Why following this professional 'rule' is getting in the way of workplace happiness
mother trader woman baby frankfurt stock exchange
mother trader woman baby frankfurt stock exchange

(REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach) Pretending you don't have a family doesn't help anyone, Setta argues.

If you follow a certain line of conventional wisdom, you won't mention your husband to your coworkers, and if you leave early to pick up your kid, or your parent, or your grandfather, you'll keep that information discreetly to yourself.

You're a professional, the thinking goes — don't do anything to jeopardize that. Especially if you're female.

The fear makes sense: women — particularly women of child-bearing age — are still up against assumptions that they'll ultimately choose their families over their careers. "We'd love to offer her this opportunity, but she probably wants to spend time with her kids, so..." And why offer her a promotion, when she'll probably have a baby and leave?

The tides may be turning — the execution of family-oriented policies may need significant work, but the rise of family-oriented perks, more reasonable parental leave policies, and increasing recognition of the benefits of flexible work schedules, suggest that at least there's an interest in changing things.

But things haven't necessarily changed yet, and they haven't necessarily changed everywhere, and accordingly, it's hardly unreasonable to assume that the best way to keep up professional appearances is to separate work and family as much as possible. If you're going to have the audacity to have family obligations, you can at least have the courtesy to pretend you don't.

That impulse is understandable. But Salli Setta, president of Red Lobster, says it's not benefiting anybody — and it's up to corporate leaders to change it.

To her, there's nothing taboo about discussing family at work.

Employees shouldn't have to hide their non-work relationships, and by maintaining the illusion that people don't have lives and priorities outside the office, we're reinforcing a system that's already broken.

HubSpot office talking friends networking
HubSpot office talking friends networking

(Hubspot) If everybody is allowed to publicly have a life and identity outside of work, then the assumptions about who wants what start to dissipate.

Through one lens, it's a gender equality issue: while stay-at-home dads are on the rise, the general (outdated, but general) default assumption is that women will end up doing the bulk of the caretaking, whether or not they're working outside the home.

That means that in the office, women — and particularly (though not exclusively) mothers — end up in the awkward position of having their colleagues make assumptions about their priorities. Those assumptions can be well-intentioned, but research has repeatedly shown they hurt women's career prospects.