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4 Things Women Don't Do at Work Banish these stereotypes from the office.

By Nina Zipkin

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Recently, Facebook COO and LeanIn.org founder Sheryl Sandberg co-wrote an op-ed in The New York Times to break down a harmful stereotype: women don't, or won't, help other women in the workplace. A double standard as old as time, an aggressive man is seen as powerful, but a woman is catty or shrill -- only looking out for number one.

"Queen bees aren't a reason for inequality but rather a result of inequality," Sandberg wrote with co-author Wharton professor Adam Grant. "Research shows that in male-dominated settings, token women are more likely to worry about their standing, so they're reluctant to advocate for other women. A talented woman presents a threat if there's only one seat for a woman at the table."

Related: Here's How You Can Embody the Strength and Leadership of Sheryl Sandberg

Sandberg and Grant explain that an inclination to fiercely guard a hard won position is understandable when the stakes are high and there is no room for error. "This behavior isn't inherently female. It's a natural way we react to discrimination when we belong to a nondominant group."

Only 4 percent of the CEOs on the Fortune 500 list are women, an unacceptable number by any standard. But studies show that when there is a diversity of voices in leadership positions, and multiple women have a seat at the table, everyone succeeds.

Read on for four debunked myths about women at work.
Sofie Delauw I Getty Images

1. Women don't hold other women back from promotions.

Researchers from the University of Maryland and Columbia Business School explored data from 1,500 Standard and Poor's rated firms and found that "female CEOs are more often found in companies that, for observable and unobservable reasons, tend to have more women in general."

Their findings proved the opposite of "queen bee syndrome."
Caiaimage/Paul Bradbury I Getty Images

2. Women actually don't undermine other female colleagues.

A report from Catalyst found that 65 percent of women and 56 percent of men who were given professional support when they were coming up are now doing the same with new hires. But 73 percent of those women are developing new female talent, while only 30 percent of those men are doing the same.

Caiaimage/Paul Bradbury I Getty Images

3. Women really aren't bad negotiators.

Research from Notre Dame highlighted a connection between having a diversity of voices in the board room and making fewer mergers and acquisitions, and professors at the University of British Columbia also found that companies headed up by women directors also spend less on those types of deals.

Not only that, but an experiment from the University of Texas found that when women negotiated their salaries, they asked for an average of $7,000 less than their male counterparts, when men and women negotiated for a colleague, they asked for the same amount of money.

Clearly women do have a skillset for brokering smart deals. But they can struggle when they are advocating for themselves, especially since women can be penalized for negotiation, according to work from Harvard and Carnegie Mellon.

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4. Women don't just care about work/life balance.

A recent survey conducted by ICEDR of working millennials, found that the top reasons why women in their 20s and 30s left their current jobs was because they found a position that paid more, had more room for professional development and growth or had more meaningful or interesting work. Not on that list? Leaving their gig because they wanted a role that was less taxing or they wanted to start a family.

Nina Zipkin

Entrepreneur Staff

Staff Writer. Covers leadership, media, technology and culture.

Nina Zipkin is a staff writer at Entrepreneur.com. She frequently covers leadership, media, tech, startups, culture and workplace trends.

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