Friday, May 29, 2020

Alexandra Levits Water Cooler Wisdom Is The Performance Deck Stacked Against Women

Alexandra Levit's Water Cooler Wisdom Is The Performance Deck Stacked Against Women I recently conducted some research on gender differences in the workplace and learned that the same behaviors that were praised in men were often criticized in women. In particular, women who were more assertive, or confident in expressing their views, were often perceived negatively. Assertive men, on the other hand, were viewed as strong and competent. A colleague pointed me in the direction of this Fortune piece by Kieran Snyder, who had a linguist do some number-crunching to determine if gender plays a role in the type of feedback an employee receives at review time. Snyder asked men and women in the technology field if they would be willing to share their performance reviews for a study. Assuming that only strong performers would be willing to share, Snyder was most interested in looking at the critical feedback that these strong performers had received and whether the review tone or content differed based on employee gender. Snyder collected 248 reviews from 180 people, 105 men and 75 women at 28 large, mid-size, and small companies. About 71 percent of the reviews contained critical feedback. However, critical feedback was not distributed evenly by gender. When breaking the reviews down by gender of the person evaluated, 59 percent of the reviews received by men contained critical feedback, but 88 percent of the reviews received by women did. The men were given constructive suggestions. The women were also given constructive suggestions â€" and told to pipe down. The critical feedback men received was heavily geared towards suggestions for additional skills to develop. A few examples: “Constructive feedback on your performance as a feature crew tester can be summed up by saying that you still have some skills to continue to develop.” “Hone your strategies for guiding your team and developing their skills. It is important to set proper guidance around priorities and to help as needed in designs and product decisions.” Women receive this kind of constructive feedback too. But, according to Snyder, the women’s reviews included a sharper element that was absent from the men’s: “You can come across as abrasive sometimes. I know you don’t mean to, but you need to pay attention to your tone.” “Your peers feel that you don’t leave them enough room. Sometimes you need to step back to let others shine.” For the rest of the piece, check out the SilkRoad blog.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.