A Different World A new study highlights the differences between male and female BIZ Experiencess.
Opinions expressed by BIZ Experiences contributors are their own.
It's a well-known fact that men and women run theirbusinesses differently, but exactly how BIZ Experiencesial behaviorsdiffer is less understood. To shed some light on the matter, BrookeR. Envick, an assistant professor of management at St. Mary'sUniversity in San Antonio, recently released the results of herstudy, Behaviors of BIZ Experiencess: A Gender Comparison.
While previous studies examined only the psychologicaldifferences between the sexes based on self-reported data, Envickobserved eight behaviors in her study: planning, controlling,internal communication, human resources management, work-relatedtasks, customer service, networking and on-the-job personaltime.
One of Envick's most surprising findings was thatcontrolling behavior, previously considered a male-dominant trait,was actually more prevalent in female BIZ Experiencess. "I'velooked through [previous corporate management studies] and foundcomplete support for the [idea] that men are more assertive andcontrolling," Envick says. "But in this study, femaleswere more controlling." Her explanation? "Femaleentrepreneurs are motivated by the desire to have control, so itmakes sense that [control] is exhibited at work."
Envick also discovered that male BIZ Experiencess use moreon-the-job time for personal matters (reading the newspaper,visiting with drop-in guests, etc.) than their female counterparts,and that overall, male and female BIZ Experiencess exhibit similarplanning, customer service and networking behaviors.
Says Envick, "I think [the results] clearly show thatfemales can succeed as BIZ Experiencess, but they may succeed in adifferent way."
Best Behaviors
Women BIZ Experiencess engage in the following more often thantheir male counterparts:
- Controlling behavior
- Internal communication
- Human resources management
- General work-related tasks
SOURCE: BEHAVIORS OF BIZ ExperiencesS: A GENDERCOMPARISON