Today’s Upside Thought is a little different – and yet still about leadership and positioning.
Working in the world of Federal law enforcement, I entered my first assignment with several assumptions.
The biggest assumptions were that –
1 — I would be valued for my intelligence and
2 — I would be part of the “thin blue line” (a term used to speak about the camaraderie in the law enforcement profession and the symbol used to designate them as the protectors for communities around the country).
Nothing could have been further from the truth.
The Harvard Business School conducted a gender difference study in 2003 that may explain this dynamic.
The Heidi/ Howard Study found that women are perceived as either being competent or likable, but rarely both.
What?
It was assumed that I would be compassionate, not competent. Caring, not courageous. And, sexy, not smart.
Women and men have role expectations.
Women are expected to be nurturing and when women don’t measure up to this, the measuring stick comes and you’re graded by how “nice” you are. (In fact, a guy in my class at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center told me that I wasn’t very “nice”. Wow.)
No one knows how to handle a woman who violates her role in society and doesn’t choose “nice” behavior first.
What’s interesting about this study is that this expectation is from both men – and other women!
The desire to be liked has held back countless women from stepping into leadership.
I mentioned that I wasn’t valued for my intelligence.
Because I was strong willed and opinionated, I was labeled as “assertive”, “aggressive”, and “unemotional”.
Great leaders are willing to engage in this discussion and shine light on the “be competent or be liked” issue as too many women have difficulty finding their way on their own.
And, kudos to the men who are a part of the Upside community and willing to dive deeply into this topic.
ACTION ITEM: The Upside Challenge of the week is to examine your thoughts about gender roles. Because biases are not always conscious, you may uncover a belief that needs to be changed or modified.
People follow the person first, not their great plan.
Be someone worth following.
The world is made for those who stand out, not those who fit in
Keep riding the Upside. It’s all Upside.