India Inc. celebrated a second independence day in 1991, as laissez-faire reforms opened the markets and drove an unprecedented number of people into the workforce. Over the past three decades, India’s GDP has grown over 30 times driven by a rise in per-capita income. The entry of women into the workforce—spurred by new opportunities in education and corporate world—has played a major role in driving this growth. During this time, women have made their mark across myriad sectors, including banking and financial services, technology, pharmaceuticals, and media. In 2020, India celebrated the selection of a female Air Force Pilot to fly the state-of-the-art Rafale fighter aircrafts.
While there have been many victories, the ratio of women joining the workforce has slipped from 32 percent in 2005 to 23 percent in 2019, even as the female literacy rate has climbed to 70 percent. A key factor in this decline is the difficulty many face in translating academic excellence into corporate success. Reports from the Central Board of Secondary Education show that girls have been outperforming boys in 10th and 12th level examinations for years, with a pass percentage that is consistently 8 to 12 percent higher than their male classmates. Additionally, the proportion of females pursuing higher education has increased by 40 percent since 2005. However, when it comes to the corporate world, they have over two decades of catching up to do. An anecdotal but pervasive belief among women is that while schools and colleges provide an unbiased environment, they have found they must work harder than their male counterparts to achieve the same level of success in the corporate world. Further, there is a widespread view that women in the workplace are thought to be more execution–oriented than strategically focused. As such, women are less likely to serve in leadership roles requiring strategic and organization-wide decisions at the highest level. Therefore it is not surprising that the percentage of female managing directors and CEOs of NSE-listed companies has increased only marginally between 2014 and 2019, from 3.2 percent to 3.6 percent. According to the Ministry of Statistics & Programme Implementation, the ratio of women engaged in managerial positions of listed companies in India is just 90 per 1000 people.
Women in India are viewed as playing a critical role in building our society, but mainly as mothers. Since they are assumed to be the primary care-givers at home, it is often difficult for them to carve out a career for themselves when familial responsibilities increase. While many women welcome this care-giving role, they also acknowledge that it carries a cost; almost always demanding a tempering of career ambitions, if not a complete sacrifice.
As sustainability and inclusion become increasingly critical focus areas for many organizations, leaders must begin to think more creatively about their strategic imperative to achieve more gender-diverse workforces. According to the latest Economic Survey, 60 percent of females aged 15 to 59 years were attending to domestic duty only and were not part of the paid workforce. To make meaningful gains, organizations will have to offer women a wider variety of opportunities and flexibility, and most notably, help them sustain their career momentum so that they are not waylaid by the family responsibilities expected of a woman in India.
Harshbeena Zaveri, NRB Bearings, Vice Chairman & Managing Director
Gender diversity is now on the radar of every leader and board member, and organizations are making genuine efforts to improve the representation of women through various interventions. In India, one area where women continue to lag men is in operational roles within the industrial and manufacturing sectors. According to the 2018 Periodic Labour Force Survey, only 25 percent of all female employees in India work in the manufacturing and industrial sector. The ratio drops further when one looks at women in technical roles. This stands in contrast to women’s progress in these roles in other countries such as Malaysia, Singapore and the US, where we witness a higher female ratio in operational roles right from the entry level. In our discussions with many organizations in India, this continues to be a problem that eludes quick solutions.
Commonly-offered reasons for why women operations leaders are so rare in capital-intensive sectors are often outdated or narrow, but nonetheless pervasive. Women looking to enter these sectors or roles may hear claims that “the nature of the work is not conducive to women,” or that it is a “male domain” because “it requires heavy lifting.” This is further amplified by the narrative that the remote locations for many entry-level roles are not appropriate for women because of security concerns or lack of opportunities for their spouses. In some cases, organizations lack the necessary maturity in their human resources organizations and leadership tracking mechanisms to successfully identify and groom female leaders.
While the needle has moved over the past two decades and more women today serve in hands-on technical or operations roles than in past decades, pushing past stereotypes and finding good role models remains a critical challenge. Building a truly diverse workforce demands a long-term view and commitment from leadership.
With a view to help organizations improve gender diversity in senior operational roles, we interviewed seven successful women operations leaders to better understand the challenges they have faced and what have they done differently to achieve success. These interviews integrate viewpoints from female leaders at both large-scale listed public companies and private sector organizations, as well as those from MNCs operating in India, the Indian diaspora, and promoters.
Kumud Srinivasan, Intel, Director of Non-volatile Memory Fab Manufacturing & Automation Systems
Seema Gupta, Power Grid, Director Operations & Board Member
Harshbeena Zaveri, NRB Bearings, Vice Chairman & Managing Director
Anjali Kulkarni, Board Member, Tata Consulting Engineers (Former Chief Engineering Tata Power)
Sujatha Narayan, Wabtec / Faiveley, Managing Director India
Hemalatha Annamalai, Ampere Vehicles, Founder
Learnings for young women aspiring to make a career in core operational roles in industrial companies include the following:
Drew inspiration from family: Given the paucity of female leaders in operational roles; they rarely had any idols or mentors to guide their careers. Their inspiration and ambition has often come from their families, and they learned to utilize all relationships and advice available to them.
Seized the opportunity: Whether it was a conscious decision to pursue a career in manufacturing or by happenstance, these women chose to make the most of the opportunity presented to them and capitalize on it.
Never played the “gender card”: While all of the women interviewed described working hard to create a space for themselves, they chose to take gender out of the equation, refusing to let it come in the way of responsibilities that required action, decisiveness and stoicism.
Unfazed by obstacles and operational hindrances: Almost all the women leaders we spoke to had to face significant challenges, such as lack of infrastructure, security concerns, or family responsibilities. By recognizing them as speed bumps rather than roadblocks, they continued to drive change in both mindsets and organization hierarchies.
Based on our interviews and research conducted by RRA, we have mapped common personality traits of successful women operations leaders to our Leadership Span competency model and developed a framework for organizations to identify and groom high-potential diverse talent in operations.
Counsel from women leaders who have built successful careers in this space revolved around five common themes:
"Gender diversity is a deep-rooted issue for India. As a country we need more push from corporations to promote women in manufacturing. Such diversity will lead to increased productivity and predictable performance."
Hemalatha Annamalai, Ampere Vehicles Founder
Taking a top-down approach alone will not solve this issue. Organizations committed to grooming female leaders in operational roles should conduct a root cause analysis of why and at which levels women are underrepresented in manufacturing roles.
Commit to building talent pipelines by hiring female college graduates. Address the reluctance of women in colleges and motivate them to consider technical roles. Demonstrate a career path in operational roles, rather than a glass ceiling.
Companies in India must still solve for infrastructure issues, such as security concerns or support systems for new mothers in remote locations.
The right sponsorship and guidance is of paramount importance to help leaders look beyond the usual biases and groom women leaders in operational roles. This demands a high degree of maturity from male colleagues and counterparts and may require organization-sponsored training and culture shift.
While these are often normative in operational roles, consider reducing them or offering creative flexibility to address the responsibilities many women face as primary care-givers and home managers.