26 September 2023

Plain failing? How sponsorships can sink a career

Start the conversation

Carmen Nobel* says sponsors are increasingly being used to help women get ahead, but new research suggests aspects of such programs can instead hinder women.


Key aspects of corporate sponsorship programs, while designed to advance women’s careers, may end up widening the gender gap rather than narrowing it, according to new experimental research.

“We’re not trying to say that sponsorship programs don’t work or that they’ll always backfire,” says Katie Coffman, an Assistant Professor at Harvard Business School and co-author of the study.

“What we are saying is that certain aspects of sponsorship don’t work exactly how we’d want them to work, at least in the lab.”

The study was co-authored by Coffman and Nancy R. Baldiga, an economics and accounting Professor at the College of the Holy Cross and Coffman’s mother.

It’s well documented that women are underrepresented in the executive suite.

To address the stubborn gender gap, a growing number of organisations have adopted formal sponsorship programs, in which a seasoned manager officially takes on a junior protégé.

Sponsorship is essentially mentorship on steroids.

While a mentor may provide valuable career advice and an empathetic ear, a sponsor will actively advocate for a protégé’s career — formally and publicly recommending her for high-profile projects or job promotions.

If the protégé handles new challenges successfully, it makes both sponsor and protégé look good.

“Sponsorship builds on traditional mentorship by adding a more transactional nature to the relationship,” explains Coffman.

“It’s not just the altruistic view; it’s that if my protégé does well, I do well, too.”

Sponsorship programs are meant to boost confidence among protégés, increasing the likelihood that they will compete more effectively against their peers.

Research has shown that men tend to favour competitive settings more than women, which may contribute to the gender gap in the high-stakes senior ranks of an organisation.

Ideally, sponsorships would result in more women entering the competitive pool, which would then result in more women rising to the top.

But the study suggests that key aspects of sponsorship actually benefit men more than women.

Relative interests and a collaborative experiment

A few years ago, Baldiga and Coffman decided to team up on a laboratory study on the value of sponsorship.

They looked at how organisations are actually using sponsorship programs to address the gender gap and tried to bring to bear some experimental economics tools to understand how well these initiatives might work.

Specifically, Baldiga and Coffman wanted to gauge the efficacy of two isolated ideas related to sponsorship: one, the idea that being personally chosen by a sponsor as a protégé could serve as an important vote of confidence; and two, the idea that sponsors’ compensation being linked to protégé outcomes might serve as further motivation for the protégé.

They set up several rounds of experiments in which 176 men and 178 women solved basic math problems for cash rewards.

In one round of the experiment, participants could opt for a guaranteed payment of 50 cents per problem solved, or they could compete for higher stakes.

Those who chose to compete received a significantly higher payout (ranging from $1 to $3 per problem) if they scored in the top 25 per cent of the problem solvers, but received nothing if they did not.

As the researchers predicted, more men than women chose the competition over the guaranteed payment.

The subsequent round introduced the element of sponsorship.

In each session, three participants were randomly chosen as “sponsors” who would receive 25 cents each time a “protégé” correctly solved a problem — but only if their protégé scored in the top quartile and decided to choose the high-stakes competition over the lesser guaranteed payment.

Significantly, the protégés were told that they had sponsors before choosing whether to take the guaranteed 50 cents per solved problem or whether to compete for more money.

The goal of the researchers: to find out whether participants were more likely to compete if someone were sponsoring them.

The research revealed that sponsorship definitely increased the likelihood that participants would choose a high-stakes competition over a non-competitive guaranteed payment — but this proved true only among male participants.

And in terms of the choice to compete, sponsorship had the most dramatic effect among the men who performed the worst on the math problem exercise.

In other words, sponsorship served to boost the confidence of low-ability men.

Among female participants, the introduction of a sponsor had no significant effect on the choice to compete; this was true even when the protégés were told they had been specially chosen by a sponsor.

“So, while you might be hoping sponsorship might close the gender gap by encouraging high-ability women who are reluctant to compete, providing that extra nudge to compete, it in fact has the opposite effect,” Coffman says.

“If anything, we see a larger gender gap in willingness to compete [when sponsorship is introduced].”

Designing better sponsorship programs

The researchers emphasise that sponsorship is not necessarily an ineffective way to help women in the workforce, but rather that certain aspects may not work exactly as intended.

It behooves organisations to be more thoughtful about how sponsorships are designed.

For instance, a protégé’s success may be less about the mere vote of confidence than about the advocacy skills or the wisdom of the sponsor.

Future research may reveal which factors matter most.

“I think it’s great that we’re being more creative about solutions to female advancement, and there might be a lot of good things going on in terms of sponsorship,” Coffman says.

“Now we just need to understand better what does work and why.”

* Carmen Nobel is the Senior Editor of Harvard Business School Working Knowledge.

This article first appeared at hbswk.hbs.edu.

Start the conversation

Be among the first to get all the Public Sector and Defence news and views that matter.

Subscribe now and receive the latest news, delivered free to your inbox.

By submitting your email address you are agreeing to Region Group's terms and conditions and privacy policy.