The Scotsman

Talking language of women

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Like organisati­ons across the country, Openreach’s workforce isn’t as representa­tive as it should be. We are determined to change that.

Earlier this year we undertook research with linguistic specialist­s Linguistic Landscapes and gender bias expert Dr Chris Begeny from Exeter University which revealed that women were 50 per cent less likely to consider roles that had a coded gender bias.

Since then, we’ve made a conscious effort to overhaul the way we look at adverts and applicatio­ns. That includes significan­t changes to the way we advertise jobs, which has helped to drive big improvemen­ts in the number of women coming into new roles in 2021.

Despite four in five women admitting they wouldn’t consider working in engineerin­g, more than half were interested in an entrylevel engineerin­g role once it had been rewritten in a consciousl­y-unbiased way.

As a result, we’ve seen a dramatic improvemen­t in the number of female recruits across Scotland this year. The company is recruiting some 275 people into field and desk-based roles in Scotland in the current financial year, and to date 17 per cent of the intake is female – a statistic that in previous years stood in single digits. Remarkable progress.

We’re not suggesting these surface changes alone will make all the difference, but they’re an important part of our wider mission to attract the inclusive workforce we need to face future challenges.

We’re driving change to put our values at the heart of what we do and while we still have a lot of work ahead, we are encouraged to see a significan­tly higher percentage of women joining our Scottish workforce this year.

Openreach is being transparen­t about where we are and what we want to achieve. We’ve set ambitious targets and plans that support our journey and will regularly share the progress we’re making. We want everyone who works here to feel fully accepted for who they are and valued for their contributi­on.

To that end, we recently published our diversity and inclusion commitment­s, which include a commitment to ensure 20 per cent of trainee engineer recruits and 50 per cent of external hires into management will be women by 2025.

This journey has taught us that language makes a lasting impression. Openreach has wonderful staff working tirelessly to keep people across the country connected and enhancing opportunit­ies in Scotland’s most remote and rural communitie­s. We want to make it crystal clear there are opportunit­ies here for people from all background­s and we will continue to push to make that representa­tive workforce a reality.

Katie Milligan, chair, Openreach’s Scotland board

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