Road to Workplace Equality Still Steep But Employers Making Gains Through Initiative, Innovation
The "World of Work Outlook for Women in 2024" finds less than half (41%) of employers report attaining full gender equity. However, some industries are making progress, including Consumer Goods & Services (69%), Financials & Real Estate (68%), Communications Services (67%), Health Care & Life Sciences (67%), and Information Technology (66%) on the right track.
"In a world of talent shortages, we need everyone contributing to employment in a meaningful way. Bringing women into the workforce with an equal playing field is an economic imperative, not a nice-to-have," said
KEY FINDINGS
- Flexibility Drives Retention – Over one-third (37%) confirm flexible working policies are most effective for retaining and attracting diverse talent. Other top initiatives: Leadership development (30%), inclusive culture (29%), coaching/mentoring (28%) and academic partnerships (24%).
- Learnability Promotes Advancement – Three in 10 organizations (30%) report leadership development programs are effectively narrowing gaps that historically have prevented promotion to management.
- Innovation Powered by Tech – 65% of employers say new technology has helped them be more flexible, promoting more gender equality, 62% said tech is diversifying their IT talent pipelines, 61% cite advancing tech as helping gender equality, and 52% said that AI-based tools are aiding with the recruitment of the best candidates regardless of gender.
- Mixed Progress on Pay Equity – Just over half (52%) of respondents report pay equity initiatives are on schedule, while the remaining 48% are behind or have no initiatives. Financials & Real Estate (59%), Communications Services (58%), and Information Technology (58%) are outpacing the global average, while Industrials & Materials (51%), Consumer Goods & Services (50%), and Health Care & Life Sciences (49%) are lagging.
- Uneven Representation by Role – Efforts to expand the number of women candidates vary by role type, with administrative (51%) and operational (48%) positions leading the way. Less female representation is seen in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) (43%) and top-level management (42%).
KEY OPPORTUNITIES TO ENGAGE WOMEN
- Empower Women's Allyship – Guide young women's career journeys early on. Facilitate mentorship and sponsorship programs for women led by senior executive female allies.
Leverage An Internal Talent Marketplace – Implement AI-based talent marketplaces matching women's skills and aspirations to projects, gigs, and leadership opportunities enabling professional growth.- Focus On Upskilling and Reskilling – Offer AI-enabled and virtual upskilling and reskilling to suggest personalized courses. Host tech academies to ensure women develop high-demand digital fluencies.
- Keep Flexible Benefits – Survey staff to shape policies supporting work-life harmony. With growing return-to-office plans, maintain caregiving benefits and hybrid remote options to retain women.
- Support Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Belonging (DEIB) Adequately – Embed DEIB goals into operations with executive support, clear KPIs, tools, and training that build capabilities across all levels.
The data draws on
Download the complete "World of Work Outlook for Women in 2024" report to access additional statistics and tangible recommendations on how organizations can actively promote women's workforce participation and advancement.
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SOURCE
John Julitz, +1 (414) 502-9314, john.julitz@manpowergroup.com