Tag: workplace bullying

  • Why Women Are Mean to Other Women In the Workplace?

    We want to think of women as caring and we hope their presence makes the workplace a more cooperative environment.  As one of my female traits I list that women work in groups and we assume that their groups are cooperative and supportive.  While we want to associate women with positive, peaceful and loving characteristics, we know women can also be extremely nasty to each other in the workplace.  A lot of women report they have worse relationships with female colleagues and supervisors than their male.  24371149_m

    Even though I’ve worked with 50 times more men than women, I would say half of the meanest people I’ve worked with are women.  And by far, the #1 top position is held by a woman who personified every negative quality ever associated with a woman to an extreme degree.  I will give credit to other women who tried to rival her Queen of Mean position, but they all fell short.  And if anyone out there thinks they have a story about a mean and nasty woman in the workplace, believe me, my story can top yours.

    Why can women be so nasty to other women?       

    I think it happens because there is a conflict between who women naturally are and the type of person they think the male-dominated workplace expects them to be.  A lot of women believe that the male-dominated workplace is competitive and in order to rise up, you have to pull down.  Another woman in the workplace is a unique competitor.  Competing against her is not like competing against male colleagues.    

    Women know that being the only or one of a few women in the workplace is an advantage.  We know how to manipulate situations to our advantage in ways our male colleagues can’t.  This was one of the very first lessons I learned as a woman in the male-dominated workplace. 

    When I went into the Air Force, as new 2nd Lt’s we were assembled into groups of 12-15 to meet the top brass.  Typically I was the only woman in the group or on occasion there may have been one other woman.  When the Colonel was introduced to a dozen random faces, he remembers the one that was different.  He always remembered the name and role of the woman in the group.  This was huge advantage. 

    It didn’t take long for me to figure out other ways to take advantage of being a woman.

    If my workplace was working on an important proposal or report, I volunteered to use my better communication and writing skills to proofread.  I could invite myself in as a team member on the most important projects.

    If there is a big meeting with outside clients or senior management, I knew how to get myself introduced.  I just played hostess when lunch was brought in.  Setting up lunch, I got into the conference room.  There is always a man who is anxious to eat.  I introduce myself, strike up a conversation and eat lunch with the big boys.  Meanwhile my male colleagues are wandering around the office trying to figure out how to get in. 

    In one workplace, a retiring male colleague taught me another trick.  The women in the workplace make it their business to know what is going on.  I learned how to use the network of office women to know what was really going on in my workplaces. 

    I’ll be honest, I play the woman card to my advantage.  Some women are afraid of being associated with the stereotypes but we use them to get our foot in the door.  It is what we do once we are in the door that is important. 

    When another woman comes into the workplace, we suddenly have competition – someone who can do what we can do.  Our woman card is no longer as valuable.  Now that competitiveness we were taught to have, kicks in but in a slightly different way than being competitive with men. 

    We see this new woman as invading our turf.  That makes her the aggressor.  She knows we have an advantage in the workplace and she needs to pull us down so she can take our place.  This makes us defensive and women are the most aggressive when they are defensive. 

    Before it became politically incorrect to say so, we believed women had a maternal instinct that made us great defenders.  You Tube is full of videos of females in every species defending their young against predators.  They never back down.  They fight to the death.  No matter what we call it this instinct it makes females incredible defenders.  We will be mean and defend our turf against the new woman. 

    There is another characteristic of the male-dominated workplace can cause women to be nasty to other women – Autonomy.  Men work autonomously.  Women feel ostracized and rejected when their male colleagues work autonomously and not as part of a cooperative team.  I’ve seen this a lot and women become bitter.  They then put on blinders and refuse to help others.  Again, this is a defense mechanism to ward off unhappy feelings.

    When a new woman comes in and the men gravitate toward her because she is the new, a woman’s feelings of estrangement increase.  There is jealousy.  When women see everyone else getting along and they are left out it hurts.  Women can lash out. 

    There are many issues that make women nasty in the workplace.  One of the first things I look for is bullying.  As a manager, I’ve learned that most of the women who were mean, nasty or bullying to other women were acting out from being bullied in the workplace.  Some other women act out due to abuse at home or from being abused as a child.

    When women are mean or nasty in the workplace, we shouldn’t assume they are just ugly people and accept it.  We need to find out the root cause and get it addressed.  Most workplaces have an Employee Assistance Program (EAP) that gives employees resources for free counseling.  Our goal is not to punish and further ostracize the woman but to solve the root cause of the issue so we can bring her into the team if possible. 

    I’ve found it is best if women are allowed to work out the issues amongst themselves with little HR involvement.  A third party is used to choose sides.  And if a male manager wants to get involved don’t let him!  I’ve never seen men getting in the middle of a dispute between women without making it worse.  He will allow himself to be used to choose one side, then the other side, then back to other.  Men try to treat women like men when resolving their conflict.  It makes the backstabbing between the women escalate. 

