« Back to article | Print this article |
The study, to be published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, found that nice guys don't get ahead in salary negotiations, but they don't finish last either - that position is left for women, whether or not they're nice.
Click NEXT to read more...
That may be because people judge no-nonsense women more harshly than no-nonsense men, said study researcher Timothy Judge of the University of Notre Dames' Mendoza College of Business in Australia.
"Women who appear to be tough or disagreeable get a special kind of scorn directed toward them."
Click NEXT to read more...
For their research, Judge and his colleagues pulled data of about 3,500 people from three large American studies: the National Longitudinal Surveys of Youth, the National Survey of Midlife Development and the Wisconsin Longitudinal Survey.
The researchers controlled for factors such as education and job complexity that could skew the results.
In all the studies, people who scored high in disagreeableness were found to have earned more than agreeable types.
Click NEXT to read more...
Disagreeable women outearned agreeable women by 5.47 per cent, an average difference of only $1,828 per year, the researchers said.
According to the researchers, agreeableness is one of the basic personality traits found to have a strong genetic basis and about half of the variation between people's agreeableness is controlled by genes.
Click NEXT to read more...
To find out why disagreeableness seems beneficial to men in particular, the researchers asked 460 undergraduates to read profiles of eight female job promotion candidates or eight male candidates.
Half of the candidates in each group were painted as agreeable, while the other were disagreeable.
Click NEXT to read more...
It was found that disagreeable men were more likely to be recommended for promotion than disagreeable women as the participants indicated they saw disagreeable men as strong leaders, an advantage they didn't find in disagreeable women.
Though it might seem galling that the jerk in the next cubicle has a greater chance of promotion than you, disagreeable doesn't necessarily mean rude, the authors wrote.
Rather, disagreeable people may simply set more aggressive goals and negotiate harder than agreeable types, Judge added.