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Women More Likely to Receive Less Credit at Workplace

by Bidita Debnath on December 17, 2017 at 11:33 PM

In the workplace, women are frequently subjected to subtle discrimination by both sexes. Women are more likely to receive less credit than your male counterparts, new research revealed.


The findings showed that when it comes time to replace the team's leader, these men are more likely to be nominated to do so.

‘Women are also more likely to be judged by their looks and how they dress than their male counterparts. Women are not only discriminated against for being "pretty" or "provocative" they are also discriminated against for being not pretty enough.’

Further, women are more likely to be snubbed when they share ideas on how to change the team for the better, they are not given any more respect than women who do not speak up at all, and thus are not seen as viable leadership options, the researchers said.

"In sum, we find that when men speak up with ideas on how to change their team for the better they gain the respect of their teammates -- since speaking up indicates knowledge of the task at hand and concern for the wellbeing of the team," Kyle Emich, assistant professor at the University of Delaware in Newark, said in a statement.

Moreover, when most individuals imagine a leader, they are likely to expect that leader to be a man by default.

"This is the reason it is so easy for people -- both men and women -- to link men's voices (speaking up) with leadership.

"Implicitly, men are already considered leaders to a greater extent than women are. The reason I mention this is that correcting the problem will take effort and the conscious attention to biases against women in the workplace," he added.

Giving credit where credit is due can be as simple, Emich explained, "as acknowledging that who the idea came from: If a woman's ideas have been floated around the room, you can acknowledge that by saying, 'I think we all really like (name's) idea'".

Emich also recommends that professionals consider mentoring women in the workplace.

Source: IANS

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