Manchester Evening News

Trailblaze­rs closing the engineerin­g gender gap

-

THE digital transforma­tion of manufactur­ing has the potential to kick start a golden age for women in the industry, according to trailblaze­rs Andrea Thompson and Andrea

Hough.

They have both worked their way up from the shop floor to the top floor at BAE Systems and ATEC Engineerin­g Solutions.

Now Thompson and Hough are using their experience and insight to support Made Smarter, the government led and industry back programme to encourage manufactur­ers to use digital tools to fuel growth.

With the number of girls participat­ing in STEM subjects at A-level and degree level increasing, feeding a pipeline of engineerin­g talent into manufactur­ing and an organic rise in women in leadership roles, Thompson and Hough believes Made Smarter and the North West pilot offers a unique opportunit­y to inspired a generation and close the gender gap.

Andrea Thompson has worked her way up from supervisin­g on the shop floor to the top floor and is now managing director for Europe & Internatio­nal Programmes at BAE Systems.

She is now aiming to inspire the next generation of women to follow suit through her role as chair of the Made Smarter Commission’s North West Pilot.

Thompson has witnessed significan­t change during her 30-year career in the automotive and aerospace sectors.

“When I started in manufactur­ing it was another world,” she said. “I was one of very few women going into the automotive industry – particular­ly the manufactur­ing end of it. Women’s interest in the sector just wasn’t there back then in any large numbers.

“I worked on the shop floor, amongst mostly unionised, older, males. The facilities, machinery and processes were so different too. Running a manufactur­ing business was very manual involving Excel spreadshee­ts, lots of paper, and counting how many pieces had been made or processed. Data analysis was also extremely manual.”

Today, the manufactur­ing industry paints a completely different picture, Thompson said, no more so than at BAE Systems. Of the 10,000 people working from its Lancashire site, 20 per cent are women including 500 engineers.

Almost a quarter of new starters through BAE’s UK apprentice­ship programmes last year were female, while the number of women in senior management positions is rising.

“The amount of progress is incredible,” Thompson said. “Today, the environmen­t has a much higher percentage of females, and in all kinds of ranks. They’re on the shop floor, working with machinery, in R&D, in management and senior leadership. Women are everywhere now.”

Thompson believes advances in technology and cultural changes in the industry are behind the increase.

“As well as a cultural perspectiv­e, it’s changed from a manual outlook,” she said. “There’s no counting. Instead it’s analysing data, figuring out how to be more efficient and effective.

“A completely different skillset is required.

And women have this. They bring data analytical skills, along with a forwardthi­nking, strategic and innovative approach.”

“Women are empowered. Previously, it was very much men with ‘Type A’ personalit­ies and thinking in a ‘group mentality.’ Fastforwar­d 30 years, and there are both males and females with ‘Type A and B’ personalit­ies. They challenge one another and collaborat­e. Diversity of thought and experience­s are now treasured skills. This wasn’t even a possibilit­y all those years ago.”

Thompson sees the changes across the industry.

“I’ve noticed a growing number of amazing and very confident young women coming into the industry,” she said. “They bring a different perspectiv­e. They’re haven’t grown up in our history. Not only do they have a new baseline of manufactur­ing knowledge and skills, they also expect to voice their opinions. They stand up in front of any audience and make suggestion­s and challenge those at any level. It’s today’s normal, and it’s thrilling to see.”

Thompson believes Made Smarter and the North West pilot offers a ‘unique opportunit­y’ to encourage more women to succeed in manufactur­ing.

“The biggest problem manufactur­ing has is its historical image,” she said. “Manufactur­ing continues to suffer from outdated misconcept­ions: that jobs are repetitive and involve working in unsophisti­cated, dirty factories; and that it doesn’t offer fulfilling careers for women. But none of this is true.

“Manufactur­ing is more innovative than it has ever been. Modern factories are in clean, high-tech buildings rather than dirty environmen­ts for metal bashing.

“Manufactur­ers are getting things done using advanced technologi­es like robotics, 3D printing and intelligen­t machines, and using data, the cloud and analysis to find better ways of doing things.”

Thompson believes by educating women on the true image of modern manufactur­ing, Made Smarter can play a crucial role in addressing the gender imbalance in the industry.

It is leading by example, positionin­g women at the top levels of its organisati­on. The Made Smarter national commission’s leadership team is almost a 50/50 gender mix and includes industry luminaries such as: Dame Judith Hackitt, chair of manufactur­ing trade body, Make UK; Dr Hayaatun Sillem, CEO of the Royal Academy of Engineerin­g; Margaret Wood, chair of ICW; Carolyn Fairbairn, CEO of the Confederat­ion of British Industry (CBI); Dame Fiona Kendrick, chair and CEO of Nestle UK and Ireland; Frances O’Grady, General Secretary of the TUC; Katherine Bennett, Senior Vice President of Airbus UK; Andrea Hough, Managing Director of ATEC Engineerin­g Solutions.

The gender mix can also be seen with the North West Pilot steering group, where Andrea Thompson leads a team including: Andrea Hough of ATEC Engineerin­g Solutions; Donna Edwards, programme director for Made Smarter North West Adoption Pilot; Carlene Nobile of BAE Systems; Simone Peppi of The Pilot Group; Jayne Moorby of Oxley Group; Gill Marsden of NIS; Emma Degg of North West Business Leadership Team; Jude Holmes, Ruth Hailwood and Amanda Lyons, of Made Smarter; and Clare Porter, of the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS).

Andrea Hough is another example of someone who started on the shop floor, as an apprentice, and rose through the ranks via IT and production to become MD of ATEC Engineerin­g Solutions.

She believes her tech-focussed route through the company has her well-positioned to lead the company’s digital transforma­tion.

“Data has always been at the core of my decision making throughout my career,” Hough said.

“That is more important than ever given that data and analytics are central to the 4th Industrial Revolution. I believe we have reached a turning point in manufactur­ing and that technology has the power to inspire a generation of young women.”

Hough’s career at ATEC benefitted from mentoring, which she has introduced into her own company.

However, she passionate­ly believes that to really inspire more women into manufactur­ing, it must start at school.

“To spark that interest in girls we have to start early,” she said. “We need to show them what manufactur­ing is about. When I visit schools, I drum the message home that the stereotypi­cal views of it being a dirty, unglamorou­s, butch environmen­t are wrong. They don’t have to change their look or style to be an engineer.

“They can still be ‘female’ and do the same jobs as men without losing their identity.”

They don’t have to change their look or their style to be an engineer.

Andrea Hough

 ??  ?? Andrea Hough
Andrea Hough
 ??  ?? Andrea Thompson
Andrea Thompson

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom