Ambitious, Flexible and Under-represented
Women in science are demonstrating unparalleled ambition, driven in part by the increasing availability of workplace flexibility. However, despite some notable gains, their overall representation in leadership roles remains insufficient. This is a key insight from the latest Women in the Workplace report by McKinsey & Company, conducted in partnership with LearIn.Org.
This ninth edition of the report is the largest study of women in corporate America and Canada. Surveying 276 organisations employing over ten million people, including more than 27,000 employees and 270 senior HR leaders; the study provides an intersectional analysis of specific challenges faced by women of different races, ethnicities, sexual orientations and abilities.
Debunking Myths about Women in the Workplace
The report highlights and challenges four pervasive myths regarding women’s experiences and career advancement:
- Myth: Women are becoming less ambitious. Reality: Women are more ambitious than ever, especially post-pandemic, with increased flexibility fuelling their ambitions.
Women and men at every level, including director roles, show equal interest in senior leadership. Notably, young women under 30 are especially ambitious, with nine in ten aspiring to higher roles. The pandemic has shown women a novel model for balancing work and life and flexibility has become a crucial element in sustaining their career aspirations.
- Myth: The biggest barrier to women’s advancement is the ‘glass ceiling.’ Reality: The ‘broken rung’ at the first step up to manager is the greatest obstacle.
For the ninth year in a row, women face significant hurdles at the entry-level promotion stage. For every 100 men promoted to manager, only 87 women achieve the same and the gap is even wider for women of colour. This disparity at managerial level sets back women’s career progression from the outset.
- Myth: Micro aggressions have a ‘micro’ impact. Reality: Micro aggressions significantly harm women’s mental health and career advancement.
Women, especially those with marginalised identities, face micro aggressions more frequently than men. These subtle, often unintentional comments and actions can have profound effects on their psychological safety and career trajectories. The stress from these experiences often leads women to consider quitting their jobs or feeling consistently burned out.
- Myth: It’s mostly women who want—and benefit from—flexible work. Reality: Both men and women see flexibility as crucial with significant benefits for everyone.
Flexibility in work arrangements is now a top benefit for all employees, not just women. Women, particularly mothers, value it highly for balancing professional and personal responsibilities, but men also appreciate the enhanced work-life balance and reduced burnout that flexibility offers.
State of the Pipeline
Despite progress in senior leadership, with women in the C-suite increasing from 17% to 28% since 2015, representation at manager and director levels remains weak. This creates a fragile middle pipeline for the majority of women in corporate roles. Women of colour, in particular, experience slower progress, often lagging behind their peers at nearly every step.
Recommendations for Companies
To support and advance women effectively, organisations should focus on:
- Tracking outcomes for women’s representation: Measure and analyse data on hiring, promotions, and attrition, taking an intersectional approach to uncover specific barriers faced by women of different identities.
- Empowering managers to be effective people leaders: Equip managers with the skills and support necessary to foster diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI), and make these responsibilities a core part of their performance evaluations.
- Addressing micro aggressions head-on: Establish clear policies against microaggressions, provide training to recognize and challenge them and create a culture where addressing these behaviours is normalised.
- Unlocking the full potential of flexible work: Define clear expectations for flexible work arrangements, track its impact and ensure fair evaluations regardless of work model.
- Fixing the broken rung, especially for women of colour: Implement safeguards to ensure equitable promotions, offer targeted career development programs and track outcomes to address biases in the promotion process.
Women in science are breaking barriers and defying outdated notions of work-life balance, yet significant challenges remain. By addressing these myths and implementing strategic changes, organizations can create a more equitable workplace where women can thrive and lead.
Source: Women in the Workplace 2023 report by McKinsey & Company, in partnership with LeanIn.Org