Anecdotal but according to my SO who went from all female workplace to all male one the biggest difference is going from constant drama to no drama at all.
I think this all depends on the people, not the gender … I’ve worked in several construction all male work crews and trust me, there is a lot of drama there too.
Not construction, but I’ve worked in restaurants where almost everyone was men, and others where all the servers were all women (most of the line staff were men, but the servers didn’t really interact with them much)
At least in that environment, drama transcended gender.
Anecdotal but according to my SO who went from all female workplace to all male one the biggest difference is going from constant drama to no drama at all.
I think this all depends on the people, not the gender … I’ve worked in several construction all male work crews and trust me, there is a lot of drama there too.
Have you worked in several all female crews as well? Its hard to judge when you don’t have a baseline to consider.
Not construction, but I’ve worked in restaurants where almost everyone was men, and others where all the servers were all women (most of the line staff were men, but the servers didn’t really interact with them much)
At least in that environment, drama transcended gender.
Thats really interesting. I wonder how much the culture and expectations of norms in corporations makes a difference with this.