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3 hidden taxes women pay at meetings

Meetings look neutral on the calendar. Everyone’s calendar is stamped with the same blue 30-minute block. Everyone gets a seat at the table, and—supposedly—the same shot to contribute. But the moment you click “Join,” the pecking order kicks in. 

Meetings are where power is put on display, credit is scooped up, and the rules of who speaks and who doesn’t are enforced. If you want to understand how inequality festers inside an organization, start watching what happens in your meetings.

At a time when women’s representation in the workplace has stagnated and their presence in senior leadership positions is slipping, we need to look closer at the everyday behaviors that keep the deck stacked. Meetings are one of the biggest offenders. They impose hidden taxes on women that chip away at influence, visibility, and career advancement.

1. The labor tax: Who gets stuck with the grunt work?

Someone has to do the grunt work that keeps meetings running: book the room, chase down agenda items, take notes, and send the recap. It’s important work. It’s also often low-status, mostly invisible, and rarely rewarded. It probably won’t get you promoted or make you look strategic. Too often, women are the ones expected to pick it up.

Research shows that in mixed-gender groups, women volunteered for these “non-promotable tasks” 48% more often than men. But in single-gender groups, the gap disappeared, and men and women volunteered at equal rates. It’s not that women are drawn to grunt work. It’s that the expectation kicks in when men are in the room.

Every time a woman takes notes or sends the follow-up, she’s doing the work that keeps the meeting on track while someone else gets the airtime, the visibility, and the career upside. That’s the labor tax: invisible, unpaid, and piling up throughout a woman’s career. 

2. The visibility tax: Who gets seen as a leader?

Meetings have a nasty habit of confusing airtime with leadership. Researchers call it the Babble Hypothesis. One study found that for every additional 39 seconds of speaking, the speaker earned an extra “vote” as the group’s leader. Men got a bonus just for being male—roughly one additional vote. 

But the problem goes beyond hogging airtime. Women get interrupted, talked over, or ignored. Men interrupt 33% more often when speaking with a woman than with another man. Even female Supreme Court justices are three times more likely to be interrupted by their male colleagues. And when women do break through, their ideas can get repackaged and credited to someone else, a move so common it has its own name: bro-propriation.

Women aren’t just fighting to get a word in. They’re fighting to keep what they said from being claimed by whoever says it louder, says it later, or simply has more status in the room. 

3. The cognitive tax: Who leaves the meeting depleted?

Women walk a tightrope in meetings: be confident, but not too confident. Assertive, but not abrasive. Warm, but still authoritative. For women, every meeting comes loaded with mental gymnastics. How direct can I be? Should I push back? Am I being ignored, or should I say it again? They’re not just doing the work of the meeting. They’re managing tone, reading power dynamics, and dodging penalties. That double duty drains the attention and energy that should go to the real work. 

Virtual meetings add to the cognitive tax. Women are more than twice as likely to experience Zoom fatigue. One of the biggest culprits is what researchers call “mirror anxiety,” or the strain of staring at your own face on screen. For many women, who are more likely to be judged on how they look than on what they say, they’re not showing up to one meeting. They’re showing up to two: one with their colleagues, and one with their own hypercritical reflection.

Stop taxing women for bad meeting design

The lazy “solution” is to shove the burden back on women. Speak up more. Push back when interrupted. Claim your ideas. But that doesn’t fix the meeting. It just makes women work harder inside a broken one. The better answer is to redesign the meeting itself.

Start by cutting the number of meetings. Executives say that nearly half could be eliminated with no negative consequences. Every unnecessary meeting is another chance for women to get stuck taking notes, get interrupted, or burn through another hour of Zoom fatigue. Fewer meetings mean fewer opportunities for the taxes to pile up.

For the meetings that survive, fix what they reward. Build more written and asynchronous communication into your communication system. Jeff Bezos banned PowerPoint from Amazon’s senior leadership meetings and replaced decks with six-page memos read silently before discussion. A big motivation was to curb sloppy thinking. He once said, “There is no way to write a six-page, narratively structured memo and not have clear thinking.” A strong writing culture also neutralizes the fastest talkers and the smoothest ones. Too many meetings reward speed, charisma, and volume. Better ones reward preparation, idea quality, and clarity.

Then look hard at who is doing the invisible work. Stop asking for volunteers. Women are more likely than men to step forward and pick up the grunt work, especially in mixed-gender groups. Rotate the invisible work instead. And recognize and reward it. Work that your organization can’t function without shouldn’t come with a career penalty.

Finally, consider who gets the airtime in your meetings. Most meetings have an informal pecking order that settles within the first few minutes: who sits at the head of the table, who speaks first, who gets eye contact from the leader, who gets asked for input. Invite women to speak first. Go around the room so contributions aren’t driven by confidence or status. Encourage the meeting leader to name the source of ideas in real time (“That builds on Sarah’s point from earlier”). When credit is claimed out loud and in the moment, it’s less likely to drift toward the highest-status person in the room. And try leveraging AI to monitor airtime, not as surveillance, but as a learning tool. When teams understand who’s gobbling up airtime and who isn’t, the patterns become harder to ignore and harder to excuse.

Remember, your meetings aren’t neutral. Until leaders stop assuming their meetings are fair, women will keep paying the tax—and your organization will pay for it, too. 

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