(we= women in the workplace)
(them=researchers)
The glass ceiling has cracked in many industries, but the broken ladder rung keeps women from equal advancement opportunities. Post-COVID and after the Great Breakup - women in the workplace are feeling less burnout but more concerned about mental health. We don’t feel supported to bring up or ask for mental health support as much as we did during the pandemic. We have made our voices heard in preferring remote and hybrid work but are learning the dangers of such, requiring advocacy for ourselves. We are working off hours more than ever for our jobs and at home. The Barbie movie made a dent in waking up our male and female colleagues, but male sponsorship continues to be weak without widespread organizational commitment to gender equality leadership. We learned of new studies showing again the reality of the pay gap for the same position and education right out of the gate, especially after the first child's birth. Thanks to organizations like ExecuShe, we are learning that not all executive positions can be compared as apples to apples regarding women's equality opportunities. Global gender power gaps have come to light based on shared ownership through certain executive positions. And so much more!
What have you experienced as a woman in the workplace in 2023? As a male leader, what have you done to build a gender equality workplace? 2024 is right around the corner. Together, we can build more successful businesses with happy, engaged, and productive staff members of all stripes and feathers around the table.
Mental Health Concerns Growing
Mental health concerns in 2023 for women were affected by economic worries, wars, the effects of polarization and fear, the threat of gun violence at home (now the number one cause of death for children 1-19 in the US), loneliness and isolation, and the total hours combined of home and work responsibilities.
Cracking the Glass Ceiling
There was much rejoicing when women approached 30% representation in some industries in executive leadership. Yaay! Well done, women and the executives who opened the doors for these qualified leaders! McKinsey’s 2023 report reminded us that in 2015, we could track only 17% of women in senior US executive roles. 2023’s numbers came in at a combined 28% representation of US executive women. We should applaud the 65% change in representation of women at the C-Suite levels from 2015-2023.
1. Women of Color, and specifically Latinas, are not making representational strides.
Women of color continue to experience the most tremendous gender bias, keeping them out of senior roles. Only 6% of women of color are currently in the C-suite, according to McKinsey’s 2023 report. Women of color face the sharpest drop off from their entry-level participatory numbers compared to their executive leadership numbers. As they move up the pipeline, the representation of women of color drops by ⅔’s. And only 1% of Latinas are in C-suite executive positions in the US. I have biracial grandchildren with a Mexican-born father. These abysmal statistics for Latinas in the US need concentrated attention from us all.
2. All C Suite representation of women is not apples to apples.
The two most powerful executive roles are the CEO and Executive Chairperson. Globally, though, these are the least diverse executive roles, with 79% being filled by white men. Power here is defined by share ownership. Power comes from who controls, manages, and owns the business. Gender power gaps are much more strikingly different than even gender representation gaps. The numbers in this section come from ExecuShe. They are doing excellent live gender data analysis of organizations around the world and is an essential live data set I follow closely to understand challenges and opportunities for women in the workplace in the US and worldwide.
ExecuShe shows as of 12-10-23 that women executives make up 28% of the 4274 publicly traded companies, with only 11% of the power based on share ownership. Here are the current representational percentages as of 12-11-23 of women in executive roles in the US currently from Execushe:
You’ll note that if we count women CEOs as the only executive role counted, we would be celebrating 7%, not 28%, of women’s representation. By tabulating in the 74% of Chief Human Resource Officer roles filled by women (which are part of the total mix), we have earned the hoopla of cracking the glass ceiling. But the Chief Sustainability Officer, General Counsel, and Human Resource Officer numbers of women in these senior roles have blinded us to the reality of the greatest number of women not yet being considered and advancing to the CEO position. We must continue to peel back the layers to understand where women are leading and what power they have in that position to affect change. Building a senior team where women are more than 30% present will bring positive changes from a diverse team. But women are still under 10% in the US for filling senior seats. Do you really believe there is only one qualified woman to 90 other men for the top role? I sure don’t. Why is this continuing? Don’t let this fact of only 7% female CEO representation get masked under the 30% glass ceiling celebration.
Concentrate on the Broken Rung
Remote Work’s Opportunities AND Dangers for Women (extra work)
Women’s burnout has decreased due to the increase in remote and hybrid possibilities, which greatly benefit women. McKinsey’s 2023 Women in the Workplace research shows that over this last year, women through increased remote and hybrid work experienced fewer microaggressions, had a higher level of psychological safety, benefitted from fewer interactions with unpleasant coworkers, and were healthier without appearance or personal style pressure. Indeed, remote and hybrid work has allowed for more flexibility to help organize and participate in child and elder care and decrease pressures that build towards burnout.
Finally, concerning the mixed bag of remote work for women - working off-site magnifies the loss of informal influence women routinely miss out on, especially when the senior executive is male. Women continue to feel excluded from meetings, decision-making, and informal invitations like the golf game, drinks after work, or banter over lunch at the neighborhood restaurant. If you’re working remotely or supervising remote workers- make sure their access to you is as open as those who work down the hall. You must plan to make this happen, or the default will harm your remote workers.
2023 was a Good Year for Women’s Representation
But we lack the power of ownership and are not in the highest seats of influence from which we are also capable of leading. The ceiling is cracked, but not overall in the CEO position. Our representation in executive senior teams makes a positive difference, reaching over 30% more routinely now. Our mental health will soon begin suffering more if our places of employment don’t hurry up and again invite mental health concerns to be shared and offer meaningful support. We continue working longer than our male partners with home and dependent care responsibilities. We appreciate the flexibility of remote work but are missing out on being included in meaningful relationships and decisions. We need systemic revamping of advancement practices primarily at the first rung of opportunity so the pipeline is more full of qualified women to be considered for senior positions.
2023 was a good year for women’s representation.
But 2024 can be better.
Let’s build a more equal and equitable gendered work culture for the betterment of all. I’d love to help you explore how that can look at your organization.
Transforming influence alongside you,
- Deloitte Women @ Work 2023 Report
- McKinsey Women in the Workplace 2023
- ExecuShe 2023 live data website with subscription
- Our Epidemic of Loneliness and Isolation from the U.S. Surgeon General’s Advisory on the Healing Effects of Social Connection and Community 2023.
- CDC on gun violence as the leading cause of death for US children