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- About
Women experience increased stress in male-dominated industries
Workplace experience can vary widely based on any number of factors. One worker’s love for conversation and friend-making may make her in-person, highly collaborative position a dream job. But that dream job may look more like a nightmare for an introvert who prefers to focus on independent projects from his home office.
Factors other than personality influence employee workplace experience, too. Gender, sexual orientation, identity and self-presentation, race, national origin, religion and ability can shape someone’s experience on the job. And in the last few years, these patterns have grown more exaggerated.Take, for example, the experience of women working in male-dominated industries. While high-profile employers have made focused efforts on boosting representation among their ranks in recent years, certain professions have remained decidedly male. These professions include civil engineers, computer programmers, construction managers, truck drivers, mechanical engineers and software developers.
In each of these professions, women comprised fewer than 21% of workers in 2021, according to data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Women of color had even less representation: Black women made up just 0.5% of U.S. civil engineers last year.
We could continue to review statistics flagging related inequalities in male-dominated workplaces, numbers that tell of wage gaps, sexual harassment, and gender discrimination. But we want to focus on an aspect of the male-dominated workplace that’s under-discussed: The well-being of women and others who fall outside a cis-male profile.
While statistics abound on other topics, we don’t often hear much about the emotional experience of those outside the majority in these types of workplaces. This data focuses on the experience of people who identify as women. How does their experience compare to that of their male counterparts? And what actions might that information prompt?
Women experience more stress than their male counterparts
To explore these questions, we looked into data we collected in December 2021 as a part of our working parents survey. The poll comprised 584 parents working full-time in the U.S., with the audience nearly split between mothers and fathers (49% and 51%, respectively). We parsed the data by gender and industry, splitting responses into male-dominated industries and non-male dominated industries.
Male-dominated industry or not, the data show that women experience a great deal more stress than their male counterparts. Seventeen percent of women reported feeling on edge compared to 6% of men. The same amount of women said they experience “a great deal of tension” in their daily lives, while 9% of men agreed. The most drastic difference occurred when we asked about stress. Twenty-eight percent of women said they often felt stressed out. Eleven percent of men agreed.
When we separated the respondents by those working in male-dominated industries and non-male-dominated industries, we found no differences in how men experience stress between the two environments. We did find, however, striking differences among women. Significantly more women working in male-dominated industries reported feelings of stress and experiences of being “on edge” than did peers working in non-male-dominated industries.
Organizations need to consider burnout, performance, and quitting through additional lenses like sex and gender
Many organizations are paying more attention to the emotional health of their workers, both due to the growing awareness surrounding mental health issues and a burgeoning understanding of the impact they can have on the workplace.
The pandemic spurred stress among workers. Between February 2020 and February 2022, Google searches for same-day mental health services and centers for workplace mental health expanded by more than 1,300%. Meanwhile, searches for “how to ask for a mental health day” skyrocketed by 1,000%. It’s no surprise, then, to learn that stress eats into employees’ workday. A recent report found that stress costs some workers up to two hours of their day.
It follows that efforts to ease stress, tension, and other signs of burnout would benefit employees while also boosting the bottom line — a connection many organizations are making in their quest to address worker mental health. As they strategize, however, it’s clear that conversations about workplace stress require a high level of nuance when it comes to who’s experiencing the stress and why.
Our data revealed that it’s more common for women to encounter stress and feel on edge when working in male-dominated industries. This data doesn’t tell us whether the stress stems from their femaleness and added societal expectations of being female, or simply from not being male, from being in the minority in the workplace. It doesn’t tell us if it comes from explicit discrimination and exclusion or from the difficulty of navigating a workplace where everything — equipment settings, temperature, scheduling, performance standards, social patterns — is designed around a male standard.
Yet the findings point to a clear need for organizations to consider burnout, performance, and quitting through additional lenses. When organizations convene to combat workplace stress and burnout, it’s essential they consider how their workforce encounters these phenomena by looking at demographics — perhaps using sex or gender as a starting point.
The data also highlight the need for male-dominated industries looking to bolster representation to consider the challenges women may face when entering such professions. Organizations like Girls who Code are making headway in giving young women the skills to pursue careers that once belonged exclusively to men. But employers need to match such efforts to build technical skills and even softer skills by ensuring they enable women to join their ranks and empower them to succeed there.
What might that entail? For starters, looking at their own recruiting practices and identifying and mitigating areas of explicit or unconscious bias, broadening the candidate pipeline, and considering how the environment and their own actions might shape how a candidate shows up. Another area with ample room for improvement: make conscious efforts to lead inclusively and create a culture of belonging where the women or people of color who get in the door find it a worthwhile place to stay. Employers can move in on this goal by taking a wide range of actions, from setting up mentorship programs to enacting strong policies around benefits like maternity leave.
Without progress on representation and inclusion, women will likely continue to experience workplace stress in greater numbers than men, especially in male-dominated industries. It’s up to employers to address the root causes of this problem or risk the realities of unequal stress burdens and the resulting stress-induced burnout.
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Create a plan for a healthier life with personalized guidance from our wellness coaches.
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Erin Eatough, PhD
Dr. Erin Eatough is an occupational health psychologist who has published research on employee well-being in over 30 outlets such as the Journal of Applied Psychology and has been featured in media outlets such as Harvard Business Review. Erin currently serves BetterUp in translating data to insight and helps to bring the science of BetterUp to life through content marketing. Erin received her Ph.D. in Industrial-Organizational Psychology from the University of South Florida.
Before BetterUp, Erin was a professor of Industrial and Organizational Psychology. She lives in Alexandria, VA with her husband and two young children. When not working, you can find her and her family on adventures in their tiny home on wheels, a converted Sprinter van.