People Matters Logo

Fewer employees in Asia have men bosses: Report

• By People Matters
Fewer employees in Asia have men bosses: Report

Despite an increase in the number of women line managers in major employment markets across Asia, organizations have a lot of ground to cover in order to make their workforce truly diverse and inclusive. This and many other insightful findings are a part of the 2018 Hays Asia Diversity & Inclusion report.  

More than 900 professionals from Mainland China, Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore and Malaysia were surveyed regarding how diverse and inclusive their organizations are.

Increasing women managers across Asia

Access to equal opportunities

Support for diversity and inclusion

The more actively an organization supports diversity in the workplace, it is more likely to enhance the employer’s perception in the eyes of future employees and job seekers, said Simon Lance, Managing Director of Hays Greater China.

“Our research shows employers need to do more to check unconscious bias when recruiting and promoting,” Lance said. “Equal pay also needs active support to ensure employees and candidates alike have confidence that hard work and strong performance are the benchmarks for success.”

As a rule, organizations should strictly move away from the perception that employees need to be of the same gender or background as their managers, Lance added.

Even though organizations around the world prioritize to make their workforce more diverse and inclusive, the report shows that the there is still a long road ahead of us. In order to reap the benefits of a varied and inclusive workforce such as giving birth to an environment that motivates innovation and rewards creativity, employers are going to have to go beyond formulating D&I policies on paper and actually begin implementing them.

The fact that an overwhelming majority of the respondents felt that their professional career and progress could be adversely affected by factors like age, marital status, religion or sexual orientation is a worrying sign. While it is encouraging to see that the number of female line managers is growing, any sustainable action will have to be backed by a comprehensive people strategy that eliminates unconscious biases at each stage of the employee’s life-cycle.

Lance sums up the need for having a diverse workforce aptly, “The increasing complexity of most industries today means companies need a constant pipeline of new ideas and ways of doing things if they are to gain a competitive advantage. A diverse workforce is a key to ensuring a company can not only adapt to changing conditions but leverage that change to keep building on their success.