A message from male chief executives: An intervention is required - Women's Agenda

A message from male chief executives: An intervention is required

Getting a handful of our most powerful chief executives in the same room at the same time is no small feat. Getting more than 20 of them, including the head of our defence force, and having seven of them voluntarily submit themselves to 7.30 host Leigh Sales’s questioning, is remarkable. But it happened yesterday. Even more remarkably the topic that drew them in was the role of men in accelerating the advancement of women in leadership.

Mike Smith, Alan Joyce, Ian Narev, David Thodey, Elmer Funke Kupper, Joe Hockey, Michaelia Cash, Arthur Sinodinis, Heather Ridout and Meredith Hellicar were among the leaders from business and government whom descended on The Westin in Sydney’s Martin Place to discuss this issue.

The fact the topic of women’s representation in leadership is couched as an issue is worth celebrating in itself. Recognising a problem exists is a small but significant step on any road to change. And that might just be the most powerful hangover from the launch of the Male Champions of Change 2013 report.

It’s a testament to the tremendous tenacity and leadership of the force behind the initiative — Sex Discrimination Commissioner Elizabeth Broderick — that the event drew the crowd it did. As she has said many times, the responsibility for increasing the number of women in senior leadership roles cannot sit on the shoulders of women alone. The Male Champions of Change program, which Broderick established in 2010, provides a practical pathway for that idea. It enlists male leaders to keep this issue on the agenda and to tackle some responsibility for progress.

In their 2011 report the men considered the why of this issue: why are Australian women still so under-represented in management? This year their report looks at how this can be redressed.

“We have all seen the numbers. We have all read the research. We have all voiced our opinion,” ANZ chief executive Mike Smith told the room. “Then and now, the facts speak for themselves. They tell us clearly, that an intervention is required.

Today, we are proposing a leadership intervention.”

Smith explained one of his personal epiphanies that reinforced why intervention is required. He described it as the ‘Leadership Lottery’ that exists in many organisations.

“This was a phrase we coined to reflect the fact that sometimes, the career trajectory of talented women can rest entirely on their leader, be they male or female,” Smith said. “Women told us they tended to excel with leaders who demonstrate strong values; are inclusive; and supportive during the various stages of their life and career.”

By way of contrast careers stall when a great leader moved on or the woman moved on to a less capable leader.

“It strikes me that we need to celebrate men who have a track record of hiring, developing and advancing women – but actually these men are quite rare,” he said. “Making inclusive leaders the norm rather than the exception – be they men or women – might just be the circuit breaker we need on this issue.”

Hearing that searing insight shared by a man at the helm of one of Australia’s biggest companies, to a room filled with more men than women, was welcome. Smith’s awareness and discernment on this issue was echoed by the chief executives who joined Leigh Sales on stage.

These men included Commonwealth Bank’s Ian Narev, Lieutenant General David Morrison, Telstra’s David Thodey, IMB’s Andrew Stevens, Treasury’s Dr Martin Parkinson, ASX’s Elmer Funke Kupper and Qantas’ Alan Joyce. They spoke freely, frankly and emphatically about the moral and economic imperatives for improving women’s representation in leadership.

But, critically, they spoke about what is required to make that happen. About normalizing flexibility in the workplace, looking at caring responsibilities in non-gendered terms, being proactive about reaching targets, setting targets and making management accountable for meeting them, putting a disproportionate amount of resources into boosting women in senior ranks. The level of detail with which these men spoke on these issues impressed me most.

And it is that understanding of those details that underpins their new report. After considerable consultations, conversations and research the group has devised a 12-point action plan to fix the issue that Mike Smith says “we’ve discussed for decades”.

Momentum on the issue of women in leadership is undoubtedly building. On Tuesday the Business Council of Australia launched its direct action plan to ensure women hold 50% of senior positions by 2023. This week the Australian Financial Review published an editorial calling for more women. And yesterday a powerful group of chief executives lay down the gauntlet. It is time for this issue to be addressed and they’ve given a few hundred of the country’s leaders a road map for doing it. There just aren’t excuses.

There is no doubt there is a commercial imperative for business to act on this. They know the data; companies with better gender diversity at senior levels perform better, they attract and retain the best talent and the bottom line is boosted.

The economic imperative for the government to lead on this issue is just as persuasive. However unlike business the government’s lack of awareness on this issue, evidenced by Cabinet, is glaringly obvious.

Three weeks ago Australia received a damning assessment for the opportunities it affords women. The World Economic Forum’s 2013 Global Gender Gap report indicates that yet again Australia ranks 1st in the world for educating women. More women reach higher levels of study here than in any other country. Critically, however, we rank 52nd in the world for female workforce participation. The disparity between those criteria is expensive and appalling. As is the fact no one from government commented on this. Considering the productivity gain for closing that gap is estimated at 13% of GDP, there is a convincing reason this should be discussed.

Before we sat down yesterday the minister assisting the minister for women, Senator Michaelia Cash, told a guest the fantastic thing is that there is now realisation among businesses that there is a financial reason to act on gender equality. That is not only true for business: government stands to gain too. Failing to lead on this issue is a failure bigger than the issue itself. If the Treasurer Joe Hockey or Senator Cash, take anything away from yesterday’s event I hope it’s that.

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