Jeff Immelt has some advice for the next generation of corporate leaders: _‘__spend more time in factories and less in Davos.’ _Immelt, CEO of General Electric, is challenging business leaders to get out of their ivory towers and get back in touch with the needs of their people and customers at ground level. He is claiming that business leaders have become distant from the needs of the ‘real people.’
I don’t dispute that those who occupy the C-suite are busy (although I loathe the term busy). However I’d question what they are busy doing if scandals such as those at Uber, Fox News, Channel 7, CPA Australia and the Health Services Union can go undetected, unnoticed or are swept under the carpet. Particularly when, in the case of Uber, Fox News and Channel 7, the transgressions are related to sexual misconduct and assault against women. Are those in the C Suite asleep at the switch? Or are they just not aware of the organization they are really in charge of?
Culture eats strategy for breakfast every day
Peter Drucker got it right. Cultures does eat strategy for breakfast every day. Assuming it’s the right culture. Because of course, culture is ‘the way we do things around here,’ Imagine being a woman working at Uber, Fox and Channel 7? No thanks! Back to Jeff Immelt. His theory, which I agree with, is that business leaders are not aware enough of what it’s like for workers in their organization, because they are too distant from the coal face.
Leaders can be too distant, or delegate too much of their accountability for the issues that affect women. In her book, Stop Fixing Women, Catherine Fox interviewed Martin Parkinson who was (then) head of Australian Treasury. Parkinson had commissioned an external review of Treasury to understand why women were not advancing. The output of the review was, predictably, poor and Parkinson was quoted saying to a colleague ‘we are not leading the organization we thought we were.’
How did that happen?
I have observed this same behavior in my many years in corporate Australia and now, in my gender diversity consulting work. I recall in the not so distant past presenting a visual diagram of the gender diversity statistics for every level in my organization to a group of my predominantly male colleagues. Of the 5 levels represented, only the first (entry) level was balanced, the rest became progressively unbalanced, with the most senior level having only 11% female (which including me, was 2 women!) Two reactions from my colleagues surprised me. The first was ‘how did that happen?’ The second was ‘I had no idea!’ It was a #facepalm moment, but also an illuminating and defining one for me. I realized, that despite all the HR managers, HR systems, mandatory reporting, employee engagement surveys, unconscious bias training and the list goes on, that leaders were simply not in touch with what it was like to be a woman working in their organization. They were not focusing on the metrics that matter to advance women.
What Great Leaders Do
Leaders, if your organization was burning cash, had declining market share, had ballooning costs, you would take accountability, step in, understand the root cause, undertake remediation activity and begin the journey to set things right. Right? The same goes for creating an inclusive culture where women in your organization can participate to their fullest potential and advance to more senior roles. Just like the head of Australian Treasury did, you need to ask yourself these difficult questions:
- Am I really leading the organization I think I’m leading? (how do we really do things around here?)
- Where are the women in my organization structure? (junior, senior, in HR or shared services roles or running customer facing, P&L businesses?)
- Does my workplace ‘work’ for women? (If not, why not?)
- What resources (human & financial) have I allocated to gender diversity initiatives? (And how many of the human resources are non-HR?)
- Who do I hold accountable to ensure women are advancing at the same rate as men? (Do I have gender targets or quotas at every management level?)
I don’t need to quote any more statistics
I don’t need to quote any more statistics, however, I will. Global gender parity is 170 years away at the current rate. Your organization is foregoing revenue increases of up to 41% if you don’t do something about advancing women in your workplace. If that is not compelling you to act, then you may be headed the same way as some of the not so illustrious leaders of the companies at the start of this article!
I help business leaders and organizations begin their gender diversity journey, where it needs to begin, at the beginning! By diagnosing the status quo, I enable inclusive leaders to understand exactly what type of organization they are leading, what the actual experience is for women in their workplace and how to develop strategies and tactics to build an inclusive, gender balanced workplace.