Leadership The Likeability Penalty: Stop Worrying About Being Liked We all know successful men are seen as assertive and powerful but high-flying women are considered bossy. Should you worry about the 'likeability penalty' or give it the flick? By jitendermittal Published 11 July, 2025 Leadership The Likeability Penalty: Stop Worrying About Being Liked We all know successful men are seen as assertive and powerful but high-flying women are considered bossy. Should you worry about the 'likeability penalty' or give it the flick? By jitendermittal Published 11 July, 2025 Previous article How To Manage Your Super In Your 20s Next article The Likeability Penalty: Stop Worrying About Being Liked My oldest daughter – let’s call her Marge – likes to be in charge. Aged 8, and with three younger siblings, you’d think she had ample outlet for her leadership ambitions. But no. She still likes to organise her friends, her Sylvanian Families collection, even her parents. She is often urged by her father and me to try to be a bit less bossy. But how, I sometimes wonder, would we feel if our second-born, a son, acted in the same way? Would we worry that he would be viewed as too domineering – or simply admire his leadership skills?Sheryl Sandberg, the high-flying chief operating officer of Facebook, reckons she knows the answer. Back in 2013, Sandberg first asserted that natural born female leaders suffer a “likeability penalty” that begins in childhood – and in the five years since, we’ve been noticing and debating the phenomenon. “When a little boy asserts himself, he’s called a ‘leader’,” Sandberg has said as part of a campaign to ban the word “bossy” from our collective vocabulary. “Yet when a little girl does the same, she risks being branded ‘bossy’. Words like bossy send a message: don’t speak up. By middle school, girls are less interested in leading than boys—a trend that continues into adulthood.” Simply put, Sandberg’s “likeability penalty” asserts that women face social penalties for acting in the very way that leads to power and success. They may be applauded for delivering results, but then branded as “too aggressive”, “out for herself”, “difficult” or “abrasive”. gender diversity leadership work Best Of Future Women Leaders This is an exciting article title By Ben Tweedie Leaders Testing the article duplicate function By rosa762070 Leaders How this CEO stamps out passive-aggressive behaviours By jitendermittal Leaders This is an exciting article title By Ben Tweedie Leadership New FW partnership to boost number of women in cybersecurity By jitendermittal Gender diversity Soft Power By jitendermittal Gender diversity Be honest. Did you think Bluey was a boy? By jitendermittal Gender diversity Cyber expert laments “lost generation” in online misogyny panel By jitendermittal Your inbox just got smarter If you’re not a member, sign up to our newsletter to get the best of Future Women in your inbox.