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Why female bosses fail more often than male ones
May 3rd 2014
A MERE 5% of the chief executives of the world s biggest companies are women.
And they are more likely to be sacked than their more numerous male colleagues:
38% of the female CEOs who left their jobs over the past ten years were forced
to go, compared with 27% of the men. This is the latest finding from the
research on the top management at the world s 2,500 largest public companies
that Strategy& (the clumsy new name for Booz & Company, a consulting firm) has
been conducting since 2000.
A clue as to why women are more likely to be fired than men is provided by
another statistic in the study: 35% of female CEOs are hired from outside the
company, compared with just 22% of male ones. Outsiders generally have a higher
chance of being kicked out, and generate lower returns to shareholders.
Businesses that are already troubled are more likely to turn to outsiders; and
outsiders are less likely to have a support network of friends who can rally
around when times get tough.
Michelle Ryan, an organisational psychologist at the University of Exeter in
England, says women face nothing less than a glass cliff : they get their best
shot at the top job by taking the helm of a firm in trouble. In practice,
outsiders of either sex face the same precipice. But since women are still
fairly exotic creatures in the C-suite, they attract disproportionate publicity
when they hit problems. Carly Fiorina, dropped as HP s boss in 2005, made
things worse by inviting such publicity. But the same is not true of, say,
Ginni Rometty, the lower-profile boss of IBM (promoted from within the company
in 2012), who is under fire over the firm s performance.
The new research is not entirely pessimistic. Over the past ten years the
balance of incoming versus outgoing female CEOs, as a proportion of all changes
of boss, has risen significantly. Strategy& predicts that women will make up as
many as a third of incoming CEOs by 2040. It appears that the demand for female
bosses exceeds supply hence firms willingness to bring them in from outside.
This points to an obvious solution: companies should work harder on creating a
pipeline of female future CEOs. This would reduce both the pressure to raid
rival firms and the chances of women failing when they at last reach the top.