March 7, 2025 | Diversity, Our Company, Our Thinking, Women in the Workplace
From the Top Down: Why Female Leadership is Key to Accelerating Action on Gender Equality
This Women’s History Month, business leaders have an opportunity to reflect on the state of gender equality in leadership roles and consider how female executives uniquely contribute to advancing workplace equity. While important progress has occurred over the past decade, current trends indicate that true gender parity in senior leadership remains decades away. The acceleration of meaningful change will depend largely on increasing the presence of women in executive positions.
Despite notable gains in recent years, the journey toward gender parity in leadership remains challenging. As of 2024, women held 29% of C-suite positions, compared to just 17% in 2015—a significant improvement, but far from parity. The representation gap widens when examining the full corporate pipeline, where women remain underrepresented at every level.
What’s more concerning is that progress has slowed at critical entry points. Women are less likely than men to be hired into entry-level roles, creating an initial representation deficit. The situation worsens at the first promotion to manager—the “broken rung” of the corporate ladder—where for every 100 men promoted, only 81 women advance. This fundamental barrier creates a narrowing talent pipeline that makes it nearly impossible to achieve gender balance at more senior levels.
For women of color, the outlook is even more challenging. Despite representing a significant portion of the workforce, they occupy just 7% of C-suite positions—a mere four percentage-point increase since 2017. McKinsey’s research projects that at the current pace, it would take 22 years for white women to reach parity in senior leadership, but an alarming 48 years for women of color.
Female executives bring more than just diversity to leadership teams—they drive meaningful change throughout organizations in several key ways:
Role Modeling and Mentorship
Women in leadership serve as powerful role models, demonstrating to other women that advancement is possible and providing roadmaps for success. Their visibility helps dismantle stereotypes about women’s leadership capabilities and creates a ripple effect throughout organizations.
However, the “superwoman myth”—the expectation that female leaders must simultaneously excel in their careers while maintaining perfect home lives—creates unrealistic standards. A KPMG study found that 47% of executive women experience self-doubt, and 56% fear they won’t live up to expectations. Rather than showcasing only seemingly flawless executives, organizations benefit from highlighting leaders who transparently navigate work-life integration challenges.
Policy and Cultural Shifts
Organizations with women in leadership positions are more likely to implement policies that promote diversity, inclusion, and equitable practices. Female executives often champion cultural initiatives such as flexible work arrangements, equitable parental leave, and fair compensation practices that benefit all employees.
These leaders frequently approach problem-solving with unique perspectives that challenge traditional workplace norms. For example, when Indra Nooyi became PepsiCo’s first female CEO, she introduced design thinking that enhanced both packaging and user experience, developing products based on how women statistically prefer to snack—an approach that drove revenue growth and stock performance during her tenure.
Organizational Performance
The business case for gender diversity in leadership is compelling. According to McKinsey, companies with the strongest representation of women on executive teams are 39% more likely to financially outperform those with the weakest representation—up from 15% in 2015. UN Women reports that achieving gender equality could inject an additional $12 trillion into the global economy, with closing the skills gap potentially adding $10 trillion more.
These performance improvements stem from diverse thinking, broader perspectives, and more innovative problem-solving that women bring to leadership teams. As more female executives take their place in the C-suite, their influence increasingly drives stronger business outcomes.
Despite compelling evidence supporting the value of women in leadership, persistent obstacles continue to impede progress:
The “Broken Rung” Phenomenon
The most significant barrier to achieving gender parity is the first step up to management. This critical juncture—where far fewer women than men receive their first promotion—creates a talent pipeline imbalance that becomes increasingly difficult to correct at more senior levels.
This challenge disproportionately affects women of color. While white women saw 89 promotions for every 100 men promoted to manager in 2024, the numbers were significantly lower for Black women (54) and Latinas (65), demonstrating how racial and gender biases compound to create even steeper advancement hurdles.
Persistent Gender Biases
Unconscious biases continue to shape perceptions of leadership capability. Women are nearly twice as likely as men to be mistaken for someone more junior, and 37% of female leaders report having colleagues take credit for their ideas (compared to 27% of male leaders).
These biases particularly affect women who don’t conform to traditionally masculinized notions of leadership—expectations that include working extended hours, sacrificing personal lives, and embodying stereotypically male leadership traits. As Forbes notes, many successful women have “had to survive in very masculine organizations where they must put in long hours and devote themselves entirely to work.”
DEI Rollback Concerns
Recent shifts in organizational priorities threaten to undermine progress. According to LeanIn.Org and McKinsey’s Women in the Workplace report, the number of companies that identified gender diversity as a high priority dropped from 87% in 2019 to 78% in 2024. Similarly, racial diversity prioritization declined from 76% to 69% during the same period.
This waning DEI commitment coincides with several major corporations scaling back their diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts. With women already outnumbered 5 to 1 in senior leadership positions at the country’s 100 largest publicly traded companies, such rollbacks risk further slowing advancement toward gender parity.
Fostering gender parity in executive leadership requires a multi-faceted approach:
Organizational Initiatives
Companies making the greatest strides in advancing women implement comprehensive programs that address structural barriers:
Organizations should also track gender representation metrics across the entire leadership pipeline, with particular attention to the critical “broken rung” stage where disparities first emerge.
Policy Recommendations
Effective policies acknowledge the full spectrum of employees’ lives and create environments where women can thrive professionally without sacrificing personal well-being:
These policies benefit all employees while particularly supporting women, who continue to shoulder disproportionate caregiving responsibilities.
Individual Actions
While systemic change is essential, individual actions also drive progress:
Particularly important is challenging the “superwoman myth” by encouraging authentic leadership that acknowledges work-life integration challenges. As Dr. Parves Khan notes, “By debunking this myth and fostering environments where leaders can be both human and successful, organizations can pave the way for truly equitable workplaces.”
Female leadership is not merely a benchmark for measuring diversity—it is a critical catalyst for accelerating progress toward gender equality. The presence of women in executive positions drives policy changes, inspires cultural shifts, and improves organizational performance while creating pathways for other women to advance.
As organizations look toward the future, prioritizing gender parity in leadership is both a moral imperative and a strategic advantage. By implementing targeted initiatives that address systemic barriers, companies can harness the full potential of their female talent and create workplaces where all employees can thrive.
The path to gender equality may be long, but with committed leadership and sustained action, meaningful progress is possible. As research consistently demonstrates, organizations that invest in advancing women in leadership don’t just improve individual careers—they build stronger, more innovative, and more profitable businesses.
Happy International Women’s Day! How is your organization working to advance women into leadership positions?