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Speaking While Female, with Sheryl Sandberg

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By Sheryl Sandberg and Adam Grant

Years ago, while producing the hit TV series “The Shield,” Glen Mazzara noticed that two young female writers were quiet during story meetings. He pulled them aside and encouraged them to speak up more.

Watch what happens when we do, they replied.

Almost every time they started to speak, they were interrupted or shot down before finishing their pitch. When one had a good idea, a male writer would jump in and run with it before she could complete her thought.

Sadly, their experience is not unusual.

We’ve both seen it happen again and again. When a woman speaks in a professional setting, she walks a tightrope. Either she’s barely heard or she’s judged as too aggressive. When a man says virtually the same thing, heads nod in appreciation for his fine idea. As a result, women often decide that saying less is more.

Some new studies support our observations. A study by a Yale psychologist, Victoria L. Brescoll, found that male senators with more power (as measured by tenure, leadership positions and track record of legislation passed) spoke more on the Senate floor than their junior colleagues. But for female senators, power was not linked to significantly more speaking time.

Suspecting that powerful women stayed quiet because they feared a backlash, Professor Brescoll looked deeper. She asked professional men and women to evaluate the competence of chief executives who voiced their opinions more or less frequently. Male executives who spoke more often than their peers were rewarded with 10 percent higher ratings of competence. When female executives spoke more than their peers, both men and women punished them with 14 percent lower ratings. As this and other research shows, women who worry that talking “too much” will cause them to be disliked are not paranoid; they are often right.

One of us, Adam, was dismayed to find similar patterns when studying a health care company and advising an international bank. When male employees contributed ideas that brought in new revenue, they got significantly higher performance evaluations. But female employees who spoke up with equally valuable ideas did not improve their managers’ perception of their performance. Also, the more the men spoke up, the more helpful their managers believed them to be. But when women spoke up more, there was no increase in their perceived helpfulness.

This speaking-up double bind harms organizations by depriving them of valuable ideas. A University of Texas researcher, Ethan Burris, conducted an experiment in which he asked teams to make strategic decisions for a bookstore. He randomly informed one member that the bookstore’s inventory system was flawed and gave that person data about a better approach. In subsequent analyses, he found that when women challenged the old system and suggested a new one, team leaders viewed them as less loyal and were less likely to act on their suggestions. Even when all team members were informed that one member possessed unique information that would benefit the group, suggestions from women with inside knowledge were discounted.

Obviously, businesses need to find ways to interrupt this gender bias. Just as orchestras that use blind auditions increase the number of women who are selected,organizations can increase women’s contributions by adopting practices that focus less on the speaker and more on the idea. For example, in innovation tournaments, employees submit suggestions and solutions to problems anonymously. Experts evaluate the proposals, give feedback to all participants and then implement the best plans.

Since most work cannot be done anonymously, leaders must also take steps to encourage women to speak and be heard. At “The Shield,” Mr. Mazzara, the show runner, found a clever way to change the dynamics that were holding those two female employees back. He announced to the writers that he was instituting a no-interruption rule while anyone — male or female — was pitching. It worked, and he later observed that it made the entire team more effective.

The long-term solution to the double bind of speaking while female is to increase the number of women in leadership roles. (As we noted in our previous article, researchshows that when it comes to leadership skills, although men are more confident, women are more competent.) As more women enter the upper echelons of organizations, people become more accustomed to women’s contributing and leading. Professor Burris and his colleagues studied a credit union where women made up 74 percent of supervisors and 84 percent of front-line employees. Sure enough, when women spoke up there, they were more likely to be heard than men. When President Obama held his last news conference of 2014, he called on eight reporters — all women. It made headlines worldwide. Had a politician given only men a chance to ask questions, it would not have been news; it would have been a regular day.

As 2015 starts, we wonder what would happen if we all held Obama-style meetings, offering women the floor whenever possible. Doing this for even a day or two might be a powerful bias interrupter, demonstrating to our teams and colleagues that speaking while female is still quite difficult.

Speaking While Female, with Sheryl Sandberg | Adam Grant | LinkedIn

@Spring Onion @levina @Blue_Eyes @Aamna Ali @Akheilos @syedali73 @MastanKhan


Readers and commentators (if I get any) please refrain from trolling, turning this thread into any vs. and gender biases while sharing your experiences. Thank you.
 
Long story short every one is a sexist.
 
I agree on this :P

Examples? They may be competent but one thing what I have personally experienced is a bit lacking in pressure handling. And pressure handling for me is one of the key attributes of leadership :)
 
come on... sheryl sandberg is a mba-type corporate officer with a capitalist useless company called fake-book, sorry, facebook... what authority has she to speak on anything...

i would prefer people to listen to this lady... ( Gwynne Shotwell - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia )... she is ceo of spacex.
 
come on... sheryl sandberg is a mba-type corporate officer with a capitalist useless company called fake-book, sorry, facebook... what authority has she to speak on anything...

i would prefer people to listen to this lady... ( Gwynne Shotwell - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia )... she is ceo of spacex.

