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Management jobs: Women lack negotiation skills, not self-belief, research suggests

Men and women feel equally confident, and well-equipped for management positions – but the gap opens up when it comes to ambition and practical negotiation skills.

The prevailing narrative is that women suffer from ‘imposter syndrome’: a self-confidence disorder that ties in conveniently with the self-help, wellness and magazine industries.

The Wundamail Women At Work Report suggests otherwise.

Men and women feel equally equipped for management positions, and are equally confident advocating for themselves in a high-pressure work situation. 65% of men and 67% of women feel they ‘could easily do their manager’s job to a better standard than them’.

And yet, over 72% of men would ‘aspire to take on their manager’s role in the future’, compared with a meagre 47% of women. 

Only 62% of women reported that they would feel confident advocating for a raise, compared with 88% of men. 

And on average, men were twice as likely to talk finance in career conversations, whereas women preferred to focus discussion on qualitative factors such as skills, achievements or career progression.

Over 84% of women have previously feigned agreement with someone’s opinion ‘purely to avoid confrontation’. 

Though men and women may feel equally confident, women are twice less likely to provoke direct financial discussion, or invite negotiation. 

Unequal representation in the workplace can therefore be remedied by endowing women with the practical skills they need to advocate, articulate, and most importantly, negotiate.

The Wundamail State of Remote Work Report 2019 can be accessed HERE

Based on research of 10,000 trained professionals in the US and UK to establish the barriers holding women back from reaching their full potential at work.

The sample was representative by region, ethnic background, socio-economic status, gender, and inclusion of both high-income and low-income bracket workers. Wundamail collected all data between 03/01/20 and 12/01/20.

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