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Home » The invisible competence syndrome: why do women always have to prove more?
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The invisible competence syndrome: why do women always have to prove more?

By News Room19 February 20264 Mins Read
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The invisible competence syndrome: why do women always have to prove more?
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In open spaces as in executive committees, a reality persists: women often have to do more to be seen as competent. This phenomenon, which can be described as invisible competence syndromereflects neither a lack of talent nor a deficit of ambition. On the contrary, deeply ingrained cognitive biases shaping assessment, promotion and recruitment decisions.

Behind this silent invisibility, the numbers speak. And above all, they deconstruct the myth of an alleged lack of female leadership.

Equivalent performances, unequal recognition

First of all, data from major international studies clearly show it: with equal skills, companies do not evaluate women and men in the same way.

The Nobel Prize in Economics Claudia Goldin highlighted a determining structural mechanism: beyond direct discrimination, organizations favor implicit evaluation standards. They value total availability, displayed competitiveness or self-promotion – behaviors that socialization encourages more in men.

Furthermore, the report Women in the Workplace of McKinsey & Company reveals that companies promote women less from the first managerial level. This “broken rung” lastingly unbalances the entire leadership chain.

👉 Concretely, companies offer women less access to positions of responsibility, less strategic exposure and, ultimately, less political capital.

Cognitive biases at work

To understand this mechanism, we must examine the psychological forces that guide decisions. Several cognitive biases directly fuel invisible competence syndrome.

1. Confirmation bias

We spontaneously look for elements that confirm our initial beliefs. When decision-makers unconsciously associate leadership with masculine traits – assertiveness, dominance, displayed confidence – they perceive a competent woman as “surprising” rather than “obvious”. Thus, perception guides evaluation.

2. The behavioral double standard

Evaluators are more likely to describe an assertive woman as “aggressive”, while they describe a man in the same posture as “decisive”. Likewise, they judge a cautious woman “lacking leadership” and consider a cautious man “analytical.”

These differentiated judgments directly influence annual evaluations, feedback and promotion decisions.

3. Attribution bias

Managers more frequently attribute male success to individual skills. On the other hand, they explain female success more by the effort made or by the context. Conversely, they more easily personalize a woman’s failure.

This mechanism maintains an invisible, but extremely effective, circle.

Recruitment: a land of silent inequalities

Recruitment is a decisive moment. Recruiters project their representations of potential and leadership onto it.

A study of Harvard University showed that evaluators judge a male first name to be more competent than a female first name with an identical CV – and offer a higher salary.

In addition, women are more hesitant to apply when they do not meet 100% of the criteria. Men apply as soon as they fill out a majority. This differentiated behavior reinforces the gap in exposure to opportunities.

In interviews, recruiters also examine “potential”, an often vague notion which refers to the projection of future leadership. However, they do not apply the same criteria depending on gender.

👉 Recruiters rely on the potential of men.
👉 They demand tangible proof from women.

A charge of permanent outperformance

In this context, women internalize the need to constantly demonstrate their legitimacy.

So, this translates to:

  • A tendency to over-prepare
  • Less spontaneous speaking
  • Increased risk of burnout
  • Strategic perfectionism

Ultimately, this constant demand can lead to burnout. It also produces a paradoxical effect: by considering them as extremely reliable and operational, organizations struggle to project them into strategic roles.

Why does this slow down business performance?

Ignoring these biases is costly. Extensive research shows that diverse leadership teams make better decisions and generate better financial performance. However, upstream, companies allow their implicit filters to restrict women’s access to strategic positions.

They thus lose talents.
They homogenize their decision-making profiles.

Ultimately, this is not a simple HR subject, but a competitiveness issue.

How to make the skill visible?

Fortunately, concrete levers exist:

  • Structuring the evaluation criteria – Standardized grids limit subjective judgments.
  • Training in cognitive biases – Awareness programs reduce assessment gaps.
  • Review the notion of “potential” – Clarify what is measured and on which indicators.
  • Value results, not style – Distinguish between real performance and conformity to stereotypes.

Towards a redefinition of leadership

Beyond technical adjustments, companies must question their skill standards.

As long as they implicitly associate leadership with a masculinized model, they will force women to “prove more”. Changing the rules of assessment means redefining the standard itself.

What if, ultimately, the invisible competence syndrome revealed less of a feminine deficit than of a deeply rooted organizational bias?

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