household labor is substantial

  and measurable. Research has shown that women with families who

  work full-time experience far higher levels of stress than their male

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  counterparts, and that their excessive stress is due not to the demands

  of their employment but to the weight of their responsibilities at home.

  In one extraordinarily revealing study, researchers periodically mea-

  sured the blood pressure and norepinephrine levels of managers during

  the day. (They chose norepinephrine because this hormone responds

  rapidly to changes in stress.) They found that the male managers’ blood

  pressure and stress-hormone levels dropped dramatically at five P.M.

  but the women managers’ levels actually jacked up as they turned their

  attention from their “first-shift” jobs to their “second-shift” responsibili-

  ties as wives and mothers. Another researcher, who looked at the levels

  of stress hormones in employed mothers and childless women, found

  that the women with children at home excreted higher levels of the

  stress hormone cortisol and reported more stress around home respon-

  sibilities. The amount of stress they experienced around their work re-

  sponsibilities did not differ from the stress experienced by childless

  women.4

  These higher levels of both norepinephrine and cortisol represent a

  genuine threat to women’s health. As Linda Austin reports in What’s

  Holding You Back, “Chronic elevation of blood pressure caused by nor-

  epinephrine secretion . . . is a significant risk factor for heart disease,

  the number one killer of women.”5 Dr. Bruce S. McEwen, director of

  the neuroendocrinology laboratory at Rockefeller University, confirms

  that “prolonged or severe stress has been shown to weaken the immune

  system, strain the heart, damage memory cells in the brain and deposit

  fat at the waist rather than the hips or buttocks (a risk factor for heart

  disease, cancer, and other illnesses).”6 In addition to these threats, stress

  can contribute to aging, depression, rheumatoid arthritis, diabetes, and

  other illnesses.7

  Women pay for shouldering more than their share of household

  work with diminished professional success as well. Numerous studies

  have noted the fact that, as Linda Austin writes, “high achievement and

  heavy domestic responsibilities do not mix.”8 This is not because getting

  married and having children automatically saps a woman’s ambition

  and makes her want to aim less high professionally, but because the

  burden of her responsibilities at home make it impossible for her to

  devote the attention, energy, and time to her career that single or

  childless women can commit. In many cases, this is a choice that

  women happily make. Nonetheless, research has consistently shown

  that working mothers experience more stress and depression than

  working fath
ers do. And, as Linda Austin writes, “the cause of the stress

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  E P I L O G U E

  is frequently misattributed. It is often implied that employment is caus-

  ing women stress and depression and that the remedy is staying home.”

  In fact the opposite is the case: “A study of 3,800 men and women

  concluded that paid employment is associated with reduced depression

  among both husbands and wives, while time spent in housework is

  associated with increased depression for both genders, regardless of

  other roles.”9

  This tells us that working outside the home can be good for a wom-

  an’s mental health, but if she also has children she will find herself

  desperately in need of the skills necessary to make that balancing act

  work. One of the most important skills she will need is the ability to

  negotiate with her spouse or partner. Of course, if her circumstances

  permit it, a woman can choose to work part-time, choose a less aggres-

  sive career track, or decide to put some of her ambitions on hold until

  her children are older. If she is sufficiently affluent, a woman can hire

  people to do some of the household labor she doesn’t have time to do

  (housecleaners, nannies, gardeners—even cooks and personal assis-

  tants). Any of these are fine choices for a woman to make if she can.

  And none of them change the fact that caring for children and running

  a household take a lot of work, and it makes sense for both adult part-

  ners in a relationship to do a fair proportion of that work. Negotiation

  can be a useful strategy for establishing a more equitable distribution

  of this workload.

  Thinking about It Differently

  Shortly before her first child was born, Emma, the social science re-

  searcher, said to her husband, “How are you going to care for your child

  while you are at work?” Her husband was taken aback—he had not

  considered that this was a problem he needed to solve. He’d assumed

  that Emma would make whatever adjustments needed to be made to

  see that their child was properly cared for. Emma told Sara that she

  frequently repeats this story to groups of women, and they always re-

  spond with a kind of shocked delight, applauding her for her daring.

  Their response reveals the assumptions made by most women: Since

  they have always done the lion’s share of the childcare and housework,

 

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