Even though women make 50% of the workforce in hospitality, gender equality remains a myth in our sector. There is a significant gap in terms of rank, pay, role and general progression in women's leadership positions and female representation falls as women rise in their careers with only 5% going on to make the top job of CEO. Beyond the facts and figures, if we need to be on the frontlines of change, we really need to get a grasp on the biggest challenges the current CEO's face in fixing the problem. Because CEO's who think gender diversity isn't a problem only make it worse and simply hiring more women will not solve the problem.

Why is gender diversity at the top still a challenge? How are you driving change in your organizations from the very top? What are the biggest challenges you face as a CEO or C-Suite executive and what would you like to see more of - quotas, universal standards for measuring and monitoring, legal enforcements?

IDeaS - A SAS Company

This viewpoint is co-created with IDeaS a SAS company
More information

Jay Stein
Jay Stein
Head of Dream Hotels at Hyatt

At Dream Hotel Group we believe in good talent. Our goal is to hire, train and retain the best in the business. We pride ourselves in supporting growth and opportunities for all gender identifications. We lead from the top: all of our verticals are led by women vice presidents, and one of our five in the c-suite is a woman. In New York and some of the toughest other markets in the industry, more than half of our hotels are led by women – women comprise more than half of our general managers, directors of finance and department heads. Throughout the country, leadership also includes transgender and transexual individuals.

Quotas and legal enforcement are not the answer at this point. Supporting growth opportunities and flexible work schedules, mentoring and training, and intentional efforts to foster growth among diverse leaders and to train others in what to look for and to foster that growth is the key. The world is changing and the issue is being discussed and raised more than ever before. Companies are being watched more closely and gender bias will negatively impact a company's image. More c-suite gender diversity will become the norm over the next decade, but this complex issue is not going away so soon.

View all 10 views in this viewpoint