Women are less effective in traditionally male industries – False
Bob Sherwin, COO of leadership consultancy Zenger Folkman writes for Business Insider that “in the traditional male bastions of sales, legal, engineering, IT and the R&D function, women actually received higher effectiveness ratings than males.”[4]
The claim for this statement comes from a feedback sample of around 16,000 leaders where each participant had an average of 13 managers, direct reports and peers respond. The same data indicates that, on aggregate, women outperform men in overall effectiveness by a small, but statistically significant, amount.
Women are only seen as better leaders because they are more nurturing – False
The Zenger Folkman data dispels a very common assumption that women leaders are only better at what Bob Sherwin calls “nurturing competencies”. These are leadership competencies such as collaboration, teamwork, inspiring others, relationship building and so on.
While women do outscore their male counterparts in these categories, they outscore men even more in the areas of taking initiative, displaying integrity and honesty and driving for results. These are not nurturing competencies. Women leaders were seen as more effective in getting things done and delivering results.
Hopefully, the pioneer women of 2014 will help all businesses dispel the myths surrounding women in leadership and reassure employers and employees alike that entrusting leadership to women is not only the right thing to do, it’s also good business.
[1]http://fortune.com/2014/06/03/number-of-fortune-500-women-ceos-reaches-historic-high/
[2]http://gender.stanford.edu/news/2013/work-family-conflict-not-problem-overwork
[3]http://www.hbs.edu/faculty/conferences/2013-w50-research-symposium/Documents/stone.pdf
[4]http://www.businessinsider.com/study-women-are-better-leaders-2014-1