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Survey: Sponsorship, not mentorship, the answer to advancing women in construction

Angela Gismondi
Survey: Sponsorship, not mentorship, the answer to advancing women in construction
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What women really need in order to advance in the construction industry is sponsorship, not mentorship, a new study finds.

Building Better: A Women in Construction Study is a collaboration between Ambition Theory and the National Center for Construction Education and Research.

About 770 women from across 新澳门六合彩开奖结果2023 and the U.S. completed the survey which provides 鈥渁 comprehensive view of women鈥檚 experiences across the industry.鈥

鈥淢entorship is really about advice and preparation and sponsorship is about opportunity and exposure,鈥 explained Andrea Janzen of Ambition Theory, which provides leadership training and professional coaching for women in construction. 鈥淢entorship is when you ask that senior person, 鈥楥an I have some advice?

鈥淗ow did you get to where you are? What should I be learning?鈥 And the sponsor will be like, 鈥榶ou should read this book, you should learn this skill鈥 and then at the end of the day it鈥檚 up to the mentee, that junior person to be like 鈥極K, I gotta go find the opportunity.鈥欌

While mentorship is important, it has not been successful in accelerating women into leadership positions, the report states.

Sponsorship is different, Janzen said, but women receive sponsorship only half as often as they receive mentorship. The survey results confirmed women are aware of the need for sponsorship and a lack of exposure and opportunities is holding them back.

鈥淚t鈥檚 like someone bringing you along to that meeting, someone advocating for you to go on a bigger project when you are not in the room,鈥 Janzen said.

鈥淭he interesting thing about it is that we call it all mentorship. It鈥檚 part of the culture of how people advance, but men are typically sponsored so they are given that opportunity. Women are typically mentored.

鈥淲omen are encouraged to prepare for the next opportunity. Men are thrown in and they get to learn as they go. They have the person that put them in that position that kind of has their back and makes sure that they succeed.鈥

About 76 per cent of women reported they understand what it takes to advance in their careers.

鈥淎 solution to advance women is a mindset shift from preparing the woman for the opportunity to throwing her into that situation and ensuring her success,鈥 Janzen noted. 鈥淲e鈥檝e been doing a lot of speaking engagements around it鈥he biggest 鈥榓ha鈥 moment for people is this shift from mentorship to sponsorship.鈥

According to the report, when asked what type of support they need to help them advance their careers, women said they wanted to 鈥渂e invited to the same meetings that their male counterparts attend, expressed a desire for more opportunities to do bigger work and wanted to be trusted to handle more complex projects.鈥

鈥淲omen are expected to know how to use every piece of machinery, do every job, know every aspect of the project before they are promoted to that next level but that is not usually the requirement for men,鈥 Janzen said. 鈥淲hen will women have the opportunity to lean into their strengths instead of trying to learn every single technical skill before you can advance?鈥

According to the survey, the number one thing women said they want in a job is work-life balance.

鈥(If) it鈥檚 a snow day and my kids can鈥檛 go to school, feeling like there is a process for that and not feeling judged or like you鈥檙e going to be reprimanded for doing that,鈥 Janzen stated.

When asked how do you decide what job you want to take, women with less than one year of experience said money and for women with more than one year of experience it was a clear path to advancement.

鈥淪o money gets people in the door but if you want to retain women it鈥檚 about what is that career path and how do we get there,鈥 Janzen said.

鈥淲e asked women do you want to be in a leadership position at some point in your career and 88 per cent of them said they wanted to or they already were in a leadership position.

鈥淭he reason they would take a job is they want to see that clear path to advancement but then when we asked people how often have you had a woman manager or supervisor鈥72 per cent said they never or rarely had had a woman supervisor or manager. Women want to be in leadership positions, they want to see that clear path to advancement but they鈥檙e just not there.鈥

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