Women

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Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg looks at why a smaller percentage of women than men reach the top of their professions -- and offers 3 powerful pieces of advice to women aiming for the C-suite.

Description of the video:

So for any of us in this room today, let's start out by admitting we're lucky.
We don't live in the world our mothers lived in,
our grandmothers lived in,
where career choices for women were so limited.
And if you're in this room today,
most of us grew up in a world where we have basic civil rights,
and amazingly, we still live in a world where some women don't have them.
But all that aside, we still have a problem,
and it's a real problem.
And the problem is this:
Women are not making it to the top of any profession
anywhere in the world.
The numbers tell the story quite clearly.
190 heads of state -- nine are women.
Of all the people in parliament in the world,
13 percent are women.
In the corporate sector, women at the top,
C-level jobs, board seats --
tops out at 15, 16 percent.
The numbers have not moved since 2002
and are going in the wrong direction.
And even in the non-profit world,
a world we sometimes think of as being led by more women,
women at the top: 20 percent.
We also have another problem,
which is that women face harder choices
between professional success and personal fulfillment.
A recent study in the U.S. showed that, of married senior managers,
two-thirds of the married men had children
and only one-third of the married women had children.
A couple of years ago, I was in New York,
and I was pitching a deal,
and I was in one of those fancy New York private equity offices
you can picture.
And I'm in the meeting -- it's about a three-hour meeting --
and two hours in, there needs to be that bio break,
and everyone stands up,
and the partner running the meeting starts looking really embarrassed.
And I realized he doesn't know where the women's room is in his office.
So I start looking around for moving boxes,
figuring they just moved in, but I don't see any.
And so I said, "Did you just move into this office?"
And he said, "No, we've been here about a year."
And I said, "Are you telling me that I am the only woman
to have pitched a deal in this office in a year?"
And he looked at me, and he said,
"Yeah. Or maybe you're the only one who had to go to the bathroom."
(Laughter)
So the question is, how are we going to fix this?
How do we change these numbers at the top?
How do we make this different?
I want to start out by saying, I talk about this --
about keeping women in the workforce --
because I really think that's the answer.
In the high-income part of our workforce,
in the people who end up at the top --
Fortune 500 CEO jobs, or the equivalent in other industries --
the problem, I am convinced, is that women are dropping out.
Now people talk about this a lot,
and they talk about things like flextime and mentoring
and programs companies should have to train women.
I want to talk about none of that today,
even though that's all really important.
Today I want to focus on what we can do as individuals.
What are the messages we need to tell ourselves?
What are the messages we tell the women that work with and for us?
What are the messages we tell our daughters?
Now, at the outset, I want to be very clear
that this speech comes with no judgments.
I don't have the right answer.
I don't even have it for myself.
I left San Francisco, where I live, on Monday,
and I was getting on the plane for this conference.
And my daughter, who's three, when I dropped her off at preschool,
did that whole hugging-the-leg, crying, "Mommy, don't get on the plane" thing.
This is hard. I feel guilty sometimes.
I know no women,
whether they're at home or whether they're in the workforce,
who don't feel that sometimes.
So I'm not saying that staying in the workforce
is the right thing for everyone.
My talk today is about what the messages are
if you do want to stay in the workforce,
and I think there are three.
One, sit at the table.
Two, make your partner a real partner.
And three, don't leave before you leave.
Number one: sit at the table.
Just a couple weeks ago at Facebook,
we hosted a very senior government official,
and he came in to meet with senior execs
from around Silicon Valley.
And everyone kind of sat at the table.
He had these two women who were traveling with him
pretty senior in his department,
and I kind of said to them,
"Sit at the table. Come on, sit at the table,"
and they sat on the side of the room.
When I was in college, my senior year,
I took a course called European Intellectual History.
Don't you love that kind of thing from college?
I wish I could do that now.
And I took it with my roommate, Carrie,
who was then a brilliant literary student --
and went on to be a brilliant literary scholar --
and my brother -- smart guy,
but a water-polo-playing pre-med,
who was a sophomore.
The three of us take this class together.
And then Carrie reads all the books in the original Greek and Latin,
goes to all the lectures.
