Friday, 8 August 2008

Welcome a-board - more news on better balanced boards

If you read The Economist, you'll know that it never lacks confidence in its own rightness.

It promotes a liberal, free-market view of the world and, healthily, has little time for the fuzziness of much modern economic policy making. So I think that an article this week, Getting more women on board, is quite significant. As you'd expect, this article is about the improving gender balance on Boards and in top-level management (known these days as 'The C-Suite' - as in 'C' for 'Chief [insert function - Financial, Information, Executive ...] Officer').

The article discusses the slightly disappointing findings of a survey by Catalyst, an NGO that promotes equal opportunity in workplaces, indicating that the rate at which women have reached the top floor offices has 'stalled' in the last few years. Even now, Catalyst estimates that women occupy only one in seven board positions in Fortune 500 companies.

One interesting, and not surprising, finding is that the strongest predictor of how women will progress into the top executive positions in the future is the current proportion of women on their board:

  • 'Companies with 30 percent women board directors in 2001 had, on average, 45 percent more women corporate officers by 2006.'

You'd expect this if a company has a culture that creates a work environment providing opportunity for all its people - as seems probable if there is real diversity around its Board table. There is also some evidence that female directors are seen as role models who both inspire and support aspiring female executives.

The Economist takes this a step further, getting close to what I see as the real point - the incentive for shareholders to select leaders from the broadest possible pool of talent, regardless of gender or other demographics (apart, one would hope, from ability).

Several years ago, I was a member of a Board of five directors. Normal succession processes had resulted in my being the only male on the Board. The best part of that experience was that it was three or four months before anybody even noticed this rather unusual circumstance. And that, surely, is the end-game - when surveys such as Catalyst's, and blog posts like this, are redundant, because all of us around the table are seen simply as directors, each appointed because the shareholders considered us to be the best person for the role.

Realistically, I think it'll be a while yet.

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