Recent studies have found that women, especially women of color, are less likely to be promoted than men. To overcome these gaps, dubbed the “broken rung,” experts say that both managers and women employees will have to be more proactive.
For every 100 men promoted to manager, only 85 women overall – 58 Black women and 71 Latinas – were promoted in 2020, according to McKinsey. These grim statistics are compounded by the fact that millions of women were pushed out of the workforce during the pandemic.
“Morning Joe” co-host and Know Your Value founder Mika Brzezinski recently discussed promotion inequality as part of the ongoing “LEVELING UP” series with Kat Cole, former COO and president of Focus Brands, along with Dia Simms, CEO of Lobos 1707 and Alex Carter, professor at Columbia Law School and author of “Ask for More: 10 Questions to Negotiate Anything.”
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“There’s already been a pay gap between men and women, especially women of color. Let’s add to that, the opportunity to get promotions,” said Brzezinski during the discussion.
Here are six ways that employees and companies can combat the problem.
1. For employees: Ask questions.
Employees often don’t understand how promotions work in their company. Carter strongly suggested that they ask pointed questions right off the bat.
“Early on in your first job, you want answers to three important questions: what, when and who. What are the metrics by which promotion is decided? When does that window of opportunity open and who do you need to recruit to your side to get you there?” said Carter.
She continued: “Sit down with your manager early on. Ask her how promotions are decided, what you need to hit to get there, when you can start working with her to make that case, and then look at other people at work.”
2. For managers: Recognize that female leaders are good for business.
Research shows that recruiting and promoting women is beneficial for the bottom line. According to an S&P Global study, companies with female CFOs generated $1.8 trillion more than their sector average, and firms with female CEOs saw more company value appreciation than those run by men.
“The ‘why’ is also important. The intentionality is critical. It still continues to be treated as if it’s a charitable effort,” said Simms. “It can’t be said often enough that women in leadership are just very strictly good for business.”
3. For employees: Be ready.
Carter suggested that women be prepared for a promotion, even if it’s not imminent.
“We can’t just wait for somebody to tap us on the shoulder and say, ‘you’re ready.’ The negotiation for the promotion doesn’t happen in the performance review. It happens those other 364 days a year,” said Carter.
Cole shared that, throughout her career, most of her promotions came suddenly when someone left or got promoted.
“Be ready,” said Cole. “I was viewed as ready internally in the organization. When someone else changed, it became my opportunity.”
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4. For managers: Recruit, nurture and train female managerial talent.
Managers have to be proactive in order to give women equal access to management roles. First, according to Cole, companies must assess their own policies and managerial roster.









