Report says too many women stuck in middle management roles

-

New research suggests that UK business is potentially missing out on £5bn a year because companies are leaving women in middle management roles rather than allowing them to reach the top.

Research commissioned by Alexander Mann Solutions and networking organisation Everywoman found that 43% of women in middle management roles feel they are likely to leave their current employer within two years.

The report, based on UK research involving 400 female middle managers and 200 HR leaders working in the same organisations found that the aspects of work that female middle managers were least satisifed with were the lack of opportunity (48%) and clarity of career path (40%).

‘Focus on the pipeline: Engaging the full potential of female middle managers’ also portrayed the differing opinions between HR leaders and the female middle managers themselves. While 81% of female middle managers feel lack of progression is a problem, just 62% of HR leaders agree.

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

Co-founder of Everywoman, Karen Gill, said:

“After 13 years of working with women in business, we know all about the frustrations and challenges that women face.

“While diversity is much more front of mind than several years ago, some companies still don’t know where to start to unlock the productivity of their female middle managers.”

Rosaleen Blair, the founder and CEO of Alexander Mann Solutions, said:

“Focusing on increasing the numbers of women on boards is missing the fundamental problem of how to improve the pipeline of talented women from middle management to senior management. Female talent is often lost at this middle management level, so businesses need to give this segment of the workforce more attention.”

Latest news

‘Job centre in your pocket’ plan raises questions over role of AI in employment support

The government's AI-powered employment assistant has sparked debate about how technology should support jobseekers while maintaining trust.

Employers urged to spot gambling harms during World Cup

Employers are being urged to watch for gambling-related harm at work as the 2026 World Cup brings weeks of daytime matches and betting activity.

Habits for health: small changes that lead to bigger gains

From walking meetings to better sleep routines, simple habits can improve health, wellbeing and performance across the workplace.

Jeanette Wheeler: The business case for purpose-led leadership

Public scrutiny on businesses and societal expectations are putting pressure on leaders to demonstrate that purpose runs deeper than profit.
- Advertisement -

Britain’s biggest retailers cut 18,000 jobs as employment costs rise

Rising wage bills and tax costs are prompting retailers to rethink hiring as they seek savings across their operations.

Georges Elhedery on AI and job losses

“We all know generative AI will destroy certain jobs and will create new jobs.”

Must read

Make your own training videos with Camtasia

Making your own training video just became easier.  

Seren Trewavas: What HR can learn from Ryanair

Earlier this month, budget airline Ryanair  announced it would...
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you