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Men Play an Important Role in Women Finding Voice

10/17/2017

 
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Silencing experiences for women are far too common. The media tends to pick up on those that are sensational with a larger than life leader/predator abusing those with minimal power trying to navigate their careers. It is hard to imagine how these things can go on so long without intervention and many are questioning the silence behind what is coined the “casting couch” phenomenon. If we step outside of Hollywood and look in other corporate spaces, we will see women silenced in multiple ways, and it is not always by the sexual evil predator disguised as a wealthy and successful businessman.
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Women in leadership roles – with inherent power and authority based on their position – struggle with the silencing phenomenon much more than realized. There are at least three reasons why.
  1. It is not uncommon for a corporate culture to favor a male-dominant discourse. When a female uses a genderlect style of communication (often focused on building rapport and connection) and is met with communication norms that favor status and independence – this can become a silencer.
  2. As women navigate corporate cultures or systems of silencing that are primarily faceless and find some measure of success, they can inadvertently become a silencer of other women who are in the midst of their own navigation. When women silence other women, this can become an acutely painful experience – perhaps even less spoken.
  3. We assume that only those with formal power silence others and this is not true. Peers can be just as demanding on each other, if not more so, then the next level up. Our tendencies to judge and create ingroups versus outgroups live beyond those high school years. This dynamic in a workplace can be a substantial silencer for women in leadership as they wrestle with acceptance and success in their roles. It is also true that stakeholders, direct reports, customers, and community groups that come together and create a source of informal power can become silencers to women especially when those groups hold a majority opinion that may not be shared by a female leader.  
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The phenomenon of silencing is complex, and the recovery process is not just a flip of a switch when all the sudden words are spoken, and silence is broken. It is never quite that simple. Female leaders can take years to recover fully from a silencing experience, and men have an essential role to play.
  1. Acknowledge and advocate for the women in your immediate professional circles. Ask them their opinions, solicit their thinking, and do not assume their silence is because they have nothing to say.
  2. If you learn a female colleague has been silenced – ask her to share what happened. As women open up about the experience of feeling silenced, it begins to normalize an experience that for many can feel shameful. Shame can lose its fangs when words are spoken.
  3. Last, stand with us. As a woman, it can be hard working with other females. We can be exceptionally hard on ourselves and our gender. You have the opportunity to help us see different perspectives with ourselves and others. We also need to regularly experience men as respectful role models, mentors, advocates, professional colleagues, and friends.
Voice efficacy is fundamental for both genders in leadership. We need to speak and lead in ways that others will follow with commitment. When men and women work together in supportive ways, we have the power to eradicate systems that consistently silence.

What has been your experience with silencing?
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    Carrie Arnold, PhD, MCC, BCC

    Carrie Arnold, PhD, MCC, BCC

    In no particular order: Author | Dog mom to Moose | Speaker | Reader  Mom to human offspring  Wife | Lover of Learning Leadership coach & consultant, The Willow Group | Fellow, Institute for Social Innovation | Program Director for Evidence-Based Coaching at Fielding Graduate University 

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Carrie Arnold

Carrie Arnold, PhD, MCC
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​Silenced and Sidelined: How Women Leaders Find Their Voices and Break Barriers
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