Does jamahir requires one to hold some high position to get his / her valid argument presented and to be heard of?

I think she is spot on and this happens in real world (not all MNCs or organisations), it is sort of a social evil if you ask me.
 
Does jamahir requires one to hold some high position to get his / her valid argument presented and to be heard of?

I think she is spot on and this happens in real world (not all MNCs or organisations), it is sort of a social evil if you ask me.

no high position required to speak truths and question wrongs. :-)

i was only saying that she claims to speak of anti-female attitudes among western company boards but she ignores the bigger issue of the useless-ness of most of those companies... it is like obsessing about a needle-prick wound when the body is afflicted with cancer.

look at how western capitalism acts against female-ness... selling them botox treatments that actually make them look ugly... selling them gym equipment that makes them lose their chubbiness and feminine-ness and seeks to turn them into androgynous figures... selling them college degrees that turns them into wage-slaves for life... selling them "must have" consumer goods ( like the latesht cell phone ) that are totally useless in reality... such bigger things.
 
Examples? They may be competent but one thing what I have personally experienced is a bit lacking in pressure handling. And pressure handling for me is one of the key attributes of leadership :)
Indian House Wives,Neerja Bhanot, or see me :D I can handle much pressure, as the other day you almost tried to fight with me but I just escaped that with a smile :D or quote any 1 post of mine where i was low or sad or angry despite being abused many times :P
 
i was only saying that she claims to speak of anti-female attitudes among western company boards but she ignores the bigger issue of the useless-ness of most of those companies... it is like obsessing about a needle-prick wound when the body is afflicted with cancer.

A needle prick can latter on cause a cancer as well. Forget about the boards just come down the line and imagine a meeting of managers e.g. and make it more specific to our sub continent societies, do you think women would be heard in those meetings with their peers the same way their male counterparts?


look at how western capitalism acts against female-ness... selling them botox treatments that actually make them look ugly... selling them gym equipment that makes them lose their chubbiness and feminine-ness and seeks to turn them in androgynous figures... selling them college degrees that turns them into wage-slaves for life... selling them "must have" consumer goods ( like the latesht cell phone ) that are totally useless in reality... such bigger things.

I have not seen Western capitalism forcing botox or cosmetics on females. I see what your POV is but let me ask you what makes females to go for all this shit? I think its the men who have all these fantasies of demanding perfect figure, looks and physique, its the men like you (assuming you are male :)) and me who want to see perfect models, actresses and wives.

And unless you have any other alternate for all these business I would say they are providing jobs to people in way or other and feeding their families. Not every household has major Oil Revenues Bro

Indian House Wives,Neerja Bhanot, or see me :D I can handle much pressure, as the other day you almost tried to fight with me but I just escaped that with a smile :D or quote any 1 post of mine where i was low or sad or angry despite being abused many times :P

Sorry for that it was just some other comment that took over my sanity for a day.

I respect Neerha Bhanot's brave actions, that were totally heroic, but surviving a corporate culture is somewhat different from life and death situation, continuous job pressure, targets, deadlines, lots of office politics, discrimination and gossip.
 
Sorry for that it was just some other comment that took over my sanity for a day.

I respect Neerha Bhanot's brave actions, that were totally heroic, but surviving a corporate culture is somewhat different from life and death situation, continuous job pressure, targets, deadlines, lots of office politics, discrimination and gossip.
oh come on, don't be sorry atleast you didn't use slang words. :D
and see it depends on person to person in business field.
Some women will observe pressure better than males but some men can observe pressure better than the women.
So we can't judge it really.
What I can say that yep women do have equal leadership qualities.
 
oh come on, don't be sorry atleast you didn't use slang words. :D

Ask that from any male commentator :ashamed:


and see it depends on person to person in business field.
Some women will observe pressure better than males but some men can observe pressure better than the women.
So we can't judge it really.
What I can say that yep women do have equal leadership qualities.

Hmmmm okay I can agree with you on that but I would like to register that I have not witnessed such colleague or female counterpart in my whole work life, who would sustain pressure like males, they panic. May be someday I will meet some female colleague who has this quality.
 
