Published 01-14-04
Submitted by National Association for Female Executives
Scholastic, Liz Claiborne, Wellpoint, Hewlett-Packard, Charming Shoppes, Kraft Foods, The New York Times Company, IBM, and Prudential Financial round out the Top 10 companies on this year’s list.
"Only eight women chief executives are running Fortune 500 companies because most companies primarily groom men for the top jobs," states Betty Spence, president of the National Association for Female Executives. "Where the best companies for women stand out is their focus on moving women into the historically male province of profit-and-loss (P&L) responsibility," she says.
Among this year’s winners, NAFE found outstanding manufacturing, publishing, high tech, and consumer products companies where women have moved into positions as chief operating officer, managing director, general manager, or presidents of operations here and abroad. Women run the show at Avon, Charming Shoppes, Hewlett-Packard, and Xerox. At Liz Claiborne and Scholastic, women dominate the ranks up and down except for the top spot.
"Most companies have not dispelled myths about women’s commitment, about their risk quotient, willingness to relocate, and ability to manage men or run a manufacturing operation," says Spence, "so women do not get offered the opportunities that lead to the corner office. Companies that 'get it' hold managers accountable for moving women into P&L jobs. They should make any woman’s short list of places to work."
Therefore in selecting the Top 30 this year, NAFE focused on the number of women in the management pipeline, as well as those already holding senior positions. It also looked for programs and policies that ensure training and job rotation and enforce accountability for women’s success. Even among the Top 30, NAFE found only a handful with formal rotation geared to women, without which women will not catch up.
NAFE finds that companies rarely track gender statistics for P&L positions and anticipates that breaking out these numbers will place the issue on the table.
Women also have to catch up to men in compensation: among the 150 top earner slots in the NAFE Top 30, only 17 percent are women, with Liz Claiborne and Scholastic boasting a majority. However, 70 percent of companies on the list have three or more female board directors – and #1 company Avon has a majority.
Methodology: To be named to the NAFE Top 30 Companies for Executive Women, companies with a minimum of two women on the board complete a comprehensive application that focuses on the number of women in senior ranks (compared to men and to the company population), including questions about the programs and policies which support women’s advancement.
The 2004 "NAFE Top 30 Companies for Executive Women" (listed alphabetically):