Good Intentions, Imperfect Execution? Women Get Fewer of the “Hot Jobs” Needed to Advance (Report)
Nov 21, 2012Catalyst’s findings about project assignments are very important. They echo my conclusion years ago, in my book Men and Women of the Corporation, that women were given the more routinized jobs, not the ones with high risk/high rewards that bring power and promotions. So it was exciting to see Catalyst call attention to this with new data. I applaud Catalyst’s great work.
—Rosabeth Moss Kanter, Harvard Business School Professor and author of SuperCorp and Confidence
The sixth report in the series, Good Intentions, Imperfect Execution? Women Get Fewer of the “Hot Jobs” Needed to Advance, examines the impact of leadership development—both formal programs and on-the-job experiences—on high potentials’ career advancement. It specifically investigates whether women and men get equal access to the experiences critical for advancement. Our findings revealed that:
- Large and visible projects, mission-critical roles, and international experiences are the crucial “hot jobs” that advance high potentials further and faster, but women get fewer of these critical experiences necessary to advance.
- Formal leadership development programs can provide access to the “hot jobs” when managed strategically, but formal programs don’t always result in advancement, particularly for women.
The report includes a series of questions for the reader to reflect upon about why disparities in career advancement persist. The goal is to help identify opportunities for effecting change in your organization, as well as in your career.
Additional Information:
- Harvard Business Review (Blog): “Study: Women Get Fewer Game-Changing Leadership Roles”
- Harvard Business Review: “High Potentials in the Downturn: Sharing the Pain?”
- Harvard Business Review: “Women in Management: Delusions of Progress”
- Harvard Business Review: “Why Men Still Get More Promotions than Women”
- Harvard Business Review (Blog): “New Research Busts Myths About the Gender Gap”
- Harvard Business Review (Blog): “Women Don’t Go After the Big Jobs with Gusto: True or False?”
- Catalyzing (The Catalyst Blog): “Be Somebody—Get Sponsored”
Research Partners: Bloomberg, BMO Financial Group, Chevron Corporation, Credit Suisse, Dell Inc., Deloitte LLP, Desjardins Group, Deutsche Bank AG, Ernst & Young, General Motors Company, Hewlett-Packard Company, IBM Corporation, KeyBank, McDonald’s Corporation, Sodexo, Inc., UPS