By Jessica Love
BASED ON THE RESEARCH OF Jason R. Pierce ,Leigh Thompson ,Maryam Kouchaki ,Laura J. Kray,Jessica Kennedy, Mary-Hunter “Mae” McDonnell and Nicole Stephens
During negotiations, studies have found that men are considerably more likely to lie than womenand men are more tolerant of lying as a strategy. But why?
EDITORS NOTE: Several female faculty presented new research about challenges facing women in business as part of the 2018 Global Womens Summit. These are some highlights from a faculty panel on ethics in the workplace.
Its a bit of a puzzle, according to Leigh Thompson. Generally speaking, men and women tend to approach ethical decision-making fairly similarly. So it seems to be something about negotiations in particular that causes large gender differences to emerge.
New research by Thompson, a professor of management and organizations at Kellogg, offers an intriguing explanation: men and women enter into negotiations with different default assumptions about whats at stake. Namely, men tend to view negotiations as competitions with winners and losers, while women tend to view them as relationships, with opportunities for everyone to win.
Men and women walk around with different lenses on, Thompson says.
When people are encouraged to view a negotiation with a different lens, she finds, the gender differences shrink.
In three studies, Thompson and her colleague Jason R. Pierce of UNC Greensboro asked participants to play a computerized game with a partner on a computer in a different room. Participants were handed an envelope of cash and given the opportunity to split the money with their partner. The partner could then choose to accept the split or not. But there was a twist: participants were allowed to lie about how much money was in the envelopesaying there was only a dollar, for instance, instead of a twenty in order to trick their partners into accepting a less favorable split.
Consistent with previous research on negotiations, 44% of male participants chose to lie to their partners, while just 29% of women did.
Critically, however, when the exercise was presented in a different frame, the results changed drastically. In a second study, the game was explicitly framed as a competition. This is a bargaininggame, participants were told, so it was them versus their opponent. We made it sound like this was going to be a real fight to the finish, says Thompson.
In this context, the gender difference decreased, with both men and women frequently choosing to lie.
When the women were put in this competitive, winnerloser, opponent frame, 64% of them said, Ok, Im going to lie too, says Thompson. So it isnt the fact that we dont have this in us. Its just that somehow that was not our mindset going in.
Which begs the question: If encouraging women to adopt a competitive mindset can make them lie more, will encouraging men to adopt an empathetic mindset lead them to lie less?
A third study tested this hypothesis. Some participants were told that their partner was a retiree in financial straits who wanted nothing more than to purchase treats for her grandchildren with any money she makes during the experiment. Under this condition, few participantsof either genderopted to lie to their partner.
We were able to induce more truth-telling in men, says Thompson.
When the women were put in this competitive, winnerloser, opponent frame, 64% of them said, Ok, Im going to lie too.
Leigh Thompson
Negotiating for Others
Women are often given a simple piece of advice before stepping into a negotiation: frame your argument as though you are advocating for someone else, be it your team, your organization, or even the success of your project.
The idea, says Maryam Kouchaki, an assistant professor of management and organizations at Kellogg, is that advocating for others releases women from social constraints that would otherwise limit how tough or forceful they are allowed to be.
Research has shown that when women are in advocacy rolesfor example, using a framework of we or Im negotiating for usthen women dont experience a backlash when they negotiate assertively, says Kouchaki.
New research by Kouchaki suggests a potential wrinkle.
Advocacy roles can put a new kind of social pressure on women. Namely, women may feel less pressured to be polite, but more pressured to do whatever it takes to strike a hard bargaineven if whatever it takes involves unethical behavior.
In four studies, Kouchaki and her colleague Laura Kray of UC Berkeley confirm that when negotiating for themselves, women are less likely than men to use deceptionsuch as failing to reveal the defects on a car they are selling. When representing someone else, however, the gender gap disappears.
Moreover, says Kouchaki, when explicitly asked, only women feel pressure when they are representing others.
But heres where things get really interesting. When women negotiate on behalf of men, they lie more than when they represent women. Why? Kouchaki theorizes that women assume that menmore so than womenwill want them to lie.
Your constituents preferences determine what you will do during a negotiation when you are negotiating on behalf of others, rather than you relying on your own ethical preference, says Kouchaki.
Would Martha Stewart have received as much jail time for insider trading if she had been a man? Would her reputation, and that of her company, have taken the same hit?
Of course, as with most hypotheticals, its impossible to say for certain.
But it is true that women face a higher ethical bar than men do, says recent research conducted by Nicole Stephens, an associate professor of management and organizations at Kellogg. In a new study, Stephens, along with her coauthors Jessica Kennedy of Vanderbilt and Mae McDonnell of the University of Pennsylvania, examined a database of nearly 500 cases in which attorneys were judged to be guilty of breaching the American Bar Associations Rules for Professional Conduct.
The judges who made the decision about punishment were highly trained, says Stephens, and there was a very systematic process by which they decided the punishment that an individual should face.
Nonetheless, female attorneys were assigned more severe punishments than male attorneys for equal offenses, Stephens found. In fact, female attorneys were more than twice as likely to be disbarred for the same offense.
The disparity was greatest when there were very few female judges on the ABAs decision-making panel, and it disappeared as female representation increased.
These findings suggest the importance of ensuring that women are represented in these important roles of influence, says Stephens.
A second study, in the laboratory, confirmed the overall findings. Participants read a hypothetical story about either a man or woman who committed an ethical violation. The participants indicated that they wanted to punish female perpetrators more severely than male ones. They also indicated that they desired women to behave more ethically than men.
As an individual, if youre a woman entering an organization and you look to act like one of the guys, says Stephens, that might not be a good idea. There might be different standards applied to men versus women
Jessica Love is editor in chief of Kellogg Insight.
The article was originally published in Kellogg Insight.