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How to Ask for What You Want at Work—Including More Money
Reluctant to ask for what you want at work? It may feel uncomfortable, but it’s worth doing, for the sake of your career. If you don’t speak up, you’re putting yourself at a significant disadvantage. Find out more in Forté’s Women Lead webinar, Why Don’t Women Ask, which featured Michelle Duguid, a professor at Samuel Curtis Johnson Graduate School of Management, where she teaches such courses as Women and Leadership, Negotiations, and Power and Influence.
At the beginning of the webinar, Duguid offered a reminder that we should always be negotiating. She said, “Usually when people think about negotiations and asking for things, they tend to think of these very big moments—negotiating for a salary, negotiating for a raise, or when you’re buying a house or a car—but we negotiate all the time, and you should be asking all the time for things that you think you need to be successful.” She explained that this includes things like asking for more time and asking to be taken off of a project.
When she asked webinar participants to list a few of the reasons women don’t ask, responses included “fear of rejection,” “fear of hurting the relationship,” and “lack of confidence.” Duguid said another reason women don’t ask is because they don’t think they need to. When women join a new organization, they tend to believe that their new workplace knows exactly how much they’re worth. These women think, “I’m sure they’re going to treat me fairly. They’ll give me what I deserve.” She referred to recent research that showed that while women in white collar industries were more likely to assume they’d be paid fairly, men were more likely to do salary research and return to the negotiating table with hard numbers to back up their request for more money.