In January 2011 The Australian Stock Exchange’s (ASX) Diversity recommendations for listed companies came into force. Whilst diversity covers many forms the ASX recommendations are primarily focused on ‘Gender Diversity’. Amongst these recommendations companies now have to report on the percentage of women in the organisation as well as a breakdown of women holding senior management and board positions. Listed companies are required to disclose their Diversity Policy and failure to do so may result in a breach of ASX Listing Rules. There are pros and cons for these recommendations but the objective is clear, they are driven by a need for fair and equal workplaces.
This policy impacts me. I work for a large corporate ‘listed’ company. I am responsible for delivering an important piece of technology to Australians. I make technical decisions, I manage technical people and I am a woman. I am rare. In fact my female parts and I make up just 2-7% of the females in management in IT in my company. The ASX decision to have listed companies report on gender diversity has turned my world upside down. All of a sudden I have a voice; the sound cannot be coming from my conventional voice box as I’ve had that all along. I’ll leave it up to your imagination. I am being heard, I am being listened too, I am being asked to stand up and deliver and finally I am being asked to consider promotion.
I work as hard as my male peers, possibly harder as being a woman I have had to continually prove myself and then accept disappointment when I am overlooked for ‘one of the boys’. I have an ego and I would like to think that I have had something of worth to say before now.