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HOW TO USE THIS REPORT: India: The Case for Gender Diversity is geared toward human resources professionals, diversity and inclusion practitioners, and business school students taking their first steps in building awareness on gender diversity in corporate India.
India: The Case for Gender DiversityJanuary 2012
Catalyst Information Center
Promoting diversity helps companies increase revenue by attracting new
customers, identifying new markets, improving success in cross-cultural
negotiations, stimulating innovation, and boosting growth potential through
non-traditional hires. Additionally, diversity is key for Indian companies
in addressing the increasingly competitive talent shortage. By expanding
the pool of eligible candidates, Indian companies gain access to the top talent.
Understanding this connection between business goals and diversity goals
is the first step leadership takes when choosing to advance women or other
underrepresented groups into leadership positions.1
ChangingÊworkplaces.ÊChangingÊlives.
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1
The Case for Talent
Increasingly, Indian companies are focusing on recruitment, development, and retention of talent to gain a competitive advantage—not just among other Indian companies, but also among multinationals with a presence in India.2 While India has no labor shortage, talent is in demand and in very short supply.3 Recently, Infosys reported that of the 1.3 million recent job applicants only 2 percent were qualified or even employable.4 This shortage is predicted to get worse. The report, India’s Demographic Dilemma predicts that there will be a shortage of 750,000 skilled workers over the next five years. During this same period there will be a surplus of 1.3 million unskilled and unqualified workers.5 Because of the projected annual GDP growth of 7 percent and this projected talent gap, it is essential for companies to engage a key component of economic growth—the skills and talents of women. 6,7
67 percent of employers in India are struggling to fill jobs—double the global average of 34 percent.8
n Jobs that are most difficult to fill in India include sales representatives, engineers, research and development
positions, executives, and accounting.9
n 45 percent of employers in Asia Pacific state the problem is lack of available talent.10
76%
80%
16%
40%
24%
14%
52%2010
2011
67%
Japan
Percentage Change in Difficulty Finding Talent to Fill Positions: 2010-2011
India
China
US
51%Percentage point increase in difficultyfinding talent in India
11
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EDUCATION AND TRAINING: Education and training will be critical not only in filling this talent gap, but to the overall economic development of the nation. Goldman Sachs believes lack of quality education is holding back India’s economic growth. The overall quality of talent produced by Indian educational institutions does not match the skills required by global organizations. Modernizing India’s education system is essential.12
Demand for graduates over the next five years is likely to be 13.8 million; with only 13.2 million students graduating, India
will face a shortfall of 600,000 graduates. 13
Of those students enrolled in higher education, 40.3 percent are women,14 and of those women, more are opting for MBAs (an increase from 16 to 19 percent between 2004–2006).15 Even so, women continue to have trouble moving up the ladder and are stuck at the junior and middle management levels.16
The Case For Stronger Financial Performance
DIVERSITY IMPROVES FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE. In 2010, McKinsey & Company analyzed companies from Europe, Brazil, and India, among others, showed that companies with the highest share of women in their senior management teams outperformed those with no women by 41 percent. In terms of return on equity, the “top-quartile group exceeds by 41 percent the group with no women
Leadership Gender Gap in India Inc.
4.9%Women
Board of Directors
3% to 6%Women in Senior
Managment
22.6%Women employed by Organizations
36%Women in the Labor Force
17
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(22 vs. 15 percent).”18 While these numbers do not demonstrate causality, the conclusion shows that higher performing companies have more women in their executive committees. 19
DIVERSITY GIVES A COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE. The results of Cedric Herring’s 2009 study show that companies with more gender and racial diversity outperform those with less in terms of sales revenues, number of customers, and market shares. Herring suggests growth and innovation occur when people from various backgrounds work together and generate new ideas. 21
DIVERSITY IS COST EFFECTIVE. The cost of employee turnover is generally 100 to 200 percent of the annual salary and benefits of the former employee.22 Once talent is found and hired, it is most cost effective to retain that talent.
Indian Women Are Just as Ambitious as Indian Men 23
Indian women aspiring to a job
with a higherresponsibility
Indian men aspiring to a job
with a higherresponsibility
95.6%
52%
97.2%
A study of the top 30 firms on the Bombay Stock Exchange found that those with women leaders of family-owned businesses
fared better in annual growth rates than the Bombay Stock Exchange 30 as a whole for the previous five years.20
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The Marketplace
MARKET SHARE: Companies with a diverse team can increase revenues by attracting new customers and opening new markets. Employees who understand the values, regional and cultural backgrounds, or languages spoken by clients or customers will provide a higher level of service as well as spot new markets before their competitors.26 A diverse workforce can also improve service while providing better support and understanding to the existing customer base.
