Professionalism
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New Moms and Work
November 30, 2006
Nearly every one of our clients is concerned with the relatively small number of women within their organizations who advance to leadership positions. In most cases, our clients are sincerely concerned with the possibility that a glass ceiling might truly exist. I have no doubts that if a glass ceiling were proven, the vast majority of our clients would rapidly grab a hammer and shatter it.
According to today’s Wall Street Journal (“More New Mothers Are Staying Home Even When It Causes Financial Pain,” 11/33/06, p. D1 or visit www.wsj.com), the first demographic analysis of the trend toward new mothers dropping out of the workforce is about to be released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. It sheds light on why so many women opt to leave work and stay home. Among the reasons some women choose to drop out of the work force:
According to today’s Wall Street Journal (“More New Mothers Are Staying Home Even When It Causes Financial Pain,” 11/33/06, p. D1 or visit www.wsj.com), the first demographic analysis of the trend toward new mothers dropping out of the workforce is about to be released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. It sheds light on why so many women opt to leave work and stay home. Among the reasons some women choose to drop out of the work force:
- Desire to nurture babies in their first years
- Poor quality of available child care
- High cost of acceptable child care
- Lack of extended maternity leave
- Lack of flexible return-to-work options
- Decision to switch to a more family-friendly career
Interestingly, the analysis indicates that today’s new mothers step away from the workforce for shorter periods of time than they typically did in the past. On average, mothers now step away from work for only one to three years.
I predict that those organizations who build off and on “career ramps” for new Moms will succeed in retaining those women and increase the likelihood that more rise to leadership positions.
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