
Jill Armstrong (Murray Edwards College) discusses her research on the behaviours听and perceptions of men regarding women's workplace experiences.听
Jill Armstrong (Murray Edwards College) discusses her research on the behaviours听and perceptions of men regarding women's workplace experiences.听
It is still true that far more men than women have . If you ask women to explain this, as , they point to workplace culture as .
Many readers will be familiar with the kinds of experiences that frustrate women鈥檚 career progress; things like being interrupted or talked over in meetings. But that is old news. Less well known are more subtle trends such as the tendency of men to be promoted on their potential to take on a new role, while women need experience of the role to get the job. This is often called 鈥溾 and often happens simply because men鈥檚 networks are stronger. Men tend to gravitate to other men in the informal chats that happen in corridors, coffee shops and after five-a-side football games.
These conversations are where connections are made that open the door to opportunities. Men can also kill careers with misplaced 鈥渒indness鈥. In their concern not to upset a woman, men often give less direct and less useful feedback . Over time, the consequence of these behaviours for women is that they feel they do not fit in, that they are not being promoted on merit and, as a result, ambition and confidence can melt away.
Men: the missing ingredient
Lack of gender parity is influenced just as much by what men are doing as what women are doing. And yet male voices have been quiet, or not listened to, while initiatives focus on things like mentoring female employees to be more assertive 鈥 in effect 鈥溾 to fit in with how things are done.
探花直播better news for women is that many men support gender parity at the top of organisations. 探花直播business case is well accepted and, for men in early or mid career in particular, gender parity is a too. Men tell us that it鈥檚 not right that their daughters, female partners and friends should have a different experience of the workplace from the men they work alongside.
So its surprising that very little research has been done to find out what men think of the problems with workplace culture that women report, or to discover what men think can be done about it. This is why Murray Edwards College started the research project, working with 40 men in early career, middle management and senior leadership roles in both small businesses and large organisations 鈥 and in both the public and private sector.
If individuals are not prepared to change something themselves, then no amount of company policy is going to make a tangible difference. However, given that most men haven鈥檛 done much thinking about how their behaviour may negatively affect women鈥檚 careers, it follows that it鈥檚 not obvious what they can do to help. So the first thing we did was to share a summary of the research from women鈥檚 perspective. Many of the participants then discussed this research with their female colleagues. 探花直播effect was to make unconscious behaviours visible and to prompt many men to suggest practical changes which could help redress the balance. Let鈥檚 pick out some highlights here:
Solutions to improve workplace culture
Just talk 鈥 A first step would bring teams together in a facilitated, neutral meeting where evidence on workplace culture can be aired and women can describe issues they think they experience because of their gender. Teams can then discuss solutions with the help of the ideas that came from this research.
Making visible how things get done in practice 鈥 Power audits are needed by mixed gender teams after a project is finished to make visible how and where decisions were made. This will improve how gender diverse teams work together.
Building close relationships 鈥 A key insight from the research stresses the importance of extending mixed gender networks to make it more likely that a woman comes to mind when an opportunity arises. This might include networking with a social agenda: you might have 鈥淲alkabout Wednesdays鈥 when everyone is expected to have coffee with someone new. Networking can also happen as a by-product of something useful: for example, 鈥淭ake Two鈥 buddy ups when you need cover for two hours while you do something outside work. Or it can be directly related to work, perhaps mixed-gender mentoring to share skills and perspectives on a project.
Bystanders amplify 鈥 Not having their comments and ideas heard in meetings is one of women鈥檚 biggest complaints. Men can help by amplifying a woman鈥檚 contribution when they notice it has not been heard; repeating their colleague鈥檚 idea and giving her credit.
Actions from leaders - Individual actions need to be authorised by leaders taking a clear stance. Male role models are needed to transform workplace culture 鈥 yet the men who take on this role often face backlash. Leaders can help by rewarding and supporting men who make changes to support gender parity.
Men and women in early career and middle management have a lot to get done. 探花直播best solutions will adapt easily into the normal working day. Many of these ideas may seem like small things but, by increments, we think that these small changes could make a big difference to how women feel about work, their access to sponsorship that comes with stronger networks and progress into leadership positions.
Individual action from men to improve workplace culture will work in tandem with other initiatives such as training to recognise unconscious bias, designing systems to remove gender bias from hiring and promotion and introducing flexible working policies that all aim to close the gender equality gap.
, Research Associate at Murray Edwards College working on gender equality in careers,
This article was originally published on . Read the .
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