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  3. Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

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  • 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴  (🌈🦄)A This user is from outside of this forum
    🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴  (🌈🦄)A This user is from outside of this forum
    🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴 (🌈🦄)
    wrote last edited by
    #1

    Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

    "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

    In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

    The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

    I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

    Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

    ¹ not all men

    The Orange ThemeT MomoM Mark :meow_pan:N Alexa Devreux-SwiftA AutistiCriticB 51 Replies Last reply
    0
    • 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴  (🌈🦄)A 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴 (🌈🦄)

      Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

      "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

      In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

      The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

      I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

      Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

      ¹ not all men

      The Orange ThemeT This user is from outside of this forum
      The Orange ThemeT This user is from outside of this forum
      The Orange Theme
      wrote last edited by
      #2

      @alice I'm sorry, that sounds endlessly exhausting and frustrating.

      Random Damage 🌻R 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴  (🌈🦄)A 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴 (🌈🦄)

        Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

        "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

        In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

        The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

        I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

        Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

        ¹ not all men

        MomoM This user is from outside of this forum
        MomoM This user is from outside of this forum
        Momo
        wrote last edited by
        #3

        @alice
        Honestly, I hear so many storys and I see them myself in team meetings, etc. And I always realize: "That's not me, I don't do that."

        But I do. In my case it is related to my ADHD, that I feel the urge to burst out whatever I have in my mind before I forget about it because there are butterflies on the window!

        After I realized that I started to observe myself, try to suppress impulses. Medication helps and I think I have this more under control than ever before.

        Not because I count my self as "not all men", but because I realized "actually, me too". So thank you and everyone else who spoke up. Please don't stop. And everyone, please don't stop listen, even if you are not all whatever. Because it could be you anyway.

        AprazethA LisPiL 2 Replies Last reply
        0
        • 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴  (🌈🦄)A 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴 (🌈🦄)

          Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

          "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

          In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

          The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

          I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

          Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

          ¹ not all men

          Mark :meow_pan:N This user is from outside of this forum
          Mark :meow_pan:N This user is from outside of this forum
          Mark :meow_pan:
          wrote last edited by
          #4

          @alice sadly that sounds about right 😔

          On a similar note, the nicest, most pleasant IT project I ever worked on was run entirely by women. Despite it being the first one any of them had been involved with it was an absolute delight compared to the normal macho pissing contest nonsense.

          This is also why most of my friends are female, enbies or trans - I just find most (but not all) men hard work.

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴  (🌈🦄)A 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴 (🌈🦄)

            Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

            "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

            In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

            The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

            I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

            Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

            ¹ not all men

            Alexa Devreux-SwiftA This user is from outside of this forum
            Alexa Devreux-SwiftA This user is from outside of this forum
            Alexa Devreux-Swift
            wrote last edited by
            #5

            @alice

            I have seen and experienced this so much myself in tech, and especially since transition.

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴  (🌈🦄)A 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴 (🌈🦄)

              Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

              "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

              In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

              The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

              I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

              Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

              ¹ not all men

              AutistiCriticB This user is from outside of this forum
              AutistiCriticB This user is from outside of this forum
              AutistiCritic
              wrote last edited by
              #6

              @alice That’s the sort of combative macho bullshit that has infected political discourse and the media. No wonder no-one in charge has any idea what the fuck they’re doing. 😔

              BredrollB 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴  (🌈🦄)A 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴 (🌈🦄)

                Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

                "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

                In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

                The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

                I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

                Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

                ¹ not all men

                Scar :Fire_Pansexual:A This user is from outside of this forum
                Scar :Fire_Pansexual:A This user is from outside of this forum
                Scar :Fire_Pansexual:
                wrote last edited by
                #7

                @alice assertiveness is a big part, but I think not just that. Men¹ do not listen to women. So tha man who repeats your idea first and explains it to you back gets the credit from the others. The only thing that corrects them is if another man points out their behaviour. But it is ingrained so much that even calling out does not stop it from occurring again. Next time, they do the same. 💔

                Juniper 🏳️‍⚧️🌲E 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴  (🌈🦄)A 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴 (🌈🦄)

                  Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

                  "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

                  In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

                  The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

                  I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

                  Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

                  ¹ not all men

                  Anyia, melting girl 🏳️‍⚧️🏳️‍🌈A This user is from outside of this forum
                  Anyia, melting girl 🏳️‍⚧️🏳️‍🌈A This user is from outside of this forum
                  Anyia, melting girl 🏳️‍⚧️🏳️‍🌈
                  wrote last edited by
                  #8

                  @alice one thing I've noticed is how some people never pause to give anyone else even a chance to speak. As if there's a filibuster that needs to be kept going uninterrupted or something. And if you don't counter what they're saying when is wrong they consider you to have agreed whatever incorrect statement it is. Quite tiring.

