Daily Highlight
  • MOVIE
  • TV
  • CELEB
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • MCU
  • DISNEY
  • About US
Daily Highlight
No Result
View All Result

Executive Sends a Message: There Is No ‘Mr. Johnson’ Here

by Sunny Nguyen
November 24, 2025
in Social Issues

A ski-trip anecdote turned into a revelation about gender expectations in the workplace.

While changing clothes in a parking lot after an afternoon run, the group heard a tale of mis-addressed letters and busted assumptions. Our protagonist on the story is a woman who led an engineering company where nearly everyone assumed the CEO must be a man.

She didn’t accept the assumption. She instructed her secretary to return unopened every letter addressed to “Mr. Johnson.”

Now, read the full story:

Executive Sends a Message: There Is No ‘Mr. Johnson’ Here
Not the actual photo‘A letter for our CEO, Mr. Johnson?’

I just came back from a great skiing trip with a bunch of colleagues. It was a short holiday in our private time and paid in full by anyone who...

In other words: it was a private trip, with all attendees working at the same company. The youngest person in the group was fresh out of school, while others have...

The company I work for is a Dutch engineering firm with 1000+ employees. This field of work is dominated by men.

We are a professional yet very informal organization, where everyone addresses each other on a first name basis.

Our former CEO was with us on the trip. Let’s call her Cathy Johnson. Not only is she a great skier, she is also a very outgoing person who loves...

By the way: the reason that she’s not the CEO anymore but still works at the company is that we have a mandatory rule that requires the executive board to...

the thought behind that is that the best performing, fresh-minded leaders are generally not people who are well past sixty years of age.

On the day of our return trip (a 10-hour drive – we were car-pooling), we had already vacated the hotel and went out skiing until well after lunchtime.

While we were changing clothes out in the open in the car parking, she shared a great story.

While she was the CEO, she received many letters addressed to the CEO, Mr. Johnson or Mr. C. Johnson. These letters were all based on the false assumption that the...

She instructed her secretary to return every single letter unopened that addressed her as a man. Her secretary, also a woman, loved doing that.

She returned dozens of letters over the year, stating that there was no Mr. Johnson at our company.

When I asked Cathy about the replies, she told me that the senders invariably either sent a second letter with profuse apologies or were never heard of again.

TL;DR. Female CEO in a field of work heavily dominated by men returns every single letter that addresses her as a man. _______.

Edit: given the massive amount of comments, it seems that I need to clarify a few things.

Why mention the ski trip? Well, that’s where the story started for me, so that’s where I started my writing. (Sorry guys and gals, I didn’t know it would be...

Cathy casually told me the story while we were standing bare pants in a car park. Not a likely setting for interaction with most executives out there. Was it relevant...

But I hope it might add some background information about her personality – as I wrote: nothing pretentious.

About missing opportunities by returning the letters: of course the secretary consulted Cathy about every letter before returning it, which always gave them a good laugh together.

Obviously, no harm was done to the company’s business interests.

This particular engineering firm consistently outperforms all other engineering firms in the country – it didn’t get in that position with poor management skills.

She’s wise enough to know what she was doing. For what it’s worth: she was elected European CEO of the year* a few years back.

Where is the malicious compliance?

She obviously knew that the letters were meant for her, but returned them to make the senders aware of their own prejudice that engineers – especially those in key positions...

Throughout her career she fought for more diversity in the engineering world and this was one way to create awareness.

I love how a casual ski-trip anecdote morphed into a potent moment of quiet revolution. The way she handled the mis-addressed letters says volumes about confidence, clarity, and flipping expectations.

It wasn’t confrontational, it was firm, sly, graceful. It signals to everyone that leadership isn’t about the default image, it’s about the person doing the job. This feeling of rewriting narrative in action is textbook leadership in plain clothes.

Why this story matters?

The core issue here is bias and assumption. In an industry where men dominate the technical ranks, many still default to a male image of leadership. When the CEO receives letters addressed to “Mr. Johnson,” the message is subtly loud: “We didn’t expect you.”

By returning those letters unopened, she created a visible counter-mark, saying, “Yes, I’m here. Reassess your assumptions.”

What the research reveals?

Representation in engineering remains low for women. For instance, women made up roughly 16 percent of engineers and architects in 2023 in the U.S.

Another analysis found that only about 23 percent of C-suite executives in engineering and industrial manufacturing are women, while entry-level women counted for around 33 percent. These numbers point to the “leaky pipeline”: women enter engineering but often fail to reach the top.

Moreover, bias plays a role. A 2023 study found that stereotypically, women in leadership are judged less competent when they show traits that mirror traditional male leaders. In engineering leadership specifically, one study found 80 percent of women in leadership had experienced gender bias.

An expert in engineering leadership put it this way: “Women in leadership positions in the field of engineering remain a minority… making female engineers highly vulnerable.” The story you shared aligns with this dynamic: the default assumption was male, and the CEO flipped it.

What we can learn?

  1. Visibility matters: When leadership disrupts stereotypes, it creates role-models. Her act of returning letters did more than correct a name, it signalled recognition and capability.

  2. Language shapes culture: Names and forms of address seem trivial but they reflect deeper norms. When someone treats a female CEO as “Mr.,” the message sends bias, even unintentionally.

  3. Deliberate action stirs change: Bias won’t always correct itself. This leader didn’t wait for letters to stop—she made a choice to respond. That action amplifies a culture of equality.

  4. Inclusivity drives business: Studies suggest that companies with gender-diverse leadership tend to perform better. When you create an environment where leadership expectation expands beyond stereotype, you leverage wider talent.

