June 19, 2025

The Paula Principle

by Rachel Salaman
reviewed by Keith Jackson
Professor25 / © GettyImages
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Transcript

Rachel Salaman: Welcome to this edition of Expert Interview from Mind Tools with me, Rachel Salaman. Now, have you heard of the Peter Principle? It's the idea that employees tend to rise to their level of incompetence. What does that mean? Well, it means we'll continue to rise through the ranks based on being good at what we do, until we're promoted to a position that is just beyond us; and because we're not very good at it, there we will stop.

It's called the Peter Principle, after its creator, Laurence Peter. His book of the same name has sold several million copies since it was first published in the 1960s. Now, another writer has coined a related term: the Paula Principle. This is the idea that most women work below their level of competence.

Are you nodding in recognition? Or maybe you're seething at the very notion of such a gender-driven concept. The writer is Tom Schuller, a teacher, researcher, international bureaucrat, policy analyst, and yes, a man – a fact that several publishers gave him as their reason for passing on his new book, "The Paula Principle," arguing that they'd find it hard to market a book on this topic if it wasn't written by a woman. I went to meet Tom in London, and I began by asking him about that.

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