Mapping Exclusion in the Organization


Annual workforce demographic reports show that despite prominent high-tech companies’ pledges to increase gender diversity, the pattern of underrepresentation of women persists. Compared with workers in other industries, executives and professionals in the tech sector are disproportionately male. Women account for only 30% of the workforce in the top 75 technology companies in Silicon Valley, even though women achieve near parity at non-technology businesses in the region. As a female technical consultant said in a 2018 Pew Research report on women in STEM: “People automatically assume I am the secretary, or in a less technical role, because I am female. This makes it difficult for me to build a technical network to get my work done. People will call on my male co-workers, but not call on me.”

One of the biggest barriers to women’s success is their exclusion from informal professional networks. To identify the challenges and solutions involved in developing gender-inclusive networks, we studied the organizational networks of dozens of companies, surveyed thousands of employees, and interviewed senior executives responsible for implementing their organization’s gender-related diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) efforts. (See “The Research,” p. 60.) Our research made clear that who you know is as important — often more so — than what you know when it comes to rising through the ranks.

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