CHANGING DEMOGRAPHICS: In India, the middle class is expected to grow to almost 10 times its current size in a little over 10 years (McKinsey predicts 59 percent of consumption will come from this rising middle class). 27 Meanwhile, women are the largest emerging market of consumers the global economy has ever seen (in Europe and America women decide on 70–80 percent of all household purchases).28 But many companies have failed to invest in understanding women as consumers and therefore are losing out on a significant return known as the “gender dividend.” To fully capitalize on this gender dividend, organizations must employ strategies aimed at integrating women at every level. A women’s perspectives must be embedded into key decision making processes.29
n Households that can afford discretionary spending will grow from 8 million today to 94 million by 2025.30
n Middle class incomes are estimated to become 58 percent of India’s total income by 2025.31
n By 2020, 100 million economically active individuals will enter the Indian labor force (equal to the combined
labor force of the UK, France, Italy, and Spain).32
n Women are changing the retail markets in India. More than one-third of all car purchases were influenced by women.
16 percent of Accord buyers, 12 percent of Jazz customers, and more than 15 percent of General Motors India’s
buyers are women.33
Youth Demographic 25Number of Indians in the Middle Class 24 2025
583 Million
41% of the population
2011 50 MILLION
50%Percent of Indian Population
under the age of 25 in
2020
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Indian Companies Strengthening the Talent PipelineThe Gender Diversity Benchmark for Asia report concludes that India has the smallest percentage of women in the total workforce (between China, Hong Kong, Japan, Malaysia, and Singapore) and the largest pipeline leak occurring earliest in womens’ careers—between middle and senior-level positions (48 percent decrease). Indian women are giving up their careers much sooner than professional
women in other Asian countries. 34 Some companies in India are working to close that leak and get more women into senior management.
n GOOGLE launched the Google India Women in Engineering Award, to target and find talent early at the university
level.35 In 2010 Google India organized a week-long event “The 6th Sense: Diversity Week in India” to increase
awareness of differences, across not only genders but cultures and sexual orientation.36
n Tata Consultancy (TCS) helps address the talent shortage by working with university leaders on curriculum
development, the faculty hiring process, faculty training, and providing TCS employees for guest lectures. 37
n IBM INDIA’S diversity policy targets not only employees, but the entire system of suppliers, partners, and
vendors. In addition, IBM India is one of the few companies that provides sensitivity training to its managers on
lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender employees.38
n In 2003, INFOSYS launched a global council of six internal, senior women who were tasked with conceptualiz-
ing and implementing an initiative that would create a gender-sensitive environment to attract, hire, and retain
top talent, including women. Between 2003 and 2006, the retention rate for women increased, which Infosys
attributes to its programs and policies. Infosy recognizes that retaining top talent is essential to being a global
leader in the marketplace.39
n PFIZER INDIA’S priority is to retain high-potential women in this growth market. Pfizer recently launched
“Creating a High-Performance Community” with goals to ensure top female talent is supported and feels
valued, and to strengthen the connection between Pfizer’s high-performing women and their women customers.40
n ABG launched formal, company-wide talent management in November 2003 to introduce uniform practices
across all its companies. The objective was threefold: to institutionalize a set of core talent management
processes; to provide a common standard by which to assess talent; and to establish common standards for
attracting, identifying, and developing talent company-wide.41
n SOFTBRANDS INDIA PVT. LTD. launched a leadership program with the goal to establish consistency in manage-
ment practices, establish a common language, and support employee growth.42
n HSBC INDIA introduced the Flexible Work Arrangements (FWA) program in 2008. Since the program’s inception,
an estimated 10 percent of HSBC India’s employees have used FWA, and the bank has succeeded in retaining ap-
proximately 4 percent of the employees who had resigned or expressed the intention of resigning by offering them
the option to participate in the FWA program.43
n SHELL INDIA’S core values of respect and inclusion, work/life balance, and FWA allow women to excel especially in
the IT and business process outsourcing groups, which have hired significant numbers of women.44
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Sources
1. Catalyst, Making Change: Creating a Business Case for Diversity (2002).
2. Society for Human Resource Management, Indian Human Resources Management and Talent Mindset (2009).
3. Ibid.
4. Boston Consulting Group, Aligning Talent for Global Advantage (2007).
http://www.bcg.com/documents/file15087.pdf
5. Kazim Ali Khan, Skill Development for Indian Workforce: A View Point by Kazim Ali Khan.
http://www.articlesnatch.com/Article/Skill-Development-For-Indian-Workforce—A-View-Point-By-Kazim-Ali-Khan/908954
