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?

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Christine Demen Meier
Christine Demen Meier
Managing Director, Les Roches

Quotas, monitoring and legal enforcement will undoubtedly bring more women into leadership roles within hospitality. Fast forward 10 years and the stats will be much improved, I'm sure of it, but what of the culture? This is the danger of using metrics, rather than meaning, to drive equality. We run the risk of addressing only superficially the problem of equal opportunity, without actually shifting the mindsets that are preventing women from smashing through the glass ceiling across the industry.

 

As individual organizations, we need to look beyond our own business to make a real, lasting cultural change. At Les Roches, we aim to empower anyone who has the passion and commitment to become a hospitality professional. Our student gender split across all programs and campuses is about 53% female and 47% male depending on the years, which echoes the hospitality industry as a whole, and we take great pride in preparing a future generation of female professionals for leadership careers in hospitality and beyond.

 

It is up to all of us in the industry to ensure these women have an equal shot at success, and to our ultimate detriment if we don't. To shift the fight from individual females to industry wide, leaders need to make gender equality commitments that aren't just self-serving, they must look outwards, all coming together to create a movement that will be so much more transformative than measurement.

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