    While we can’t stop either men or women from bringing their personal baggage and issues into the workplace, we can change the male-dominated workplace so women don’t feel the need to compete and take down each other.  Women should understand that we excel when we work in cooperative and supportive groups.  If we aren’t working that way then we need to figure out why.  That may sound Pollyanna-ish but it is part of our responsibility as being empowered women.      

    Empowered Women Ensure Women Work in Supportive and Cooperative Groups

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  • Discriminate or Bully?

    Women still talk about being discriminated against in 2016, but is it still a relevant issue for women in today’s male-dominated workplace?   Over the past 20 years workplaces have invested great sums of money training themselves and their employees on how to avoid sexual discrimination claims.  They know exactly where the lines are drawn.27245377_m

    So, today, no company should have a discrimination suit unless they have employees who are really stupid.

    Amazingly I know from personal experience that there are some really stupid men out there.

    I had a manager call a meeting about a project that I was a senior leader on and invite all my subordinate male colleagues but not me.  Instead he announced in front of everyone that I had three tasks that day:

    1. Make dinner reservations
    2. Go buy office supplies
    3. Pick up his boss at the airport later that day

    My very first thought was: How stupid are you?  You stepped right into a discrimination claim!

    What did he think I was going to do when I picked up his boss and am alone in the car with his boss on the hour long drive back from the airport?

    Actually, I didn’t give his boss an earful about discrimination.  Instead, I took full advantage of the situation to discuss the project and my views.  That discussion continued over dinner.  I don’t know if I was supposed to attend the dinner but I did – after all, if I make the reservations you can bet I will include myself.  Then the next day I gladly drove the boss back to the airport where we again had a long discussion about the project and I presented my detailed plans to correct the problems he heard about.

    Those discussions paid off.  So while I was clearly being discriminated against, legally it is hard to claim damages from discrimination since I manipulated the situation to my advantage and advancement.

    Unfortunately not every situation can be twisted and taken advantage of.  There are still some men who are incredibly stupid – like what rock did you climb out from under, stupid.

    A new manager invited me and a male colleague to dinner to get to know us better.  That sounds professional except he invited us to a restaurant where the waitresses only wore pasties above their waist.  Yes, he invited me to dinner at a gentleman’s club.

    I didn’t go to the dinner.  Instead I began what turned out to be a very thick folder on this man’s many issues with women.

    When faced with discrimination, women face a difficult decision – Do you fight it or just move on?

    Too often women expect that if they take their issue to their company, their company will do the right thing.  But the company spent a lot of money learning how to obstruct discrimination claims.  They too learned how to twist discrimination claims into something that can be ignored.

    Decades ago paternalism put all women below all men so even the least valued men, the Omegas, were above women.  After spending lots of money on discrimination training, companies learned a little trick to hold women back without it being labeled as discrimination – group women with the Omegas.

    With this technique, a manager can take action against all women and a few inconsequential men and get away with it.  Companies know that as long as women are not singled out and there are no sexual or gender specific comments or actions, it isn’t discrimination.  Companies are legally safe.

    While discrimination is a great rallying cry for women, it isn’t the greatest personnel issue women face in the workplace today.  Bullying is.  And bullying isn’t illegal.

    I thought about the women I’ve worked with and can’t think of too many in the past 15 years who haven’t been bullied.  As for myself, I lost count of how many times men tried to bully me in order to hold me back or get me removed from my job so they could take it over.  I know my number is high because I was in competing with men for the best jobs.  However, most of my female colleagues weren’t.  They were just targets.

    What can we do about workplace bullies?

    You have to stand up against them, usually by yourself.  Bullies exist in the workplace because they are allowed to.  The culture allows it.  Bullying is considered a personnel issue for supervisors to address but most won’t.  The supervisor either likes the bully and empowers him or the supervisor is bullied themselves.  When addressed, bullying gets brushed off as a training issue.  Or if the bully is a manager, then the bully just needs more management training.  The training however seldom comes or is effective.

    Asking HR for help usually doesn’t work – they refer you back to the supervisor.  I read that you should make a business case and ask HR or others to stop bullying for their own self-interests.  However, twice I’ve found the women in HR who was trying to address an issue in tears herself after being bullied.

    You can find allies in the workplace to help you deal with a bully but you have to look hard.  You have to find someone who has strong values and isn’t afraid of conflict.  I’ve found that people who have military experience especially Marines are a great ally.  However, the vast majority of people who are bullied in the workplace eventually leave.

    Always remember that bullies exist because they are allowed to.  So when you are bullied or see someone else being bullied, you have to ask yourself if you are going to intervene or look the other way.  And if you choose to look the other way, can you live with the consequences?

    Between discrimination and bullying, bullying is by far a bigger issue in the workplace for women.  Discrimination has many legal and financial ramifications making it a risky endeavor.  Bullying doesn’t.  So why would anyone who wants to put down or hold back a woman act out through discrimination when they can be a bully and get away with it?  Bullying is the issue we need to focus on.

    Empowered Women Stand Up to Bullies  

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