|
Financial Times Calls for 30% Women on Boards: Guest Blogger Jacki Zehner |
|
YES! It is another sign. Just today we are putting the final touches on
a discussion paper that I have been working on for a very long time
with the National Council for Research on Women looking at reasons and
solutions for why there are so few women managing money. We pull the
lens back on the issue in to a more general context on the lack of
women in positions of leadership and power at financial services firms
more generally and issue a "Call to Action."
One of our calls if for
responsible institutions to adopt a voluntary "Critical Mass
Principle", which sets as a goal 30% women on their boards and in
senior leadership roles. The Financial Times issued
the same call in an OPED published today. We see the time as now to
boldly move forward and are launching the paper on June 24 th at
Bloomberg. As far as we know it is the most comprehensive work ever
done on the topic and we hope it will get lots of media attention.
According
to the FT - "If there is ever a time for women to make a decisive
breakthrough in corporate boardrooms, it is surely now. Many boards,
especially in financial services, are in flux after the
testosterone-fueled excesses that led to financial disaster. There is a
desperate need to rebuild trust, more easily achieved if boards better
reflect customers and the public."
Amen. Amen. Amen.
We
are still looking for partners to assist in the launch of this
important discussion paper so if you are interested please contact me
orTeresa Bagly at the National Council for Research on Women.
I already crafted a response to the editor and I hope you will too! To send a letter to the editor
This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it
.
Jacki Zehner is a frequent media commentator on women’s leadership and success in the workplace, and their relationship to wealth, investing, and social change. She was the youngest woman, and first female trader, to be invited into the partnership of Goldman Sachs. After leaving the firm in 2002, she became a Founding Partner of Circle Financial Group, a private wealth management operation
|