I read all the books in English
and go to most of the lectures.
My brother is kind of busy.
He reads one book of 12 and goes to a couple of lectures,
marches himself up to our room
a couple days before the exam to get himself tutored.
The three of us go to the exam together, and we sit down.
And we sit there for three hours --
and our little blue notebooks -- yes, I'm that old.
We walk out, we look at each other, and we say, "How did you do?"
And Carrie says, "Boy, I feel like I didn't really draw out the main point
on the Hegelian dialectic."
And I say, "God, I really wish I had really connected
John Locke's theory of property with the philosophers that follow."
And my brother says,
"I got the top grade in the class."
(Laughter)
"You got the top grade in the class?
You don't know anything."
(Laughter)
The problem with these stories is that they show what the data shows:
women systematically underestimate their own abilities.
If you test men and women,
and you ask them questions on totally objective criteria like GPAs,
men get it wrong slightly high,
and women get it wrong slightly low.
Women do not negotiate for themselves in the workforce.
A study in the last two years
of people entering the workforce out of college
showed that 57 percent of boys entering, or men, I guess,
are negotiating their first salary,
and only seven percent of women.
And most importantly,
men attribute their success to themselves,
and women attribute it to other external factors.
If you ask men why they did a good job,
they'll say, "I'm awesome.
Obviously. Why are you even asking?"
If you ask women why they did a good job,
what they'll say is someone helped them,
they got lucky, they worked really hard.
Why does this matter?
Boy, it matters a lot.
Because no one gets to the corner office
by sitting on the side, not at the table,
and no one gets the promotion
if they don't think they deserve their success,
or they don't even understand their own success.
I wish the answer were easy.
I wish I could go tell all the young women I work for,
these fabulous women,
"Believe in yourself and negotiate for yourself.
Own your own success."
I wish I could tell that to my daughter.
But it's not that simple.
Because what the data shows, above all else, is one thing,
which is that success and likeability are positively correlated for men
and negatively correlated for women.
And everyone's nodding, because we all know this to be true.
There's a really good study that shows this really well.
There's a famous Harvard Business School study
on a woman named Heidi Roizen.
And she's an operator in a company in Silicon Valley,
and she uses her contacts
to become a very successful venture capitalist.
In 2002 -- not so long ago --
a professor who was then at Columbia University
took that case and made it [Howard] Roizen.
And he gave the case out, both of them, to two groups of students.
He changed exactly one word:
"Heidi" to "Howard."
But that one word made a really big difference.
He then surveyed the students,
and the good news was the students, both men and women,
thought Heidi and Howard were equally competent,
and that's good.
The bad news was that everyone liked Howard.
He's a great guy. You want to work for him.
You want to spend the day fishing with him.
But Heidi? Not so sure.
She's a little out for herself. She's a little political.
You're not sure you'd want to work for her.
This is the complication.
We have to tell our daughters and our colleagues,
we have to tell ourselves to believe we got the A,
to reach for the promotion, to sit at the table,
and we have to do it in a world
where, for them, there are sacrifices they will make for that,
even though for their brothers, there are not.
The saddest thing about all of this is that it's really hard to remember this.
And I'm about to tell a story which is truly embarrassing for me,
but I think important.
I gave this talk at Facebook not so long ago
to about 100 employees,
and a couple hours later, there was a young woman who works there
sitting outside my little desk, and she wanted to talk to me.
I said, okay, and she sat down, and we talked.
And she said, "I learned something today.
I learned that I need to keep my hand up."
"What do you mean?"
She said, "You're giving this talk,
and you said you would take two more questions.
I had my hand up with many other people,
and you took two more questions.
I put my hand down, and I noticed all the women did the same,
and then you took more questions,
only from the men."
And I thought to myself,
"Wow, if it's me -- who cares about this, obviously --
giving this talk --
and during this talk, I can't even notice that the men's hands are still raised,
and the women's hands are still raised,
how good are we
as managers of our companies and our organizations
at seeing that the men are reaching for opportunities
more than women?"
We've got to get women to sit at the table.
(Cheers)
(Applause)
Message number two:
Make your partner a real partner.
