The Denver Post

“The Onlys”: Businesses are lacking females at the table

- By Rebecca Greenfield

The last time Kaitlin Savage attended a meeting that included another woman was months ago. Savage works in the solar industry, in which men outnumber women 3 to 1. The majority of her time is spent surrounded by men, who at times, she said, underestim­ate her work, flirt with her, call her after midnight for “personal reasons” and give her inappropri­ate compliment­s.

“It’s emotionall­y exhausting,” said Savage, who has considered switching to a less heavily maledomina­ted field, like oil and gas.

She’s part of a group that a new survey from LeanIn.org and McKinsey & Co. calls “On lys”: women who are often or always the only female in the room at work. One in five women place themselves in this category, according to the survey of more than 64,000 U.S. employees at 279 companies. That number rises to 40 percent for women in senior or technical roles.

Onlys face more challenges in the workplace than other women, the survey found. Half of these women said they need to provide more evidence of their competence than others do. Onlys are twice as likely as other women surveyed to be mistaken for someone junior. These women also are almost twice as likely to be subjected to de

meaning comments and twice as likely to report having experience­d sexual harassment in their careers.

“This was my entire career, basically,” said Kristen Fanarakis, who spent 15 years working in finance. She was a part of many allmale teams and didn’t have a female friend at work until she was in her 30s, she said.

Although Fanarakis had many supportive male colleagues and mentors over the years, she said, other men treated her with disrespect. One boss told her she could “handle the nappies,” she recalled. Another held her to impossible standards, giving her poor performanc­e reviews even though she brought in new business and met all of her goals, she said.

These experience­s are even worse for women of color. Almost half said they’re often the only person of their race at work. These women are more likely to feel excluded, scrutinize­d and closely watched, the survey found. Maura Cheeks, an MBA student, has written about having her identity mistaken for another black woman in the office and having to explain her credential­s to colleagues.

More than 90 percent of the companies surveyed said diversity and inclusion is a top priority, but for the fourth year in a row, Lean In and McKinsey found that corporate America has made almost no progress in increasing women’s representa­tion. Women make up 48 percent of entrylevel employees but only 22 percent of the Csuite, as companies fail to promote women, the study found.

Even those who do make it past the early stages of their careers aren’t likely to stay. Onlys are more ambitious than other women, the Lean In/McKinsey study found: Almost half said they want the top job, and almost 80 percent said they want to be promoted. But more than a third of Onlys said they’re thinking about leaving their jobs in the next two years.

“You have a group of women who are put in very isolating and scrutinize­d positions,” said Rachel Thomas, the cofounder and president of Lean In. “You would hypothesiz­e the reason they are leaving is because they are having an experience that is markedly worse than other women.”

Molly Oswaks was one of two women on staff at the tech news site Gizmodo. She said her colleagues posted pornograph­ic content in the company group chat, adding that readers would harass her in the comments section of her stories, saying she’d slept her way to the job.

“There was no respect for the fact that women were there,” she said. “It was just like, I was the girl that they plucked to have a girl on staff.” (Gizmodo did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States