With New Zealand’s Prime Minister, Rt Hon Jacinda Ardern, commencing her six weeks’ maternity leave, I thought it was an appropriate time to talk, once again, about the fear that women have about taking a career break.
A 2014 London Business School survey showed that women are anxious about taking time out for maternity leave and the effect this will have on their career – of those surveyed 70% of women fear taking a career break.
As a leadership coach , working with leaders up and down the country, I’ve had a front row seat to this statistic. Many women executives have whispered (almost apologetically) to me in career coaching sessions that they worry about taking too much time off, in case their careers suffer as a result. The dread of pay gaps and being ‘left behind’ is as pervasive as it is real.
I have my own story to share. After my third child, I went back to work earlier than I wanted to, partly because I feared that taking the full 12 months off might have a negative impact on my future career prospects within the firm. With all three of my pregnancies, I admit to feeling caught out. Do I risk being judged by others for taking too little time off, or taking too much time off? I didn’t want increasing pay gaps and decreasing career prospects to become my reality.
It was hard enough that I was a youngish female working in an industry predicated by executives representative of the typical demographic– not many C-suites or Boards of large corporates had loads of thirty-something women on them! This gnawing worry about taking career breaks to have children just contributed to my feeling that I was somehow ‘not on an even keel’ with my male counterparts.
Back in 2015, Yahoo CEO, Marissa Mayer, announced she would take only two weeks of maternity leave. She received a great deal of backlash for choosing to take so little leave. I find it hard to believe that we’d have had the same level of debate and criticism if the CEO became a second-time father and decided to take two weeks of paternity leave.
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However, when I put my ‘leadership coach’ hat back on, I tell myself it’s not helpful to stay in victim mode for too long. There are many different positive things leaders and organisations can do to ease the fears women have at taking a career break.
While Jacinda prepares to embark on this next journey, it is a fantastic time for us to start an ongoing, and at times tough, conversation about equality in the workplace. It is a leader’s role to ensure you are empowering women to make the choice that is best for them – whether that is career or family or both.