PRESS RELEASE: ION Releases 2006 report, February 16
Thursday, February 16, 2006
Regional Organizations Urge Corporate Leaders to Promote Women to Boardrooms and Executive Suites
Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania - February 16, 2006 — New research about women directors
and executives in seven key U.S. regions concludes that only a
proactive effort by corporate leaders will propel women into boardrooms
and executive suites. "Time for a Charge," the report issued today by
ION, urges corporate leaders at public companies to change the face of
corporate leadership and governance, adding more qualified women from
the pipeline of candidates that already exists.
The
members of ION - The InterOrganization Network - include The Boston
Club, The Chicago Network, The Forum of Executive Women (Philadelphia),
Board of Directors Network (Atlanta), Milwaukee Women inc, Inforum
(Detroit) and Women Executive Leadership (Florida). ION, a term
referring to an electrical charge, was adopted as the name for this
organization to define how executive women's networks combine their
energies to increase the presence of women in corporate boardrooms and
executive suites.
While
the ION report shows positive steps forward in some regions, there were
also some major steps backward. Overall, the slow rate at which women
are making their way into the companies' boardrooms continues, based on
comparisons from last year's ION report.
The
percentage of companies without a woman on the board continues to be
significant: - Georgia (54.0%)
- Florida (52.4%)
- Massachusetts
(45.0%)
- Philadelphia (43.4%)
- Michigan (40.0%)
- Wisconsin (36.0%)
- Chicago (12%)
That percentage has increased in some areas, even among
Fortune 500 and Fortune 1000 companies, where women traditionally hold
more board seats than in smaller companies.
"The
snail's pace at which women are making their way into corporate
boardrooms is simply not acceptable," said Vicki Kramer, chair of ION's
Executive Committee. "It makes good business sense to have more women
represented at the table where decisions are made. This truth has been
borne out in study after study. For example, The Economist recently
reported that research from America, Britain and Scandinavia shows a
strong correlation between shareholder return and a higher proportion
of women in the executive echelons."
A
promising note came from the findings about board nominating
committees, a topic ION's members researched for the first time.
Massachusetts led the list of companies with women on reporting
companies' Nominating Committees (32.0%), while Wisconsin came in
second (29.4%). Three other areas reported women on companies'
Nominating Committees including Michigan (28.0%); Philadelphia (26.3%);
and Georgia (24.1%). The report points out that, "because of the
critical role that these committees play in the identification and
recruitment of new directors, the presence of women on them has the
potential to accelerate the process of change."
Kramer
cited the remarks of Shirley Tilghman, the first woman president of
Princeton University, to put into perspective the importance of women
being added to Nominating Committees. "In this case, I agree with
Tilghman who said, ÔThe world works on lists. If a woman is involved in
constructing those lists, the likelihood of selecting really terrific
women goes way up.'"
When it
comes to women in executive suites, no region had more than 15.4%
(Chicago) female representation in the companies' top executive ranks.
From high to low, the percent of total executive officers who are women
followed this ranking: 11.0% (Wisconsin), 10.2% (Philadelphia), 10.1%
(Massachusetts), 8.2% (Georgia), 7.7% (Michigan) and 7.6% (Florida).
Even
more startling were the percentages of companies without a single woman
executive officer. The figures by area were:
- 79.0% (Michigan)
- 65.3%
(Florida)
- 62.6% (Georgia)
- 55.6% (Philadelphia)
- 48.0%
(Massachusetts)
- 36.0% (Wisconsin)
- 30.0% (Chicago)
Companies
without women in leadership positions are not likely to be delivering
to their shareholders the same returns as their counterparts with
better representation of women, according to recent research. Citizens
Advisers, Inc. of Portsmouth, New Hampshire, focusing on the 298
companies in its Index, found that the total and average annual return
on the stock of those companies with the highest gender diversity on
the board and in the upper two levels of management was several
percentage points higher than that of the companies with the lowest
gender diversity. In addition, the stock of the companies with more
women had less volatility or risk than those with fewer women.
At the
beginning of this year, Norway legislatively mandated that 40% of its
public companies' board members be female. Although 16% of the board
seats in the country were held by women, the government wanted the
proportion of women in the boardroom to mirror women's presence in that
country's population. ION expects American businesses to be as
progressive as Norway's without being legislatively prompted to do so.
Each of
ION's member organizations publishes an annual census report on the
status of female executive officers and women directors in public
companies in its respective geographic area. Detailed analysis of the
geographic-specific results can be found on the participants'
respective web sites.
To download a PDF of the ION Report, visit www.foew.com.
For more information and interviews, contact: Malli Gero 617-277-1675 malli@gerocom.com
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