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 When Women Ask for More, They Pay for It

Research shows women negotiate and advocate for themselves as often as men do—but they're more likely to face backlash when they do.*


When Anna, a 32-year-old IT professional, started her first job, she quickly encountered a familiar pattern: job creep. "They said, 'Hey, can you do this other thing too for a little bit? It'll be like 10% of your time,'" she recalls. "But that turned into basically doing a second full-time job."

So Anna did what she'd been taught to do: she scheduled a meeting with her manager to request compensation that reflected her expanded responsibilities. "I laid it out: 'Here's what I've taken on, here's how I'm spending my time, here's what my days look like. Can we renegotiate my salary?'" 

Her manager refused—and subtly shamed her for asking. "'You're asking for more money? We're a startup,'" he replied. The message was clear: *You're ungrateful. How dare you ask, even though we're asking you to do two jobs?*

After that, every attempt to advocate for herself felt like a battle. Her boss dangled promises of bonuses and raises if she took on more work. Anna delivered. The rewards never came. "It makes you feel crazy," she says. "You're getting feedback like, 'This is how you get recognized and rewarded.' I did all those things." Yet each time she followed the script, she was thwarted or dismissed. "You start to wonder: Am I overasking? Do I really deserve this? You're fighting just to get paid fairly."

If this sounds familiar, you're not alone.
The Double Bind

The very behaviors that help men—particularly cisgender, straight, white, able-bodied men—advance in their careers often become liabilities when women exhibit them in the same contexts.

> He's independent. *What a go-getter.*  
> She's independent. *How selfish.*  
>  
> He's ambitious. *That's just what we need.*  
> She's ambitious. *Who does she think she is?*  
>  
> He's assertive. *What a great leader.*  
> She's assertive. *What a bitch.*

A reason to hire, promote, or reward a man can become a reason to withhold those same opportunities from a woman.

Research confirms this pattern. In their study "The Dynamics of Gender and Alternatives in Negotiation," Jennifer Dannals and colleagues analyzed over 2,500 negotiators to understand why women typically achieve worse outcomes. Were women less assertive? Negotiating less often? Less skilled at the process? The data said no. Women were less likely to get what they asked for *not because they weren't assertive, but because they were*.

Women's assertiveness challenges patriarchal expectations that women should be warm, accommodating, and deferential—not ambitious, aggressive, or demanding. Dannals's research suggests it's this perceived "gender role transgression," rather than negotiation tactics themselves, that triggers professional penalties.

 The Ambition Penalty

This creates a catch-22 researchers call the **double bind**: We tell anyone who wants to advance that they must be strong, bold, and assertive—traits culturally coded as masculine. Yet because patriarchal norms also dictate that women be nurturing and deferential (especially to men), ambitious women often find themselves in a no-win scenario:

- Express stereotypically feminine qualities? Your competence and leadership potential may be questioned.
- Express stereotypically masculine qualities? You risk being labeled unlikable, "not a team player," or "not a good fit."

These biases are most pronounced in roles and industries stereotyped as masculine, which coincidentally tend to offer higher pay, greater autonomy, and more influence. A 2020 study of women in male-dominated fields like STEM and finance found that women arbitrarily assigned to leadership roles faced fewer penalties than those who actively pursued those positions. In other words, it was acceptable for women to succeed as leaders—as long as they hadn't openly aimed for the opportunity.

This reveals the **ambition penalty** in action: When women are perceived as actively pursuing professional or leadership goals, the *pursuit itself* is often resented more than the achievement. It is the expression of ambition—the "audacity" of raising one's hand—that triggers the strongest backlash.

When "Just Ask" Isn't Enough

For those raised on advice like *Nice Girls Don't Get the Corner Office* or *Girl, Stop Apologizing*, the backlash that follows a straightforward request for fair compensation can be a harsh awakening.

"I did feel like, *Damn, should I have just left it alone? Should I not have pushed hard on the salary?*" recalls Carla, who had a marketing job offer rescinded after attempting to negotiate an increase from $40,000 to $45,000.

Or consider Nadia, a publishing professional in her thirties. After four interviews and repeated assurances that she was the top candidate, she was told, "It seems like actually, this isn't a good fit for you," after requesting a salary commensurate with her experience. "You feel stupid for thinking you could negotiate. You feel worthless—like they really don't value you at all. And that your work isn't really worth anything."

We were part of a generation repeatedly warned that women simply don't assert their ambitions enough. But the data tell a different story. A 2018 study titled "Do Women Ask?" found that women request raises just as often as men do—yet remain less likely to receive them. "Our main finding—women do ask—holds in both large and small companies, and for women with and without advanced education," the authors concluded. "While women do now ask, they 'don't get.'"

"And yet we're still getting told, 'Just ask, just ask,'" says Caroline, a 26-year-old tech worker whose offer was withdrawn after she attempted to negotiate salary and benefits. "I've talked to three other women who said, 'Yes, this happened to me. I tried to negotiate, and the company either ghosted me or rescinded the offer.'"

 Reframing the Solution

Encouraging women to advocate for themselves isn't inherently wrong—but positioning individual assertiveness as a simple fix for systemic inequality overlooks the structural biases at play.

Research shows women receive more negative evaluations when they self-promote. Women who highlight their achievements in job interviews are rated as less likable and less worthy of hire than those who don't. Critically, it's this *real and heightened risk of backlash*—not a lack of confidence—that often discourages women from self-promoting in the future.

When we recognize how consistently women's ambitions are penalized, we begin to see that much of what's been attributed to "women holding themselves back" is actually a rational adaptation: a conscious or subconscious strategy to avoid professional penalties.

**In other words: The problem isn't that women fear speaking up, negotiating, or asking. The problem is the disproportionate consequences they still face when they do.**

Acknowledging this distinction clarifies where the responsibility for change truly lies—not with women learning to navigate biased systems more perfectly, but with organizations and cultures dismantling the double standards that punish ambition in half the workforce.

Until then, the message remains painfully clear: When women ask for more, they often pay for it. And that's a cost no one should have to bear.

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