In today’s episode we are going to talk about the common goals and challenges that women in the Function face. Find the show notes on my website at PowerYourImpact.com/1.
After 20 years in Procurement & Supply Chain I made the decision to launch Power Your Impact, a Leadership Coaching & Strategy Business designed to help women in Supply Management elevate their leadership impact.
I give credit to my 25-year old daughter who one day said to me “I know you love what you do, but are you following your passion”? Following my passion?
I had never thought about my passion!
It was with this prompting that caused me to take a pause and reflect. After much soul-searching, I realized I wanted to dedicate more time to helping other women in the Function.
In order to best understand the common goals and challenges that women in Procurement & Supply Chain face I interviewed a diverse group of Executive women from the Function:
- All levels of Executives
- All major Industries
- 5-20+ years in the Function
- 20% Women of Color (Black, Asian, Hispanic)
95% of the interviewees were women I did not know as I wanted to get the straight talk.
The results showed 4 common themes:
Challenge #1: Navigating a Male Dominated Field
Challenge #2: Changing the Perception of the Function
Goal #1: Building a Strong Talent Pipeline
Challenge #3: Reclaiming Time for Self
The results may not surprise you, but what may surprise you is the degree of commonality:
100% of the women identified the first 2 themes
Over 75% identified the 3rd theme
Over 50% identified the 4th theme
Here are 6 specific comments that these women shared:
- “There are no tools to navigate unconscious bias, particularly from the supplier base”.
In many companies there is training and procedures to address internal harassment; should there be similar tools and processes for external harassment? - “Women don’t raise their hand for the challenging assignments unless they check all the boxes”.
Do women fear failure more than men? - “I didn’t elevate my concerns when facing unconscious bias because I didn’t want to be perceived as a complainer.”
Should any level of unconscious bias be acceptable if it makes you feel uncomfortable? - “The Function has a stigma of being a support function and not a strategic enabler”
How can leaders more effectively package the total value proposition that the function contributes? - “Supply Management is not a destination Function”
How can leaders build awareness about the impact the Function drives to the bottom line? - “Women carry a larger load both at home and in the office”
How can women lighten the mental load and free-up time for self?
If any of these comments resonated for you, know that you are not alone.