If I narrate you story of an
interview where the candidate negotiated hard for incremental compensation and
higher incentive, what would be your first impression? What would be your
assumption of this candidate’s gender, nature and working style? Or consider
yourself on the panel of promotion board and you have to make a choice between
a man and a pregnant woman, who would be your preferred candidate for
promotion? These situations are not hypothetical neither uncommon, we witness
many such events in a day-to-day working life. A recent survey undertaken, by
International Center for Research on Women (ICRW) states,
around two in five men in India – nearly 40.7% held rigid and discriminatory
gender views. This segment believes women to be inferior.
Now don’t be very worried if your
answers in both the above situations were ‘male’. These are the result of the
unconscious biases that we all have, which have been deep-rooted through our
culture, people at homes, educational institutions and now workplaces. Everyone
has biases... but this statement should not make you complacent, and let you justify in
accepting it as a norm and continuing to live with it. It is important that you
become more aware of these biases and be ready to challenge them in self as
well as in others.
Our workforce demographics are
changing, and as per one of the reports on gender mix in education in India, almost 47%
of the total graduates, 48% of engineers, and 40% of MBAs are women.
However, as per Oxfam’s report this year, India ranks second lowest in the
Group of 20 (G20) economies when it comes to women’s participation in the
workforce. It is above only Saudi Arabia, a country that does not even allow
its women to drive.
This depressing figure doesn’t
culminate just here, as per World Economic Forum (WEF) report from last year,
India ranked 124 out of 136 nations in a tally comparing women’s economic
participation. Embarrassingly, all the BRICS nations
rank much higher than
India. The 12 countries below India include countries riven by political
instability, such as Pakistan, Egypt and Syria.
Observing all these startling, yet
real data points, one is forced to ponder over reasons which are resulting in
leaking pipeline, inhibiting women from establishing their position at the
workplace and exploiting their own potential. Whilst, there are several social
and economic factors that play an important role in augmenting or deteriorating
progression and advancement of women. The environ of a workplace and the
prevailing biases have an equal vital role to play in attracting, retaining,
engaging and promoting women.
With the new Company’s Act coming
into being, organizations are certainly forming policies, setting up internal
committees but most seem to only tick the
compliance, focused on ensuring how ‘men don’t get into trouble’ and how
organizations can insulate themselves from potential complaints and negative
publicity. However, this psyche in corporate India needs to change and they
need to take up challenging programs for sensitizing employees about gender
stereotypes and their unconscious biases that intercept in capitalizing
advantages of diverse workforce and achieving greater participation of women at
workplaces.
With more and more women acquiring
higher education, and entering the workplace, it is imperative that
organizations are well prepared to accept and include women and leverage their
strength for collective advantages of people and business. Instead of teaching
men or prescribing suggestive appropriate actions or conversations to them we
need to make them understand the impact of their biases and insensitivities. They need to realize that sensitivity is not by exceptions, it
is an expectation. The business case and imperatives of having more women in
organizations have been illustrated several times in various reports, surveys,
seminars and forums but now we need to take ‘affirmative actions’. We need to weed out the
unconscious biases and preconceived notions about gender. We need to show
respect and dignity as professionals. We need to appreciate and be conscious of
people’s background, preferences, appearance, and ancestry. The power of
inclusion and specially gender is such that it can increase India’s GDP by more
than a quarter if it can match male and female employment rates (according to a
report by consulting firm Booz
& Co.)
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