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Top 7 Reasons Why Women Business Leaders Are Needed

By: Brian Kirk

Article Word Count: 1143 words  [Comments (0)]
Total Views: 51 Views


That’s what they say…but business is being done a new way. Massive technological connectivity and access to tidal waves of information is causing a shift in society, workers attitudes and how business is done.

Rapid changes in technology are causing disruption in the way corporations do

business. Communication is now digital. Products are now digital. Marketing and

delivery of product and services must be done in a different way.

Added to that, the evolution of global business environments has significantly

increased competition and stress on the traditional corporation.

One other important shift is that now the “knowledge worker” (skilled and

experienced) is now becoming the most valuable asset of the corporation versus

capital equipment and they are leaving corporations by the thousands.

So what is a corporation to do? Find and retain the best people.

I believe a new, better corporate structure is evolving and it will take women of

ability paired with men of ability to make it the best and most profitable business.

However, few women make it to the top management positions.

This is where many women’s development programs have failed. They simply

addressed the soft skills of mindset and confidence for women.

The truth is that successful business is led by people of experience with specific

business skills AND the right mindset.

This is why we must develop women managers further through learning

experiences, coaching and training that insure the results a corporation needs to

obtain highly skilled women leaders.

Here are some reasons why we need more women as leaders in business:



  1. Women, on average, are terrific communicators and tend to be better at it than

    men. It’s the information age and it’s highly competitive. This means companies

    will need more skilled communicators involved in all aspects of business where

    good, clear communication is critical to generate revenue, control expense, manage

    top talent and build a loyal customer base.

  2. Global business will require expanding business networks. Women are natural

    networkers.

  3. Diverse viewpoints can result in better, more creative solutions to business

    issues. Both women and men are needed to address business issues effectively.

  4. Keeping a talented knowledge worker will require relationship strategies.

    Women instinctively care about building relationships which is why they tend to

    gravitate toward jobs where building relationships is a major component such as

    Marketing or HR.

  5. Increased competition will require the resources of creative thinkers to develop

    new products and services that meet the needs and desires of the marketplace. The

    talent pool of creative leaders is doubled when more women leaders are available.

  6. Rapid change in technologies requires more flexibility. Women have extensive

    multi-tasking abilities as evidenced by women who manage business and families at

    the same time.

  7. Half of the workers available today are women. Women in leadership roles can

    act as mentors to develop other potential women leaders just as executive men have

    done for years.


With all this said, women are still not reaching top levels in management. There are

several reasons for this.

Part of the reason is societal in that women were often not included in business

conversations as they were growing up so they did not have the opportunity to

learn. Part is that the corporate structure was invented by men for the way men

think and work. Part is that women are still the primary managers of the family and

cannot always dedicate all their time to the company.

In a recent survey conducted by Womencorp, there were some striking differences

between what men believed and what women believed about the “why” women are

not succeeding as corporate business leaders.

Of the female respondents, 68.3% believe that lack of flexible options for work is

holding women back. 51.7% believe that lack of confidence is also a contributing

factor. 45% believe that women aren’t given a chance because men stick together.

This was what one woman had to say about that subject:

“This is a very complex issue. What I have found, after seven years at {a major

corporation}, is that men seem to internally denigrate qualified technical women

(perhaps because of jealousy). They do form cliques and do not wish to 'include'

women in their cliques. They are group-oriented, no doubt. They will hang with

other guys, just because they are guys. There are individual males who

communicate well with women, but they are few. Despite years of emphasis on

including women, promoting women, and hiring women, I feel that the disparity of

women in the business world is growing, not shrinking. Still, both men and women

do not seem to 'get it'. I wish I had something more positive and constructive to

give, but I do not.”

On the other hand, 53.7% of men believe that lack of flexible options is holding

women back. 32.3% said they feel the glass ceiling is still firmly in place and just

17.9% believe that women lack confidence.

Perhaps men don’t realize women lack confidence, whereas women know how they

feel. This mindset can be altered with a proper development program for both

women managers and men who manage women.

This comment from one male participant is noteworthy:

“Capable women are often unfairly fast tracked early in their career to positions

that may demand experience to be successful over a prolonged period. Found

wanting, they are then niched in dead-end executive roles. Rather like moving a ball

player to the majors too quickly because of their native talent. Their "rookie"

mistakes occur with too much exposure and can prove fatal.”

But what difference does it make as to why few women have achieved top leadership

roles in business? The reason to know why is because we can then use this

information to develop solutions.

The bottom line is that more women need to be in leadership roles for many

reasons including the 7 listed above. The challenge is to find new ways to enable

them to succeed at top levels.

For both men and women respondents, they seem to feel that coaching, mentoring

and multi-day workshops are quite important to help develop women leaders to

their fullest potential.

The Womencorp Team agrees and is working to make a difference for women in

business. Would you like to help? Just take a moment to fill in this quick 30 second

survey:

For Women


For Men

CONTACT INFORMATION:


Brian Kirk


Womencorp


(205) 835-8167


http://www.womencorp.org

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