Ernst & Young, the major accounting firm previously embroiled in sexual-harassment suits, reportedly advised women to look "fit" and not to address men face-to-face.
The HuffPost reporter Emily Peck wrote Monday that she had obtained a 55-page EY presentation on leadership rife with negative stereotypes that women were not "ambitious," shouldn't challenge their male colleagues, and must not dress provocatively.
Read more: Lower pay, more harassment: How work in America has failed women of colorEY told HuffPost it no longer used the version of the presentation mentioned in the story and clarified that the training was hosted by an "external vendor."
Per Peck, some of the more bizarre practices of the EY Power-Presence-Purpose training (as it was called) included:
The presentation also had a breakdown describing differences between men's and women's speaking styles, saying women ramble and "miss the point" when they communicate and "think men hog air time."
Studies show men interrupt women and dominate workplace conversations: A 2014 study found women interrupted men just once during three-minute conversations, while men averaged 2.6 interruptions of women during those three minutes.
EY did not immediately respond to Business Insider's request for additional comment.
The training reportedly occurred in June 2018, at the height of the #MeToo movement as women across the US shared stories of sexual harassment at work. EY itself faced two sexual-harassment complaints, while the rival accounting firm Deloitte fired 20 partners for misconduct.
Promoting gender stereotypes at work may also result in excluding nonconforming employees. Half of LGBTQ employees have experienced verbal discrimination at work, and queer people have high rates of workplace sexual harassment.