Moving more women into top leadership positions continues to be a challenge but is particularly difficult for women from diverse backgrounds. Only 1 in 20 C-Suite leaders is a woman of color. Of the 26% of women in the C-suite, just 5% of those leaders are women of color.
Tokenization is still a major issue for women from diverse backgrounds moving into leadership. Often having one woman from a diverse background is considered enough.
However, the expectations are not just for being responsible for business development, developing strategy, people management, vision setting, and the usual responsibilities of a leader. They are often expected to be the spokesperson for their diversity group and expected to address those inequities in the organization. These women are the only women of color or one of a few in the organization, and the team they work with is often not that diverse. So not only are these women isolated in their leadership, they are expected to perform major changes around diversity in an unrealistic timeline.
Inherited leadership style can also be a barrier. Women diversity leaders are put into positions following the leadership of long-tenured male or white or a combination of both white and male leaders. Unless their predecessors were more self-aware individuals, their leadership style was more likely to be patriarchal and have what would be viewed as white dominant characteristics. This style of leadership may not be how women of color or diversity lead. Because the work culture may perpetuate particular leadership styles, it gets in the way of how women from diverse backgrounds are seeking to create positive disruption.
Like their white female counterparts, getting adequate support continues to be an issue. Some surveys have shown that requests for support for learning and growth for leaders are often not given priority or are outright denied. They may not be given the same access to coaching, the opportunity to attend key conferences, get needed training, or be provided with enough support staff. An additional challenge is being continuously questioned or even undermined by white staff and board members.
There are specific ways organizations can start to help more women from diverse backgrounds succeed in getting them into management and higher leadership roles.
Representation at all levels does make a difference. New generations of leaders are inspired by seeing women of color and diverse backgrounds in leadership roles. It means they see a path for themselves and highly value diversity, equity, and inclusion in the companies they work for.