What's Hot

    What Can You Trust?

    May 7, 2025

    Build a Safer Jobsite with AI and Cameras

    May 7, 2025

    Women in Construction: PPE

    May 6, 2025
    Get your Copy Today
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    Connected WorldConnected World
    • SPM
    • Sustainability
    • Projects
    • Technology
    • Constructech
    • Awards
      • Top Products
      • Profiles
    • Living Lab
    Connected WorldConnected World
    Home»Projects»Is a Shattered Ceiling Enough?
    Projects

    Is a Shattered Ceiling Enough?

    No Comments4 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp Pinterest Email

    I have spent several decades writing about women breaking through the glass ceiling in male-dominated industries like construction and manufacturing. The stories are always beautiful triumphs of women doing incredible things with business, process, and technology in an industry that isn’t traditionally built for them. But has it been enough? Are we still stalled in many areas?

    A new survey piqued my interest when it crossed my desk earlier this month because it focuses on the biggest barrier preventing more women from entering the project profession in industries like construction, transport and logistics, and more.

    The survey by the APM (Assn. of Project Management) of 1,000 project professionals (from junior to director level), shows of the 308 female respondents, a third (33.4%) say unequal pay is the main barrier, followed by gender stereotyping (32.5%), and not enough women having taken STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) subjects while studying at school, college, or university (29%).

    However, among the male respondents to the survey, the most common reason as to why more women aren’t joining the project profession is that it’s still being perceived as male dominated (cited by 31.5% of male respondents). Yikes.

    So, men think women aren’t joining because the profession is still perceived as male dominated and women believe unequal pay followed closely by gender stereotyping are genuinely the top reasons they are staying away.

    To be very frank here, is this elephant in the room something the industry is trying to avoid simply by not talking about it? Does addressing the issue of pay raise too many eyebrows? Or do men really not see that unequal pay is still a problem? I am genuinely interested.

    Because here is the reality: APM’s most recent Salary and Market Trends Survey highlights the salary figures for men and women working in the project profession, and it reveals a gender pay gap of 24%. That is not a small percentage. There is still much work to be done.

    Although I should note there was some positive change outlined in the report, with women making up a growing proportion of those earning between £50,000 and £69,999—up from 20% from the previous year to 24%. Still, as I always report, the survey found women are still over-represented in roles where lower salaries are the norm: they account for four out of five project administrators (79%), while representing 57% of parttime workers. By contrast only 22% of consultants, who enjoy higher average salaries, are women.

    Breaking this down a bit further by sector, APM’s survey also highlights the different opinions of project professionals. For example, in engineering, 43%, and in telecoms, 40%, said gender stereotyping is the biggest hurdle for women entering their profession.

    Unequal levels of pay are considered as the greatest challenge to women entering project management as a career within the financial services sector (38%) and in technology (40%). For those in construction and transport and logistics, far too few women take STEM subjects at school, college, or university, which is often a big barrier for entering these sectors.

    APM’s new survey also asked the profession what they considered to be main barrier for both men and women being recruited into the profession, with lack of awareness of project management as a career choice (30%) coming out on top, followed by a lack of skilled individuals (28%), and budget restrictions (28%).

    Let’s do the hard work here. Let’s find ways to make pay more equal and address stereotyping in the workplace. Let’s find more ways to encourage women to consider project management as a career. I do believe some progress is being made recently, with many organizations focusing more on DEI (diversity, equity, and inclusion), but I am not sure it is enough—and I am not sure it is being done fast enough. I have been writing about women in construction for more years than I can count, and the numbers aren’t changing fast enough. What do you believe needs to be done to address this?

    Want to tweet about this article? Use hashtags #construction #IoT #sustainability #AI #5G #cloud #edge #futureofwork #infrastructure 

    5G AI Cloud Construction Edge Future of Work Infrastructure IoT Peggy’s Blog Project Management Sustainability Women
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp Email

    Related Posts

    What Can You Trust?

    May 7, 2025

    Build a Safer Jobsite with AI and Cameras

    May 7, 2025

    Women in Construction: PPE

    May 6, 2025

    Success Stories: Customized Sensors for Wildfire Prevention

    May 5, 2025

    The Rise of Prefab

    May 1, 2025

    Manufacturing in an Era of Digital Product Passports

    April 30, 2025
    Add A Comment

    Comments are closed.

    Get Your Copy Today
    2025 ASCE REPORT CARD FOR AMERICA’S INFRASTRUCTURE
    https://youtu.be/HyDCmQg6zPk
    ABOUT US

    Connected World works to expand quality of life and influence a sustainable future through digital transformation, innovation, and create opportunities all around.

    We’re accepting new partnerships and radio guests right now.

    Email Us: info@specialtypub.com

    4611 Hard Scrabble Road
    Suite 109-276
    Columbia, SC  29229

     

    Our Picks
    • What Can You Trust?
    • Build a Safer Jobsite with AI and Cameras
    • Women in Construction: PPE
    Specialty Publishing Media

    Questions? Please contact us at info@connectedworld.com

    Press Room

    Privacy Policy

    Media Kit – Connected World/Peggy Smedley Show

    Media Kit – Constructech

    Facebook Twitter Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
    © 2025 Connected World.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.