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    Report: Women of Color Want To Excel At Work More Than White Women

    Women of Color

    Report: Women of Color Want To Excel At Work More Than White Women

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    We’ve known that Black women have always been ambitious, but new data shows they are increasingly gunning for top corporate spots more than their white female counterparts.

    According to LeanIn.Org and McKinsey & Company’s new report on women in the workplace, minorities are aiming for more responsibility and opportunities at work despite America still failing to step up regarding equity advancement.

    Despite a greater awareness of DEI issues and increased focus and investment on racial equity in corporate America, women of color continue to experience similar types of microaggressions at similar frequencies as they did two years ago. These experiences can take a heavy toll:  compared to women of color who don’t experience microaggressions, women of color who do are more than twice as likely to feel negative about their job, twice as likely to be burned out,  and three times as likely to say they’ve struggled to concentrate at work due to stress. And while more white employees see themselves as allies to women of color this year, they are no more likely to take action. Seventy-seven percent of white employees say they’re allies to women of color, but only 39 percent confront discrimination when they see it and only 21  percent regularly advocate for new opportunities for women of color. This points to the critical need for businesses to equip employees at all levels to challenge bias and show up as substantive allies.

    The report is based on data and insights from 423 companies representing more than 12 million people, along with survey responses from over 65,000 individual employees. It shows that despite important gains since 2016, women remain significantly underrepresented at all levels of management in corporate America.

    At the same time, women in leadership are rising to the moment as stronger people leaders and more active champions of diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI)—and are taking on the extra work that comes with it. Compared to men at the same level, women in senior leadership are  60 percent more likely to provide emotional support to employees and 24 percent more likely to ensure their teams’ workloads are manageable. Senior women leaders are also twice as likely to spend a substantial amount of time doing DEI work outside of their formal job responsibilities— from recruiting candidates belonging to underrepresented communities to leading employee resource groups. And at every level, women are more likely than men to show up as allies to women of color.

    Companies have benefited significantly from women’s leadership during this year of unprecedented workplace changes. However, this critical work is largely going unrecognized and unrewarded. Despite companies signaling a high commitment to DEI and employee wellbeing, only 25 percent say that their formal performance review process recognizes this type of work to a substantial degree. This has serious implications. Companies risk losing the very leaders they need right now.

    “Women are contributing more yet are often less recognized. Burnout is at an all-time high.  While women have been resilient, it is a moment of reflection,” said Lareina Yee, a senior partner at McKinsey & Company said in a news release. “Companies cannot afford to miss the signals of talent attrition. It’s time to invest in the leaders who have kept companies afloat throughout the  challenges of the past two years.”

    While all employees are more burned out than last year, women have been hit particularly hard.  Forty-two percent of women report being burned out, as compared to 35 percent of men. And  24/7 cultures are driving this exhaustion. More than one in three employees feel as if they are expected to be “on” at all times, and those who feel this way are more than twice as likely to be burned out.

    “This year’s report should serve as a wake-up call. Despite bold commitments to racial equity,  the experiences of women of color aren’t getting better,” said Rachel Thomas, co-founder and  CEO of LeanIn.Org. “This points to the critical need to engage employees as change agents and  allies, so we can truly transform the culture of work.”

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