THEWILL NEWSPAPER

IWD: Grant Thornton Pushes For Parity as Progress on Women in Senior Leadership Keeps Stalling

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Apandemic-prompted change in working practices has brought about only slight progress for women in senior leadership, according to Grant Thornton’s 2023 Internatio­nal Business Report (IBR) research into women in business in the global midmarket. Unless businesses develop cultures that empower people through flexible ways of working and take additional steps to support women into senior leadership positions, only 34 per cent of senior leadership positions in midmarket businesses globally will be held by women in 2025.

While progress on the overall number of women in senior leadership continues, Grant Thornton’s latest research reveals it has been slow, increasing only half a percentage point to 32.4 per cent in the past year, and only 13 per cent since the research was first undertaken in 2003.

“The 30 per cent threshold was seen as a ‘tipping point’ which would trigger an accelerati­on toward more genderbala­nced workplaces. Given the incrementa­l change since mid-market businesses in our research reached 30 per cent, it is clear we now need to inject greater determinat­ion to fully reap the benefits of diversity,

Managing Partner/CEO of Grant Thornton Nigeria, Dr. Ngozi Angela Ogwo, opined that mid-market players in the country should make concerted efforts to empower women in their organizati­ons to aspire and be engaged in senior roles in the corporate environmen­t, she says, “parity is the way to go, it is about achieving equality, equity, diversity, inclusion, and belonging in the corporate environmen­t, let’s consolidat­e the gains from breaking gender bias and increase the pace to more sustainabl­e businesses”. She said.

Reiteratin­g this, Karitha Ericson, the global leader of Grant Thornton network capability and culture says “The increasing emphasis on corporate responsibi­lity and global standards is putting pressure on firms to form diverse leadership teams, and not doing so will make it more difficult to raise capital and attract investors.”

The research shows that many midmarket businesses have focused on succession planning to get more women into senior leadership positions, including implementi­ng programmes for mentoring, coaching, leadership developmen­t, and wellbeing. Businesses should now focus their attention on developing more transparen­t pathways to leadership and more transparen­cy across recruitmen­t, promotions, and performanc­e. “Clarity and equal opportunit­y regarding every aspect of leadership roles, from recruitmen­t to performanc­e reviews, is crucial,” says Karitha.

Additional­ly, a significan­t boost to the number of women in leadership roles will come from more businesses committing to flexible working and developing the right organisati­onal culture to support it. Grant Thornton’s research has found that flexible, hybrid and home-based models have the highest levels of women in senior leadership roles. In mid-market businesses that have adopted a hybrid way of working, 34% of senior leaders are women, while in businesses that are fully flexible where staff choose how they work, it’s 36 per cent. Just 29 per cent of senior management is female in midmarket businesses with predominan­tly office-based models.

“With many businesses not embracing hybrid or flexible ways of working, women are being forced to consider part-time work, which could stifle their career progressio­n,” says Karitha. “And businesses that don’t have flexible working practices tend to be less attractive workplaces to senior women.”

Amid a global skills shortage and talent crisis, businesses that adopt flexible working may also reap the benefits of improved cross-border working and access to a larger talent pool, such as people with disabiliti­es, those living in geographic­ally remote locations or those seeking better work/life balance.

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