Women are not getting adequate development, career support and sponsorship
Sharon Peake, CPsychol
IOD Director of the Year - EDI ‘24 | Management Today Women in Leadership Power List ‘24 | Global Diversity List ‘23 (Snr Execs) | D&I Consultancy of the Year ‘22 | UN Women CSW67/68 delegate | Accelerating gender equity
When it comes to development feedback, numerous studies have shown that women receive more vague, personal and unhelpful feedback than men. This prevents them from getting clear information about their performance that would push them to learn, grow and improve.?
We found 27% of women don’t feel that their manager provides developmental feedback to aid their career progression, and 25% do not feel they are supported in their career by senior leadership. This barrier is even more pronounced in the energy and infrastructure, and manufacturing industries.??
Not only is career support and sponsorship from senior leadership critical to career advancement, it also appears to moderate women’s level of ambition. Several factors influence ambition, including the degree to which line managers and senior leaders support women’s development: the greater the support the more likely the woman will be ambitious about her progression within the organisation.??
Lack of career support hinders women’s ambition?
We analysed the data to understand the causal factors that impact ambition and a woman’s belief?that she can progress within her organisation. We found three elements that directly impact?a woman’s level of ambition:?
While not predictive in isolation, collectively, these elements are important hygiene factors?for organisations if they want to create the right environment for women to happily progress. These factors are further moderated according to whether the woman perceives she has career support from senior leadership. Together, these factors influence a woman’s ambition for progression and belief that she can progress within the organisation.??
This is important, as it suggests that organisations have more influence than previously thought in?nurturing women’s ambition, by actively cultivating a developmental, supportive and psychologically safe environment.?
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?What this means for organisations?
Organisations must structure career development with measurable processes, strong manager capability, and positive action programmes to level the playing field.??
Without a targeted approach to accelerating women’s development and representation so they can?compete fairly, a level playing field is simply not attainable and mericocracy remains a myth.??
Here are four practical steps that organisations can action today:?
Watchout: It’s important to note that career development might require extra time and energy on top of day-to-day work, which can be particularly problematic for women with a disability who might not be able to give the extra time and can therefore inadvertently get excluded from career development?opportunities.?
CEO & Founder, Whispa Health | Bayer Foundation Women Empowerment Awardee | Global Feminist | Health Tech Entrepreneur | Passionate about improving the lives of Youth, Women and children
1 年These networks aren't only a must but a need! As you say, there's clear evidence showing how little support women receive in their organisations when it comes to sponsorship so these gender-specific programmes are crucial to closing the gap.
Board Director
1 年I can corroborate your great research here and share with you with some interesting insights from my own company, Rungway: 1. Women can be left unclear when they receive feedback. When a client of ours asked the question 'Have you had your mid-year review?' around 7% of people replied 'Not sure'. All of these were women. 2. When women have a psychologically safe space to speak up (which Rungway provides through the option of anonymity), they use it. Worldwide, women ask 30% more about their career and 50% more about Wellbeing than men. We also see that 2x as many women than men won't speak up due to 'fear of being seen as a nuisance'. 3. Bullying and harassment are notoriously difficult to tackle because there isn't the right forum to speak up without fear of repercussions. We need to build places to voice issues without fear and to help leaders more easily role-model inclusive behaviours in a way that's visible to all.
Sharon Peake - Your research aligns with our own.?That is why we need to focus on men. Regularly forgotten, often feeling threatened by d&I but crucial to us making progress. Yes, more male allies and better still Inclusion Leaders are needed.? We need to de-emphasise the training of women to succeed in the current culture, with the current behaviours and values. We need to train the majority in the workplace to become more inclusive and better leaders and in doing so change the culture, behaviours and values.? A win/win for all.