Equity, Diversity and Inclusion

How to support more women in leadership roles

We need to encourage more women in leadership roles

We need to encourage more women in leadership roles Image: Photo by Christina @ wocintechchat.com/Unsplash

Sarita Nayyar
  • More diverse teams that have women in leadership roles have better long-term performance.
  • Yet women still hold only about a quarter of leadership roles.
  • We can close this leadership gap with efforts including top-down commitments to gender parity, skills training and family-friendly policies.

The continued gender gap in leadership roles around the world is well-known and striking. Women make up half the world’s workforce and the majority of college graduates, yet they hold only about a quarter of leadership roles.

In politics, women around the world last year held just 25.2% of parliamentary seats and 21.2% of ministerial positions, according to the World Economic Forum’s Global Gender Gap 2020. Only 68 of the 153 countries covered by the report have had a female head of state in the past 50 years.

Lack of women in leadership roles

The lack of representation at the top is also evident in business. According to a recent study, there has been some progress of women gaining seats on corporate boards in the US, with a share of 25.9% of seats in 2019, up from 18.9% in 2015. Yet, the share of women in top board leadership roles remained almost unchanged at low levels at 7.5% in 2019, up only slightly from 7.4% in 2015.

Leaders in governments and businesses must take immediate action to address the systemic causes of gender inequality and empower more women to hold leadership roles.

Country wise percentage of women in leadership roles
Country wise percentage of women in leadership roles Image: World Economic Forum Global Gender Gap Report 2020

Hurdles to having more women in leadership roles

Studies show that women often get stuck in gendered career paths or support roles that don’t always lead to career advancements.

They are also underrepresented in the fastest-growing roles – such as those in STEM fields including computer science, cloud computing, data and artificial intelligence – as well as those where wage growth is the most pronounced.

Women in general often receive fewer important responsibilities and assignments that could lead to promotions. Studies have shown that women tend to receive lower salaries and fewer recommendations, which can also hamper the advancement of women in leadership positions.

In addition, gender biases create hurdles for women in leadership positions. These barriers can include perceptions that management is a male role, stereotypes against women in recruitment and promotion, and masculine corporate cultures.

Five ways we can support more women to rise to leadership roles:

1. Top-down commitment to building a pipeline for women to access key growth positions. This can be done with efforts including ensuring half of all candidates are women, posting salary ranges and committing to fair pay. For example, Salesforce has commissioned salary reviews and used them to adjust the salaries of employees who were not receiving fair pay, which has turned out to be mostly women.

2. Companies must ensure equal opportunity to gain the skills, experience and mentorship needed to encourage women in leadership positions. For example, Hilton ranked first in Fortune’s list of the top large workplace for women in 2019, has programmes that enable employees to enrol in training, among others.

3. Supportive policies around parental leave, including offering paternity leave so both genders can share caregiving responsibilities. For example, Finland recently announced a plan to extend paternity leave to seven months. Big tech companies, such as Amazon, Microsoft and IBM have also made commitments to ensuring paid parental leave.

4. Flexible, family-friendly arrangements can also enable more women in leadership positions. For example, tech company, Dell, offers a range of flexible and remote work options, including allowing employees to work remotely some or all at the time at various hours, as part of the company’s efforts to increase the share of women in its workforce.

5. There must be a focus on creating inclusive work cultures and combatting unconscious biases that hold women back. For example, management consultancy Bain & Co. has made efforts to avoid systems that tend to favour men, such as self-reporting for promotion.

The benefits of women in power

Gender equality at the top can translate to higher profits in the bottom line. More diverse companies, which draw from a broader range of information when they make decisions, have better long-term performance. Research has shown that having women in the C-suite increases net margins.

Increased gender parity at the top could also serve to create a role-model effect[19] to encourage more girls and women to pursue leadership positions and counteract unconscious societal biases about women in leadership roles.

Only with women at parity in top positions can we work together to build a more inclusive sustainable future for all.

This post originally appeared on Media Planet.

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