Ask that from any male commentator :ashamed:
ok then be sorry :P :D


Hmmmm okay I can agree with you on that but I would like to register that I have not witnessed such colleague or female counterpart in my whole work life, who would sustain pressure like males, they panic. May be someday I will meet some female colleague who has this quality.
you should meet that female to believe this :enjoy:
 
AAEAAQAAAAAAAACVAAAAJGVhMTliOWFmLTg5NWEtNDQ4NS1hYWYzLTYxNTM3MTk3N2MxZQ.jpg



By Sheryl Sandberg and Adam Grant

Years ago, while producing the hit TV series “The Shield,” Glen Mazzara noticed that two young female writers were quiet during story meetings. He pulled them aside and encouraged them to speak up more.

Watch what happens when we do, they replied.

Almost every time they started to speak, they were interrupted or shot down before finishing their pitch. When one had a good idea, a male writer would jump in and run with it before she could complete her thought.

Sadly, their experience is not unusual.

We’ve both seen it happen again and again. When a woman speaks in a professional setting, she walks a tightrope. Either she’s barely heard or she’s judged as too aggressive. When a man says virtually the same thing, heads nod in appreciation for his fine idea. As a result, women often decide that saying less is more.

Some new studies support our observations. A study by a Yale psychologist, Victoria L. Brescoll, found that male senators with more power (as measured by tenure, leadership positions and track record of legislation passed) spoke more on the Senate floor than their junior colleagues. But for female senators, power was not linked to significantly more speaking time.

Suspecting that powerful women stayed quiet because they feared a backlash, Professor Brescoll looked deeper. She asked professional men and women to evaluate the competence of chief executives who voiced their opinions more or less frequently. Male executives who spoke more often than their peers were rewarded with 10 percent higher ratings of competence. When female executives spoke more than their peers, both men and women punished them with 14 percent lower ratings. As this and other research shows, women who worry that talking “too much” will cause them to be disliked are not paranoid; they are often right.

One of us, Adam, was dismayed to find similar patterns when studying a health care company and advising an international bank. When male employees contributed ideas that brought in new revenue, they got significantly higher performance evaluations. But female employees who spoke up with equally valuable ideas did not improve their managers’ perception of their performance. Also, the more the men spoke up, the more helpful their managers believed them to be. But when women spoke up more, there was no increase in their perceived helpfulness.

This speaking-up double bind harms organizations by depriving them of valuable ideas. A University of Texas researcher, Ethan Burris, conducted an experiment in which he asked teams to make strategic decisions for a bookstore. He randomly informed one member that the bookstore’s inventory system was flawed and gave that person data about a better approach. In subsequent analyses, he found that when women challenged the old system and suggested a new one, team leaders viewed them as less loyal and were less likely to act on their suggestions. Even when all team members were informed that one member possessed unique information that would benefit the group, suggestions from women with inside knowledge were discounted.

Obviously, businesses need to find ways to interrupt this gender bias. Just as orchestras that use blind auditions increase the number of women who are selected,organizations can increase women’s contributions by adopting practices that focus less on the speaker and more on the idea. For example, in innovation tournaments, employees submit suggestions and solutions to problems anonymously. Experts evaluate the proposals, give feedback to all participants and then implement the best plans.

Since most work cannot be done anonymously, leaders must also take steps to encourage women to speak and be heard. At “The Shield,” Mr. Mazzara, the show runner, found a clever way to change the dynamics that were holding those two female employees back. He announced to the writers that he was instituting a no-interruption rule while anyone — male or female — was pitching. It worked, and he later observed that it made the entire team more effective.

The long-term solution to the double bind of speaking while female is to increase the number of women in leadership roles. (As we noted in our previous article, researchshows that when it comes to leadership skills, although men are more confident, women are more competent.) As more women enter the upper echelons of organizations, people become more accustomed to women’s contributing and leading. Professor Burris and his colleagues studied a credit union where women made up 74 percent of supervisors and 84 percent of front-line employees. Sure enough, when women spoke up there, they were more likely to be heard than men. When President Obama held his last news conference of 2014, he called on eight reporters — all women. It made headlines worldwide. Had a politician given only men a chance to ask questions, it would not have been news; it would have been a regular day.

As 2015 starts, we wonder what would happen if we all held Obama-style meetings, offering women the floor whenever possible. Doing this for even a day or two might be a powerful bias interrupter, demonstrating to our teams and colleagues that speaking while female is still quite difficult.

Speaking While Female, with Sheryl Sandberg | Adam Grant | LinkedIn

@Spring Onion @levina @Blue_Eyes @Aamna Ali @Akheilos @syedali73 @MastanKhan


Readers and commentators (if I get any) please refrain from trolling, turning this thread into any vs. and gender biases while sharing your experiences. Thank you.
What do you want me to say? Well it maybe true in say politics, businesses and stuff like that where people care more about how gorgeous a woman looks over what she has to say while in academics it is less so....but it still is present believe male dominance is not a new thing! However feminism is BS...there should be a middle balanced way!
 

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