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

Kenneth  Macpherson
Kenneth Macpherson
CEO, Europe, Middle East, Asia and Africa (EMEAA), IHG Hotels & Resorts

The challenges of the past 18 months have reinforced to me that the special culture we have at IHG Hotels & Resorts is fundamental to the wellbeing and development of all our people across the globe, who represent the enormous diversity that make the world such a wonderful place.

I'm proud of the steps we're taking to recruit a higher proportion of women into senior roles, as we continue to represent the diversity of our guests, owners and colleagues. We're doing this in many ways both directly – such as through our Rise development programme for aspiring female hotel General Managers and Operations leaders – and indirectly, with our recent moves to offer hybrid working and extended paternity leave, initially in the UK and US, helping to remove some of the barriers for women that have been in place too long. Our employee networks – grassroots groups for colleagues with shared interests – are also incredibly important to making lasting change at IHG. Our Lean In group for women and EMbrace group for colleagues and allies of ethnic minorities meet regularly and share ideas with leadership on how we can make our business an even more inclusive and welcoming place.

There's still much work to do, but we are making progress. In the UK, for instance, we have recently published our UK gender pay gap report. It shows we have increased the number of women in the top and middle quartiles of our UK corporate population over the past year, with 50% now filling Executive Committee roles or being the direct reports of EC members. On top of this, 60% of corporate promotions and new hires in the UK between January 1, 2020 and August 31, 2021 were female, while 38% of the IHG Board is made up of women.

The steps we're taking come against a backdrop of debates around quotas and legal enforcements, which undoubtedly have a positive influence. However, there is one vital challenge that must be overcome if we're ever to achieve true gender diversity – and that's education.

Starting at a young age, people need to learn how gender relations are evolving and why abolishing negative gender, sexist and sexual stereotypes is so important. It's not just the responsibility of schools and colleges, but employers, too, and I've been delighted with the reaction of our teams to the conscious inclusion training we've rolled out across the organisation in recent years.

Only through education in every setting will we truly achieve social and cultural change – the exchanges where you connect with people for who and what they are, their identities and what they represent, alongside the valuable contribution they make. We haven't reached it yet, but we're working hard to get there.

View all 10 views in this viewpoint