I've become convinced that we've made more progress in the workforce
than we have in the home.
The data shows this very clearly.
If a woman and a man work full-time and have a child,
the woman does twice the amount of housework the man does,
and the woman does three times the amount of childcare the man does.
So she's got three jobs or two jobs, and he's got one.
Who do you think drops out when someone needs to be home more?
The causes of this are really complicated, and I don't have time to go into them.
And I don't think Sunday football-watching and general laziness is the cause.
I think the cause is more complicated.
I think, as a society,
we put more pressure on our boys to succeed
than we do on our girls.
I know men that stay home
and work in the home to support wives with careers,
and it's hard.
When I go to the Mommy-and-Me stuff and I see the father there,
I notice that the other mommies don't play with him.
And that's a problem,
because we have to make it as important a job,
because it's the hardest job in the world to work inside the home,
for people of both genders,
if we're going to even things out and let women stay in the workforce.
(Applause)
Studies show that households with equal earning
and equal responsibility
also have half the divorce rate.
And if that wasn't good enough motivation for everyone out there,
they also have more --
how shall I say this on this stage?
They know each other more in the biblical sense as well.
(Cheers)
Message number three:
Don't leave before you leave.
I think there's a really deep irony
to the fact that actions women are taking --
and I see this all the time --
with the objective of staying in the workforce
actually lead to their eventually leaving.
Here's what happens:
We're all busy. Everyone's busy. A woman's busy.
And she starts thinking about having a child,
and from the moment she starts thinking about having a child,
she starts thinking about making room for that child.
"How am I going to fit this into everything else I'm doing?"
And literally from that moment,
she doesn't raise her hand anymore,
she doesn't look for a promotion, she doesn't take on the new project,
she doesn't say, "Me. I want to do that."
She starts leaning back.
The problem is that --
let's say she got pregnant that day, that day --
nine months of pregnancy, three months of maternity leave,
six months to catch your breath --
Fast-forward two years,
more often -- and as I've seen it --
women start thinking about this way earlier --
when they get engaged, or married,
when they start thinking about having a child,
which can take a long time.
One woman came to see me about this.
She looked a little young.
And I said, "So are you and your husband thinking about having a baby?"
And she said, "Oh no, I'm not married."
She didn't even have a boyfriend.
(Laughter)
I said, "You're thinking about this just way too early."
But the point is that what happens
once you start kind of quietly leaning back?
Everyone who's been through this --
and I'm here to tell you, once you have a child at home,
your job better be really good to go back,
because it's hard to leave that kid at home.
Your job needs to be challenging.
It needs to be rewarding.
You need to feel like you're making a difference.
And if two years ago you didn't take a promotion
and some guy next to you did,
if three years ago you stopped looking for new opportunities,
you're going to be bored
because you should have kept your foot on the gas pedal.
Don't leave before you leave.
Stay in.
Keep your foot on the gas pedal,
until the very day you need to leave to take a break for a child --
and then make your decisions.
Don't make decisions too far in advance,
particularly ones you're not even conscious you're making.
My generation really, sadly,
is not going to change the numbers at the top.
They're just not moving.
We are not going to get to where 50 percent of the population --
in my generation, there will not be 50 percent of [women]
at the top of any industry.
But I'm hopeful that future generations can.
I think a world where half of our countries and our companies
were run by women, would be a better world.
It's not just because people would know where the women's bathrooms are,
even though that would be very helpful.
I think it would be a better world.
I have two children.
I have a five-year-old son and a two-year-old daughter.
I want my son to have a choice
to contribute fully in the workforce or at home,
and I want my daughter to have the choice to not just succeed,
but to be liked for her accomplishments.
Thank you.
(Applause)
In this energetic talk, Martin pushes for women to advocate for one another in the workplace, stressing that hard work does not speak for itself--you do.