6. World Economic Forum, The India Gender Gap Review (2009).
7. Deepali Bagati and Nancy M. Carter, Leadership Gender Gap in India Inc.: Myths and Realities (Catalyst, 2010).
8. Manpower Group, “Talent Shortage Survey Results” (2011).
http://us.manpower.com/us/en/multimedia/2011-Talent-Shortage-Survey.pdf
9. Ibid.
10. Ibid.
11. Ibid.
12. Rina Chandran, “Talent Building Remains Key Challenge For Indian Firms” Live Mint (2009).
http://www.livemint.com/2009/08/11221220/Talent-building-remains-key-ch.html
13. Ibid.
14. Government of India, MHRD, Statistics of Higher & Technical Education, 2009-10.
www.education.nic.in/stats/statpub.asp
15. India Lags Behind as Women Around the World Use MBA to Break the Glass Ceiling, www.topmba.com (August 2006).
16. Deepali Bagati and Nancy M. Carter, Leadership Gender Gap in India Inc. Myths and Realities (Catalyst, 2010).
17. Society for Human Resource Management, Perspectives on Women in Management in India (2009); Corporate Women Directors
International, Comparative Percentage of Women Directors–Countries (2007-2008); World Economic Forum, The India Gender Gap Review
2009 (2009); World Economic Forum, The Corporate Gender Gap Report 2010 (2010).
18. Anand Rawani, “Women Promoters Beat Big Daddies” Economic Times, (March 8, 2009).
19. McKinsey & Company, Women Matter 2010 (2011).
http://www.mckinsey.com/locations/swiss/news_publications/pdf/women_matter_2010_4.pdf
20. McKinsey & Company, Women Matter 2010 (2011).
http://www.mckinsey.com/locations/swiss/news_publications/pdf/women_matter_2010_4.pdf
21. Cedric Herring, “Does Diversity Pay? Gender and the Business Case for Diversity” American Sociological Review, vol. 74, (2009).
22. Jac Fitz-enz, “It’s Costly To Lose Good Employees,” Workforce, vol. 76, no. 8 (August 1997): p. 32.
23. Deepali Bagati, Leadership Gender Gap in India Inc. (Catalyst, 2011).
24. McKinsey Global Institute, The ‘Bird of Gold’: Rise of India’s Consumer Market (May 2007).
25. Society for Human Resource Management, Indian Human Resources Management and Talent Mindset (2009).
http://www.shrm.org/Research/Articles/Articles/Documents/09-
26. David Forman. “The Business Case for Diversity,” TM Talent Management (2006).
http://talentmgt.com/articles/view/the_business_case_for_workforce_diversity/1
27. McKinsey Global Institute, The ‘Bird of Gold’: Rise of India’s Consumer Market (May 2007).
8 | © 2012 Catalyst — DO NOT DISTRIBUTE WITHOUT PERMISSION
28. Special Report: Women and Work,“Closing the Gap,” The Economist (2011).
http://www.economist.com/node/21539928
29. Greg Pellegrino, Sally, D’Amato and Anne Weisberg, The Gender Dividend: Making the Case for Investing in Women (Deloitte
Perspectives, 2011). http://globalblogs.deloitte.com/deloitteperspectives/2011/01/how-women-can-help-you-beat-the-competition.html
30. Diana Farrell and Eric Beinhocker. Next Big Spenders: India’s Middle Class (2007).
http://www.mckinsey.com/Insights/MGI/In_the_news/Next_big_spenders_Indian_middle_class
31. Ibid.
32. WEF, Stimulating Economies through Fostering Talent Mobility (2010).
http://www3.weforum.org/docs/WEF_PS_TalentMobility_report_2010.pdf
33. Sarah Jacob & Sobia Khan, “Cos in Race For Pleasing Women Customers” The Economic Times, (2010).
http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com/2010-05-25/news/28476085_1_indian-women-women-employees-study-women
34. Anne Marie Francesco, Gender Diversity Benchmark for Asia 2011 (2011).
http://www.communitybusiness.org/images/cb/publications/2011/GDBM_2011.pdf
35. Google India Women in Engineering Award 2011. http://www.google.co.in/jobs/anitaborg/home.html
36. Google, Diversity in our Culture and Workplace. http://www.google.com/diversity/culture.html
37. WEF, Stimulating Economies through Fostering Talent Mobility (2010).
http://www3.weforum.org/docs/WEF_PS_TalentMobility_report_2010.pdf
38. Saumya Bhattacharya and Puja Mehra, “In Good Company” Business Today, (2011).
http://businesstoday.intoday.in/story/in-good-company/1/9235.html
39. Catalyst, D&I Practices, Infosys—Driving Work-Life Effectiveness Through Employee Empowerment at Infosys (2010).
40. Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid, ‘The Battle For Female Talent in Emerging Markets,” Harvard Business Review Blog, (2010).
41. Catalyst, D&I Practices, “Aditya Birla Group (ABG)—Talent Management and Leadership Development (2011).
42. SHRM India, Corporate Indian Companies: Forging New Talent Pipelines and Creative Pathways (2008).
43. Catalyst, D&I Practices, HSBC India—Flexible Work Arrangements (2011).
44. Society for Human Resource Management, “Perspectives on Women in Management in India.” (2009).
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