                  Like you're on a CSMA/CA medium, but some people treat it as CSMA/CD but don't bother with the CD aspect of it 🤷‍♀️

                  (That's Carrier Sense Multiple Access, with either Collision Avoidance or Collision Detection, for those not in the networking world)

                  Seán FenianZ 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴  (🌈🦄)A 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴 (🌈🦄)

                    Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

                    "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

                    In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

                    The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

                    I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

                    Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

                    ¹ not all men

                    LichoL This user is from outside of this forum
                    LichoL This user is from outside of this forum
                    Licho
                    wrote last edited by
                    #9

                    @alice I think that's very accurate. That's what I remember from the times I was in the male dominated spaces.

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴  (🌈🦄)A 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴 (🌈🦄)

                      Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

                      "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

                      In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

                      The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

                      I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

                      Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

                      ¹ not all men

                      WTLW This user is from outside of this forum
                      WTLW This user is from outside of this forum
                      WTL
                      wrote last edited by
                      #10

                      @alice The act of interrupting someone who is speaking without having a something to contribute just makes you look stupid, doesn’t it? I’m clearly not cut out for the corporate world.🎉

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴  (🌈🦄)A 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴 (🌈🦄)

                        Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

                        "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

                        In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

                        The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

                        I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

                        Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

                        ¹ not all men

                        KarstenB This user is from outside of this forum
                        KarstenB This user is from outside of this forum
                        Karsten
                        wrote last edited by
                        #11

                        @alice I hate it and I hate being part of the system that normalizes this behaviour. 😔

                        🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴  (🌈🦄)A 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴  (🌈🦄)A 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴 (🌈🦄)

                          Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

                          "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

                          In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

                          The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

                          I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

                          Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

                          ¹ not all men

                          Sharp Cheddar GoblinS This user is from outside of this forum
                          Sharp Cheddar GoblinS This user is from outside of this forum
                          Sharp Cheddar Goblin
                          wrote last edited by
                          #12

                          @alice I can't stand over-talking. So rude. Someone talks over me and I just shut down and don't bother communicating any more, since they clearly don't care what I have to say. I refuse to play dominance games.

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • Scar :Fire_Pansexual:A Scar :Fire_Pansexual:

                            @alice assertiveness is a big part, but I think not just that. Men¹ do not listen to women. So tha man who repeats your idea first and explains it to you back gets the credit from the others. The only thing that corrects them is if another man points out their behaviour. But it is ingrained so much that even calling out does not stop it from occurring again. Next time, they do the same. 💔

                            Juniper 🏳️‍⚧️🌲E This user is from outside of this forum
                            Juniper 🏳️‍⚧️🌲E This user is from outside of this forum
                            Juniper 🏳️‍⚧️🌲
                            wrote last edited by
                            #13

                            @Azzura @alice

                            This became a big thing at my previous job. There was a meeting of essentially the whole program I was on. Way bigger than it needed to be, so most of us were just spectators. I don't remember what issue they were trying to solve, but a woman made a suggestion, it was ignored, a little later a man repeated the suggestion, and it was taken seriously. The most notable thing about this incident is that another woman called it out in the same meeting, and that actually started a good discussion. Of course, afterwards a bunch of guys were rolling their eyes and saying "oh, I guess we have to be careful what we say now." I was not out at work at that time, so there was an extra layer of discomfort for me. But the fact that this happened and was called out publicly among the higher levels of the company seemed to empower women there to speak up more.

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴  (🌈🦄)A 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴 (🌈🦄)

                              Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

                              "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

                              In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

                              The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

                              I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

                              Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

                              ¹ not all men

                              SemitonesS This user is from outside of this forum
                              SemitonesS This user is from outside of this forum
                              Semitones
                              wrote last edited by
                              #14

                              @alice boo! Fire the CEOs! Hire Alice!

