Yahoo’s Mayer: A trailblazer, but no game changer for women in tech
Marissa Mayer was a rarity: a major tech-company CEO who served while pregnant and, later, as a mother of young children.
But her trailblazing seems to have done little to meaningfully improve the second-class status of women in tech, a more deep-seated problem that will take many years — and certainly more than one person — to fix.
Like any CEO, Mayer really had one job: to run her company. But to many people, she represented much more than that. Her life became a lens through which the world viewed working mothers, class status (she’s a well-paid executive), female bosses and even plain old business success and failure.
Women make up 37 percent of Yahoo’s workforce and 24 percent of its leadership positions, numbers typical of the technology industry, which remains dominated by white men. There are 23 female CEOs at Standard & Poor’s 500 companies, including Mayer. That’s actually a decline from 2014, when there were 26, topping 5 percent for the first time.
Ceiling-shattering feminist was never a moniker Mayer seemed comfortable with. Throughout her four-year tenure at Yahoo, she was “caught in a Catch-22 where she doesn’t want to be a spokeswoman for women at work even though she has become a spokeswoman for women at work,” said Katharine Zaleski, president of PowerToFly, a jobmatching service for women in technology.
Not long after taking the helm, Mayer announced that she was pregnant, but also that she’d take as little time away from work as possible. She was immediately criticized for not setting a good example at a time when many American women have little to no access to paid maternity leave.
Others wondered why she had to set an example at all, since plenty of male CEOs have had children without becoming role models and having it affect their job performance. To Mayer, biases against women in the technology industry seeped into the sometimes-harsh critiques of her leadership at Yahoo.
“I used to be very gender blind,” Mayer told the Associated Press on Monday. “In the past year, it has become so undeniable that some of the criticisms have been so flush with gender-loaded viewpoints that it has been really disappointing. I really think our media needs to do better if they really want to encourage a collaborative community and a really constructive approach to women in leadership.”
Mayer took heat for banning telecommuting at Yahoo, which was said to hurt working mothers; for saying in a documentary that she doesn’t consider herself a feminist; for negotiating a large pay package; for dressing in designer clothes; and, in the end, for failing to turn around a company that was already failing when she took its helm.
Some of that is clearly what any CEO in Mayer’s position could expect. But some of it reflected rising, if disappointed, expectations about what a female CEO should stand for.
“I wish we could view her as a positive example of what a woman can be if she has the support that is needed to be CEO and have babies at the same time,” Zaleski said. Instead of a business failure, she said, maybe we should look at Mayer as someone who stepped into a company that “billed itself as the front page of the internet for years, and the front page of the internet stopped existing.” In that sense, selling Yahoo’s core business for $4.8 billion looks like a smashing success, she suggested.