100 Women
What better way to encourage companies to focus on equality and diversity than to make them think of their bottom line?

In the UK, the 30% Club was set up in 2010 with the aim of having women make up at least 30% of the members on every board.
In
the US, the Thirty Percent Coalition - a group of people who are chief
executives and chairs of their companies - was created to achieve the
same thing.
Of course, there are many other - and some say better - reasons to
argue for gender equality, but we wanted to look at whether this broadly
accepted claim is true - does having more women on the board really
mean the company makes more money?

A report published by Credit Suisse
last year said companies with at least one woman director received a
better return on their investments compared with companies with all-male
boardrooms.
They say companies where women made up at least 15%
of senior management were 50% more profitable than those where fewer
than 10% of senior managers were female.
But Prof Alice Eagly, at
Northwestern University in the US, says many of the studies commissioned
by corporations are "naive" as they don't consider other variables.
She explains that more sophisticated pieces of analysis carried out
by academics have shown very small positive correlations between female
board members and financial success. But this is an average - in some
companies the relationship was neutral and in some it was negative.
And
proving causation is far harder. It is difficult to say that it is
having more women on boards that makes companies do better, rather than
other factors - something corporate reports acknowledge.
This is because companies with more women on boards are different in other ways, too, according to Prof Eagly.
For
example, firm size seems to be one of the most significant factors in
determining profitability. And larger companies are likely to employ
more women at every level.
More innovative companies were more
likely to use their talent effectively, regardless of gender. And
companies that were already more profitable may have been more able to
focus efforts on diversity, she says.
A study looking at the gender make-up of the top management of the US's biggest firms,
not only their board members, found female representation in top
management improves firm performance but only in companies that are
"focused on innovation".
'Add women and stir'
And,
interestingly, female board members appear to have more of a positive
impact on their company's performance in countries where women have more
equal rights and treatment overall.
It looks like there is a
relationship between more successful companies and those with more women
in senior positions in general, but it's not enough to simply "add
women and stir", as Prof Robin Ely at Harvard Business School puts it.
Another
study from a group of German, Dutch and Belgian researchers found "the
mere representation of females on corporate boards is not related to
firm financial performance if other factors are not considered". It
relies on there being a good company culture too.
If women are in
the minority in a room that is hostile to them, they are unlikely to be
able to have a positive effect and that applies to other kinds of
diversity too, the study suggests.
Focusing on numbers without also addressing structural diversity issues is not enough, according to Prof Ely.
Looking at how many spaces on a board are filled by women doesn't
tell you how influential the board is, and it doesn't tell us whether
those women are being listened to and allowed to have an impact, Prof
Ely points out, as "not all spots on a board are created equal".
There
is some evidence that having three women on a board of 12 to 15 people
is the tipping point for them to actually be heard and able to have an
influence at all. So there are good arguments for the 30% rule - it
just doesn't necessarily translate directly to profits.
In fact
Corinne Post, a professor of organisation management, says that board
members don't have a direct influence on the bottom line of a company,
but they do have a greater influence on corporate social responsibility.
She found that there was a five times stronger correlation
between a company having female board members and stronger performance
when it comes to ensuring they are environmentally friendly as a
company, or involve themselves in philanthropy for example, than the
correlation between female board members and profits.
Profitability
is highly complex and there's even evidence that chief executives might
not have much of an influence on company profits.
"In companies
with any women on their board at all, they tend to have between one and
three - are you really saying the gender of three people on a board is
going to have an impact on the bottom line?" Prof Ely asks.
For
Northwestern's Prof Eagly, the most pertinent question is why we would
need evidence women bring in more money than men, before they are given
equal status on boards.
"Why should you rule out 50% of the population from important jobs. It's about social justice not about profits."
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