                              🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴  (🌈🦄)A Scott WilsonS The Orange ThemeT 3 Replies Last reply
                              0
                              • AutistiCriticB AutistiCritic

                                @alice That’s the sort of combative macho bullshit that has infected political discourse and the media. No wonder no-one in charge has any idea what the fuck they’re doing. 😔

                                BredrollB This user is from outside of this forum
                                BredrollB This user is from outside of this forum
                                Bredroll
                                wrote last edited by
                                #15

                                @benjamincox @alice all those "big picture" people who dont want to be bothered with pesky things like reality

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴  (🌈🦄)A 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴 (🌈🦄)

                                  Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

                                  "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

                                  In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

                                  The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

                                  I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

                                  Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

                                  ¹ not all men

                                  Jason Parker (he/they)N This user is from outside of this forum
                                  Jason Parker (he/they)N This user is from outside of this forum
                                  Jason Parker (he/they)
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #16

                                  @alice As a generally soft-spoken ¹, I see the same things pretty often. It's hard to demonstrate that yes, I actually do know wtf I'm talking about.

                                  Could you imagine how successful some companies would be if this mediocrity were replaced?

                                  Seán FenianZ 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴  (🌈🦄)A 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴 (🌈🦄)

                                    Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

                                    "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

                                    In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

                                    The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

                                    I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

                                    Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

                                    ¹ not all men

                                    FoolishOwlF This user is from outside of this forum
                                    FoolishOwlF This user is from outside of this forum
                                    FoolishOwl
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #17

                                    @alice It's definitely something that men are trained to do. I've had people criticize me for not being "assertive" enough, in just this way. In workplaces, though, I'm usually low enough in status that I'm not expected to say anything in a meeting.

                                    I have also been criticized for talking over people, to be fair. I don't mean to; I just want to complete a thought. In a lot of conversations I feel like I'm waiting for my turn, and I don't recognize when my turn is over.

                                    EDIT: removed a bad figure of speech.

                                    🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴  (🌈🦄)A 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴  (🌈🦄)A 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴 (🌈🦄)

                                      Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

                                      "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

                                      In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

                                      The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

                                      I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

                                      Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

                                      ¹ not all men

                                      NeilG This user is from outside of this forum
                                      NeilG This user is from outside of this forum
                                      Neil
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #18

                                      @alice I'm a man who has gotten the same feedback. I think my tendency to listen is a strength and I'm not interested in getting ahead by running my mouth.

                                      🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴  (🌈🦄)A NeilG 2 Replies Last reply
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                                      • 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴  (🌈🦄)A 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴 (🌈🦄)

                                        Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

                                        "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

                                        In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

                                        The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

                                        I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

                                        Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

                                        ¹ not all men

                                        Howard CohenH This user is from outside of this forum
                                        Howard CohenH This user is from outside of this forum
                                        Howard Cohen
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #19

                                        @alice I think you are right.

                                        Men need to unlearn this when we leave the schoolyard and enter the adult world.

                                        I think part of the resistance to learning this is imposter syndrome. Young men are full of fears they often cannot share. Those fears get paved over with hostility and domineering, which they pretend is strength. By the time they end up in a meeting with female peers, they have an inescapable need to prove themselves. Their inexperience leads them to believe respect and admiration is a zero-sum game. At that point, any chance of being a good team mate with women is practically lost.

                                        It doesn't have to be that way. But, I'd say it usually is.

                                        I've seen men who respect women in meetings. I learned to do it better, from them. It can be learned, and then things are so much better. A team fighting itself doesn't win very often. More importantly, life is shitty when it's full of conflict, and much more joyful when everyone feels good about their part in a team effort. The team wins together.

                                        🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴  (🌈🦄)A LisPiL 2 Replies Last reply
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                                        • 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴  (🌈🦄)A 🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴 (🌈🦄)

                                          Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

                                          "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

                                          In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

                                          The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

                                          I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

                                          Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

                                          ¹ not all men

                                          Legit_SpaghettiL This user is from outside of this forum
                                          Legit_SpaghettiL This user is from outside of this forum
                                          Legit_Spaghetti
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #20

                                          @alice Wait, you were a tech exec? But... you're capable, smart, and have good takes. You also seem like a really decent person who cares about others. How did you last even five minutes in the churning gyre of madness that is the executive circle of hell?

                                          🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴  (🌈🦄)A 1 Reply Last reply
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