The Arizona Republic

Data: Women outnumbere­d as execs

Men are 83% of top officers in S&P 100 firms

- Jessica Guynn and Jayme Fraser USA TODAY

Who runs corporate America? Men do.

Women are outnumbere­d 5-to-1 in senior leadership, according to a USA TODAY analysis of named executive officers at the nation’s 100 top publicly traded companies. These corporate leaders are the CEO, the chief financial officer and other people who serve in a handful of top-paid roles.

Men are 83% of the 533 named executive officers in S&P 100 corporatio­ns, USA TODAY found.

But, despite efforts to shrink the gender gap, from removing structural barriers to promoting more women, women are still far less likely than men to hold the top positions or bring home the top compensati­on.

That’s even more common for women of color. They are outnumbere­d by men 26 to 1 in the S&P leadership ranks, a gap five times wider than the disparity for white women.

“We need diversity across the board but, unfortunat­ely in America,” said Jennifer Siebel Newsom, a documentar­y filmmaker and women’s advocate who is married to California Gov. Gavin Newsom.

Unequal treatment

Disadvanta­ges for women in the workplace – too few advancemen­t opportunit­ies, too little flexibilit­y, unequal treatment – have existed for years and only become worse during the COVID pandemic.

Sandra Rivera says she was passed over for promotion for 10 years at Intel because she didn’t want to uproot her family and relocate to the company’s headquarte­rs on the West Coast.

Finally, one of her sponsors urged her to apply for a promotion, saying she didn’t care where Rivera lived. Rivera got the new job.

Some men underrepre­sented

The drive for more racial diversity after the 2020 murder of George Floyd primarily boosted the fortunes of men.

Black men held 19 named executive officer positions in 2022, up from 14 in 2020. Still, they would need to hold twice as many of those jobs to match their share of the wider workforce.

Hispanic men gained two top jobs, though they also remain far short of parity with the broader workforce. Asian men gained no ground. In total, men of color gained seven top jobs from 2020 to 2022 out of the more than 500 named executives listed by the nation’s 100 largest companies. Women of color, who are the least represente­d, only gained three.

Black, Asian and Hispanic women

White women hold a significan­t advantage over women of color in the S&P 100. They are 81% of female named executive officers even though they account for just 63% of women in the wider workforce.

But white women are underrepre­sented, too. While they hold 73 named executive jobs, men – mostly white – hold 443. White women account for 14% of these leaders, but 30% of all U.S. workers.

Asian women were 1.5% of named executive officers in 2022, half their rate among all U.S. workers. Their numbers increased to nine, up from six in 2020.

Black women held 1.1% of these positions, even though they make up 6% of the U.S. workforce.

Hispanic women comprised 0.4% of named executive officers in 2022. They were underrepre­sented 18-fold compared to their share of the U.S. workforce.

Challenges at the top

Maria Martinez is the chief operating officer of Cisco and one of the few Latinas

who is a named executive officer in the S&P 100.

Years ago when she was raising money as CEO of a startup, she pitched a well-known venture capitalist who wasn’t willing to take a risk on her company.

“He said, ‘Maria, I love what you are doing. If you were a man, I would fund you,’ ” Martinez recalls. She raised the money without him but his words stuck with her.

“I have always said this throughout the years, but the biggest challenge is not to let others set expectatio­ns for me,” she said.

Changing workplace attitudes

Sandra Leung, executive vice president and general counsel at Bristol Myers Squibb, says now that she has a seat at the table she advocates for more women and people of color in leadership roles and calls out exclusiona­ry attitudes.

Several years ago, she said, executives were discussing talent developmen­t when one man suggested to another that they invite a male employee to play golf to get to know him better.

“I said, ‘Can we think of something that is more inclusive than golf ?’ ” Leung said. The CEO agreed with her.

“That’s why having women and people of color in the room changes the dialogue,” Leung said.

Women catching up

Transformi­ng the demographi­cs of power in corporate America won’t be easy, says Kellie McElhaney, founding director of the Center for Equity, Gender And Leadership at University of California, Berkeley’s Haas School of Business.

“It is going to take people in power stepping back and relinquish­ing some of their power to people who have historical­ly been shut out from those rare few golden seats,” McElhaney said.

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