Description of the video:


0:00
I was pumped I had just started my first
0:05
job in tech helping women learn to code
0:08
to get high-paying jobs I was in one of
0:11
my first conversations and we were
0:13
talking about a class launch and trying
0:15
to figure out the best ways to teach
0:17
starting coding concepts and I was
0:20
really excited because I thought this is
0:23
the perfect marriage between my skills I
0:24
really have something to offer here I
0:26
had struggled my way through this course
0:29
most of it I was a former educator and I
0:33
was new to tech so let's go so the
0:36
conversation continues and it gets stuck
0:39
at this point we're trying to figure out
0:40
should we keep a certain problem set in
0:42
the class or not and I was I felt really
0:45
strong about keeping it and so I thought
0:47
here's my moment I'm gonna let them know
0:51
that I you know I've added value to this
0:53
team so I said you know I think we
0:55
should keep this problem set it really
0:57
helped me understand foundational coding
0:59
concepts yeah they're gonna be so
1:02
excited that I'm on their team Chris
1:03
Christmas here it's awesome I look
1:06
around the room and everyone is silent
1:09
no one says anything okay moments later
1:14
a dude basically says the exact same
1:17
thing I said and he gets a standing
1:21
ovation dude that's a great idea I'm
1:23
like so we continue talking and this
1:27
dynamic continues I raise a point it
1:30
gets shot down I raise another point
1:32
it's ignored and after a while I shut
1:35
down
1:35
I was drew from the conversation
1:37
entirely and I said forget it you see as
1:42
a woman and especially a woman of color
1:45
and in my case a black woman society
1:48
teaches you to keep your head down don't
1:52
take up too much sake space sorry don't
1:56
ruffle any feathers don't piss anyone
1:58
off just do the work and it will get
2:02
noticed and may you see messages like
2:06
work hard and silence let your success
2:09
fear noise
2:10
I saw this as I was scrolling through my
2:15
Instagram feed mindlessly on a women and
2:18
tech advocacy page and my first thought
2:19
was no no that is not how this works
2:24
that is not how any of this works what
2:26
CEO top contributor leader of an
2:30
organization just toils and silence and
2:34
hopes somebody notices none you don't
2:38
know any you know you enter the text on
2:42
your toe work hard putting your time
2:45
earn your stripes focus have discipline
2:48
get an internship learn new things build
2:51
side projects take on more at work make
2:54
open source contributions teach others
2:57
you hear and then you hear this this
2:59
word meritocracy Tech is a meritocracy
3:03
it's a system in which the talented
3:06
advanced based on their achievement it's
3:08
all about what you can do so I go all
3:12
right I'm gonna hustle women say we're
3:14
gonna have some real learn all this
3:15
stuff learn all the code and then you
3:18
asked me where are the women
3:22
where are the women attack why is it
3:29
that 41% of women leave the tech field
3:34
in their 10th year as opposed to just
3:37
17% of men in my opinion it's because of
3:41
messages like this keep your head down
3:43
do all the work stay signed I'll say
3:45
nothing and then when you realize that
3:47
is not the approach it's not the path to
3:50
success it's too late you're burned out
3:54
you've been disrespected drags looked
3:57
over for far too long
4:00
so in my experience what I have found is
4:04
that the only way you can advance in
4:06
your career in any career is to have
4:09
someone in a position of influence or
4:12
power acknowledge advocate for and
4:17
advance your ideas the mark of a true
4:20
leader is not someone that has the best
4:22
hair the best dress has the best ideas
4:25
knows how to do all the things the most
4:27
charismatic it is someone who can look
4:30
at and acknowledge the source of good
4:32
ideas it's someone that can look outside
4:36
of their constructs of what talent and
4:38
leadership is to look at the
4:40
contributions and value of others that
4:43
may or may not look think or act like
4:46
them so after that first conversation I
4:51
needed to say something and so we had
4:56
another conversation and I thought so I
4:57
talked to my boss and I said did you
5:00
notice what happened there
5:05
I said they talked over me the entire
5:09
time
5:09
It was as if I was not even there I need
5:13
you to advocate for me when that happens
5:15
I need you to say something so the next
5:18
meeting we had I shut it down I stopped
5:22
a cold when it started happening and I
5:23
said okay here's the thing on you all
5:27
you all are expert programmers that's
