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Highlights, insights, best one liners - Women in Leadership Queensland
Highlights, insights, best one liners - Women in Leadership Queensland
Posted : Wednesday, June 29, 2011
New thinking, cut-through honesty and business insights ended
Queensland's first Women in Leadership series - much in the spirit
in which the series had been launched 12 months ago.
The 2010-11 series closed with an invitation only sunset forum
where 50 CEDA guests gathered to hear the stories, advice and
arguments of three speakers on the topic of 'Developing women in
non-traditional industries'.
The increased presence of women in non-traditional roles has
enhanced operations and bottom lines argued Simone Wetzler,
Executive General Manager People, Safety and Environment,
Thiess.
The Women in Leadership series, which CEDA runs in a number of
states, ran for the first time in Queensland through 2010-11.
Public and member-only events covered the business and economic
benefits of diversity, the challenges of leading change and the
workforce imperative for ensuring the engagement and retention of
senior women.
Through this series CEDA has been acknowledged as providing
thought leadership on a complex and long discussed topic, providing
new insights and a forum for debate for CEDA members, trustees and
guests.
In Queensland CEDA will continue the Women in Leadership series
in 2011-2012 with public and member events. The first event of the
2011-2012 series will be held in August and will build on the
thought leadership provided by leading speakers in series one.
What follows is a reflection and summary of the concerns,
solutions and insights offered so far.
Elizabeth Broderick, Sex Discrimination Commissioner and
Commissioner Responsible for Age Discrimination, Australian Human
Rights Commission, spoke in February this year. She rolled out the
facts: Australia is educating women better and longer than any
other country in the world; the majority of Australian university
graduates are women; women start with the same level of education,
intelligence and commitment but they are missing in action at the
senior levels of the workforce, across every sector; in Australia
59 per cent of women are in paid work; women in senior management
is trending backwards.
"We have a huge wastage of female talent in Australia",
Elizabeth said. "A failure to change the picture of
leadership in Australian business will put us at a disadvantage on
the international stage - this is about using all the talent
available in this country."
But she said, "Being convinced of the benefits of gender
equality in the workplace and actually delivering on that
conviction are two completely different things".
Elizabeth outlined what she sees as the barriers to gender
equality and to equal representation of women in senior leadership:
belief barriers, cultural barriers and structural barriers, all of
which she said require systemic intervention.
In response to the suggestion that there had been progress and
that the topic was tired she responded: "We have been aware of and
working on this issue, the issue of gender equity and
representation of women for 100 years and still there is unfinished
business."
She said that if it was easy to fix it would have been fixed by
now.
Elizabeth closed with the argument that to meet the talent
demand and to know that change has been made a critical mass must
be reached - "critical mass is 40 per cent - within five years we
have to have reached critical mass".
Elizabeth was joined on stage by Giam Swiegers,
Chief Executive Officer, Deloitte Australia and said that it was
"important to hear strong male leaders speaking out on
equality".
She applauded the leadership that Giam and many other senior men
had provided on the issue and in removing barriers, saying, "we
will only see gains when it is men working with men to solve these
problems".
Giam Swiegers, Chief Executive Officer, Deloitte Australia spoke
about a critical mass, but perhaps of a different type. Speaking
about the programs and initiatives put in place at Deloitte he
said: "We only had one goal and that was to get our unfair share of
female talent, it was clearly going to give us a competitive
advantage."
Being asked what it was that would help the firm outperform
competition the clear answer for Giam and for Deloitte was "make
the most of all available talent so as not to suffer from the
skills shortage".
With that objective clear, talking about history or complaining
about barriers was not productive. Change, commitment and action
were called for.
"To me if you walk into my office and say that you know it's
going the take two generations for this culture to change, what I
hear is someone saying they are not going to do anything about this
on Monday," he said.
Like many of the Women in leadership series speakers an opinion
was sought, and if not expressed then drawn out in question time,
on quotas. Was quotas part of Deloitte's plan?
"I'm not a fan of quotas, I come from South Africa and quotas
have a very particular meaning there, but I do believe that if you
are serious you have to have targets. Without targets I can't see a
measure for success and neither can I see a clear definition of
failure," he said.
Aware that recruitment and promotion were only part of what was
required to reach and maintain targets Giam talked about retention,
about mentoring programs, options for mentors who were not line of
sight supervisors, part time work, the applauding of part time
workers as valuable contributors, and pushing back against
perceptions of part time workers as only being part workers. On
mentoring he described the value of mentors as not only progressing
people but also as identifying when not to progress.
"There is research out of the United Kingdom on the glass cliff.
Not the glass ceiling, the glass cliff. It investigates why the
failure rates of female executives is higher than for their male
counterparts. It found that without a mentor, when high risk
assignments come up, women take them. They have no one to say
'don't touch that one, wait, there will be better
opportunities'."
In one of the strongest business benefits statements of the
series Giam posed the simple question: What if you do nothing?
"If nothing else compels you that you have to figure out how to
get and make the most of female talent, it's the simple fact that
today, of commerce students graduating from Australian universities
less than 15 per cent are Caucasian males... organisations that are
entirely dependent on their ability to manage Caucasian males will
soon face a serious challenge."
Earlier in the Women in Leadership series, in November 2010,
Catherine Fox, Author and Journalist, and Jane Caro, Lecturer and
Author, presented their thoughts on women in leadership and
mythbusted their way through many women and women in leadership
myths.
