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Cultivating Female Talent in the UK Energy Sector
Cultivating Female Talent in the UK Energy Sector
What the sector can do to resolve the barriers faced by women in middle management
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What the sector can do to resolve the barriers faced by women in middle management
New research shows companies have commitments on diversity and inclusion but there is a delivery gap holding back female talent – initiatives to support diversity have been put in place but are not consistently delivering.
Women face career barriers at middle management level in UK energy sector
POWERful Women and Bain & Company have published a new report on women in middle management in the UK energy sector. Cultivating Female Talent: what the sector can do to resolve the barriers faced by women in middle management1 is based on one-to-one interviews and a comprehensive industry survey of more than 4,700 respondents.
The pioneering research – the first of its kind for the UK energy sector – reveals fascinating and at times startling insights into the lived experience of women in the UK energy workplace and the barriers they are facing, whether they want to succeed in their current roles or progress through middle management to senior leadership.
Elizabeth Baxter, POWERful Women Board Member and co-author of the report said:
“We listened to the individual and collective voices of women working in energy middle management today – a group whose experiences have so far had little attention. We wanted to understand why women continue to be under-represented in the UK energy industry, including in the pipeline to executive roles. The sector faces immense challenges as it transforms and upskills for the energy transition and responds to evolving customer demands. It is essential that companies secure and cultivate the best and most diverse talent for success.”
The report’s key findings include some positive news. The energy sector excites women as a career choice – they cite a sense of purpose and being motivated by mitigating climate change and contributing to Net Zero. Companies in the sector should also be praised for making clear and positive commitments on diversity and inclusion.
However, research has revealed a delivery gap – these commitments are not being cascaded effectively to all levels within organisations. A variety of policies are in place to support people’s careers but data shows that they are not being used by women. For example, 58% of women surveyed said their company has a formal sponsorship programme but only 12% were benefiting from it. Critically, policies are not being backed up by an inclusive and supportive culture.
Olga Muscat, Senior Partner, Bain & Co, and report co-author, commented;
"The results of our research have given us some fascinating insights into women's lived experience in the UK energy workplace. On one hand the work highlighted the strong commitment of the Energy Sector to gender diversity, and all the progress already made. On the other hand, it revealed a delivery gap in well intended initiatives being put in place, but not consistently delivering on their promises."
The report features a number of career case studies and quotes from interviews. In particular, women said that:
On the other hand, the data revealed that effective and usable diversity and inclusion policies that deliver in practice increase the attractiveness of an organisation as a place to work.
For example, women’s willingness to recommend their company to others and in particular to other women rose by at least 15% when women used two or more of their company’s diversity-supporting policies.
Ruth Cairnie, Chair of POWERful Women, commented;
“Our research suggests that the UK energy sector is investing in diversity and inclusion initiatives but is not getting the return it should on this investment. Female talent is not being sufficiently developed, doesn’t feel valued and in some instances is being lost to rival companies or sectors. Our conclusion is that organisations need to work harder at cultivating the talent they already have. This can be an important contribution to creating the workforce they need for the energy transition, improving performance and fulfilling all that society requires from them.”
POWERful Women has made a number of recommendations to energy sector organisations on how to close the diversity and inclusion delivery gap for women in middle management, including: