Despite slow improvements, businesses still have a long way to go to reach gender equality. We have five suggestions to help your firm get started.
Businesses in the UK know that they need to do more to promote equality and diversity despite recent improvements. And the numbers back that conclusion.
Research by EY indicates that despite progress for women in FinTech, there is still a low female representation in senior roles. This research shows that the main obstacles to female progression include an absence of industry recognition and an opaque promotion ladder.
The report also highlights the need to reduce the gender pay gap in the UK. Some of the key findings include:
On a global scale, the UK is ranked 15th on the Global Gender Gap Index. This is behind other European countries such as Belgium, Germany, and Ireland.
Add a gender equality statement to your company's diversity policy, have a named executive responsible for diversity and assess the impact of your policy.
Set self-imposed targets and measure performance using metrics. Publicly report progress towards targets to promote transparency. This data is necessary to meet the new gender pay gap reporting rules.
Introduce executive accountability for increasing gender diversity at all levels in your company across all business units. Get the tone from the top right and ensure there is senior-level buy-in.
Firms should give gender diversity parity with other business issues. Responsibility for it should sit with someone in a profit and loss line, ideally male, to prevent it from being seen as a 'silo issue' (in isolation).
Executive bonuses should be explicitly linked to better gender balance. Remuneration can be a powerful way of changing behaviour.
It's up to firms to decide how to effect this, but incentives could be given to executives and/or hiring managers.
There's a clear incentive for companies to get this right by linking remuneration with results.
By creating a charter, you recognise the issue publicly and commit to specific ways you will tackle gender diversity.
The Women in Finance Charter provides a great framework for your gender equality charter.
Those signing up to the charter agree to promote gender diversity in four ways:
We’ve created a comprehensive Equality & Diversity roadmap to help you navigate the compliance landscape, supported by e-learning in our Essentials Library.
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