Thursday, March 12, 2020

This is When Women Reach Their Peak Career Confidence and It May Surprise You

This is When Women Reach Their Peak Career Confidence and It May Surprise You Are women really less confident than men in professional settings? New research says sometimes.Corpotarif research conducted by Jack Zenger and Joseph Folkman suggests that the largest difference in self-reported confidence between the genders occurs in workers under the age of 25.In a survey of over 3,000 men and 4,000 women, researchers found that just 30 percent of female responders age 25 or younger rated themselves as confident. Meanwhile, 50 percent of their male peers self-assess as confident.The confidence gap appears to disappear by age 40, when men and women rate themselves as equally confident. Then, by age 60, women rate themselves as more confident than men on average.The researchers posit that young women are more competent than they believe, while their male peers are overconfident in their abilities. However, over time, women are reassured of their competency especially as leaders because they tend to outperform their male peers.However, the authors are careful to note that their conclusions contradict common thinking around confidence in the workplace. While some studies suggest that the early career confidence gap is a myth and that women are less confident in senior-level roles, Zenger and Folkmans research suggests this isnt the case. Instead, it seems that young women are held back by societys whisper in their ear that they arent good enough, while older women are held back by the belief that they arent confident.So youre telling me, yet again, that gender inequality isnt the fault of individual women? Well, Ill be.

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