Houston Chronicle Sunday

Young women are still less likely to negotiate job offers — but why?

Female workers could be analyzing climate better than male colleagues

- By Danielle Paquette

Nearly a decade ago, Carnegie Mellon University researcher­s surveyed a group of graduating college students and found just 7 percent of women said they’d tried to negotiate their initial job offers, compared to a whopping 57 percent of men.

This negotiatio­n gap appears to stubbornly persist among today’s young workers — though it’s less dramatic. The latest evidence comes from Earnest, a lending company in San Francisco, which recently asked 1,005 Americans nationwide, age 18 to 44, about their approach to conversati­ons about pay. 42 percent of men in the report’s youngest age group, 18 to 24, reported asking for more money, compared to just 26 percent of their female peers.

The chasm appears to close with age, at least in these data: 43 percent of women, ages 25 to 34, said they negotiated a job offer, compared to only 35 percent of their male counterpar­ts.

Negotiatio­ns, of course, don’t always yield favorable results. In Earnest’s 18-24 group, the men were more likely to have a “successful” negotiatio­n compared to women, by a margin of 24 percent to 16 percent. In the 25 to 34 group, women were more likely to successful­ly bargain. Older men and women had about the same odds.

No matter the experience level, firms apparently shut down workers left and right.

Overall, the data show that it’s young women, perhaps in their first or second job, who shy away most from the negotiatio­n process — a perplexing revelation, considerin­g women are outpacing men in college enrollment and degree attainment. So, what’s going on? The Earnest survey didn’t elaborate on the meaning of “negotiate.” So, the women in the older age brackets may have found more success in asking for benefits like flexible schedules, rather than simply higher salaries.

More generally, women who opt out of negotiatin­g aren’t succumbing to some confidence problem, notes Hannah Riley Bowles, a Harvard lecturer who studies gender in negotiatio­n. They might be more accurately reading the social climate. They might see it’s just not a good idea.

“The answer has more to do with how women are treated when they negotiate than it has to do with their general confidence or skills at negotiatio­n,” Bowles wrote recently in the Harvard Business Review. “Their reticence is based on an accurate read of the social environmen­t. Women get a nervous feeling about negotiatin­g for higher pay because they are intuiting — correctly — that self-advocating for higher pay would present a socially difficult situation for them — more so than for men.”

In three 2006 experiment­s, subjects of both sexes were asked to think like hiring managers and evaluate mock job negotiatio­ns. They penalized women more than men for making extra demands. That happened whether they watched women negotiate on video or read about their efforts on paper. People found men who negotiated to be generally more persuasive, even if they followed the same script as female hopefuls. (Bowles and her colleagues theorize this may have something to do with an unspoken social norm that women are expected to be team players and menare supposed to be bold leaders.)

An April study from the Harvard Business School and Stanford University, meanwhile, found that always opting to negotiate a job offer, regardless of the circumstan­ces, might actually backfire.

Researcher­s set up an experiment in which people playing “workers” and “firms” entered wagesettin­g discussion­s. They forced some women to negotiate every offer and gave others the choice to either accept the initial package or push for more. When women were forced to negotiate, their overall wages actually dropped. The rate by which final wages fell below the initial offer increased from 9 to 33 percent.

“In light of such complexiti­es,” the authors wrote, “women may be good judges of whether or not they should lean in.”

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