Group Vows to Advance More Women at Work -- WSJ
December 07 2016 - 3:02AM
Dow Jones News
By Joann S. Lublin
More than two dozen chief executives of companies, including
Bank of America Corp., LinkedIn Corp. and Newmont Mining Corp.,
have signed a pledge to speed women's progress up the corporate
ladder.
The corporate commitment is the opening salvo of "Paradigm for
Parity," a drive by a new group dedicated to achieving gender
equality in the upper echelons of American companies by 2030.
Its game plan, to be announced Wednesday, demands that
businesses set measurable targets for women's representation at
every level, train employees in spotting hidden biases, and ensure
influential senior men sponsor promising women.
The idea came from a handful of female executives frustrated by
the slow pace of women's advancement, said Jewelle Bickford, a
partner at Evercore Wealth Management and a co-chair of the
coalition.
A larger group of executive women held brainstorming sessions
and conducted research to develop a road map for quickening the
pace of gender equality.
They then sought other high-powered male and female executives
to join the charge, drawing nearly 80 corporate leaders, board
members and academics.
"We are driving actions that can make a difference in creating a
step change because the progress for women is not there," said
Ellen Kullman, a coalition co-chair and former head of DuPont
Co.
The group hasn't decided yet how it might hold business bosses
accountable for fulfilling its detailed game plan. Committed CEOs
are expected to privately swap details about their progress, and
are urged to consider public disclosure.
Women now hold 19% of C-suite roles, a slight increase from 17%
in 2015, according to research by LeanIn.Org and McKinsey & Co.
Getting to 50% "will be challenging but is attainable," said
Nicholas Akins, head of American Electric Power Co. and a coalition
member.
Some diversity experts believe more drastic steps are needed,
given the slow pace of change. Committed CEOs should publicly
report their progress annually, focus on putting more women into
operating roles and set closer-range targets for parity at the top,
said Jeffrey Tobias Halter, president of YWomen, a corporate gender
consultancy.
At AEP, where two of Mr. Akins' six highest lieutenants are
women, the CEO said "we are at varying stages of development,"
especially when it comes to identifying sponsors for high-potential
female leaders at the electricity producer.
A pilot project begun this May identified and trained 40
executives to serve as sponsors, and they are now choosing
protégés, an AEP spokeswoman said.
Across companies whose chiefs joined the pledge, broader usage
of sponsors "is probably one of the bigger areas of change," Ms.
Kullman said.
Pierre Nanterme, another chief executive signing the parity
pledge, vows to intensify his pursuit of gender equality at
Accenture PLC, a global consultancy.
In March 2015, Accenture set a goal that women would represent
at least 40% of new hires world-wide by 2017.
Hiring managers surpassed the 40% mark during the year ended
Aug. 31, Mr. Nanterme reported. He said he would multiply
Accenture's diversity initiatives, such as by expanding the use of
gender-neutral job descriptions. The firm may widen its female
applicant pool by using "blind" resumes that lack names.
By next spring, Mr. Nanterme expects 50 CEOs will support the
Paradigm for Parity campaign.
He plans to personally recruit more business leaders. "If I am
unable to bring in one," he said, "I will be deeply
disappointed."
Write to Joann S. Lublin at joann.lublin@wsj.com
Corrections & Amplifications: An earlier version of this
article misspelled Jewelle Bickford's first name. (Dec. 6,
2016)
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
December 07, 2016 02:47 ET (07:47 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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