
So many column inches, blog posts and books have been written about why there’s a gender pay gap.
This book is my favourite, but frankly I’m bored of the ‘why’ already. I only have to look round my office to see the reasons why. What I’m interested in is how to eradicate it.
And in our world of project delivery that starts with
looking at what it means to take a senior project leadership job.
Having been in senior project leadership roles, the
expectations are:
- Long hours
- Being on call for your project sponsor, even on
evenings and weekends - Having someone else’s crisis or lack of
preparation be your problem, regularly - A workload that’s too large for a single person
– although the management team appreciate your many project priorities, you still
don’t get the help you need.
If I put that in a job description, would you apply?
Didn’t think so.
And yet we still wonder why the pool of candidates for
senior project management jobs is so small.
If you are in a position of power – of any kind, at any
level – at work, here are 3 things you can do to create an environment where
closing the gender pay gap for women in project management will seem possible.
1. Make women feel safe at work
I remember the staff party where a colleague joked he had spiked my drink. I lost respect for him. I also lost my drink, as I didn’t want it after that, and I had to get another colleague to walk me to the station after the party.
Seriously, guys. How hard is it to think before you open your mouth?
Homicide is the second largest cause of workplace death for women , after road accidents. Over a fifth of women who die at work are murdered. (It’s only 8% for men.)
What can you do to create emotional and physical safety for
women in your workplace?
2. Make being a woman normal
When we got a feminine hygiene bin in the “unisex” toilet at work, I wrote to the 13k project managers who receive my newsletter and celebrated this small win (you can read that email here ).
Inclusive design at work matters – as it does with project
requirements and solution design overall.
One of the best conferences I went do was the Bureau of Digital’s PM Summit, where the morning housekeeping messages included a reference to where the facilities were for breastfeeding mothers. Have a room for pumping.
Like an actual room, not a toilet.
Make sure health and wellbeing policies include menopause. Give staff guidance on how to have conversations about menopause (as recommended by The British Menopause Society in their advice to clinicians) because as a male manager – especially a younger male manager – it’s probably not going to be something they’ve spent much time thinking about.
As an aside: I found talking about
“womanly” symptoms easier in a second language than my first. Having to explain
my medical appointments to a male manager in France was relatively simple
because I only had clinical French vocabulary to go on. My grammar was basic. I
didn’t have the colloquialisms that let you dance around a subject and be coy.
So I said what I needed to say in basic, plain, clear French.
My manager didn’t show any signs of embarrassment. He told me had two daughters and understood. Job done.
Some of the biology of being a woman sucks, but we live with
it. The workplace shouldn’t make it harder. We’re humans, not robots.

3. Make managing your life stuff normal
Flexible working, being able to ask for part-time hours , being able to work from home and smart collaboration tools that keep you connected even when you don’t want to be – they’ve all changed the way work/life balance happens for women in project management.
It’s kind of good.
But not that good.
The ‘always on’ culture means it’s hard to carve out time for actually having a life.
Everyone has life admin to do
There’s an expectation at work that you are there, and therefore being paid to do the work. I get that, I really do. As a line manager, I don’t want my employees surfing Amazon all day looking at stuff they can buy (like this).
As a colleague, I am frustrated when I see people at the desk next to me spending longer than I judge as appropriate checking the sports fixture results.
But let’s get real about this: while we are at work,
everyone else is too. The dentist. The optician. The teachers.
I have to book a slot to speak to my children’s teachers, and the booking opens at 9am. I can’t wait until the evening because the few slots I will be able to do, around my existing work commitments, will already be gone. So do I take time “off” work at 9am to quickly book the teacher consultations or do I wait until I’m not at work, and then have to reorganise work around those consultations? Either option is bad for my employer. I think doing the booking at 9am is less disruptive, even though it happens in work time.
There has to be an acceptance at work that family comes
first – for those people at work with a family, obviously this isn’t going to
apply to everyone. But it’s not just about kids. It’s eldercare, or dropping in
groceries to a neighbour with a newborn, or taking your aunt to visit her
friend in hospital.
It’s about balancing work with what it means to have a
fulfilling life, not simply one where you only have time to treat family and
community interactions as a To Do list item to be ticked off.

Resource your teams appropriately
Some of creating a work/life balance is about culture change. But I’d say a good 80% of it is about having enough staff and the tools to work efficiently.
I have lost count of the number of projects I have been
involved with or led where we haven’t had the resources required to deliver the
project appropriately. What happens? People end up working overtime to fill the
gaps.
That is the fastest way to lose your best people. They are prepared to step up once or twice in a genuine emergency, but when superhero skills are required to bring in a project on time, then you’ve lost the battle.
Those highly efficient, talented, knowledgeable resources are just one bad project away from walking out the door.
The good news
The good news is that I believe shifts in workplace culture
that make things better for women also make things better for people. All
people.
So, as a project leader, what are you going to do to make
things better for women in project management, and your wider project delivery
community at work?
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