The corporate quest for equality for women in management is a
lot like motherhood: Everybody is for it. Bain & Company
recently conducted a survey of more than 1,800 businesspeople
worldwide, and nearly 80% of them—women and men—said they were
convinced of the benefits of gender parity at all levels. And for
good reason: Many businesses recognize that retaining more women as
they ascend the corporate ladder will add diversity of experience
and perspective and also will help them understand women as buyers
and influencers. Higher retention rates will also save companies
millions in recruiting and retraining costs. There's only one
problem: The mechanism for getting women into leadership positions
is flawed.
Do the math: Women constitute 50% of the workforce in America,
but they represented only 3% of the chief executives of the
country's 500 largest companies in 2009. The female-to-male ratio
rapidly dwindles at almost every rung of the ladder upward, across
organizations and across industries. It's the biggest disappearing
act on earth, and it arises from two significant blind spots that
most companies seem to have.
The first has to do, literally, with motherhood. Companies have
responded to parents' demands for more flexibility by letting them
go part-time or take time off to raise their children, but they
haven't figured out how to bring them back onto a viable career
path when they're ready to return to the workforce. Our survey
results reveal that women tend to make many more compromises to
their career paths than do their male partners. They are nearly
twice as likely to take a flexible career path or a leave of
absence and three times as likely to work part-time. The majority
of promotion processes and career paths thus have a built-in
biological bias, linked to the time women take off for having and
rearing children. Some estimates show that more than 90% of women
want to return but only 40% can find full-time jobs.
The reality is that in any group of equally competent and
talented men and women of the same tenure, women who have taken
time off or worked part-time for family reasons lack equal
experience, by definition. That matters a lot when they are
considered for promotion. Result: Men usually get the job.
Ambitious and talented women then face a choice of either giving up
or getting out. It's no surprise that women entrepreneurs start
nearly 1,600 businesses daily in the U.S. One woman who traded in
her corporate career told us in the survey: "I chose to leave the
corporate world and run my own company rather than try to achieve
gender parity at that corporation, in that industry."
Read the full article at Forbes.com