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Merit versus maleness: How strategic positioning can mitigate external gender bias
Institution:1. Kansas State University, 1301 Lovers Lane, Manhattan, KS 66506, U.S.A.;2. The University of Texas at Arlington, Arlington, TX 76019, U.S.A.;3. University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, NE 68506, U.S.A.
Abstract:Despite the proactive efforts of many firms to combat gender bias within their organizations, societal prejudices still disadvantage women leaders and the firms who employ them. This external gender bias shapes outside stakeholder evaluations of women leaders’ efforts in various ways, and firms need strategies to cope with this external gender bias. We examine the conditions that might alleviate this burden of external bias and what women leaders and top executives can do to leverage these conditions—from a strategic positioning perspective—that will effectively allow female leaders to differentiate their work. To do this, we synthesize and build upon evidence that the external gender bias against women leaders diminishes when they lead in areas that are unconventional rather than mainstream. We then propose a two-step process based on (1) identifying the likely threat of external gender bias, which is stronger in some industry contexts than others, and (2) leveraging unconventionality to circumvent male prototypical comparisons, thereby reducing the hazards of external gender bias.
Keywords:External gender bias  Women leaders  Role congruity  Unconventional roles  Perceived capability
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