Women in the Workplace: Why They Leave, and How to Make Them Stay

by Nitya Bodavala

According to a 2022 study by McKinsey and LeanIn.org that surveyed more than 40,000 employees, women hold 40% of entry-level positions but only 26% of C-Suite positions. The higher you go on the corporate ladder, the fewer women you see. For every woman at the director level that gets promoted, two female directors choose to leave the company. The case for more women in leadership positions is evident in the value that female leaders bring. The 2022 study found that companies with more women on their boards invest more in innovation, have higher company performance, and de-risk by contributing more to CSR (Corporate Social Responsibility) and ESG (Environmental Social and Governance). Overall, workforce equality in participation, recognition, and pay would make the world economy $28.4 trillion richer.

Why Are Women Leaving the Workplace?

There are three main reasons why women have been leaving the workplace by droves: (1) lack of pay and recognition, (2) toxic work cultures, and (3) lack of choices.

Unrecognized Work

Although women in leadership do more than their male counterparts to promote Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) in the workplace and support employee well-being, they are recognized less for their efforts. Employee satisfaction and DEI efforts retain employees and attract new talent. By 2025, 47% of millennials will actively seek diversity in a potential workplace. With the next generation of leadership actively seeking diversity in the workplace, these policies and initiatives make a huge difference in attracting and retaining top talent. However, the time and energy spent on these efforts are not factored into women’s performance reviews and do not help them advance their careers. Further, women still make only 86 cents for every dollar a man makes, while black women make even less, at 68 cents for every dollar a man makes.

Toxic Work Culture

An MIT Sloan Management Review study found that toxic work culture was a big factor in high attrition rates. The study analyzed the language used by over 3 million U.S. employees in Glassdoor reviews to describe their employer between 2016 and 2021. The study defined toxic culture as disrespectful, non-inclusive, unethical, cutthroat, or abusive. Non-inclusive environments and disrespectful leadership were major factors in responses with the largest gender gaps. The disrespect that women face spans microaggressions, gaslighting, unfair hiring and promotion decisions, outright misogyny, sexual harassment, and sexism. Non-inclusivity may present itself in hiring practices, schedules, or allyship efforts. The study found that women are more averse to joining companies they perceive as non-inclusive, and prefer to find an organization that reflects their values.

Lack of Choice

Women want agency and choices. The option of a more flexible schedule goes a long way in providing a safe work environment. Only one in ten women prefer to spend most of their time on-site, citing work-from-home or hybrid work options as one of their top criteria while choosing an employer. Working from home allows for fewer microaggressions, which is especially obvious to women of color, LGBTQ+ women, and women with disabilities. These are the segments of women who are more likely to face demeaning or disrespectful treatment. Over 70% of HR leaders have said that offering remote work options has allowed their companies to hire and retain employees from diverse backgrounds. Lastly, remote work also keeps women from choosing between their personal and professional identities. They can be parents and employees without sacrificing one for the other.

What Can You Do as an Employer to Retain Female Talent?

Now that you understand what women bring to the table and why they are leaving, here is what you can do to prevent it.

 

      • Conduct sensitivity and sexual harassment training for all employees and have an action plan for dealing with sexual harassment complaints. Showing your employees that a process exists to help them allows them to feel safer and like they can trust you to deal with issues fairly.
      • Be more diverse in your hiring policies. It benefits you when your clients see themselves represented in your workplace. Plus, when you have a diverse workforce, your employees have a breadth of experience to capitalize on.
      • Have more holistic performance metrics. Accurately evaluate the place women occupy in your company, the work they do, and the value it results in. Get rid of outdated performance metrics and adapt to the changing needs of your employees.
      • Try to have flexible work schedules and offer childcare services for your employees who have young children. If that is not possible, provide dependent care assistance. No employee should feel punished for deciding to have children. Remember that even if these employees take some time off, they return with the knowledge that they have a supportive employer and will be happier, more productive employees. Not supporting them during this time will result in high employee turnover rates and endless hours of training new employees.
      • Offer more leadership training opportunities and pathways for women. Informal pathways for mentorship are fewer for women, so making initiatives like this a part of your institutional structure will make a significant positive impact.

This post has been reproduced and updated with the author’s permission. It was originally authored on March 28, 2023 and can be found here.


Nitya Bodavala, at the time of this post, is a 3L of Penn State Dickinson Law. She is from Hyderabad, India, and comes from a family of entrepreneurs. It was natural to gravitate toward working with entrepreneurs even within the law.

 

 

Sources:

https://www.forbes.com/sites/tomaspremuzic/2022/03/02/the-business-case-for-women-in-leadership/?sh=7d74b5769cbb

https://www.mckinsey.com/featured-insights/diversity-and-inclusion/women-in-the-workplace#/

https://www.forbes.com/sites/forbescommunicationscouncil/2022/03/03/the-importance-of-diversity-and-inclusion-for-todays-companies/?sh=5bd9569649df

Author: Prof Prince

Professor Samantha Prince is an Associate Professor of Lawyering Skills and Entrepreneurship at Penn State Dickinson Law. She has a Master of Laws in Taxation from Georgetown University Law Center, and was a partner in a regional law firm where she handled transactional matters that ranged from an initial public offering to regular representation of a publicly-traded company. Most of her clients were small to medium sized businesses and entrepreneurs, including start-ups. An expert in entrepreneurship law, she established the Penn State Dickinson Law entrepreneurship program, is an advisor for the Entrepreneurship Law Certificate that is available to students, and is the founder and moderator of the Inside Entrepreneurship Law blog.