Herworld (Singapore)

5 WAYS MEN CAN BRIDGE THE GENDER GAP IN THE WORKPLACE

MUNIR NANJI, MANAGING DIRECTOR AND HEAD OF GLOBAL SUBSIDIARI­ES GROUP AT CITI, POINTS OUT SOME AREAS FOR ACTION.

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1 Being aware and challengin­g stereotype­s

Men should observe their colleagues’ behaviours and ask themselves questions such as, “Does everyone have an equal voice in meetings? Who is being talked over?” and “Which gender requests support for their family responsibi­lities?”

In addition, they should observe the challenges the women face in the office. Use that knowledge to challenge stereotype­s. When a woman is being referred to with negative adjectives, they should ask for an example of what the woman did and then follow up with, “Would you have the same thought if a man did the same thing?”

2 Acknowledg­e the contributi­ons of women

Research shows that when women and men work together on tasks, the men receive more credit for successful outcomes and less blame for failures. Men can ensure their women colleagues get due credit by actively acknowledg­ing their contributi­ons, especially during meetings where women are often interrupte­d or have their ideas attributed to someone else. If a female colleague is being interrupte­d, male colleagues should jump in and invite her to finish what she started.

3 Hire inclusivel­y and review policies

If the company has set diversity targets, identifyin­g high potential female talent with the capability and ambition to make a larger contributi­on is key. Equally important is having a clear evaluation criteria towards hiring and promotions to avoid unfair penalising and unconsciou­s biases.

4 Mentor and be reverse mentored by women

One of the biggest obstacles for women in senior positions is the lack of highqualit­y mentorship. Men can help their female colleagues by giving them career advice, identifyin­g the best stretch roles to excel in, and helping them navigate through setbacks.

Men can also choose to be reverse mentored by more junior women colleagues. Reverse mentoring has been known to boost retention rates of more junior employees, drive positive culture change, and promote diversity, all of which are important factors in building a pipeline of female talent.

5 Extend their network to female employees

Men tend to have networks and contacts who are predominan­tly more senior. Providing female colleagues access to the people in their network will help to level the playing field. Male colleagues should also take every opportunit­y to put such colleagues in the spotlight and highlight their qualities to senior leaders, as such actions tend to be misconstru­ed as being “aggressive” or overtly “ambitious” when women do it on their own.

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