5:30
true you know what you're talking about
5:32
but I'm an expert educator that's the
5:35
reason I'm here right now I'm an expert
5:37
too you have to respect what I say now I
5:41
recognize that everyone does not have
5:43
the confidence or even agency to do this
5:46
right
5:46
let me get penalized for doing this kind
5:48
of thing and that is why it was so
5:51
important to have my manager there he
5:53
backed me up he said how can we build an
5:57
inclusive safe environment for people to
5:59
learn if we can't even do it on our
6:01
teams it starts with us we need to do
6:04
better so after that everything was
6:08
amazing it was great no
6:14
it wasn't it wasn't but it was a work in
6:18
progress
6:18
and over time things got better and my
6:23
manager really bus was shaped and formed
6:25
by this when this venes things kind of
6:27
arose again
6:28
he was one of my biggest advocates and
6:30
an advocate for the other women in our
6:31
organization and as time went on the the
6:36
value and contributions of women were
6:38
valued in a different way for the better
6:43
because you see at the end of the day
6:45
Tec is for people you have to have
6:48
diverse teams and diverse leadership and
6:50
people at that table when you have
6:53
diversity of thought ideas identity and
6:57
experiences you have new insights better
7:01
software innovation and money in a study
7:09
done in 2015 by McKinsey they looked at
7:13
366 public companies and they found
7:16
those in the top quartile for gender
7:19
diversity where 15% more likely to have
7:23
returns above the industry average for
7:26
racial and ethnic diversity it was 35
7:29
percent more likely companies benefit
7:33
financially by having teams that are not
7:36
primarily male and pale
7:42
[Applause]
7:49
and they're great mail until people are
7:52
amazing I'm in love with one so so
7:58
you're probably wondering what can I do
8:00
as a leader as a peer a co-worker how
8:04
can I do this and if I want to give you
8:05
some scenarios that I have found myself
8:07
in that many of you maybe have found
8:09
yourself in and think about redirects
8:11
ways to bring the attention back to the
8:14
original source of ideas and in this
8:15
case women so much like the situation I
8:20
was in that I shared a woman sure has an
8:23
idea it gets ignored summary States to
8:27
this fact that it was theirs it would
8:30
have been really nice to have someone in
8:32
the room say actually crystal just
8:35
mentioned that you know crystal could
8:37
you say that again I think it's really
8:38
important you hear that point in the
8:41
moment you are bringing the attention
8:44
back to her so everyone in that room
8:45
knows that she has good ideas she has
8:49
something to say another situation is a
8:53
little bit 2-fold you may find yourself
8:56
um you know I found myself in a
8:57
situation where I have a peer who shares
9:00
with me share something with me and
9:02
confident she says I have a really great
9:04
idea and I think we should do this I'm
9:06
too afraid to say something they're not
9:09
gonna listen to me anyway or you're
9:12
sitting in a meeting this has happened
9:13
to me someone mentions a really awesome
9:16
idea for data analysts and analysis
9:19
excuse me and it's awesome and I realize
9:23
it is the original idea of a woman
9:26
someone that I know and that is not
9:29
mentioned at all so you give her a stage
9:33
in that moment you bring it you say that
9:35
that original idea was this person but
9:37
the way you do it you may say yeah I was
9:40
actually at lunch with Priya the other
9:41
day she mentioned that I think she's
9:44
really close to the problem so I think
9:46
the next time we have a conversation
9:48
about this we should have her come in
9:50
and present about it I think she can
9:52
really articulate it well think of how
9:55
huge this could be for her career
9:58
having the opportunity to have a stage
10:00
in an audience with some of the most
10:02
influential people in your organization
10:04
that's huge
10:05
and you lose nothing by doing that and
10:09
in that situation I have found myself in
10:12
is that I heard a good idea and I kind
10:16
of want to share it and maybe anonymize
10:18
the person who had it originally this
10:21
will make me look good but I don't do
10:22
that I say her name I give her the
10:26
credit and then that it's a win-win
10:28
situation you know this you have good
10:32
ideas and the good ideas come from other
10:34
people as well you so you have to burn
10:37
the patriarchy together kidding but we
10:44
must always attempt to lift as we climb
10:48
every step in our career there is
10:50
someone coming up behind us then we can
