A network's gender composition and communication pattern predict women's leadership success

Many leaders today do not rise through the ranks but are recruited directly out of graduate programs into leadership positions. We use a quasi-experiment and instrumental-variable regression to understand the link between students’ graduate school social networks and placement into leadership positi...

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Published inProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS Vol. 116; no. 6; pp. 2033 - 2038
Main Authors Yang, Yang, Chawla, Nitesh V, Uzzi, Brian
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States National Academy of Sciences 05.02.2019
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Summary:Many leaders today do not rise through the ranks but are recruited directly out of graduate programs into leadership positions. We use a quasi-experiment and instrumental-variable regression to understand the link between students’ graduate school social networks and placement into leadership positions of varying levels of authority. Our data measure students’ personal characteristics and academic performance, as well as their social network information drawn from 4.5 million email correspondences among hundreds of students who were placed directly into leadership positions. After controlling for students’ personal characteristics, work experience, and academic performance, we find that students’ social networks strongly predict placement into leadership positions. For males, the higher a male student’s centrality in the school-wide network, the higher his leadership-job placement will be. Men with network centrality in the top quartile have an expected job placement level that is 1.5 times greater than men in the bottom quartile of centrality. While centrality also predicts women’s placement, high-placing women students have one thing more: an inner circle of predominantly female contacts who are connected to many nonoverlapping third-party contacts. Women with a network centrality in the top quartile and a female-dominated inner circle have an expected job placement level that is 2.5 times greater than women with low centrality and a male-dominated inner circle. Women who have networks that resemble those of high-placing men are low-placing, despite having leadership qualifications comparable to high-placing women.
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Edited by Greg J. Duncan, University of California, Irvine, CA, and approved November 26, 2018 (received for review December 11, 2017)
Author contributions: Y.Y. and B.U. designed research; Y.Y., N.V.C., and B.U. performed research; Y.Y. and B.U. analyzed data; and Y.Y. and B.U. wrote the paper.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1721438116