Seeing women in power is often celebrated as a milestone for gender equality. A female CEO or board member signals progress, inspiring others to believe that opportunities are opening up. But new research suggests a surprising twist—seeing women in power may actually slow progress. When people see a few visible women leaders, they often assume gender equality has already been achieved, even when data shows otherwise.
A study published in the Journal of Applied Psychology found that people consistently overestimate gender diversity in organizations led by women. Participants believed companies with female CEOs had more women overall—even when shown the actual numbers. This visibility bias can backfire: it reduces support for hiring women, influences pay decisions, and reinforces inequality. The same trend appears across race as well—seeing a few successful Black employees leads people to assume diversity is higher than it is.
Once a company has women in visible roles, hiring momentum often slows. Organizations unconsciously model what seems “typical.” For example, research on S&P 1500 boards found that most had exactly two women—no more, no less. That number became the silent standard. The illusion of “enough representation” discourages further inclusion efforts and can even widen pay gaps over time.
True equality requires more than showcasing a few women in leadership—it needs systemic inclusion. Companies should:
Publish transparent gender and pay data to reveal real progress.
Set measurable goals for representation across all levels.
Train hiring panels to recognize unconscious bias caused by visibility.
Celebrating women in power is vital—but the goal isn’t just visibility. It’s creating systems where equality is the norm, not the exception.
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