10:53
help advocate for it's not even just
10:57
grooming these people have good ideas
10:58
bring them up with you put them to the
10:59
forefront so no hard work does not speak
11:06
for itself you do and others do so I
11:15
want to leave you with some names the
11:19
women on stage here with me today
11:20
they're mothers grandmothers godmothers
11:24
play mothers I'm teas teachers mentors
11:28
sisters some of them I haven't even seen
11:32
in a long time they probably don't even
11:34
remember who I am
11:35
but I have a very public way of
11:38
acknowledging the love and life that
11:40
they have breathed into me the work that
11:42
they have done and sewn into me they are
11:45
the reason why I'm standing here before
11:47
you today so I want you to take a minute
11:50
I want you to think of your names who
11:55
are the women in your life who have
11:57
picked you up and put you in places you
11:59
were too afraid to go who are the women
12:03
who put you in a position you were not
12:05
qualified for instance you'll figure it
12:07
out
12:09
who are the women who have moved
12:11
mountains and raised hell for you to
12:14
have a shot think of them maybe you have
12:18
a Camila a Tamra a brandy a Margo a
12:22
Helen maybe you have one think are their
12:25
names give thanks and do what they did
12:31
thank you
When women lead, bias often follows. Documentarian Robin Hauser dives into the dilemma between competence and likability faced by women in leadership roles, detangling the unconscious beliefs and gendered thinking that distort what it means to be a good leader.

Description of the video:

I’m a middle child, and I was born leaning in.
For as long as I can remember,
I've had this insatiable desire to compete, to accomplish
and to prove myself.
My energy isn’t easily contained,
and I've been called by both men and women
intense, high-octane,
aggressive.
These words don't feel like compliments to me.
I try to control my eagerness.
I try to be softer.
It's exhausting.
(Laughter)
The truth is, this tough shell conceals sensitivities and insecurities
that only those closest to me know.
And yeah, my masculine traits make me the kind of gal
that can hang with the guys,
as long as I'm not their boss.
Last winter, I was walking through a ski resort
and a man came up to me and said,
"Excuse me, are you with a husband or a fiancée?"
"No," I said, and I continued toward the lifts.
And then curiosity got the better of me.
And I turned around and asked the guy why he wanted to know if I was with a man.
"I'm selling timeshares. It's a real estate thing."
(Laughter)
"And you don't sell to women?"
"Oh, are you interested?"
"No."
(Laughter)
"But you do know women carry checkbooks, too?"
And at that, he looked at me and said, "Wow, lady, you're tough."
(Laughter)
Modern day sexism is different than it was in the past
when a blatant comment about a woman's physique
or a chummy pat on the derriere was tolerated, maybe even accepted.
Today's sexism can be more subtle.
Little nuances that might seem like no big deal to some,
but their impact can have the effect of a thousand cuts.
That day at the ski resort resulted in more than just another microabrasion.
It sparked a curiosity in me about perceptions that we have
for women versus men.
I wanted to know why do we perceive women differently when we assert ourselves.
So I did a little research and I came across something,
just to make sure this wasn't all on my mind,
called the competence/likability dilemma,
where women, unlike men,
are rarely perceived to be both competent and likable.
Now we should take a moment to define the word "likable."
Merriam-Webster says "likeable" is:
"having qualities that bring about a favorable regard,
pleasant or agreeable."
The Urban Dictionary says:
"likeable, an adjective meaning pleasant or attractive.
It describes something that is easy to like."
The sad truth is, most of us don't find strong, competent women easy to like.
In 2003, Professor Flynn at Columbia Business School
conducted an experiment.
He took a case study about Heidi Roizen,
a successful female venture capitalist,
and he changed the name to Howard Roizen.
Everything else about the case study remained the same.
He gave half of his class the Heidi Roizen case study
and the other half the Howard Roizen case study.
And he asked the students to rate
how competent and how likable Heidi and Howard were.
Both female and male students found Heidi and Howard to be equally competent.
But the students tended not to like Heidi.
They thought that she was a little too aggressive and out for herself.
Neither female nor male students wanted to work for or hire Heidi,
but they all thought Howard would make a great colleague.