Catherine's seven myths and her rounding rebuttal of them
included:
- That this is a meritocracy - the fact is that merit is
distributed across the population, across gender and across race.
You know that talent can come from anywhere, so if this really was
a meritocracy you would not be having this conversation.
- That this is a meritocracy - then why is there a pay gap. And
yes there is a pay gap. The gender pay gap in this country is 18
per cent. The pay gap widens the more senior you become in your
organisation. In the financial services sector the pay gap is
bigger.
- Women with children lack ambition - this is said because both
men and women have bias about mothers.
- Women should act more like men - this one is a waste of time
and energy, if it was as simple as acting like a man women would
have done it and it would have worked. It doesn't work.
- Quotas and targets are a bad idea - Norway has 46 per cent of
women on boards after instituting mandatory quotas, the Norwegian
sky has not fallen in and their economy has not shut down.
- There are not enough women - there is not a supply issue.
- Time will heal all - well it hasn't, there are fewer women in
senior positions than we had four years ago.
Jane Caro trumped Catherine with eight of her own myths and not
just about women in the workforce. First she set the scene by being
very clear that the term 'work-life balance' was not one she wanted
to hear again - ever. "Work is part of life," she said. Her eight
myths of women and life were as follows:
- Women are nicer than men - this is the assumption that women
will be kinder and more collaborative. Actually women are as
diverse and different as anyone else so do not punish women when
they actually are not nice or nicer.
- Men are inherently dangerous - they are not.
- Women are their own worst enemy - they are not. Much of what
women are dealing with is new, things have changed more for women
in the past 30 years than in the last 2000 years; women might make
some mistakes, but mostly are doing a fab job.
- Women are nasty to one another; women don't help each other -
just not true.
- Women aren't funny - only to people who don't get the
joke.
- Women were happier at home, and feminism devalued housewives -
double barrel myth - women voted with their feet on this, when
universities opened for women, when options other than staying at
home opened up, women took up those options in droves, presumably
because they were not happier at home.
- Women are motivated by love not money - women motivated
entirely by love end up poor, old and alone.
- All solved now, feminism worked - Australia is number one in
the world in education and number 50 in the world for workplace
participation and equity. Not solved.
Not all the myths are yet busted and perhaps the most pervasive
will never be, but CEDA audiences appreciated the thought very
much, with question time interrogating what myths were most
influential and what real myth busting would take.
Earlier in the series Professor Sharon Bell, Professorial Fellow
and Senior Program Developer at Melbourne University's LH Martin
Institute had done some myth busting of her own with hard, cold
facts.
She said that women are participating in undergraduate programs
and increasingly in post graduate programs and cited persistent
patterns of women's participation by discipline in tertiary
education. She did however point to the gaps in change and some
traps. "Women are the largest number of research assistants and are
poorly represented in elite science and in centres in
excellence."
On the question of equity and diversity as a business
imperative, she said: "this is about a higher cause, about an
ideological movement, it's about fair play and human rights, it is
all those things but it is dumb not to recognise this is also a
fundamental business decision".
Sharon was positive about women's talent and women's engagement
and set the mixed audience a task, "think about the enablers and
inhibitors, consider how you might go about changing the
organisation culture in which you work and find incremental and
systematic ways to move forward".
At the final public event of the 2010-11 series Miriam Silva,
General Manager Commercial Operations, Elders Limited spoke about
leadership, unconscious bias and her experience as a Muslim woman
in executive Australia.
Arguing that the leadership model is the same for men as it is
for women, Miriam said the key lessons were: be yourself, which she
said is the easiest thing to say and the hardest thing to do,
"because to be yourself you have to know yourself"; don't take
yourself too seriously; get a mentor; and in the only leadership
message that she thought was particularly for women "tell people
what you want and what you think, if you don't tell someone,
how can they know what you are thinking?"
Other Queensland 2010-11 Women in leadership series speakers,
panellists and moderators included:
- Peter Ball, People, Performance and Culture Executive Partner,
KPMG
- Tim Biggs, Office Managing Partner, Queensland Deloitte
- Mara Bun, Chief Executive Officer, Green Cross Australia
- Karina Collins, Partner, BDO
- Joanna Glynn, Executive Counsel, Freehills
- Mark Johnson, CEO and Managing Partner PwC
- Kerryn Newton, Non-Executive Director Energex Limited
Board
- Varina Nissen, Managing Director, OnTalent
- Dr Polly Parker, MBA Director, UQ Business School
- Peter Strachan, CEO, Translink
- Professor Debbie Terry, Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Academic), The
University of Queensland
- Janine Walker, Director, Office of Human Resource Management,
Adjunct Professor of Management, Griffith University
- Simone Wetzler, Executive General Manager People, Safety and
Environment, Theiss
The Women in Leadership 2010-11 series in Queensland was
supported by CEDA members. Many of the above speakers contributed
time and ideas as part of the reference group developing the first
series. Trustee functions were hosted by Freehills, Translink,
Energex, KPMG, PwC, UQ Business School and Thiess. The series was
generously sponsored by Griffith University, NAB and Rio Tinto
Alcan.
CEDA members can listen to the full audio of the Queensland
Women in leadership public event speakers here.
The Women in Leadership series will continue in Queensland in
2011-12. The series will include four public events and two CEDA
member trustee functions. The 2011-12 series is sponsored by CEDA
members Griffith University Business School, KPMG and NAB.
By Kyl Murphy, Queensland State Director, CEDA
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