15% Of Women Have Slept With Their Bosses -- And 37% Of Them Got Promoted For It

I was reading and came across an article that fascinated me entitled "15% Of Women Have Slept With Their Bosses -- And 37% Of Them Got Promoted For It" written by Alyson Shontell (http://www.businessinsider.com/sex-is-killing-the-workplace-2010-8).  The most amazing thing to me is the magnitude of these numbers.  I would have expected them to be lower.  I was wondering whether they have gone up or down over time.

15% Of Women Have Slept With Their Bosses -- And 37% Of Them Got Promoted For It

Alyson Shontell  

Research from the Center for Work-Life Policy shows mid-level, professional women need powerful, senior executives to help promote them to the next level of management.

The problem is this: More often than not, superiors are males who are married.

Enter, sex.

In that same CWLP study, 34% of executive women claim they know a female colleague who has had an affair with a boss.  Furthermore, 15% of women at the director level or above admitted to having affairs themselves.

And worse, 37% claim the action was rewarded: they said that women involved in affairs received a career boost as a result.

Meanwhile, all this hanky-panky is really screwing the rest of us, says Slyvia Ann Hewlett at Harvard Business Review’s Blog:

61% of men and 70% of women lose respect for a leader involved in an affair. Most poisonous of all, when a junior woman is having a sexual dalliance with the boss, 60% of male executives and 65% of female executives suspect that salary hikes and plum assignments are being traded for sexual favors. This can have a disastrous effect on morale and productivity. Forty-eight percent of men and 56% of women feel animosity towards the involved couple, and 39% of men and 37% of women see a fall off in productivity as the team splinters. Talk about collateral damage!

So what is Sylvia’s suggestion?

The time has come for rigorous, high-profile policies that punish offenders. It's not just about the parties involved anymore. Looking at the larger picture can show some dark times ahead for women in the workplace — something that should be stopped sooner rather than later.

 

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