CALIFORNIA FEDERATION OF BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL WOMEN Public Policy Conference February 9, 2013...
-
Upload
kayla-ramsell -
Category
Documents
-
view
212 -
download
0
Transcript of CALIFORNIA FEDERATION OF BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL WOMEN Public Policy Conference February 9, 2013...
CALIFORNIA FEDERATION OF BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL WOMEN
Public Policy Conference
February 9, 2013
BREAKING
Script By: Rosemary Enzer
Slides By: Anne Marie Johnson
THE GLASS CEILING
Once upon a time….
…happily ever after.
1970’s and 80’s
Doctor
Business Woman
Lawyer
Engineer
Politician
Sky’s the Limit!
Interior Designer
POOF!
Dreaming…dreaming…
Reality Sets In
GLASS CEILING
• An invisible limit in corporations and other organizations above which it is difficult or impossible for women to rise in the ranks.
Women seemed to hit a point beyond which they were unable to progress.
Does It Really Exist?
In 1991, the U. S. Department of Labor defined glass ceiling as "those artificial barriers based on attitudinal or organizational bias that prevent qualified individuals from advancing upward in their organization into management-level positions."
Report on the Glass Ceiling Initiative, U. S. Department of Labor, 1991
The department's Glass Ceiling Commission (1991-1996) studied these barriers not only as they apply to women, but as they apply to minorities as well.
GOOD NEWSWomen Serving on Corporate Boards
199811% 72%1973
Women in Senior Management1995 2012
5% 16%
2011 --- women occupied 16.1% of board seats.
WomenMean
Business
In 2012 she became the president and CEO of Yahoo!. Previously, she was a long-time executive and key spokesperson for Google. She is the youngest CEO of a Fortune 500 company, and has been ranked number 14 on the list of America's most powerful businesswomen of 2012 by Fortune magazine.
Marissa Mayer
Women make historic gains in the U.S. Senate
How we stack up on the world stage
Rwanda First
Cuba 3rd
United StatesVenezuelaMorocco
Tied for 80th
Stained
Glass
Ceiling
Brass
Ceiling
The 2006 Celluloid Ceiling Report studied films of 2006 with combined domestic box office grosses of approximately $8.9 billion. It found women comprised 7% of directors, 10% of writers, 16% of executive producers, 20% of producers, 21% of editors, and 2% of cinematographers in the films studied.
Women in the Audience Supporting Women Artists Now (WITASWAN). The WITASWAN mission is to convince women that the best way to puncture the celluloid ceiling is to use "the power of the purse": buy tickets to movies made by women directors and screenwriters, rent DVDs made by women directors and screenwriters, etc.
Celluloid
Ceiling
Reality or Excuse
Are You
Helping To Break The Glass Ceiling?