Why?
Because in our society, women are penalized
when we behave in ways that violate gender norms.
Our gender stereotypes show that women should be kind, nurturing,
helpful, supportive, deferential,
while traditionally men are expected to be decisive, competent,
assertive and strong.
So the dilemma for women
is that the qualities which we value in leadership,
such as assertiveness and decisiveness,
go against societal norms of what it is to be a likable woman.
I'm a documentary filmmaker, so I'm nothing if not curious.
But I've learned that being inquisitive is not an admired female trait.
I was at a cocktail party last week,
and I asked a man what line of business he was in.
“Fintech,” he said.
Curious. I dug a little deeper.
"Oh, what type?"
"It's complicated."
(Laughter)
End of discussion.
OK. Now it's possible that he wanted to spare me some long explanation,
but it's more likely that his bias, implicit or not,
informed him that as a woman I wouldn't understand finance.
Either way, I'm fairly certain he wouldn't have said "it's complicated"
had I been a man.
I absorb the sting of one more cut.
Most of us are not aware of why we don't find strong women likable.
There's just something about her that bugs us.
But deep inside, at the root of this is an unconscious bias.
Bias is a survival heuristic that we inherited from our ancestors.
The problem is, it's unconscious.
And as humans, we don't have the ability to recognize when we're being biased,
even if we can see it in other people.
We all, most of us, anyway, believe ourselves to be fair,
open-minded and unbiased.
And yet, I will admit, I too found Hillary's voice to be shrill.
As long as society continues to associate leadership with masculine traits,
female leaders will be judged more harshly,
even when they outperform male counterparts.
So it's no wonder that in the United States,
female politicians suffer greatly,
as our elections tend to value likability over competency.
Women hold only 25 percent of the seats in Congress.
The competence/likability dilemma has huge consequences,
not just in politics,
but also in education and in the workplace,
where studies show that women in meetings with both genders
are less likely to contribute knowledge.
As women we're told to lean in,
and yet there's backlash when we do.
A recent study shows that women
are not as good as men at negotiating for themselves.
And yet, women outperform men
when they negotiate on behalf of someone else.
This is because women who negotiate for themselves
are perceived as selfish,
and women who negotiate on behalf of someone else
are perceived to be helpful.
And a helpful woman might be liked more than a woman who is assertive,
but the helpful woman will not be recognized
as having what it takes to be a successful leader.
Last week I was quoting my speaker fee to a potential client,
and when I told him the price, he said to me,
"Wow. Good for you. That's a lot.
Isn't documentary filmmaking kind of, like, your hobby?"
(Laughter)
Ouch.
As humans, we're limited to what we can do to mitigate our biases.
So even if we were able to, say, implement a tool
that would bring more women into upper management,
it's highly likely that we would still evaluate the performance of those women
with biased perceptions.
Clearly, leadership and likability should not be mutually exclusive
for women or for men.
So how do we solve for this dilemma?
I wish I could offer you a cure to unconscious bias.
I don't believe there is one.
But we need to disrupt stereotypes
and redefine what it is to be a leader and a woman.
Obviously, this is a long-term solution that could take generations,
but it's a vital step.
We need to speak up.
Speak up when you witness gender bias.
Question comments that are made
about a woman's appearance or personality rather than her skills or ability.
And we need to slow down.
Question yourself. Reconsider your snap judgments.
Ask yourself, does that woman bug me for reasons that really matter?
And forget about likability,
ladies, women, if you can.
Instead focus on being awesome.
Be a smart, compassionate, effective leader
that will redefine the stereotype of what a female leader is.
I've wasted a lot of time worrying about how I am perceived.
If I ask a lot of questions, will you find me combative?
If I tell you about an accomplishment I'm proud of,
you might think I'm conceited.
But I need and seek the approval and recognition
of my family, of my friends and of my colleagues.
Like many of you, I want to be liked,
and I'm hopeful for the day when women can be recognized
as being competent and likable,
a day when we value each other regardless of gender,
for the unique contributions that we each bring to the table.
That would be the day that I won't have to worry about being liked.
I can just be me.
Thank you.
(Applause)

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