ALLURE MEDICAL - all•u Magazine all·u Magazine Fall 2018 | Page 18

CONFESSIONS OF AN IGNORANT MAN "Corporate boards have more men named John, Robert, William, or James than women in total." >> We need more men like Judd Apatow to go to bat for women. Sadly, many men don’t, because they’re blind to gender bias. I know, because I was one of them. When I worked in advertising, a female colleague mentioned that male board members weren’t taking their ideas seriously. I was convinced she was imagining it. She was brilliant, and it was the 21st century. I wanted desperately to believe that we were living in a just world. As Margaret Heffernan puts it, I was willfully blind. My eyes started to open when my wife and I welcomed our first child, and then our second—both daughters. All of a sudden, I found myself worrying about their future, and noticing how different the world was for them. I learned that the daughter effect isn’t unique to me. In Working Fathers, Jim Levine and Todd Pittinsky report that companies were most likely to become family-friendly and embrace flexible work schedules when a male CEO’s adult daughter was working in a less supportive environment. And two years ago, I wrote enthusiastically about evidence that having daughters motivates male CEOs to pay their employees more generously and male legislators to vote in support of women’s reproductive rights. Back then, I was encouraged that having daughters makes men more concerned about women—it gave me hope that more men would 18 in math, when graded anonymously, girls outperform boys, but when teachers know their names, boys do better. And when students rate their favorite professors, they describe men as “geniuses” and women as “nice.” This is sad and unacceptable. We may be in the 21st century, but we’re still a very long way from gender parity. Those combined events shattered my naiveté, and motivated me to start writing, teaching, and speaking about equality for women. I told audiences to take my comments with a grain of salt, since to my knowledge, I’ve never been a woman. But as an organizational come on board. Now, I just find it psychologist, I feel a responsibility embarrassing. Why didn’t I think about to shed light on what the data say these issues before I had daughters? about half of the population. And as Shouldn’t loving my wife, my mother, a man, I don’t feel that this is just a and my sister have influenced me? woman’s issue; it’s a social issue. I My wife and I spent a lot of time wish I hadn’t waited to become an discussing how to promote equality for advocate for women until I became our girls, but I didn’t think much about it a dad to daughters and the evidence in the workplace until I watched Sheryl was staring me in the face. But I Sandberg’s TED talk and then read guess it’s better late than never. Lean In. I was stunned by the mountain Last year, Sheryl Sandberg asked me of evidence that gender stereotypes what my own data showed about continue to hold women back. gender. I had done more than a Even then, I shied away from talking decade of research on success at about gender in my Wharton classes, work, but because of my resistance fearing that it would divide rather to acknowledging gender biases, it than unite. After all, I had read hadn’t occurred to me to systematically overwhelming evidence that on virtually analyze differences between men and every attribute ever studied, men women in my studies. When I finally and women are remarkably similar— did, I was mortified: men got credit for including intelligence, math and verbal speaking up and helping, but women abilities. Instead of claiming that men didn’t. To bring these persistent biases are from Mars and women are from to light, we decided to write a New Venus, I thought it was high time to York Times series on women at work. recognize that we’re all from Earth. Our fourth piece in the series is Two colleagues, Sigal Barsade live today. We make the case that and Nancy Rothbard, convinced gender equality isn’t just good for me that I was wrong to stay silent women—it makes us all better off. on gender. Even though there are There are still too few men who step more similarities than differences up as champions for women. Guys, it’s between the sexes, that doesn’t about time that we #LeanInTogether mean the world is fair to women. for equality. To learn more, visit Today, U.S. corporate boards have more leanintogether.org. men named John, Robert, William, or James than women in total. Recent coverage by Claire Cain Miller has brought more chilling data to light: