In her 2014 eye-opening
article for the Harvard Business Review, author Tara Sophia Mohr discussed Why
Women Don’t Apply for Jobs Unless They’re 100% Qualified:
You’ve probably heard the following statistic: Men apply for a job
when they meet only 60% of the qualifications, but women apply only if they
meet 100% of them. The finding comes from a Hewlett Packard internal report,
and has been quoted in Lean In, The Confidence Code, and dozens of articles.
It’s usually invoked as evidence that women need more confidence. As one Forbes
article put it, “Men are confident about their ability at 60%, but women don’t
feel confident until they’ve checked off each item on the list.” The advice:
women need to have more faith in themselves.
Fortunately,
Mohr was skeptical of these findings and decided to survey over a thousand men
and women, predominantly American professionals. She asked them, “If you
decided not to apply for a job because you didn’t meet all the qualifications,
why didn’t you apply?” She discovered that the barrier to applying was not lack
of confidence, at least according to the self-reporting of the respondents. In
fact, according to the table below, “I didn’t think I could do the job well”
was the least common of all the responses for both men and women.
Although it
is certainly true that many of us could use an extra dose of confidence, if we
listened only to the advice from the Lean In/Confidence Code bull horn, we
would be doing ourselves a great disservice. We would be internalizing and
personalizing the problem, putting all the weight of this dilemma on our own
shoulders (sound familiar?), and assuming that the external environment, the
world out there, was a level playing field. The bottom line is that there is
more to it than just confidence (internal), and this missing societal component
(external) is fundamentally important.
According to
their 2014 ground-breaking book, What
Works for Women at Work: Four Patterns Working Women Need to Know, authors Joan
Williams and Rachel Dempsey tell us that women need to prove themselves over
and over, where a similarly situated male colleague does not. In an article for
Gender News, author Adrienne Rose Johnson writes,
“Men
are often judged on their potential, but women are judged on their
achievements,” Williams explains, adding that women have to provide more evidence
of competence to be considered as competent as their male colleagues. What's
more, “women’s mistakes tend to be noticed more and remembered longer, but
women’s successes tend to be attributed to luck.” Williams calls this pattern
“prove it again.” Women literally need to prove themselves over and over again,
where a similarly situated male colleague does not, she explains. The obvious
solution to this problem would be for women to engage in serious
self-promotion, by broadcasting their accomplishments and minimizing their
faults. But, says Williams, self-promotion has its pitfalls. No one likes a
braggart, especially if she is a woman. Instead, coworkers expect women to be
modest and community-minded.
The Posse
Solution
Fortunately, Williams
and Dempsey don’t just leave us hanging, but rather, offer us a possible way
out of this societal dilemma – the posse. The posse
is a group of people that agree to celebrate each other’s successes.
Again, author Adrienne Rose Johnson writes,
“Women are
supposed to be modest,” Williams says, but “the posse allows you to do something
very appropriate—to celebrate someone else’s successes. Meanwhile, of course,
though, they are celebrating yours.” So, rather than Sally sending a
company-wide e-mail to announce her own achievement, a posse member, Rhonda,
sends a company-wide email announcing Sally’s achievement. Williams shows
that “the posse works because it takes traditionally feminine behavior—being
selfless and communal—and uses it to soften [self-promoting] behavior that
might be seen as too masculine otherwise.”
Walking the Tightrope
Schemas are hypotheses or stereotypes that we all use as a shortcut to
interpret social events. Since the highest levels of all prestigious
professions are occupied primarily by men, a professional woman operates within
a perceived discord between two schemas: female and professional, which is perceived
by society as male (see Valian’s Why
So Slow? The Advancement of Women). A
man’s success matches the masculine schema, so it is easy for him to take
credit and it is easy for all of us (society) to give him credit. A women’s
success also matches the masculine schema, so either she views herself as having
masculine traits or as having succeeded by luck or extraordinary effort. Relative
to men, women see luck as more important for both success and failure. Women
walk a line between being liked but not respected—or respected but not liked. Women
cannot be viewed as too feminine or masculine because this increases the schema mismatch. Adrienne Rose Johnson
writes,
An
example of how women experience the tightrope is “office housework,” meaning
the important work that keeps an office running but that does not advance one’s
career. Often these tasks default to women, who are expected to do the
housework to be liked. But, if they do too much, they do not get their “real”
job done, and they lose respect. As a solution, Williams suggests using a
strategic “No.” Women can say “Yes” to one or two pieces of office housework,
then say “No” and provide alternatives for the rest. By agreeing to some office
housework, a woman demonstrates her commitment to the team. And by saying “No”
in a way that offers a solution, she is still showing her commitment to the
team but putting her foot down just enough to allow time to get to the rest of
her important work.
Summing Up
This
topic has come up at least three times in the past few months, but only the confidence
side of the problem. The latest was during a Women in Business Leadership
workshop at UNC. In each incidence, I opened up the PowerPoint for a talk I
have given several times called, “Hidden Obstacles to Success: Unconscious Bias,
Stereotype Threat, and Impostor Syndrome.” That’s where I had laid out these
arguments. It is very important to know both the internal (confidence) and external
(societal double standard) components of this issue so we can decide how we
want to react to a particular situation. When we hear the advice, “pick your
battles,” this is the information we need to make the right choice.
PS The WIB Leadership
workshop was awesome, and I hope to write more about it if I can block out a
bit of time and muster the required creative energy!
6 comments :
One of the most useful posts I've read yet on this blog! So many useful strategies. Thanks Joan.
Thanks, Sarah! It has been a while since I've posted (super busy, stressful job), but the attention this post has gotten has motivated me to scope out more time.
A very insightful blog about the hidden factors that hold women back in the workforce. I especially liked the tips to move beyond awareness to actual strategies.
Thank you for taking the time to write this blog! Very informative
Thanks Connie & Carole. Please look out for a new post in this Leadership series on the importance of Networking. I hope it will be coming out soon.
In the article: "“I didn’t think I could do the job well” was the least common of all the responses for both men and women." This is false. If you look at the stats you've presented, the least common response for man was "I was following the guidelines..." It's important to be precise! Moreover, looking at the same stats, the biggest *difference* between man and woman is seen in the "I didn't think they would hire me [...] I didn't want to fail", that is more common in woman than man. So for me this is evidence that yes, it is a confidence problem and daring to take risks issue, but I might be over-reading this.
And as a young female researcher, I really dislike the "posse" idea. I am then to look for a group women-friends that will have my back? Isn't this the continuation of another stereotypical view of women, that we have our "girl groups" and need these groups in order to succeed?
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