Monday, 29 June 2015

Who would you Prefer-Male or Female Boss.


In the 1950s, Americans were asked, "If you were taking a new job and had your choice of a boss, would you prefer to work for a man or a woman?"

It's a question Gallup still asks.


There are about 9 million women-owned businesses in the U.S., and in the past year, women have started 1,200 new businesses each day, according to the 2014 State of Women-Owned Business Report, which was commissioned by American Express.

However, while women-owned businesses continue to grow, the businesses are relatively small, employing just 6% of the country's workforce and contributing just under 4% of business revenues. That's about the same share as in 1997.

It isn't clear how employees' preferences on their boss' gender influence success or failure, but it is clear that there is plenty of room for improvement.
"Women are not growing and scaling as much as they should be," said Amanda Brown, executive director of the National Women's Business Council. "It's no surprise that women would prefer to work for male bosses, when they stick to what they know."

In the Gallup survey, 39% of women preferred a male boss, 25% preferred a female boss and 34% said it made no difference. Overall, 46% of men and women said it made no difference.

The fact that so many respondents said it made no difference resonated with Jayna Cooke, CEO of events company EVENTup. "That's probably the response we want to get to," she said.
Meanwhile, Brown admitted that when she saw the Gallup poll, she wondered if it was a joke, saying that when you continue to ask the same question for sixty years, "you're continuing to have an outdated conversation."
 "What relevance does this have at this point?" she said, adding that the question itself highlights "that there are still women missing in the equation...women are not in the position of being bosses enough. How do we address that?"






culled:cnnmoney

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