  5. Culture trips happen in everyday moments: A ski trip, a car-park chat, letters addressed wrong, they become meaningful. Leaders who acknowledge them and turn them into teaching moments build stronger cultures.

This story isn’t just a funny anecdote. It’s a vivid example of how bias hides in everyday gestures and how leadership can counter it in simple, firm ways. It tells us that change doesn’t always require grand strategy, it can start with returning mis-addressed mail. The message is clear: you don’t have to fit the old image to lead. You just need the mandate, the vision, and the clarity to act.

Check out how the community responded:

Calling out inattentive formality

OpenScore - How hard would it be to look up the information about the CEO of a such big company and find out that it was headed by a female.

I guess people are also lazy, when attempting to reach out to the CEO of a big company.

[Reddit User] - By the way: the reason that she’s not the CEO anymore but still works at the company is that we have a mandatory rule … Wow.

MLynch8 - Why did we need to know about the ski trip and who complied maliciously? Sounds like a secretary listened to her boss. Funny though.

StandingBehindMyNose - The ski trip details were irrelevant to the story.

queen-of-carthage - So the ski trip has nothing to do with the story?

Hats off to the CEO’s quiet stand

teremaster - This is just regular executive activity. Vast majority of them have the view of “if you don’t have time to know who you’re contacting i don’t have time...

[Reddit User] - Based on the skiing anecdote intro, I’m guessing OP also runs a recipe channel where the videos take 45 mins to get to the actual recipe

igettomakeaname - I’m confused about what the ski trip, the retirement age, etc. have to do with this story?

akanes123 - I’m confused about what the ski trip, the retirement age, etc. have to do with this story?

This story reminds us that leaders show up in details. A form of address, a returned envelope, a laugh in a parking lot, these moments build culture and change norms. The result? A more inclusive workplace where leadership isn’t defined by gender but by capability.

What do you think? Have you ever seen someone challenge a stereotype through a small gesture like this? Could you imagine doing the same in your organization or team?

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen writes for DailyHighlight.com, focusing on social issues and the stories that matter most to everyday people. She’s passionate about uncovering voices and experiences that often go unheard, blending empathy with insight in every article. Outside of work, Sunny can be found wandering galleries, sipping coffee while people-watching, or snapping photos of everyday life - always chasing moments that reveal the world in a new light.

Related Posts

Son’s Pregnant Girlfriend Refuses to Work, So the Homeowner Draws a Line
Social Issues

Son’s Pregnant Girlfriend Refuses to Work, So the Homeowner Draws a Line

1 week ago
Woman’s Romantic Dinner Turns Ugly When Boyfriend Uses “I Paid” as Power
Social Issues

Woman’s Romantic Dinner Turns Ugly When Boyfriend Uses “I Paid” as Power

4 weeks ago
Man Asks Female Co-Worker To Leave Him Alone, Sparks Misogyny Debate
Social Issues

Man Asks Female Co-Worker To Leave Him Alone, Sparks Misogyny Debate

2 months ago
Roommate’s Girlfriend Tried To Get Her Evicted, So She Got Her Dumped
Social Issues

Roommate’s Girlfriend Tried To Get Her Evicted, So She Got Her Dumped

6 days ago
Parents Demand Son Pay Stepsister’s Rent After Forcing Him To Share Jobs, Money, And Even His Laptop
Social Issues

Parents Demand Son Pay Stepsister’s Rent After Forcing Him To Share Jobs, Money, And Even His Laptop

3 months ago
Disgruntled Ex-Employee Deletes All Company Files Then Accidentally Confesses Everything In One Furious Message
Social Issues

Disgruntled Ex-Employee Deletes All Company Files Then Accidentally Confesses Everything In One Furious Message

2 weeks ago

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

TRENDING

Reddit User Was Forced To Go Back To Sunday School, So They Use Their Extensive Bible Knowledge To School The Teacher
Social Issues

Reddit User Was Forced To Go Back To Sunday School, So They Use Their Extensive Bible Knowledge To School The Teacher

by Leona Pham
November 14, 2025
0

...

Read more
Her Husband Claimed She Destroyed His Sister’s Reputation – She Exposed His Lies to Everyone
Social Issues

Her Husband Claimed She Destroyed His Sister’s Reputation – She Exposed His Lies to Everyone

by Sunny Nguyen
August 29, 2025
0

...

Read more
Natasha Lyonne Set To Join Marvel’s ‘The Fantastic Four’ Crew
DC

Natasha Lyonne Set To Join Marvel’s ‘The Fantastic Four’ Crew

by Marry Anna
May 15, 2024
0

...

Read more
Smug Engineers Thought He Was Broke, He Left Them Speechless With One Move
Social Issues

Smug Engineers Thought He Was Broke, He Left Them Speechless With One Move

by Annie Nguyen
September 16, 2025
0

...

Read more
Selena Gomez And David Henrie Reuniting For “Wizards of Waverly Place” Sequel
MOVIE

Selena Gomez And David Henrie Reuniting For “Wizards of Waverly Place” Sequel

by Believe Johnson
April 17, 2024
0

...

Read more




Daily Highlight

© 2024 DAILYHIGHLIGHT.COM

Navigate Site

  • About US
  • Contact US
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Cookie Policy
  • ADVERTISING POLICY
  • Corrections Policy
  • SYNDICATION
  • Editorial Policy
  • Ethics Policy
  • Fact Checking Policy
  • Sitemap

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • MOVIE
  • TV
  • CELEB
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • MCU
  • DISNEY
  • About US

© 2024 DAILYHIGHLIGHT.COM